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Manfred Kusterer is a German engineer and founder, owner and managing director of the Europe-wide private channel "L-TV" in South-West German state Baden-Württemberg.
Life
Kusterer ran a communications technology company in Winnenden in the Rems-Murr district near Stuttgart. In 1999, he founded the private station "L-TV" in Ludwigsburg and took over its management. Initially, Kusterer held all shares in "L-TV". In 2009, he gave 5.5% each to his children and has held 89% ever since. The state authority "Commission for the Control of Concentration in the Media Sector" said that this had happened without its permission. Repeated disregard of broadcasting regulations can be punished with the withdrawal of the license.
In 2010, Kusterer concluded an agreement with the evangelical ERF Media Wetzlar for the exchange and mutual broadcast of program content.
The private television provider L-TV made political advertising for the initiative "Querdenken 711". From March 2020, "L-TV" repeatedly broadcast content from VOVID-skeptism movement. The state media agency Landesanstalt für Kommunikation Baden-Württemberg (LFK) finally imposed a fine of 65,000 euros in October 2020. After extensive examination, the suspicion had been confirmed that L-TV had advertised and broadcast "Querdenken" demonstrations for money. Manfred Kusterer then emphasized to Deutschlandfunk that his station strives to respect and comply with applicable laws. L-TV will work together with the responsible state authority and the broadcaster has taken all programmes and contributions of the lateral thinkers out of the programme.
Manfred Kusterer was involved as a volunteer radio officer on a mission ship of the organization "Operation Mobilization" and heads the "Friends of Christian Radio Amateurs".
References
Living people
People from Winnenden
German Protestant missionaries
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Alton Johnson Adams Jr. (born October 20, 1979) is an American football coach and former player who is currently the co-offensive coordinator for the Oregon Ducks. He previously served as wide receivers coach for the Washington Huskies.
Early life and education
Junior Adams was born on October 20, 1979, in Fremont, California. After finishing high school as an All-American, Adams first played college football at Oregon State University, but he later transferred and finished his career at Montana State University. Adams graduated with a bachelor's degree in sociology.
Coaching career
After graduating from Montana State, Adams became the wide receivers coach for the university from 2004 to 2006. After two years as a coach for Prosser High School, where he won a state championship in his sole year there, and Chattanooga, Adams became the wide receivers coach for Eastern Washington. Following a dominant four-year stint, highlighted by star Cooper Kupp, Adams left Eastern Washington to become a coach at Boise State. After being elevated to passing game coordinator at Boise State, Adams became the offensive coordinator for Western Kentucky. Adams left Western Kentucky in 2019 to a lower position, wide receivers coach, at Washington. Adams would later become offensive coordinator, however, becoming the co-offensive coordinator for Oregon in 2022.
References
1979 births
Living people
Oregon Ducks football coaches
People from Fremont, California
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Brookline Baptist Church is a historic former church building at 632 Grassy brook Road in Brookline, Vermont. It was built in 1836 for a congregation established in 1785, and served the congregation regularly until 1945. It is now used as a community function space. It is a locally distinctive example of vernacular Gothic Revival architecture, and it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2021.
Description and history
The former Brookline Baptist Church building is centrally located in the town of Brookline, on the east side of Grassy Brook Road, the town's principal thoroughfare. It is a 1-1/2 story brick building, with a wood-frame rear addition of slightly lower height. The main facade faces the street, and is three bays wide, with each bay articulated by a recessed Gothic arch panel. The outer bays have entrances on the first floor and windows on the second, while the center bay has windows at each of those levels, and in the gable. A two-stage square tower, framed in wood and finished in wooden clapboards, rises to pinnacles at the corners.
Brookline's first organized church congregation were Baptists, who established a formal organization in 1785. Early services were held in a barn, and it was not until 1836 that the congregation began to discuss the possibility of building a union church in conjunction with other local church groups. For unknown reasons, the Baptists opted to build their own church, and this building was the result. The rear addition, serving as a vestry, was added in 1895. Regular services were held until 1945, at which time the building was sold to the Brookline Ladies Benevolent Society. Since then, the building has been used for occasional summer services, weddings, community meetings, and town meetings.
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Windham County, Vermont
References
Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in Vermont
Brookline, Vermont
Churches in Windham County, Vermont
Churches completed in 1836
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Zimbabwean nationality law is regulated by the Constitution of Zimbabwe, as amended; the Citizenship of Zimbabwe Act, and its revisions; and various international agreements to which the country is a signatory. These laws determine who is, or is eligible to be, a Zimbabwean national. The legal means to acquire nationality, formal legal membership in a nation, differ from the domestic relationship of rights and obligations between a national and the nation, known as citizenship. Nationality describes the relationship of an individual to the state under international law, whereas citizenship is the domestic relationship of an individual within the nation. Commonwealth countries often use the terms nationality and citizenship as synonyms, despite their legal distinction and the fact that they are regulated by different governmental administrative bodies. Zimbabwean nationality is typically obtained under the principal of jus sanguinis, i.e. by birth to parents with Zimbabwean nationality. It can be granted to persons with an affiliation to the country, or to a permanent resident who has lived in the country for a given period of time through registration, a process known elsewhere as naturalisation.
Acquiring Zimbabwean nationality
Nationality can be obtained in Zimbabwe at birth or later in life through registration.
By birth
Typically, in Zimbabwe, provisions to acquire nationality through jus soli, i.e. by birth in the territory, are only relevant for foundlings and for the stipulations regarding dual nationality. Those who are eligible for nationality by birth include:
Persons born in the country who have at least one parent or grandparent who was a Zimbabwean national by birth or descent;
Persons born abroad who have at least one parent or grandparent who was a Zimbabwean national by birth, descent, or registration and whose birth is registered in Zimbabwe; or
Foundlings or orphans under the age of fifteen whose parents are unknown.
By registration
Registration can be granted to persons who have resided in Zimbabwe for a sufficient period of time to confirm they understand the customs and traditions of the country. General qualifications are that applicants are of majority and legal capacity, have good character, and can verify legal residency of a minimum of ten years. Besides foreigners meeting the criteria, those who can register include:
Adoptees may acquire Zimbabwean nationality by registration, upon completion of the legal adoption process;
The spouse of a Zimbabwean national may register as Zimbabwean after a five-year residency; or
Minor children may acquire nationality by inclusion on a parent's registration application.
Loss of nationality
Zimbabweans are allowed to renounce their nationality, provided that they receive permission from the ministry responsible for nationality provisions. The government may oppose during times of war or if there is a conflict with public policy. Overall, under the constitution, the government cannot deprive anyone of nationality if they would become stateless. Nationals by birth can be deprived of their nationality if it was fraudulently obtained or if, in the case of a foundling, if it is later learned the child had other nationality. Registered persons can be denaturalised for any type of support of an enemy nation with whom Zimbabwe is at war; for committing serious crimes that carry a sentence of one year or more; disloyal acts or crimes against the state or state security; for residing outside of the country for more than five years; or for committing fraud, misrepresentation, or concealment in a naturalisation or registration application. Persons who were Zimbabwean and previously lost their nationality may apply for repatriation, if they lost their nationality because of birth to a Southern Africa Development Community parent who is resident in Zimbabwe, of having dual nationality, or for having been absent from the country for more than five years.
Dual nationality
Under the terms of the 2013 Constitution, Zimbabweans by birth are allowed to hold dual nationality, but those who have nationality by descent or registration may be denied the ability to have other nationality.
History
Anthropologists have dated remains in the area 100,000 years ago and attributed those inhabitants to be ancestors of Khoekhoe people who reside in the territory today. Waves of Bantu-speakers migrated into the area from 200 BC to 500 AD, pushing the Khoekhoe northward. Many of the Bantu groups were Shona people, who by the tenth century were the most populous group in the area. The Shona developed centralised states which engaged in trade with Arab people from Mozambique. The political center of their state, the Kingdom of Zimbabwe, was founded at Great Zimbabwe in the 11th century. It flourished between 1250 and 1550 before being abandoned. The collapse of the Zimbabwe Kingdom gave rise to the Torwa dynasty of the Kingdom of Butua in the southwestern region of present-day Zimbabwe and about the same time in the north around the Zambezi Valley, the founding the Kingdom of Mutapa. In addition to these centralised kingdoms, the majority of inhabitants of Southern Africa lived in small societies of kinship networks, which included Nguni and Sotho people in the east and Tswana people in the west, while the Shona lived throughout the territory. The Mutapa Kingdom became the dominant political force in the northern part of the territory, developing extensive trade networks with the coastal Muslim peoples. As Portuguese rivals began to replace the Muslim traders, European contact with the Mutapa emerged.
The Portuguese explorer António Fernandes first visited the territory of the Manyika people around 1511 in search of finding the source of gold traded with Sofala. In a 1513 journey, Fernandes traveled throughout the northeastern portion of Zimbabwe encountering the Mutapa Kingdom. The Portuguese established trading posts in the Zimbabwean Highveld, but often were in conflict with both the indigenous people and their Muslim trading rivals. By the seventeenth century, Portuguese attacks on the Mutapa Kingdom had weakened the state, causing some of their tributary states to gain autonomy. The weakened Mutapa state was attacked by the Rozvi Empire in the latter half of the century and forced into vassalage. Simultaneously, the Rozvi drove the Portuguese from the area and gained dominance in the southwestern central plateau. Beginning around the 1820s, the Mfecane brought widespread disruption and conflict, as people migrated into the area from the south. Nguni groups, like the Ndebele people and Gaza people, moved into Shona territory. The Ndebele raided the Manyika people and Mashonaland, eventually establishing the Ndebele Kingdom in Matabeleland, while the Gaza people established themselves on the Sabi River. Though they did not conquer the territory, they destroyed the Rozvi kingdom, and kept the Shona people from reorganising their states.
In 1854, British missionary Robert Moffat was accompanied by the traders Samuel H. Edwards and James Chapman into the area. The following year, Moffat's son-in-law David Livingstone visited and named Victoria Falls. Increased missionary activity led to traders and settlers moving into the region in the 1880s and 1890s. In 1884, British mining magnate Cecil Rhodes convinced Parliament to grant him a charter for the British South Africa Company to develop the region and protect it from expansion of the Portuguese. In 1888, Rhodes secured a mining concession from Lobengula, king of the Ndebele, which was recognized by Britain on 12 September 1890. That year, the company sent agents to occupy Mashonaland and established a headquarters at Fort Salisbury.
British South Africa Company rule (1891–1923)
Under the charter, and terms of the Order in Council issued 9 May 1891, Britain acquired extraterritorial jurisdiction over British subjects, in the territories operated by the British South Africa Company. From their headquarters, the Company expanded westward, and took over Matabeleland after defeating the Ndebele there in 1893. In 1895, the large territory the Company was operating in Southern Africa was named Rhodesia with the dividing line between Northern Rhodesia and Southern Rhodesia being the Zambezi River. By 1896, the subjects of the declining Ndebele Kingdom revolted and were joined by the Shona people residing in the northeastern and central regions of Southern Rhodesia. The Company suppressed the uprisings in 1897 and made reforms to their administration of the area. In 1923, the British South Africa Company relinquished responsibility for Southern Rhodesia to Britain.
In Britain, allegiance, in which subjects pledged to support a monarch, was the precursor to the modern concept of nationality. The crown recognized from 1350 that all persons born within the territories of the British Empire were subjects. Those born outside the realm — except children of those serving in an official post abroad, children of the monarch, and children born on a British ship — were considered by common law to be foreigners. Marriage did not affect the status of a subject of the realm, but under common law, single women, including divorcées, were not allowed to be parents thus their children could not derive nationality maternally and were stateless unless legitimated by their father. British Nationality Acts did not extend beyond the bounds of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, meaning that under Britain's rules of conquest, laws in place at the time of acquisition remained in place until changed. Other than common law, there was no standard statutory law which applied for subjects throughout the realm, meaning different jurisdictions created their own legislation for local conditions, which often conflicted with the laws in other jurisdictions in the empire. Thus, a person who was naturalised in Canada, for example, would be considered a foreigner, rather than a British national, in Australia or South Africa. When British protectorates were established in 1815, there was little difference between the rights of British subjects and protected persons.
In 1911, at the Imperial Conference a decision was made to draft a common nationality code for use across the empire. The British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 allowed local jurisdictions in the British self-governing territories to continue regulating nationality in their jurisdictions, but also established an imperial nationality scheme for use throughout the realm. Under its terms, common law provisions were reiterated for natural-born persons born within the realm on or after the effective date. By using the word person, the statute nullified legitimacy requirements for jus soli nationals, meaning an illegitimate child could derive nationality from its mother. For those born abroad on or after the effective date, legitimacy was still required, and nationality could only be derived by a child from a British father (one generation), who was natural-born or naturalised. It also provided that a married woman derived her nationality from her spouse, meaning if he was British, she was also, and if he was foreign, so was she. It stipulated that upon loss of nationality of a husband, a wife could declare that she wished to remain British. It allowed that if a marriage had terminated, through death or divorce, a British-born national who had lost her status through marriage could reacquire British nationality through naturalisation without meeting a residency requirement. The statute specified that a five-year residency or service to the crown was required for naturalisation.
British crown colony (1923–1949)
On 12 September 1923 Southern Rhodesia became a crown colony. Though not granted in actual fact Dominion status, the country was allowed broad powers to govern, but Britain retained the right to supervise affairs and the local legislature was forbidden to regulate on matters dealing with the indigenous population. Amendments to the British Nationality Act were enacted in 1918, 1922, 1933 and 1943 changing derivative nationality by descent and modifying slightly provisions for women to lose their nationality upon marriage. Because of a rise in statelessness, a woman who did not automatically acquire her husband's nationality upon marriage or upon his naturalisation in another country, did not lose their British status after 1933. The 1943 revision allowed a child born abroad at any time to be a British national by descent if the Secretary of State agreed to register the birth. Under the terms of the British Nationality Act 1948 British nationals in Southern Rhodesia were reclassified at that time as "British subjects without citizenship", pending passage of a regulation by the Southern Rhodesian legislature. Provisions were made in the 1948 British Act that each Commonwealth Country could regulate their own domestic citizenship laws, which would provide that persons defined as citizens anywhere within the Commonwealth were automatically British subjects and not aliens. The basic British nationality scheme did not change overmuch, and typically those who were previously defined as British remained the same. Changes included that wives and children no longer automatically acquired the status of the husband or father, children who acquired nationality by descent no longer were required to make a retention declaration, and registrations for children born abroad were extended.
Internally self-governing colony (1949–1953)
Though not empowered under the Statute of Westminster 1931 as an equal self-governing independent state within the British realm, in 1949, the Southern Rhodesian Citizenship and British Nationality Act was passed by the Legislative Assembly of Southern Rhodesia. Under its terms, British nationality was conferred on anyone born in Southern Rhodesia between 12 September 1890 and 31 December 1949. Persons born on or after 1 January 1950, acquired the status of British subject if their father was a British subject by birth or naturalisation. Women married to British subjects automatically acquired the status of British subjects as did women who had previously been British subjects but lost their status because of marriage to a foreigner. Qualified foreigners could naturalise after a five-year residency and persons who were British subjects by virtue of Commonwealth Citizenship or Irish citizenship could register after a two-year residency in Southern Rhodesia, unless they were naturalised citizens, in which case a three-year residency was required. Foreign wives and children of Southern Rhodesians were allowed to apply for registration as British subjects. Persons who did not acquire Southern Rhodesian citizenship in conjunction with British nationality under the terms of the 1949 Act, remained British subjects without citizenship.
The 1951 Amendment (Act 49), besides making procedural changes, provided that children of enemy alien fathers or mothers confined to a camp because of marriage to an enemy alien, or born to parents in polygamous marriages were not entitled to be Southern Rhodesian citizens (nor British subjects). It also disallowed a wife or minor children to register based upon having a South Rhodesian husband or father, if they were a party to or product of a polygamous marriage. A subsequent amendment passed as Act 63 of 1953, which made minor changes to acquisition by birth and descent. That year, Southern Rhodesia was formally linked to the British protectorates of Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia in the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. The Federation was administrative and each member retained its status as either a protectorate or colony, meaning that internal affairs could be regulated by the federation, but foreign affairs were under Britain's control. Each of the three territories maintained separate nationality rules until 1957, when the Citizenship of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and British Nationality Act was passed.
Federation (1958–1964)
Under the terms of the Citizenship of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and British Nationality Act 1957, persons born within the territories of the federation, before and after it was created, were considered to be British subjects with citizenship in the federation, if they had previously been British subjects, as long as their father was not granted diplomatic immunity or was not an enemy alien. It excluded children from acquiring citizenship or nationality if they were illegitimate. Persons born outside of the federated territories were also considered British nationals if their father had been born in one of the territories. Wives of those who became British nationals of the federation, or would have become so except for the death of their spouse, who did not gain nationality by other provisions, were allowed to register, as long as they were not a party to a polygamous relationship. Those who were British protected persons had no change in status under the statute, which reclassified as British nationals of the federation only those persons whose fathers were British subjects.
In 1962, the United Nations General Assembly affirmed that under Chapter XI of the Charter of the United Nations the status of Southern Rhodesia was as a non-self-governing territory. A special committee was assigned to evaluate the status of Southern Rhodesia between 1962 and 1964 and concluded that Rhodesia was not ready for independence and self-government because of discriminatory restrictions on the franchise, which would limit the ability of the population to exercise their right to self-determination. The Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland dissolved on 1 January 1964. Those who had been British nationals of the federation were reclassified as CUKCs, unless they became on that date British nationals of Southern Rhodesia. Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia returned to the status of protectorates and BPPs therein retained their status as protected persons. Effectively, on that date, the Citizenship of Southern Rhodesia and British Nationality Act 1963 came into force. It specified that anyone who previously was a citizen of Southern Rhodesia and a national of Britain under prior legislation continued to be so. It further provided that after 1 January 1964, persons could obtain the status of British subject and citizen of Southern Rhodesia by birth, descent, registration, or naturalisation under the same standards as previously acquired. On 24 October 1964, Northern Rhodesia gained independence and thereafter, Southern Rhodesia was known simply as Rhodesia.
Return to self-governing colony (1965–1979)
On 11 November 1965, Rhodesia claimed independence, but the United Nations General Assembly condemned the action on the same day because it was an illegal seizing of authority of a small, white, settler, minority over the majority-African population, and a threat to international security and world peace. To enforce their action the UN Security Council urged enforcement of an oil embargo and economic sanctions against Southern Rhodesia. The Rhodesian Legislature passed a new constitution and attempted to ratify it. Under the 1965 Constitution, enacted by the Rhodesian legislature, British authority over the country was terminated, meaning that it declared that the governor was no longer the head of state and that the British Parliament had no oversight of internal or external affairs. The new Rhodesian Constitution was not confirmed by the British Parliament and was legally invalid. On 16 November 1965, the British Parliament passed the Southern Rhodesia Act reaffirming British sovereignty over Rhodesia and the 1961 Constitution as the valid constitutional instrument. An Order in Council (No. 1952) was issued by the British government declaring the 1965 Constitution invalid and forbidding the Rhodesian Legislature from further activity. This was followed by Order 1969 of 1965, which returned the nationality provisions to those in accord with British statutes, in effect the British Nationality Act of 1948, as extended under the Act of 1958, whose requirements remained basically unchanged until 1983, basing acquisition on descent, naturalisation, or registration.
Two lawsuits, Madzimbamuto v Lardner-Burke and Baron v Ayre, Bezuidenhout, Dupont and Lardner-Burke also challenged the legitimacy of the constitution and declaration of independence. The General Division of the Rhodesian Court deemed the 1965 constitution and the legislature to be invalid, but did not revoke the Emergency Orders as having done so would have created a state of anarchy. The case was appealed to the Rhodesian High Court, which ruled in a four to one decision that the government was the legal authority, and while not legally recognised, its operation and legislation were legal. Though they overturned the 1965 Emergency Order, a new Emergency Order was put in place in 1966 to replace the prior regulation. In 1968, an appeal was heard in the Privy Council of the United Kingdom which held that the government and all legislation passed in Rhodesia by the government were invalid. Because of the ruling, Rhodesians were able to apply for British passports after 1968 which confirmed they were British subjects.
The UN Special Committee on Rhodesia continued negotiations between 1965 and 1967 with Britain. In 1966, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 232 making economic sanctions against Rhodesia mandatory for all member states. In 1969, a constitution was passed to change the system of government to a republic. The 1969 Constitution of the Republic of Rhodesia had no official legal status. From the mid-1960s a liberation movement, pressed for changes in Rhodesia's governance. Diplomatic and internal conflict eventually led the government to begin negotiations in 1978 with African leaders. In January 1979, the Rhodesian government announced that it would be drafting a new constitution. Though approved by the European electorate, the UN Human Rights Commission rejected the constitution the following month. In April, the Rhodesian Parliament was dissolved and later that month a new constitution extending voting rights to Africans was enacted. On 30 May 1979, the Republic of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia was declared. In November the British Parliament passed the Southern Rhodesia Act which authorized the drafting of a new constitution and the following month passed the Zimbabwe Constitution Order which authorized the terms of the constitution that would be in force at Zimbabwe's independence. Its single provision on nationality provided that anyone who had been a citizen of Rhodesia by birth, descent, or registration would at independence be a citizen of Zimbabwe. Under provisions of the Zimbabwe Act 1979, persons who were CUCKs and acquired Zimbabwean nationality would cease to be British subjects, but other CUKCs who resided in Rhodesia would have a twelve month transitional period to decide whether to remain CUKCs or register as Zimbabwean.
Post-independence (1980–present)
Zimbabwe gained its independence after a four-month period of direct rule by Britain on 18 April 1980 and was admitted to the Commonwealth. Persons born after independence acquired nationality through birth in the country to a father who was Zimbabwean and living in the country. Children born abroad could acquire nationality if they were born to a father who Zimbabwean and who was also born Zimbabwe. Nationality could only be derived maternally if a child was illegitimate. Dual nationality was allowed and a provision was made for subsequent nationality legislation to provide qualifications for registration, eliminating the term naturalisation. When the Citizenship of Zimbabwe Act was adopted in 1984, it eliminated the possibility of dual nationality and required persons who had other nationality to renounce it by year's end in 1985. It allowed wives of Zimbabweans and persons who had resided in the country for at least five years to register as Zimbabweans. The legislation did not allow foreign husbands of Zimbabwean women the right to remain in the country. Further, immigration restrictions specified that only persons who had skills deemed critical and for which a shortage of persons with those skills existed were able to secure a residency permit.
In 1994 two cases, Rattigan v Chief Immigration Officer & Others and Salem v Chief Immigration Officer & Others, brought by Zimbabwean women challenged the law which did not allow their husbands to acquire residency. In the Rattigan case, it was argued that restricting a husband's movement restricted the movement of his wife, as well as their ability to cohabitate, and contravened her constitutional protections for free movement. In Salem, a further argument was made that restricting the right of a husband to work limited his ability to provide for his family and jeopardised his wife's ability to remain in the country in the event that she could not earn sufficient income to adequately support her family. In both cases, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the wives. When the decisions were handed down in 1996, the Constitution was amended to remove the gendered discriminatory provisions to acquire nationality and replaced them with a provision that spouses could be registered on the same grounds as any foreigner. The amendment also changed the basis of acquisition of nationality to birth in Zimbabwe to a Zimbabwean removing jus soli provisions for foreigners and protections for foundlings and against statelessness.
In 2001, the Citizenship of Zimbabwe Act was amended allowing women an equal right to pass on their nationality to adopted children. It was revised again in 2003 to allow children born in the territory to parents who were nationals of a member country of the Southern Africa Development Community and residing in Zimbabwe working in unskilled occupations to apply for Zimbabwean nationality if they renounced other nationality. In 2009, a constitutional amendment extended nationality to children who had at least one parent or grandparent who was born in Zimbabwe or descended from a Zimbabwean regardless of where they were born. It also permitted dual nationality for those nationals born in Zimbabwe. A ruling in Piroro v Registrar General by the High Court in 2011, confirmed that dual nationality could not be prohibited for nationals by birth but that legislation could be drafted on its applicability to nationals by descent or by registration. A new constitution came in to force in 2013, which retained the provisions for acquisition and loss in prior legislation. In 2014, Farai D. Madzimbamuto, son of Stella Madzimbamuto, who had previously challenged the detainment statutes of Rhodesia, successfully won a case in the Constitutional Court of Zimbabwe challenging his right to dual nationality. The court ruled that under the 2013 constitution, Madzimbamuto was a Zimbabwean by birth, entitled to dual nationality, and the immigration department could not restrict his right to free movement or unconditional residence in Zimbabwe. As of 2018, legislation had not been introduced to amend the Citizenship of Zimbabwe Act to conform with changes in the constitution enacted since it was last modified in 2003.
Notes
References
Citations
Bibliography
External links
Southern Rhodesia Act 1979
Zimbabwe Constitution Order 1979
Zimbabwe and the Commonwealth of Nations
Nationality law
Zimbabwean law | [
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Saab Sensores e Serviços Brasil is a Brazilian defence eletronic manufacturer which has operated since 2020 as a subsidiary company of the Saab AB. Previously established in 2004 as Atmos Sistemas S.A to provide electronic equipment and weather radars, it was bought entirely by the Swedish multinational to manufacture and sell electronic products and avionics for the aerospace industry, and to supply the parts and maintenance needs of the Saab JAS 39 Gripen aircraft of the Brazilian Air Force.
Currently the company provides both technical support, equipment components and electronic and maintenance services to the Brazilian armed forces in the defense field, as well as to civilian customers.
See also
Saab Aeronáutica Montagens
Ares Aeroespacial e Defesa
References
External links
Aerospace companies of Brazil
Avionics companies
Companies based in São Paulo (state)
Defence companies of Brazil
Engineering companies of Brazil
Electronics companies of Brazil
Manufacturing companies of Brazil
Manufacturing companies established in 2020
Technology companies established in 2020
Weapons trade | [
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Chen Jinggu () is a Chinese goddess of the sea, goddess of women, children, and pregnancy, and a shaman. She is also known as Lady Linshui (臨水夫人 Linshui furen).
Chen Jinggu is a deity worshipped in Fujian, Taiwan, South China, and across East Asia and Southeast Asia. The legend of Chen Jinggu originated in Fuzhou prefecture. She was a Daoist priest of the Lushan School (閭山派). She was virtuous and worshipped as a goddess after her death. She was acquainted in mediumship or spirit channeling.
Taiwan has more than 130 temples dedicated to Madam Chen, and Fujian has many ancestral temples dedicated to her as well. Today she is revered as a Daoist and Confucian deity.
History
Chen Jinggu was born Chen Jing (陳靖) and was called Chen Jinggu (陈靖姑). She was born in Xiadu (下渡), Fuzhou, nowadays Cangshan District around 766 CE. One source claims she was born in the 2nd year of Dali during the Tang dynasty. Another source says she was born at the end of the Tang dynasty and died in the 5th year of Tiancheng in the Later Tang dynasty. When young, Chen Jinggu went to the Lushan school (or Mount Lü, said to be located in modern Jiangxi) with Lin Jiuniang and Li Sanniang to study under Xu Xun (许逊). But even at Lushan, Chen learned all about Daoism except the traditional female roles of maternity, pregnancy, etc.
After finishing her studies she returned home and married Liu Qi (劉杞) from Gutian County Ningde. She continued to subdue spirits and help those in need. At the age of 24, Chen Jinggu became pregnant, but she continued to help the people through rain or drought. A drought hit north Fujian, so she used her Daoist powers to create rain, but eventually sacrificed her fetus and herself to save the people and vanquish an evil demon snake. She was regarded as a deity by the people and bestowed the honorary title Linshui, the goddess who protects the fetus and the people (順產助生護胎佑民女神).
It is said that one of the goddesses (懿德夫人 Madame Yide) of Ryukyu Islands is a disciple of Chen Jinggu.
Chen Jinggu, Lin Jiuniang, and Li Sanniang were sworn sisters (義結金蘭 Yijie Jinlan). Chen Jinggu was the head and was called Danai Furen (大奶夫人) or Chen Nai Furen (陳奶夫人). Lin Jiuniang was called Lin Nai Furen (林奶夫人) or Lin Ernai (林二奶 second lady Lin). Li Sanniang was called Li Nai Furen (李奶夫人) or Li Sannai (李三奶 third lady Li). Chen, Lin, and Li are sometimes referred to as the "Three Ladies".
Titles
Chen Jinggu was also given the title of saint (聖誕 for example 正月十四:臨水夫人陳靖姑大奶夫人聖誕).
Defending Maiden Chen (陈靖姑) where 姑 is as in 姑娘 guniang
Linshui Nu (臨水嬭)
Chen Fourteen Nainai (陳十四娘娘) or Fourteenth Damsel Chen
Shunyi furen which is said to have been bestowed during the Song dynasty
She was also given the title "Just Lady" around 1250 during the Song
She is also sometimes called the "Goddess of pregnancy"
The name Linshui Furen (臨水夫人) has been translated as "Lady at the Water's Edge" or sometimes "Water-margin Lady" as Linshui means "near the water".
Cultural influence
In Taiwan, there is a children's festival involving Ox horns (牛角做出幼) which is a coming of age ceremony for young people. It is held in front of Chen Jinggu's shrine, as it is believed in the region that Madame Chen protects children from growing up safely, so the event is thankful for her protection.
The people of Matsu Islands have a tradition of placing gifts in front of Chen Jinggu's shrine in order to pray for the birth of their children (擺嬭).
After the birth of a child, the fangli nanny (房裡奶) incense table are enshrined in the bedroom to pray to Chen Jinggu.
Festivals and parades celebrating Chen Jinggu are held in Taiwan.
In Fujian, the Chen Jinggu festival is held as a 3-day festival. Chen Jinggu is said to have more than 120 million worshippers around the world.
Chen Jinggu and Mazu are two goddesses that are revered in Southern China. Chen is usually in charge of the domestic or family realm whereas Mazu is in charge of state affairs.
Chen Jinggu is also worshipped as a goddess in Zhejiang via migration from Fujian.
Chen is also a goddess of the She people (and the Han people), an ethnic group of China.
Shrines
Chen Jinggu has many shrines located in
Fujian
Taiwan
Macau
Stories
The novel "Chen Jinggu pacifies Demons" or "The Lady of Linshui pacifies Demons" (Linshui pingyao 临水平妖) was written in the 17th century around the Ming-Qing period. However, some date the book even earlier to the 15th century. The tale is based on Chen Jinggu, who was born during the Tang, and the legend of Chen was told during the Song.
In the novel, Chen Jinggu refused an arranged marriage and ran away from home to study Daoism and shamanism in Lushan. After returning home, she married and became pregnant. But she had to confront a white demon snake and save her home, the Min Kingdom, from drought. She cast a spell to make it rain, but had to sacrifice her child (the fetus) and hide it so it would not be harmed by the spell. However, the demon snake ate the fetus, but Chen Jinggu battled and defeated the demon snake, thereby saving the kingdom.
It is noted that Chen Jinggu essentially performed abortion on herself to save her people.
The story was translated into French in 1988. Later, in 2008, it was translated into English with the help of Baptandier in a book published by Stanford University Press.
Analysis
Scholars have analyzed the book based on the reversal of gender norms and the woman's role in society. They note that Chen Jinggu initially eschewed the traditional role of women. First, she refused an arranged marriage. Moreover, rather than giving birth to her child, she chose instead to sacrifice her fetus in order to save her country. Scholars also analyze the book in terms of the challenges that women may face when trying to become leaders in society, or in Chen Jinggu's case, becoming a Daoist leader.
Guanyin
Chen Jinggu is said to be related to Guanyin via the following story. One day in Quanzhou, Fujian, the people needed money to build a bridge. Guanyin turned into an attractive lady and said she would marry any man who could hit her with silver. Many tried, and Guanyin was able to accumulate a lot of silver ingots through this process. Eventually one of the Eight Immortals, Lü Dongbin, helped a merchant hit her hair with some silver.
Guanyin's hair then floated away and became a white demon female snake. The snake would seduce men and kill other women.
Guanyin then disappeared, but she let some of her blood from her finger flow down the river. A woman named Ge Furen (葛妇人 Lady Ge), whose husband was from the Chen family, then drank some of Guanyin's blood from the water and became pregnant, giving birth to Chen Jinggu. Later Chen Jinggu would fight and kill the white demon snake.
As for the merchant, he later reincarnated as Liu Qi (劉杞) and would marry Chen Jinggu.
The story continues with how Chen Jinggu grew up, studied at Lüshan, and eventually saved Northern Fujian from drought while defeating the white demon snake, but at the cost of sacrificing her own child. It is said that she died of either miscarriage or hemorrhage from the self-abortion.
Chen's title Linshui (臨水 near the water's edge) could be related to how Guanyin stood near the water before being hit by silver, ultimately leading to the births of Chen Jinggu and the white snake. It could also symbolize Chen Jinggu's status as a goddess of the sea, with the coastal province of Fujian bordering the ocean. It could also refer to how Chen summoned rainwater to cure a drought in north Fujian.
Chen Jingu and three Monkey Saints
The Journey to the West's main character Sun Wukong's inspiration might have also come from the White Monkey legends from the Chinese Chu kingdom (700–223 BC), which revered gibbons. These legends gave rise to stories and art motifs during the Han dynasty, eventually contributing to the Monkey King figure.
The Monkey King may have also been influenced by local folk religion from Fuzhou province, where monkey gods were worshipped long before the novel. This included the three Monkey Saints of Lin Shui Palace, who were once fiends, who were subdued by the goddess Chen Jinggu. The three were Dan Xia Da Sheng (丹霞大聖), the Red Face Monkey Sage, Tong Tian Da Sheng (通天大聖), the Black Face Monkey Sage, and Shuang Shuang San Lang (爽爽三聖), the White Face Monkey Sage.
See also
Dragonslayer (heroic archetype in fiction)
Han E
List of women warriors in folklore
Susanoo, slayer of eight-headed serpent Yamata no Orochi
Nezha, opponent of Dragon Prince Ao Bing
Guanyin, Chen Jinggu is said to be the incarnation of Guanyin from Buddhism
Hua Mulan, another Chinese folk heroine
The Divine Damsel of Devastation, a story from Genshin Impact involving Yun Jin and Shenhe that is partly based on Chen Jinggu's story
Sitonai, similar Ainu legend
References
Chinese goddesses
Fujian folklore
Taiwan
Deities in Chinese folk religion
Women in Chinese mythology
Chinese folklore
Deities in Taoism | [
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Astalon: Tears of the Earth is a 2021 Japanese video game by LABS Works. The game's plot revolves around a fighter named Arias, an archer named Kyuli, and a wizard named Igus. The three are on a quest to save their home village from despair as most of the land has turned to desert from the atrocities of an ancient war..
Gameplay
Astalon: Tears of The Earth is an action-platformer game. The player can switch freely between three characters to use the uniqe abilities of a warrior, archer and wizard.
Development
Astalon: Tears of The Earth began development in 2016 but was a project that was re-started several times during production. The game was finished with the help of programmer Jon LePage. Game developer Matt Kap stated that the first prototype had room-by-room exploration with only one playable character. The second prototype introduced the 3 characters while the third prototype was closer to the completed game.
Reception
Astalon: Tears of the Earth was released on June 3, 2021 on Steam, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and Nintendo Switch.
References
2021 video games
Fantasy video games
Fictional knights in video games
Indie video games
Metroidvania games
Nintendo Switch games
PlayStation 4 games
Single-player video games
Video games developed in Japan
Windows games
Xbox Cloud Gaming games
Xbox One games | [
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Ophichthus vietnamensis is an eel in the family Ophichthidae (worm/snake eels).
It is found on the central Vietnamese coast. This species reaches a length of .
References
vietnamensis
Fish of Vietnam
Taxa named by Vn Quang Vo
Taxa named by Yosuke Hibino
Taxa named by Hans Hsuan-Ching Ho
Fish described in 2019 | [
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Brad Jones (born December 20, 1981) is an American film critic, actor, YouTuber and indie filmmaker.
He's better known as the Cinema Snob, a character inspired by the Nostalgia Critic, and in 2010, he would become a frequent collaborator and friend of the creator Doug Walker. At the beginning, Jones reviewed slasher, exploitation and pornographic films from the '60s to the '90s. He later started to focus on Christian movies and recent movies. He has been open to more genres and he reviewed some films considered the worst.
Jones is a part-time screenwriter, film director, and indie film actor. He participated in Ninja the Mission Force, a series by Dark Maze Studios which parodies the ninja films of Godfrey Ho and other '80s "ninjasploitation" films. He also appeared on Radiodrome, a pop culture opinion podcast hosted by Josh Hadley, until Brad left in 2013.
He is a featured contributor on Channel Awesome, and remains one of only two contributors to the site outside of Doug's crew after the mass exodus of contributors in early 2018.
Filmography
Film
Webseries
References
External links
The Cinema Snob
MUBI
1981 births
American film critics
American male comedians
Channel Awesome
Living people
YouTube critics and reviewers
Comedy YouTubers
American YouTubers | [
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Maya Buzinova (23 July 1929 – 30 January 2022) was a Russian animator.
She was born on 23 July 1929 in Orel, but soon the family moved to Mtsensk. Having lost her father at the very beginning of World War II (died under a locomotive), the family until August 1943 had to live in the territory occupied by the Germans. Maya went to school in the village of Pakhomovo, near Orel.
From 1947 to 1954, she studied in Moscow at the painting department of the M. I. Kalinin Art and Industrial School. At the end, she was engaged in the design of exhibitions, and then, on the advice of friends, she came to Soyuzmultfilm, where the artist Vladimir Pekar was gaining courses in phasers. As a result, since 1956, she worked at a film studio, first on cartoon ones, and a couple of years later, at the invitation of the director of the puppet association, Joseph Boyarsky, she switched to puppet animation - on Spasopeskovsky lane, 4a.
In 1977, striving for their own vision of a puppet film, together with their husband Joseph Douksha , they moved to the Multtelefilm studio in TO Ekran, where in 1978 they made their debut as directors of the cartoon Postman's Tale . Until 1992, they continued to work on puppet animation in co-authorship.
Buzinova died on 30 January 2022, at the age of 92.
References
External links
1929 births
2022 deaths
Soviet women
Soviet animators
Russian animators
Russian women animators
Soviet animation directors
People from Oryol | [
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Cladonia minisaxicola is a rare species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling) lichen in the family Cladoniaceae. Found in Bahia, Brazil, it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by lichenologists André Aptroot and Marcela Eugenia da Silva Cáceres. The type specimen was collected by the authors from the Serrano along Rio de Lençóis at an altitude between ; here the lichen was found growing on siliceous sandstone rock in a transitional forest. Cladonia minisaxicola is only known to occur at the type locality (part of the Chapada Diamantina mountains), and is only known from the type specimen. The lichen has a crustose thallus that consists of lobe-like nodes that collectively form an irregular crust measuring up to in diameter. Although it differs from all other species of Cladonia in the form of its non-squamulose primary thallus, its position in that genus has been confirmed with molecular phylogenetic analysis. The specific epithet minisaxicola acknowledges its small size and saxicolous growth.
See also
List of Cladonia species
References
minisaxicola
Lichens described in 2018
Lichens of Brazil
Taxa named by André Aptroot | [
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The 1986–87 Florida Gators men's basketball team represented the University of Florida as a member of the Southeastern Conference during the 1986–87 NCAA men's basketball season. Led by head coach Norm Sloan, the team played their home games at the O'Connell Center in Gainesville, Florida. After finishing second in the SEC regular season standings, Florida was bounced in the quarterfinal round of the SEC Tournament by LSU. The Gators received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament where they made a run to the Sweet Sixteen. In the opening round, Florida defeated NC State and followed that by knocking off No. 3 seed Purdue. The run ended in the East Regional Semifinal, where Florida was beaten by eventual National runner-up Syracuse, 87–81. The team finished with a record of 23–11 (12–6 SEC).
Roster
Schedule and results
|-
!colspan=9 style=| Regular season
|-
!colspan=9 style=| SEC Tournament
|-
!colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament
Rankings
References
Florida Gators men's basketball seasons
Florida
Florida
Florida Gators
Florida Gators | [
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The 1966 VMI Keydets football team was an American football team that represented the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1966 NCAA University Division football season. In their first year under head coach Vito Ragazzo, the team compiled an overall record of 2–8 with a mark of 1–3 in conference play, placing eighth in the SoCon.
Schedule
References
VMI
VMI Keydets football seasons
VMI Keydets football | [
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Armenia has been a member of the Council of Europe, an international organization that focuses on strengthening democracy, human rights, and the rule of law across Europe, since 2001.
Accession
Article 4 of the Council of Europe Statute specifies that membership in the Council of Europe is open to any European country, provided they meet specific democratic and human rights standards. Armenia became the 42nd member state of the Council of Europe on 25 January 2001. Armenia has been allotted 4 seats in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the parliamentary wing of the Council of Europe.
Armenia is also a member of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities, Group of States against Corruption, the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance, the European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice, the Committee for the Prevention of Torture, Eurimages, and the Venice Commission; an advisory body of the Council of Europe.
On 25 January 2021, Ara Ayvazyan, former Minister of Foreign Affairs stated, “By acceding to the Council of Europe, Armenia joined the family of European states, with whom it shares common history, values, and ideals, as well as a vision of a future Europe, where fundamental rights and freedoms are protected for all, without distinction or discrimination,” in a statement on the 20th anniversary of Armenia's membership to the Council of Europe.
Objectives of membership
Since 2005, Armenia has benefited from co-operation programs of the Council of Europe's Action Plans. Past and current programs, backed by the European Union, aim to enhance the independence and accountability of the justice system, ensure free and fair elections, protect minority rights and labour rights, promote gender equality and freedom of expression, strengthen child welfare, tackle domestic abuse, reform the penitentiary system, combat corruption, and contribute to the implementation of the goals set out in the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement, which was finalized in 2017.
As stated in the 2019-2022 Council of Europe Action Plan for Armenia, "the Council of Europe and Armenia will continue co-operation to improve existing legislative frameworks, to ensure their effective implementation and to enhance the capacities of national institutions in bringing the country’s legislation and practices closer to European standards in order to promote human rights, strengthen the rule of law and ensure democratic principles of governance." The 2019-2022 Action Plan budget was €18,9 million.
On 27 January 2022, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, adopted a resolution praising Armenia's commitment to democratic reform. The Assembly welcomed the marked improvements made in electoral, judicial, and legislative reforms achieved since the 2018 Armenian revolution.
Council of Europe treaties
As of January 2022, Armenia has signed 83 Council of Europe treaties, including:
Berne Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats
Convention for the Protection of the Architectural Heritage of Europe
European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
European Charter of Local Self-Government
European Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
European Convention on Extradition
European Convention on Human Rights
European Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters
European Cultural Convention
European Social Charter
Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities
Statute of the Council of Europe
European Court of Human Rights
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) enforces the European Convention on Human Rights. Armenia is a contracting party of the convention. The jurisdiction of the court has been recognized by all 47 members of the Council of Europe, including Armenia. An Armenian citizen, group of individuals, or the state itself, may lodge an application to the court. In 2015, Armen Harutyunyan was elected as a judge to serve in the ECHR.
Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe
The Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe is the Council of Europe's decision making body. Armenia held the chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers, for the first time, between May – November 2013. The main goals of the Armenian chairmanship were to combat racism and xenophobia in Europe, promote European values through intercultural dialogue, and foster democratic societies.
Financial contributions
The Council of Europe's budget, for 2022, is €477 million. The contribution of Armenia is €540,141.
Representation
The Council of Europe maintains a representative office in Yerevan. Armenia maintains a permanent mission in Strasbourg, France. On 2 December 2021, Arman Khachatryan was appointed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan as Armenia's permanent representative to the Council of Europe. Following his inauguration, Khachatryan stated that, "The Armenian government highly appreciates the support provided by the Council of Europe in the field of democratic reforms, ensuring the rule of law and protection of human rights". Khachatryan reaffirmed the commitment of the Government of Armenia to deepen the agenda of cooperation with the Council of Europe.
Recent developments
Following the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, the Council of Europe called on Armenia and Azerbaijan to immediately stop the renewed escalation of hostilities. The Council of Europe released a statement supporting both sides to seek a peaceful resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict through mediation by the OSCE Minsk Group.
See also
Armenia and the United Nations
Armenia–European Union relations
European integration
Foreign relations of Armenia
Member states of the Council of Europe
Member states of the Venice Commission
Politics of Armenia
Politics of Europe
References
External links
Official website
Council of Europe Office in Yerevan
Armenia in the Council of Europe on Twitter
Council of Europe
European integration
Foreign relations of Armenia
Human rights in Armenia
Armenia
2001 in Armenia | [
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Molly Morse is an American civil engineer who is the CEO of Mango Materials, a start-up based in San Francisco Bay Area. Mango Materials uses methane gas to feed bacteria which manufacture a biopolymer.
Early life and education
Morse completed her undergraduate studies in civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University. She moved to Stanford University for her doctoral research, where she studied anaerobic biodegradation of biocomposites for the building industry.
Scientific career
Morse joined Bryant & Bryant, LLC, where she researched alternative building materials.
Morse became concerned about the build up of non-biodegradable plastic in the environment. These plastics can pollute natural resources and damage ecosystems. She recognized that waste methane could be converted into biodegradable plastics that achieve similar functionalities to paraffin-based plastics. In microbial rich environments, these biodegradable plastics break down, producing methane which can once again be converted into a biodegradable plastic (Polyhydroxyalkanoates). She launched the company Mango Materials in 2010, which was named as one of the Next 50 Companies to Disrupt the World by Biofuels Digest in 2022.
Morse was awarded the 2018 US Clean Energy Education and Empowerment (C3E) Initiative Entrepreneurship Award.
References
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Cornell University alumni
Stanford University alumni | [
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was a Japanese samurai, calligrapher, and author. His imina was , and he is also known to have used the pseudonyms and .
Biography
Born in Edo, Japan, as the second son of the hatamoto . He succeeded to his mother's side and was adopted by .
The Yamaoka family, into which he was born, was well known for the of spearmanship, and he trained under his elder brother , who was regarded as a great master in the use of the spear. In 1855, Seizan died of illness at the age of 26, and Ono Tetsutarō, a student of his, married into the Yamaoka family. Taking the family name, Ono became Yamaoka Tesshū.
In 1856, Deishū became an instructor of spearmanship at the Kōbusho. Later, in 1862, he accompanied Hitotsubashi Yoshinobu to Edo.
In 1866, he was assigned to head the newly established commando unit. At the outbreak of the Boshin War in 1868, Deishū fought in the Battle of Toba–Fushimi. After the defeat of the Shogunal forces there, he returned to Edo where he attempted to rally for loyalty to Yoshinobu. On March 5 of that year, Deishū was part of the guard regiment that accompanied Yoshinobu's retreat from Edo Castle to the Kan'ei-ji in Ueno. On May 3, in the aftermath of the Fall of Edo, he remained alongside Yoshinobu during the latter's move to the Mito Domain.
After the conclusion of the war, Yoshinobu chose Deishū as his emissary to Saigō Takamori for the negotiation of the disposal of the Tokugawa family due to his resolute character. However, Deishū recommended that his brother-in-law, Yamaoka Tesshū, conduct the negotiations instead.
Later, when the Tokugawa family moved from Edo to Shizuoka, he moved with them and temporarily took stewardship of Tanaka Castle, a Tokugawa property. After the abolition of the han system, he resigned his post and settled into a secluded retirement in Tokyo. He spent the remainder of his life appraising calligraphy, paintings, and antiques.
He died at his home in 1903.
Bibliography
References
1835 births
1903 deaths
Samurai
Hatamoto
People of the Boshin War
Meiji Restoration
19th-century Japanese calligraphers
Japanese Buddhists | [
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Miroslav Marček (born around 1982) is a former Slovak soldier. He confessed in 2020 to having shot journalists Ján Kuciak and Martina Kušnírová in 2018. The commissioned double murder was the trigger for the political and social crisis in Slovakia up from 2018.
Investigations
Ján Kuciak and Martina Kušnírová were shot dead in their home in the western Slovak village of Veľká Mača on February 21, 2018. Kuciak had researched the entanglement of politics and criminal businessmen.
Marcek is said to have worked as a chauffeur for Marián Kočner and other alleged participants. In court, Marcek confessed that there was first a plan to kidnap Kuciak and then murder him. However, this was discarded because it was too complicated for the participants. He described in his confession that he hid in front of Kuciak's house and waited for the victims to come home. Then he knocked on the door of Kuciak's house and when he opened, shot him in the chest. Then he saw that there was another person in the house. Kušnírová ran into the kitchen and he shot her there.
After extensive investigations, four suspects were arrested by the Slovak police in April 2018. Among them was Marcek, who admitted the murder. Police divers searched for the murder weapon and other pieces of evidence in a river in April 2019, according to media reports.
Trial
In 2019, the trial began against the alleged client of the murders, the criminal oligarch Marián Kočner and the alleged accomplice Alena Zsuzsová. According to investigators, Zsuzsová is said to have organized contact with Miroslav Marček. Suspect Zoltán Andruskó is said to have helped Marcek with the murders. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison in December 2019.
Kočner was the main defendant in the trial. He denied having ordered the murder. However, prosecutors accused him of ordering the murder after an extortion attempt against Kuciak failed.
In 2019, the trial against Marček began in the court in Pezinok. After reading the indictment in January 2020, Marček made a confession. Miroslav Marček apologized to the relatives of his two victims. On 6 April 2020, Marček was sentenced to 23 years in prison.
References
1982 births
Living people
Slovak criminals | [
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The Church and Convent of los Dominicos of the Colonial City of Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic, is the oldest Catholic building in continuous use in the Americas, and also, according to the UNESCO, it was the headquarters of the first university in the Americas, which was called the Universidad Santo Tomás de Aquino. Today it is part of the Colonial City complex, as a World Heritage Site.
History
The Church and Convent of los Dominicos is one of the oldest European buildings in the American continent. Its construction begins with the arrival of the Dominican Order in Santo Domingo, around 1510.
By 1517, the convent was inhabited by the friars, although it was not yet finished. In 1530 the church was in the completion stage, between the years 1531–1532, by Carmonese architects Antón and Alonso Gutiérrez; its official inauguration took place, with the presence of the friars Pedro de Córdoba, Reginaldo de Montesino, Bartolomé de las Casas and Antonio de Montesinos, the latter, he was the one who said the famous Sermón de Adviento in 1511, and who reprimanded the court of Diego Columbus for the mistreatment of the Natives, thus beginning the so-called Derecho de Gentes, which became one of the main controversies of the 16th century. thus generating the first controversy of the New World.
In 1534 the convent began its classes, and in 1538 it became the first university in the Americas, which was called the Universidad Santo Tomás de Aquino and later the Primate University of America, which today we know as the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo. (UASD). This began under the mandate of the Bula In Apostolatus Culmine, which was blessed by Pope Paul III, this university also had the characteristic of the University of Salamanca.
One of the main specialties of this university was Theology, from which great important figures of the colonial life of the time emerged. Great personalities from the Antilles and Mainland were trained at this university. During the 1540s, the church reached one of its greatest peaks, in this area of study and university education and training.
The church and convent have a beautiful façade, with great splendor, since the Gothic, Isabelline Gothic and Baroque architecture stands out, which greatly predominated in the constructions of the time, not only in the country but also throughout Americas. In the building there are valuable images and statues, which were the work of the Sevillian brothers Jorge and Ajejo Fernández, and at the beginning of the 16th century, it had five altarpieces by one of the most famous Spanish painters of the colonial era, Juan Martínez Montañés.
Over the years, to this day, the church has undergone major changes and severe damage to its architecture, one of which was in 1545 with the passage of a hurricane, and during the passage of the pirate Francis Drake, it was the only building that did not suffer any damage, since the famous pirate of the time respected the sanctuaries. During the years 1684 and 1673, two earthquakes occurred on the island, respectively, which hit the island hard, destroying its roof and some rooms. In 1746 the building was restored again, with a different structure on each of its facades, thus imposing the Baroque style. In 1825, the church was closed by the Haitian government, although some time later it was a shelter for several religious orders and in 1954 the Dominicans returned to the country and recovered their old home.
Inside the Church is the Chapel of Our Lady of the Rosary, which was built in 1649. In this chapel, the Virgin of the Rosary, who is the patron saint of the Dominicans, was venerated.
High on the wall of the eastern length, a grave (the only one on the island) is a further echo of Isabeline Gothic.
In the modifications of 1746, the chapel was rebuilt by the new owners of the chapel, the Campuzano Polanco family, who replaced the wooden frame of the nave with the current barrel vault. This vault of the chapel was decorated with the twelve signs of the zodiac around the sun, and for this reason it is also called the "Chapel of the Zodiac". Also in the vault there are other characters such as the Twelve Olympians who represent the four seasons. This chapel is unique in the Americas of its kind and one of the three vaults with astrological representations that currently exist in the world, together with the Chapel of Salamanca and Río Seco.
Location
The Church and Convent of los Dominicos is located on Calle Padre Billini, in the Colonial area, in the city of Santo Domingo de Guzmán, Dominican Republic.
Gallery
See also
Universidad Santo Tomás de Aquino
List of oldest buildings in the Americas
References
External links
Church and Convent of los Dominicos' Official website
Roman Catholic churches in Santo Domingo
Ciudad Colonial (Santo Domingo)
1532 establishments in the Spanish Empire
Roman Catholic churches completed in 1532
1532 establishments in North America
Educational institutions established in the 1530s
Gothic architecture in the Dominican Republic
Isabelline architecture in the Dominican Republic
Baroque architecture in the Dominican Republic
Dominican convents | [
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Andrey Kislenko () is a retired Ukrainian professional footballer who played as a defender.
Career
Andrey Kislenko started his career in 1999 with Yunist Chernihiv a club in the city of Chernihiv. In the same year he moved to Desna Chernihiv, the main club of the city, where he played 2 matches in Ukrainian Second League in the season 1999–2000 and get 9 place in the league. In 2001 he played 1 match with FC Ros Bila Tserkva 2 and 13 matches for Ros Bila Tserkva scoring 2 goals. In 2001 he moved to CSKA Kyiv where he stayed until 2003, where he played 25 matches. In 2002 he moved to Dnipro Cherkasy where he played 22 matches and scored 1 goal. In summer 2004 he moved to Stal Kamianske for two season where he played 32 matches and scored 1 goal. In 2006 he moved to Knyazha Shchaslyve where he played 16 matches and in 2007 he played 7 matches with Feniks-Illichovets Kalinine. In 2009 he moved back to CSKA Kyiv where he played 6 matches.
References
External links
Andrey Kislenko at footballfacts.ru
1982 births
Living people
Footballers from Chernihiv
FC Desna Chernihiv players
FC Yunist Chernihiv players
FC Ros Bila Tserkva players
FC Dnipro Cherkasy players
FC Stal Kamianske players
FC Knyazha Shchaslyve players
FC Feniks-Illichovets Kalinine players
Ukrainian footballers
Ukrainian Premier League players
Ukrainian First League players
Ukrainian Second League players
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The E.J. Bullock Block is a historic commercial building at 7012 Main Street in Readsboro, Vermont. Built in 1891, it is a prominent local example of Second Empire architecture, with a long history of commercial, social, and civic uses. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2021.
Description and history
The E.J. Bullock Block is a three-story wood-frame building, located on the south side of Main Street (Vermont Route 100), on the western side of the village of Readsboro. Its distinctive Second Empire features include a pyramidal tower extending above the front central bay, and a dormered mansard roof. The main floor of the front facade has storefronts on either side of a recessed center entrance, all framed by paneled woodwork which is also probably original. The storefronts each have a recessed entry flanked by large four-pane fixed windows. The ground floor houses spaces originally used for retail commercial purposes, the second floor housed offices, and the third floor had an open plan used for social gatherings.
The block was built in 1891 by Elmer J. Bullock, operator of a local general store, during a period of economic growth in the small community which was spurred by the opening of a paper mill and the subsequent arrival of a railroad line. It was built after an arsonist destroyed his existing shop along with several adjacent buildings. At first known locally as the Music Hall, Bullock promoted use of the third floor as a performance space, drawing regional and national artists to the venue. The block continued to play an important role in the community after Bullock was bankrupted in the early 20th century, hosting all manner of community gatherings. In 1908 the hall was leased by the local Masonic chapter, a role it served until about 1968.
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Bennington County, Vermont
References
Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Vermont
Buildings and structures completed in 1895
Readsboro, Vermont
National Register of Historic Places in Bennington County, Vermont | [
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KAI RQ-101 Night Intruder is a military UAV of the South-Korean armed forces. It is the first Korean in-house development in the field of unmanned aerial technology. The manufacturer is Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI).
As early as the 1990s, the South Korean armed forces used the first drones from Israel. Among other things, the Searcher II was used, which is said to have represented the basis for the Korean in-house development. Officially, it is not known how many RQ-101s are in service with the South Korean Army. According to public sources, there were several dozen in 2017.
The RQ-101 has a wingspan of 6.4 meters and a total length of 4.6 meters. The engine of unknown brand accelerates the propeller-driven device to 185 km/h and a cruising speed of 150 km/h. The maximum altitude is about 4000 m. The drone can stay in the air for about six hours and cover a radius of 80 kilometers. Unloaded, the drone weighs 215 kg, according to the manufacturer.
The drone can be equipped with various sensors. By default, the aircraft has an HD video camera that can send live images.
References
Twin-boom aircraft
KAI aircraft
Medium-altitude long-endurance unmanned aerial vehicles
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Galovac is a village in the municipality of Maglaj, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Demographics
According to the 2013 census, its population was 147.
References
Populated places in Maglaj | [
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Three Black men were Lynched in Kirven, Texas for allegedly murdering a young girl. According to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary it was the 19th of 61 lynchings during 1922 in the United States.
Background
On May 4th, 1922, on the last day of school in Kirven, Texas, 17-year-old Eula Ausley was forced from her house, sexually assaulted and then horribly mutilated. Her absence was missed and a search party was sent out. They came across the body and the search party turned into a posse of 1,000 men armed with whatever weapon they had. Eula Ausley's family was in a feud with another family and the local Sheriff Horace Mayo already had two white suspects of that family in custody when the wife of McKinley "Snap" Curry told the Sheriff that he had suspiciously come home with blood on his clothes. The Sheriff changed the course of the investigation and arrested Curry. Under interrogation, he implicated two other men, Johnny Cornish (19) and Mose Jones (46). The three were arrested and held in jail.
Lynching
At midnight of May 6th, the mob forced its way into the prison and dragged the three men out of the jail. The men were tortured on a lot between the old Baptist Church and the Methodist Church in Kirven. Some reports state that they were castrated but at least two were burned alive. The victims were forced to watch as the others were tied to a plow had wood stacked around them, doused on gasoline and then lit on fire.
One paper reported that Tom Cornish was hanged from a tree.
Aftermath
The two white men, Claude and Audey Prowell, who were initially arrested, were released and the sheriff released a statement that they were not involved in the murder of Eula Ausley. Author Monte Akers in his book Flames After Midnight: Murder, Vengeance and the Desolation of a Texas Community, concluded that McKinley "Snap" Curry conspired with Claude and Audey Prowell to kill and murder Eula Ausley and that Mose Jones and Johnny Cornish were innocent.
National memorial
The National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018, in a setting of . Featured among other things, is a sculpture by Kwame Akoto-Bamfo of a mother with a chain around her neck and an infant in her arms. On a hill overlooking the sculpture is the Memorial Corridor which displays 805 hanging steel rectangles, each representing the counties in the United States where a documented lynching took place and, for each county, the names of those lynched.
Bibliography
Notes
References
- Total pages: 274
1922 riots
1922 in Texas
African-American history of Texas
Lynching deaths in Texas
February 1922 events
Protest-related deaths
Racially motivated violence against African Americans
Riots and civil disorder in Texas
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Ophichthus retrodorsalis is an eel in the family Ophichthidae (worm/snake eels).
It is found along the Pacific coast of China.
References
Ophichthus
Fish of China
Fish described in 2010 | [
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John Hilton Knowles (May 23, 1926March 6, 1979) was an American cardiopulmonary physiologist and physician who was most notable for being the 9th President of the Rockefeller Foundation from 1972 until his death from pancreatic cancer in 1979, and general director of the Massachusetts General Hospital from 1962 until 1972.
Biography
Early life and education
Knowles was born on May 23, 1926, in Chicago to James Knowles (1896–1971), who was a flying ace in World War I and served as vice president of the Rexall Drug Company, and Jean Laurence Turnbull (1894–1982), an artist. Knowles grew up in Normandy, but when he was twelve he and his family moved to Belmont where he would attend Belmont High School. After graduating from high school, Knowles would enroll at Harvard College where he majored in biochemistry. Along with his classmate Jack Lemmon, he would play piano on the Harvard radio station. He graduated in 1947 completing his Bachelor of Arts. After being rejected by eleven medical schools, including the Harvard Medical School, he would enroll at the Washington University School of Medicine where he would be elected into the honor society Alpha Omega Alpha and graduated cum laude as Doctor of Medicine.
Knowles would start his medical internship at the Massachusetts General Hospital where he would meet Edith Morris LaCroix, a cytotechnologist, whom he would marry in 1953 and have six children with. From 1953 to 1955, Knowles would serve as lieutenant at the Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, where he would be in charge of the cardiopulmonary laboratory. From 1956 to 1957, he studied physiology at the University of Rochester Medical Center and University at Buffalo. He would also become a part of the faculty at the Harvard Medical School where he would later in 1969 become a professor of medicine.
Massachusetts General Hospital
In 1962 he became the general director of the Massachusetts General Hospital. One of the first things he did as general director was replacing wooden benches with comfortable chairs and also introduced nine coronary care units. He would also assign psychiatrists at schools, courts and social agencies including opening a medical station at the Logan International Airport for airport employees and passengers.
For five months in 1969 the Nixon administration unsuccessfully tried to elect Knowles into the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and aroused opposition from the American Medical Association and from Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen, it was known as "the Knowles affair" by the media.
Rockefeller Foundation
In 1972, Knowles became the 9th president of the Rockefeller Foundation and in this position he established the International Agricultural Development Service. While president, he became a professor of medicine at the New York University Medical Center.
Later life and death
In December 1978, it was revealed that Knowles had developed a tumor in his pancreas. Knowles remained president and professor until his death on March 6, 1979, due to pancreatic cancer. He was honored at the Memorial Church of Harvard University by friends and family, including Jack Lemmon, and was eulogized by Theodore Hesburgh, Mary MacDonald, Richard Sears Humphrey and his eldest son John Hilton Jr., he was later buried at the Forest Hills Cemetery.
References
1926 births
1979 deaths
American physicians
Deaths from pancreatic cancer
Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Washington University School of Medicine alumni
Harvard College alumni | [
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Dhaman Persaud Kissoon (born 30 September 1956) is a Guyanese-born Canadian barrister and former cricketer.
Kissoon was born at British Guiana in September 1956, from where he migrated to Canada in 1976. He studied economics at York University, before studying for his Bachelor of Laws in England at the University of Kent. From there he returned to Canada, where he completed his law studies at Queen's University Faculty of Law. Following the completition of his studies, Kissoon was asked to remain at Queen's as an adjunct professor. He was called to the bar in Ontario in 1991. A keen cricketer, he was a part of the Canadian squad for the 1996–97 Shell/Sandals Trophy, in which he played five List A one-day matches; he played two matches apiece against Jamaica and the Leeward Islands, and one against Trinidad and Tobago. Playing as a bowler in the Canadian side, he took just a single wicket across his five matches. These List A matches for Canada marked his only appearances for the team. In 2000, he established his own legal firm, Kissoon & Associates. In April 2021, he celebrated 30 years since being called to the Ontario Bar.
References
External links
1956 births
Living people
People from Demerara-Mahaica
Guyanese emigrants to Canada
York University alumni
Alumni of the University of Kent
Queen's University Faculty of Law alumni
Queen's University at Kingston faculty
Canadian lawyers
Canadian cricketers | [
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David Serrano de la Peña (born 1975) is a Spanish filmmaker as well as writer and adapter of musical stage plays.
Biography
David Serrano de la Peña was born in Madrid in 1975. He penned the screenplay of the box-office hit The Other Side of the Bed, a 2002 musical comedy film directed by Emilio Martínez Lázaro, also taking over writing duties of its 2005 sequel, . His feature film directorial debut was the 2003 comedy Football Days, earning a nomination to the Goya Award for Best New Director. He has since directed (2007), (2010), (2016), and Voy a pasármelo bien, slated for a 2022 release.
In addition to his work in the film industry, Serrano has also written and adapted musical plays such as Hoy no me puedo levantar (writer), Billy Elliot (adapter) and (writer), as well as directed episodes of the 2019 comedy television series Vota Juan.
References
1975 births
Spanish film directors
Spanish television directors
Spanish screenwriters
Musical theatre librettists
21st-century Spanish dramatists and playwrights
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John Reading Briggs, Jr., (c.1822December 3, 1872) was an American newspaper publisher, politician, and pioneer of Wisconsin and Iowa. He served in the Wisconsin State Senate and Assembly, representing Rock County. He was described as a personal friend of Abraham Lincoln, and was employed as stationary clerk for the United States House of Representatives for the last decade of his life. His wife was Emily Briggs, a pioneering female journalist in Washington, D.C.
Biography
John R. Briggs, Jr., was born in Montague, Massachusetts, about 1822. At age 14, he apprenticed in the printing trade. After five years of apprenticeship, he was employed by Henry L. Dawes as editor of the North Adams, Massachusetts, Transcript newspaper. He then went to work editing and publishing the Whig in Troy, New York.
From Troy, he moved to the new state of Wisconsin in 1848 and settled at Beloit, Wisconsin, in Rock County. There he founded the Beloit Journal of Politics, Literature, and General Intelligence, a weekly newspaper.
In November 1849, he was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly, representing southern Rock County. In 1852, following the redistricting act which added six new seats to the Wisconsin State Senate, Briggs won a special election to represent the 18th Senate district.
In 1854, due to a conflict in the language of the redistricting law versus the language of the Wisconsin Constitution—which specified Senate terms as two years—he claimed he was entitled by his 1852 election to another year as state senator. The issue was debated in the Senate, but they ultimately ruled against his petition.
Later that year, Briggs moved to Keokuk, Iowa, where he became part owner of the Daily Whig newspaper. Briggs was a staunch anti-slavery Whig, and joined the new Republican Party which was then being created. He renamed his paper the Daily Gate City.
While working on the paper, Briggs became friendly with Abraham Lincoln, who was then becoming a leading voice in the new Republican Party. Briggs did extensive work reporting the Lincoln–Douglas debates in the 1858 United States Senate election in Illinois. Through his political connections with Lincoln, he was appointed assistant clerk of the United States House of Representatives after Lincoln became president in 1861. He worked for the Office of the Clerk of the United States House of Representatives for the rest of his life.
John Briggs suffered from tuberculosis for fifteen years before finally succumbing to the disease. He died at his home in Washington, D.C., on December 3, 1872.
Personal life and family
John R. Briggs, Jr., was a nephew of Massachusetts Governor George N. Briggs and a cousin of Union Army general Henry Shaw Briggs.
He married Emily Pomona Edson in 1854. Emily Edson was a daughter of wealthy blacksmith Robert Edson, who had moved to Chicago from New York. Her father had selected a wealthy man for her husband, but she defied him and married Briggs instead. Emily Briggs assisted her husband with his newspaper, and then became famous as a correspondent for The Philadelphia Press, using the pen-name "Olivia". John and Emily Briggs had two sons, though one died in infancy.
Just a year before his death, they purchased the "Maples" mansion at 619 D Street, S.E. The home later came to be known as Friendship House after being purchased by the Friendship House Association in 1936. It is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
References
People from Montague, Massachusetts
Politicians from Beloit, Wisconsin
Members of the Wisconsin State Assembly
Wisconsin state senators
Wisconsin Whigs
People from Keokuk, Iowa
Iowa Republicans
Year of birth uncertain
Date of birth uncertain
1872 deaths
19th-century American politicians | [
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Yonas Solomon (born 21 June 1994) is an Eritrean footballer who plays for Al Khartoum SC of the Sudan Premier League, and the Eritrea national team.
Club career
Solomon started his professional career with Adulis Club of the Eritrean Premier League from 2013 to 2016. He then transferred to Al-Ahli Club of the Sudan Premier League until 2017. He then joined fellow-Sudanese side Al Khartoum SC. As of 2015 he was one of only two Eritreans playing in Sudan, along with Samyoma Alexander.
International career
Yonas made his senior international debut on 29 November 2013 in a 2013 CECAFA Cup match against Sudan. He went on to represent the nation in its 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification series against Botswana.
International career statistics
References
External links
Global Sports Archive profile
Living people
1994 births
Eritrean footballers
Eritrean expatriate footballers
Expatriate footballers in Sudan
Eritrea international footballers
Association football defenders
Eritrean Premier League players
Adulis Club players
Sudan Premier League players | [
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The Ospedale Bonifacio was, until 1924, the insane asylum of Florence, Italy. The main facade is located on #81-83 via San Gallo, between via Duca d'Aosta and via Bonifazio Lupi; the hospital complex spanned an entire city block. In 1930, the building was restructured and now mainly serves as the police station or Palazzo della Questura.
The hospital was founded at this site in 1377 by the family of Bonifazio (Bonifacio) Lupi. It was initially dedicated St John the Baptist. By 1782, the institute was staffed by a female oblate order. In 1787, Peter Leopold consolidated various facilities housing the incurable invalids and demented and housed them at this site. In 1924, many were moved to the Ospedale di Careggi.
Note
Palaces in Florence
Defunct hospitals in Italy
Former psychiatric hospitals | [
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Warren Jacques (born 10 March 1938) is an Australian tennis coach and former player.
Jacques, a native of Sydney, was active on the international tour in the 1960s. He reached the fourth round of the 1961 Wimbledon Championships, beating Jørgen Ulrich, Ingo Buding and Donald Dell en route. His title wins included the Welsh Championships in 1963.
During the 1980s, while working in Dallas, Jacques was the tour coach of Texas-based players Kevin Curren, Steve Denton and Bill Scanlon. He guided both Curren and Scanlon to the world's top 10, while Denton made it as high as 12 under Jacques. In 1987 he was appointed captain of the Great Britain Davis Cup team and stayed in the position for three Davis Cup campaigns.
References
External links
1938 births
Living people
Australian male tennis players
Australian tennis coaches
Tennis players from Sydney
Australian expatriates in the United States | [
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The New York Latin American Art Triennial (formerly Bronx Latin American Art Biennial) is an event that takes place every three years. It is dedicated to presenting contemporary Latin American art in New York City.
History
The New York Latin American Art Triennial (NYLAAT) was stablished by the Bronx Hispanic Festival (BHF) in 2008, under the name Bronx Latin American Art Biennial. It was co-founded by artists/curators Luis Stephenberg and Alexis Mendoza. In 2019, the event moved to a triennial format and took its current name, New York Latin American Art Triennial.
The broad range of Triennial artists have included representation from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Spain, Uruguay and Venezuela.
The New York Latin American Art Triennial is based in New York City, and it frequently partnered with galleries, museums and local arts and educational organizations to present contemporary art within the city's cultural context, featuring works that range from photography to art installations, from performance art to sculpture
Partner institutions have included: the Bronx Museum of the Arts, the Bronx Music Heritage Center, Hebrew Home Riverdale, Taller Boricua, Lehman College, Boricua College Art Gallery, BronxArtSpace, Longwood Art Gallery at Hostos Community College, Andrew Freedman Home, Poe Park Visitors Center Gallery, Clemente Soto Velez Cultural Center, Loisaida Center and Rio Gallery.
NYLAAT has showcased the work of hundreds of artists whose works have touch on themes important to the community such as migration, women's rights and other issues of social justice.
For the 2016 edition Chief Curator Alexis Mendoza and Triennial Director Luis Stephenberg invited Associate Curators Ismael Checo, Miguel Lescano, Yarisa Colón and Josue Guarionex Colón to be part of the curatorial committee.
Recent developments
In 2021 associate curators/artists Alex Fdez Fernandez, Ezequiel Taveras, Franck de las Mercedes, Julia Justo, Lidia Hernandez and Naivy Perez joined the curatorial committee to support the work of Alexis Mendoza and Luis Stephenberg for the NYLAAT 2022 edition.
The 2022 triennial is titled "Abya Yala: Structural Origins”: Pre-Columbian, African, European influence and the compulsive change of the contemporary era.
References
External links
Recurring events established in 2008
2008 establishments in New York (state)
Art festivals in the United States | [
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The 2022 iHeartRadio Music Awards will be held at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on March 22, 2022, and will be broadcast live on Fox from 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EDT. The ceremony will be hosted by American rapper and actor LL Cool J.
Winners and nominees
iHeartRadio announced the nominees on January 27, 2022.
References
2022
2022 music awards
2022 in Los Angeles
2022 awards in the United States | [
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Morton Witkin (April 25, 1895 – April 20, 1973) was a Jewish-American lawyer and politician from Pennsylvania.
Life
Witkin was born on April 25, 1895, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Myer Witkin and Ray Schmerling.
Witkin attended public schools and graduated from the Central High School in 1913. He entered the University of Pennsylvania later that year, spent a year in the Wharton School, and graduated from the Law School in 1917. Later that year, during World War I, he enlisted in the United States Army as a private in the Quartermaster Corps at Fort Monroe, Virginia. After his military service he worked as a lawyer in Philadelphia. In 1924, he was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives as a Republican. He served in the House for five consecutive terms, from 1925 to 1936. From 1935 to 1936, he was Minority Floor Leader of the House. He didn't run for re-election in 1936. While in the House, he sponsored the Witkin Fire Arms Act, which passed the House in 1931.
Witkin was a delegate to the 1932, 1940, 1964, and 1972 Republican National Conventions. He was elected a Philadelphia County Commissioner in 1935, and was re-elected to the office in 1939, 1943, and 1947. He served as chairman of the three-person board from 1935 to 1951. He was a member of the Republican City Committee from the 13th Ward from 1931 to 1957. He practiced law with City Council member L. Wallace Egan under the firm name Witkin and Egan. The firm kept the name even after Egan's death in 1948. Witkin had an extensive practice on domestic relations and divorce matters, especially for the last fifteen years of his life, and practiced widely in the criminal courts. In the 1952 United States House of Representatives election, he was the Republican candidate in Pennsylvania's 3rd congressional district. He lost the election to Democratic candidate James A. Byrne.
Witkin was a member of the Philadelphia Bar Association, the Pennsylvania Bar Association, the American Bar Association, B'nai B'rith, and B'rith Sholom. He was president of the Northern Liberties Hospital in 1935 and the Golden Slipper Square Club in 1936. He was also a member of the Freemasons. He attended Congregation Rodeph Shalom. In 1919, he married Beatrice Ehrlich. They had a daughter, Majorie E. By the time Witkin died, he was married to Gale Brodnick.
Witkin died of heart failure at the Thomas Jefferson University Hospital on April 20, 1973.
References
External links
The Political Graveyard
1895 births
1973 deaths
Lawyers from Philadelphia
Politicians from Philadelphia
Central High School (Philadelphia) alumni
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania alumni
University of Pennsylvania Law School alumni
20th-century American lawyers
19th-century American Jews
20th-century American Jews
Jewish American attorneys
Jewish American state legislators in Pennsylvania
20th-century American politicians
Pennsylvania Republicans
Members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
American Freemasons | [
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Ruslan Viktorovych Popov (; born 9 August 1977) is a retired Ukrainian professional footballer who played as a defender.
Career
Ruslan Popov started his career in 1999 with Desna Chernihiv in Ukrainian Second League where he managed to play 11 matches and with the club he got 9 place in the league and he played 18 games and scored 1 goal in the season 1999–2000 In the season 2000–01 he played 9 matches and he got second place in the league. In the summer of 2001 he moved back to Spartak Sumy in Ukrainian Second League where he played 5 matches and he managed to win the Ukrainian Second League in 2001–02. In the summer of 2001 he moved to Nizhyn, where he won the Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup in 2002. In 2006 he moved to Avanhard Koryukivka.
Honours
Nizhyn
Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup: 2002
Spartak Sumy
Ukrainian Second League: 2001–02
References
External links
Ruslan Popov at footballfacts.ru
1977 births
Living people
Footballers from Chernihiv
FC Desna Chernihiv players
FC Spartak Sumy players
FC Avanhard Koriukivka players
Ukrainian footballers
Ukrainian Premier League players
Ukrainian First League players
Ukrainian Second League players
Association football defenders | [
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John Philip Sousa was an American composer and conductor of the Romantic era in the late 19th century. Primarily known for American military marches, he also wrote operettas, which are relatively lesser-known and less performed. They show influences from Gilbert and Sullivan, including short recitatives and chorus finales. According to author Paul E. Bierley, Sousa's operettas displayed a "high standard of morality". Libretti for most of the operettas were written by various prominent as well as less experienced librettists, except for The Wolf and The Bride Elect, which were written by Sousa himself. Several famous stage personalities, including DeWolf Hopper, starred in the operettas.
Sousa composed Katherine, his first operetta, in 1879, and copyrighted but never published it. His next operetta, produced after becoming the leader of the United States Marine Band, was The Smugglers, which premiered in 1882. After some financial setbacks, in the mid-1890s, he reached the epitome of his career. His operetta El Capitan was later described by author Gerald Bordman as "boding well to be the most enduring American comic opera of the nineteenth century". El Capitan portrayed the Spanish administration in Peru and became hugely popular during the Spanish–American War. His other major operettas included The Charlatan, Chris and the Wonderful Lamp, The Free Lance, and The American Maid. Bierley later wrote that, had Sousa not been the leader of the United States Marine Band, he would have likely chosen a career in theater music.
List of operettas
See also
List of marches by John Philip Sousa
References
Works cited
John Philip Sousa
Compositions by John Philip Sousa
Lists of operas by composer | [
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First Nations or first peoples may refer to:
Indigenous peoples, for ethnic groups who are the earliest known inhabitants of an area.
Indigenous groups
First Nations is commonly used to describe some Indigenous groups including:
First Nations in Canada a term used to identify Indigenous peoples of Canada who are neither Inuit or Métis
Indigenous Australians, or "Australian First Nations" are people with familial heritage from, and membership in, the ethnic groups that lived in Australia before British colonisation
Lists
List of Indigenous peoples
Lists of First Nations (Canada)
List of First Nations band governments (Canada)
List of First Nations peoples (Canada)
List of First Nations peoples (Australia)
List of federally recognized tribes in the United States
See also
Aborigine (disambiguation)
American Indians (disambiguation)
Indian (disambiguation)
Native Americans (disambiguation) | [
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The 2022 season is the 20th season of competitive kickboxing in Romania.
List of events
Prometheus 2
Prometheus 2: Voicu vs. Levițchi is an upcoming kickboxing event produced by the Prometheus Fighting Promotion that will take place on March 25, 2022, at the Olimpia Arena in Ploiești, Romania.
Results
UFT 9
UFT 9 is an upcoming kickboxing and mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Tournament that will take place on March 25, 2022, at the Horia Demian Arena in Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
Results
Colosseum Tournament 30
Colosseum Tournament 30: Căliniuc vs. Zuev is an upcoming kickboxing event produced by the Colosseum Tournament that will take place on April 8, 2022, at the Baltiska Hall in Malmö, Sweden.
Results
Urban Legend 12
Urban Legend 12 is an upcoming kickboxing, mixed martial arts and boxing event produced by the Urban Legend that will take place on April 29, 2022, at the EGO Ballroom in Mamaia, Constanța, Romania.
Results
Fight Zone 8
Fight Zone 8 (also known as Gladiator Night) is an upcoming kickboxing and boxing event produced by the Fight Zone that will take place on May 6, 2022, at the Deva Arena in Deva, Romania.
Results
Road to Colosseum 2
Road to Colosseum 2 (also known as Vikings vs. Gladiators) is an upcoming kickboxing event produced by the Colosseum Tournament that will take place on May 21, 2022, in Aarhus, Denmark.
Results
Dynamite Fighting Show 14
Dynamite Fighting Show 14 is an upcoming kickboxing event produced by the Dynamite Fighting Show.
Results
GFC 8
GFC 8 is an upcoming kickboxing event produced by the Golden Fighter Championship.
Results
See also
2022 in Glory
2022 in ONE Championship
2022 in K-1
2022 in Wu Lin Feng
Notes
References
External links
Colosseumkickboxing.com
Dynamitefighting.com
Colosseum Tournament on Facebook
Dynamite Fighting Show on Facebook
Golden Fighter Championship on Facebook
KO Masters on Facebook
OSS Fighters on Facebook
Prometheus Fighting Promotion on Facebook
Kickboxing
2022 in kickboxing
Kickboxing in Romania | [
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10600,
1016,
20877,
11031,
10600,
1016,
1024,
29536,
2594,
2226,
5443,
1012,
11902,
10649,
2072,
2003,
201... | [
0,
0,
0,
0,
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0,
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0,
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0,
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0,
0,
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0,
0,
0,
0,
0,
0,
0,
0,
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0,
0,
0,
0,
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0,
0,
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1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
The Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Awards are administered by the U.S.-based Society of American Travel Writers Foundation (SATW Foundation), a nonprofit organization founded in the early 1980s to recognize excellence in travel journalism. The first awards were given in 1985 for work done in 1984. The competition is named after Lowell Thomas, the celebrated 20th century travel journalist and broadcaster. It is open to journalists from around the world and is considered one of the premier professional awards programs for travel journalists and communicators. Entrants (in the early 2020s, more than 1200 annually) include major media outlets, staff writers and editors, freelancers, book authors, digital communicators, and journalism fellows from such institutions as the Pulitzer Center. The competition honors works in more than two dozen categories, including print, digital, audio, video and photography. Winners are announced at the SATW (Society of America Travel Writers) annual convention and receive cash prizes.
The competition attracts entries from, and is covered by, major media, including the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Orange County Register, Washington Post,Cleveland Plain Dealer, Oregonian, Outside magazine, and Globe and Mail.
Categories
The Grand Award (Travel Journalist of the Year) is given to an editor or writer whose work excels in at least five of the awards categories. In 1985 (the first year awards were given), there were 15 categories. In the intervening years, new categories, including blogging, websites, video, and multi-media, were added to reflect the changing journalism landscape. For the awards announced in 2021, a new category travel for health and safety was added, and the list had expanded to 27 categories: Grand Award, Travel Health/Safety Coverage, Newspaper Travel Coverage, Travel Magazines, Travel Coverage in General Magazines, U.S./Canada Travel, Foreign Travel, Photo Illustration of Travel, Special Packages/Series, Cruise Travel, Adventure Travel, Travel News/Investigative Reporting, Service-Oriented Consumer Work, Environmental and Sustainable Tourism, Cultural Tourism, Personal Comment, Special-Purpose Travel, Short Work on Travel, Culinary-Related Travel, Travel Book, Guidebook, Travel Journalism Websites, Travel Audio, Travel Audio (Podcasts and Guides), Travel Video, Travel Blogs, Multimedia Single Work.
Judging
Entries are judged by members of the journalism faculty of an accredited U.S. university, each of which takes on the project for five or six years. Previous judges have included members of the faculties of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication, the Northwestern University Medill School of Journalism, and the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications. In 2015, judging returned to the University of Missouri, which had judged the competition for two previous terms.
Multiple Lowell Thomas Award Winners
The SATW Foundation maintains a list of all winners by year; the following publications and individuals have garnered the most awards as of 2021:
Publications
National Geographic Traveler: 122
Seattle Times: 86
Minneapolis Star Tribune: 62
Chicago Tribune: 59
Islands magazine: 59
Los Angeles Times: 52
Outside magazine: 47
San Francisco Chronicle: 40 (20 as Examiner-Chronicle)
Boston Globe: 39
Record (NJ): 39
Travel + Leisure: 38
National Geographic Adventure: 37
Oregonian: 36
Frommer's: 36 (varying media)
Washington Post: 35
Orange County Register: 35
USA Today :28
New York Times: 27
Miami Herald: 22
Dallas Morning News: 21
Lonely Planet: 19
Chicago Sun-Times: 18
Afar: 17 (since 2010)
New Orleans Times-Picayune: 16
Southern Living magazine: 16
Individuals
Catherine Watson: Minneapolis Star Tribune 29.
Jill Schensul: (The Record/North Jersey Media Group) 29
Alan Solomon: 25 (Chicago Tribune) 25
Chris Welsch: (Minneapolis Star Tribune) 19
Gary Stoller: (Conde Nast Traveler and USA Today) 12
Christopher Reynolds: (Los Angeles Times) 11
Don George: (various media) 10
References
External links
SATW Foundation official website
American literary awards
American journalism awards
Travel writing | [
101,
1996,
15521,
2726,
3604,
8083,
2982,
2024,
8564,
2011,
1996,
1057,
1012,
1055,
1012,
1011,
2241,
2554,
1997,
2137,
3604,
4898,
3192,
1006,
2938,
2860,
3192,
1007,
1010,
1037,
14495,
3029,
2631,
1999,
1996,
2220,
3865,
2000,
6807,
801... | [
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1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
The following tables list by region the nominated candidates for the 2022 Quebec general election.
Abbreviations guide
Abbreviations of political parties used in these tables:
Animal - Québec Animal Party
Auto. - Équipe autonomiste
BP - Bloc pot
CAP - Citoyens au pouvoir du Québec
CAQ - Coalition Avenir Québec
Climat - Climat Québec
Conservative - Conservative Party of Québec
Cul. - Parti culinaire du Québec
Green - Green Party of Québec
Ind. – Independent
Liberal - Québec Liberal Party
M-L - Marxist–Leninist Party of Québec
NDP - New Democratic Party of Québec
Nul - Parti nul
P51 - Parti 51
PAPÉ - Parti accès propriété et équité
PQ - Parti Québécois
PIQ - Parti pour l'indépendance du Québec
QS - Québec solidaire
Royal. - Parti royaliste du Québec
UN - Union nationale
Number of candidates by party
Candidates and results
† = indicates that the incumbent is not seeking re-election
‡ = indicates that the incumbent is running for re-election in a different riding
§ = represents that the incumbent was refused nomination by their party
$ = represents that the incumbent was announced as nominated by their party but later chose to retire
# = represents that the incumbent was announced as nominated by their party but later lost that party's nomination through departure or expulsion from caucus
bold indicates party leader
italics = indicates a contestant for nomination or declared interest
strikethrough indicates a candidate that has been disqualified or withdrew
Bas-Saint-Laurent
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Côte-du-Sud
|
|
|
|
|
|Marie-Eve Proulx
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Marie-Eve Proulx
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Matane-Matapédia
|
|
|
|Pascal Bérubé
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Pascal Bérubé
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Rimouski
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Carol-Ann Kack
|
|
|
|
||
|Harold LeBel
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Rivière-du-Loup–Témiscouata
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Denis Tardif
|}
Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Chicoutimi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Adrien Guibert-Barthez
|
|
|
|
||
|Andrée Laforest
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Dubuc
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|François Tremblay
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Jonquière
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Sylvain Gaudreault †
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Lac-Saint-Jean
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Éric Girard
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Roberval
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Nancy Guillemette
|}
Capitale-Nationale
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Charlesbourg
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Jonatan Julien
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Charlevoix–Côte-de-Beaupré
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Odré Lacombe
|
|
||
|Émilie Foster
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Chauveau
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Sylvain Lévesque
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Jean-Lesage
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Sol Zanetti
|
|Denise Peter
|
|
||
|Sol Zanetti
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Jean-Talon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Joëlle Boutin
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|La Peltrie
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Stéphane Lachance
|
|
||
|Éric Caire
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Louis-Hébert
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Geneviève Guilbault
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Montmorency
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Jean-François Simard
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Portneuf
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Vincent Caron
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Taschereau
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Catherine Dorion
|
|
|
|
||
|Catherine Dorion
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Vanier-Les Rivières
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Donald Gagnon
|
|
||
|Mario Asselin
|}
Mauricie
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Champlain
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Sonia LeBel
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Laviolette–Saint-Maurice
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Marie-Louise Tardif
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Maskinongé
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Simon Allaire
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Trois-Rivières
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Steven Roy Cullen
|
|
|
|
||
|Jean Boulet
|}
Estrie
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Mégantic
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Marilyn Ouellet
|
|
|
|
||
|François Jacques
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Orford
|
|
|
|
|
|Gilles Bélanger
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Gilles Bélanger
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Richmond
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|André Bachand
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Saint-François
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Mélissa Généreux
|
|
|
|
||
|Geneviève Hébert
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Sherbrooke
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Christine Labrie
|
|
|
|
||
|Christine Labrie
|}
Montréal
East
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Anjou–Louis-Riel
|
|Chantal Gagnon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Lise Thériault †
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Bourassa-Sauvé
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Paule Robitaille
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Bourget
|
|
|
|Paul St-Pierre Plamondon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Richard Campeau
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Gouin
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois
|
|
|
|
||
|Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Hochelaga-Maisonneuve
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Alexandre Leduc
|
|
|
|
||
|Alexandre Leduc
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Jeanne-Mance–Viger
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Filomena Rotiroti
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|LaFontaine
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Marc Tanguay
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Laurier-Dorion
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Andrés Fontecilla
|
|
|
|
||
|Andrés Fontecilla
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Maurice-Richard
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Haroun Bouazzi
|
|
|
|
||
|Marie Montpetit
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Mercier
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Ruba Ghazal
|
|
|
|
||
|Ruba Ghazal
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Pointe-aux-Trembles
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Chantal Rouleau
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Rosemont
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Vincent Marissal
|
|
|
|
||
|Vincent Marissal
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Sainte-Marie–Saint-Jacques
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Manon Massé
|
|
|
|
||
|Manon Massé
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Viau
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Frantz Benjamin
|}
West
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Acadie
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Christine St-Pierre
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|D'Arcy-McGee
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|David Birnbaum
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Jacques-Cartier
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Greg Kelley
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Marguerite-Bourgeoys
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Hélène David
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Marquette
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Enrico Ciccone
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Mont-Royal–Outremont
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Pierre Arcand
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Nelligan
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Monsef Derraji
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Notre-Dame-de-Grâce
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Roy Eappen
|
|
||
|Kathleen Weil
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Robert-Baldwin
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Carlos Leitão
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Saint-Henri–Sainte-Anne
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Dominique Anglade
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Saint-Laurent
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Marwah Rizqy
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Verdun
|
|Isabelle Melançon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Isabelle Melançon
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Westmount–Saint-Louis
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Jennifer Maccarone
|}
Outaouais
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Chapleau
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Mathieu Lévesque
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Gatineau
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Robert Bussière
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Hull
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Maryse Gaudreault
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Papineau
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Mathieu Lacombe
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Pontiac
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|André Fortin
|}
Abitibi-Témiscamingue
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Abitibi-Est
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Benjamin Gingras
|
|
|
|
||
|Pierre Dufour
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Abitibi-Ouest
|
|
|
|
|
|Suzanne Blais
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Suzanne Blais
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Rouyn-Noranda–Témiscamingue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Émilise Lessard-Therrien
|
|
|
|
||
|Émilise Lessard-Therrien
|}
Côte-Nord and Nord-du-Québec
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Duplessis
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Lorraine Richard †
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|René-Lévesque
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Martin Ouellet
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Ungava
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Denis Lamothe
|}
Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Bonaventure
|
|
|
|Alexis Deschênes
|
|
|
|Catherine Cyr-WrightJérémy Laplante
|
|
|
|
||
|Sylvain Roy
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Gaspé
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Méganne Perry-Mélançon
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Îles-de-la-Madeleine
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Joël Arseneau
|}
Chaudière-Appalaches
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Beauce-Nord
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Luc Provençal
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Beauce-Sud
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Samuel Poulin
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Bellechasse
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Stéphanie Lachance
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Chutes-de-la-Chaudière
|
|
|
|
|
|Marc Picard
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Marc Picard
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Lévis
|
|
|
|
|
|François Paradis
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|François Paradis
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Lotbinière-Frontenac
|
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|Isabelle Lecours
|}
Laval
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Chomedey
|
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|Guy Ouellette
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Fabre
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|Monique Sauvé
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Laval-des-Rapides
|
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|Saul Polo
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Mille-Îles
|
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||
|Francine Charbonneau †
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Sainte-Rose
|
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||
|Christopher Skeete
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Vimont
|
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||
|Jean Rousselle
|}
Lanaudière
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Berthier
|
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|
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|
|Amélie Drainville
|
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||
|Caroline Proulx
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Joliette
|
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||
|Véronique Hivon
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|L'Assomption
|
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||
|François Legault
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Masson
|
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||
|Mathieu Lemay
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Repentigny
|
|
|
|Aïcha Van Dun
|
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||
|Lise Lavallée
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Rousseau
|
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|
||
|Louis-Charles Thouin
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Terrebonne
|
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||
|Pierre Fitzgibbon
|}
Laurentides
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Argenteuil
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|Karim Elayoubi
|
|
||
|Agnès Grondin
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Bertrand
|
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||
|Nadine Girault
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Blainville
|
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||
|Mario Laframboise
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Deux-Montagnes
|
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||
|Benoit Charette
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Groulx
|
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|Eric Girard
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Labelle
|
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||
|Chantal Jeannotte
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Les Plaines
|
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||
|Lucie Lecours
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Mirabel
|
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|Sylvie D'Amours
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Prévost
|
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|Marguerite Blais
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Saint-Jérôme
|
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|Youri Chassin
|}
Montérégie
Eastern
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Borduas
|
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|Simon Jolin-Barrette
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Brome-Missisquoi
|
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|Isabelle Charest
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Chambly
|
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|Jean-François Roberge
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Granby
|
|
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||
|François Bonnardel
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Iberville
|
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|
||
|Claire Samson †
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Richelieu
|
|
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|
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||
|Jean-Bernard Émond
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Saint-Hyacinthe
|
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|
||
|Chantal Soucy
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Saint-Jean
|
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||
|Louis Lemieux
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Verchères
|
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|
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|
|
|
||
|Suzanne Dansereau
|}
South Shore
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Beauharnois
|
|
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|
||
|Claude Reid
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Châteauguay
|
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|
|
|
|
||
|MarieChantal Chassé
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Huntingdon
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
||
|Claire IsaBelle
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|La Pinière
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Gaétan Barrette †
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Laporte
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Nicole Ménard
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|La Prairie
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Christian Dubé
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Marie-Victorin
|
|
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|
|
|
|Vacant
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Montarville
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Nathalie Roy
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Sanguinet
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Danielle McCann
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Soulanges
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Marilyne Picard
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Taillon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Lionel Carmant
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Vachon
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Ian Lafrenière
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Vaudreuil
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Marie-Claude Nichols
|}
Centre-du-Québec
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Arthabaska
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Éric Lefebvre
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Drummond–Bois-Francs
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Sébastien Schneeberger
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Johnson
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|André Lamontagne
|-
| style="background:whitesmoke;"|Nicolet-Bécancour
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|Donald Martel
|}
Notes
References
2022 elections in Canada
2022 in Quebec
Candidates in Quebec provincial elections | [
101,
1996,
2206,
7251,
2862,
2011,
2555,
1996,
4222,
5347,
2005,
1996,
16798,
2475,
5447,
2236,
2602,
1012,
22498,
2015,
5009,
22498,
2015,
1997,
2576,
4243,
2109,
1999,
2122,
7251,
1024,
4111,
1011,
5447,
4111,
2283,
8285,
1012,
1011,
10... | [
0,
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1,
1,
1,
1... |
Andrew John Becroft is a New Zealand barrister and former judge who from 2016 until 2021 was Children's Commissioner. Prior to that, he practised community law, and was a District Court judge and principal judge of the Youth Court of New Zealand. Throughout his career Becroft has taken a specialist approach to dealing with youth and child offenders and been involved in many organisations and initiatives to support this. During his time as Children's Commissioner, Becroft developed strong public positions of monitoring and advocacy on a range of issues related to the safety of children.
Education and early career
Becroft was born in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and attended Rongotai College before graduating from Auckland University with BA and LLB (Honours) degrees in 1981. He worked at Fortune Manning, a neighbourhood law office in Grey Lynn, Auckland, until 1986, when he set up a steering group with another lawyer, Johnny Moses, who later became a judge, and established the Māngere Law Centre where he worked until 1993. Between 1993 and 1996, Becroft was a criminal barrister in South Auckland, specialising in traffic and criminal litigation. He was appointed to the District Court bench, sitting in Whanganui in 1996, and became principal judge of the Youth Courts of New Zealand in 2001.
Appointment as Children's Commissioner
The Children's Commissioner is an independent Crown Entity set up initially under the Oranga Tamariki Act 1989, later reformed under the Children's Commissioner Act 2003, to advocate for the interests, rights and wellbeing of children and young people in New Zealand. When Becroft was appointed on 3 May 2016 to the role the Children's Commissioner, Anne Tolley, Minister of Social Development in the New Zealand Government at the time, noted that the position involved being an independent advocate for the rights of children, and that his experience in dealing with "troubled and at-risk children...[would be]... vital in the development of a youth justice service aimed at preventing offending and reoffending". Becroft said he accepted the role as "a genuine privilege at a crucial time", and politicians from other parties welcomed the appointment. After announcing on 10 July 2019 that Becroft would continue as Children's Commission until June 2021, Carmel Sepuloni said that ensuring consistency in leadership in the role was important at that time because changes were being developed to monitor Oranga Tamariki, and the "scope of the Children Commissioner’s role will also be extended to monitor young people under the Oranga Tamariki Act...to recognise and respond to the needs of Māori children and their whanau". Becroft later agreed to remain in the position until 31 October 2021 to allow time for his successor to be found. He was succeeded in the position by Judge Frances Eivers, who in accepting the role, acknowledged the contribution of Becroft in working tirelessly to improve the lives of many children and young people in New Zealand.
Monitoring and advocacy
Oranga Tamariki
Becroft challenged the independence of a new departmental agency set up the New Zealand Government in 2021 to monitor the standards of state care for children overseen by Oranga Tamariki. He had previously recommended that the monitor be located within an autonomous Crown entity and raised concerns that the Māori advisory group which the government planned to set up, needed the "partnership and co-governance involving Māori" demanded by the Treaty of Waitangi. As the debate about this continued into 2022, Becroft was quoted in a news item as saying that "an independent monitor, empowered to speak out as a watchdog on behalf of New Zealand’s children, was required."
He has called for a changed model to ensure the welfare of at-risk children, specifically around the removal of children from their families by Oranga Tamariki. While acknowledging that at times it may be necessary to remove a child during a crisis, Becroft has said that in particular, it was likely due to a high case load of vulnerable children, that social workers could be insufficiently resourced to build a structure of consultation and cooperation with Māori stakeholders and support organisations in the interests of tamariki Māori. He suggested an alternative model that aimed at strengthening families, and by planning that focused on "early intervention work and prevention...[involving]...many more social workers, resources and hours, but in the long-run it may well end up much cheaper".
Protection of Māori and Pasifika children
Early in Becroft's role as Children's Commissioner, Te Runanga o Ngāi Tahu noted that Becroft's appointment was one of several political and policy changes that were aimed at keeping children safe from violence, abuse and neglect and that in his role as a Youth Court Judge he was familiar with the misconceptions about why Māori children were disproportionately reflected in family violence and youth offending statistics. It was noted Becroft had said that there needed to be a more strategic approach toward changing systems and structures that included an explicit commitment to working with whānau, hapū and iwi.
In 2017, Becroft spoke at the annual conference of Te Hunga Rōia Māori o Aotearoa (New Zealand Māori Law Society) and traced developments in how the State had provided for the care and protection of children and youth justice since the implementation of the Oranga Tamariki Act 1989 as an update of previous legislation. He said that the legislation made it a requirement for whānau, hapū and iwi to be consulted whenever a child was to be removed by the state or arrested, but claimed that the "disproportional amount of Māori children in CYFs care – and overrepresentation of Māori in the wider judicial and prison systems" reflected a systemic failure.
Becroft later went on record in 2021 as saying that of the high percentage of children living in poverty, tamariki Māori, Pasifika and disabled children, were overrepresented in the figures and "the width and depth of the inequities in child wellbeing [was] shocking".
One of Becroft's achievements was the development of a role for a Māori Assistant Children's Commissioner and he told E-Tangata news that this gave him insight into issues faced by Māori and assisted in building relationships honouring Te Tiriti o Waitangi and enabling more devolution of resources to Māori organisations and groups to help monitor the performance of Oranga Tamariki in protecting children.
Child poverty
In 2018, Becroft outlined some of the challenges posed by child poverty and noted that there are many internationally agreed factors used to measure its extent and causes, including "adverse social gradients that were clearly dependent on poverty". Becroft presented at the Child Action Poverty Group Summit on 18 November 2019, outlining a vision of what needed to be done to address child poverty in New Zealand. In looking forward he stressed the importance of implementing the Welfare Expert Advisory Group (WEAG) recommendations to the New Zealand Government, increases in benefits involving children, free school lunches and increases in social and community housing.
Engagement in education
In his role as the principal Youth Court judge, Becroft took a public position on the correlations between youth offending and disengagement from school. He stated that young people "outside the school system are virtually the whole of the problem in Youth Court,...[and expressed]... increasing concerns as to the number of young offenders who have slipped through the educational net because of undiagnosed learning disabilities". In a 2014 paper, Becroft identified school — along with family, friends and community — as being key "protective factors against future adverse life outcomes, including criminal offending". In the same paper, he also called disengagement from school a "red flag for a high risk of adverse health outcomes...[that had]...prompted action by ADHB and school-based health services to conduct health assessments on suspended or disengaged youth".
In a presentation at the New Zealand Principals Federation Conference on 20 September 2017, Becroft identified the key challenges in keeping students engaged in education. He noted that dealing with issues such as bullying and attendance required the building of resilience of children, but that the key was accepting the link between poverty and engagement in school, acknowledging the disparity between Māori and Pākehā child wellbeing rates and identifying and working with meeting the special needs of some students.
Associations
In his role as the presiding District Court judge, Becroft called a public meeting in Whanganui in 1999 to focus on developing restorative justice in the youth courts. As a result of this meeting, the Whanganui Restorative Justice Trust was established and Becroft later became the patron of the trust.
He edited the LexisNexis publication Becroft and Hall's Transport Law, a work on road traffic law to assist lawyers in advising their clients on "technical and general aspects of traffic offences and extensive guidance to sentencing for traffic offences". This work formed the basis of another book, Driving Under the Influence, co-edited by Becroft in 2018.
As patron of the New Zealand Speech-language Therapists and Speak Easy Associations which support people with speech impediments, Becroft has said that experience with a stutter in his early life helped him to understand issues for young offenders with disabilities who are often victims themselves and in New Zealand a high percentage had some involvement with State child care systems.
Becroft is president of the Tertiary Students Christian Fellowship (NZ) Inc., and a former council member of the Auckland District Law Society and the New Zealand Law Society.
Awards
In 2009, Becroft received an award from the Public Relations Institute of New Zealand as Communicator of the Year. He was the recipient of a Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Auckland in 2010. In 2018, he was the winner of the Public Service Wellingtonian of the Year Award for the work he did as Children's Commissioner in helping vulnerable young people. In being named as a semi-finalist for the 2022 New Zealander of the Year Awards, Becroft was noted for being "vocal in his calls for further resourcing of the Royal Commission's Inquiry into Abuse in Care and [as] a tireless campaigner for the rights of children".
References
External links
Q + A with Jack Tame ‘The honour of my life’: Outgoing Children’s Commissioner Judge Andrew Becroft
Children’s Commissioner Series: Five missing pieces in the Youth Justice jigsaw
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
New Zealand judges
District Court of New Zealand judges
20th-century New Zealand lawyers
21st-century New Zealand lawyers
21st-century New Zealand judges
New Zealand public servants | [
101,
4080,
2198,
2022,
14716,
2003,
1037,
2047,
3414,
19805,
1998,
2280,
3648,
2040,
2013,
2355,
2127,
25682,
2001,
2336,
1005,
1055,
5849,
1012,
3188,
2000,
2008,
1010,
2002,
20439,
2451,
2375,
1010,
1998,
2001,
1037,
2212,
2457,
3648,
1... | [
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
Eliza Hall "Hallie" Nutt Parsley (August 13, 1842 – June 11, 1920) was an American civic leader and educator. She worked as a school teacher after the American Civil War and established her own school for children in Wilmington, North Carolina in 1894. A war widow, she was active in glorifying the Confederacy through her role as a member of the Ladies' Memorial Association, raising money to build Confederate monuments in North Carolina. Parsley became a prominent figure within the United Daughters of the Confederacy, establishing the Cape Fear Chapter in 1894 and the North Carolina Division in 1897. She served as president of the North Carolina Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy for two years, travelling across North Carolina to recruit new members and promote the pseudohistorical narrative of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy. Under her leadership, in 1898, the Cape Fear chapter established the Cape Fear Museum of History and Science.
Early life and family
Parsley was born Eliza Hall Nutt in Wilmington, North Carolina on August 13, 1842, to Henry Nutt and Louise Frink Nutt. She was educated at St. Mary's School in Raleigh.
She married Captain William Murdock Parsley, an officer in the Confederate States Army, on September 2, 1862. They had two daughters, Amanda and Janie. Parsley was Episcopalian. She is the grandaunt of the Episcopalian bishop Henry N. Parsley Jr.
Civil War
During the American Civil War, her husband was wounded three times and sent home to recover. He was later promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, but was killed shortly after near Richmond, just a few days before the surrender at Appomattox.
Parsley and her daughters took refuge at Sleepy Hollow in Bladen County and at Floral College in Robeson County. While the war was ongoing, she nursed wounded Confederate soldiers.
Life after the war
Parsley and her daughters returned to Wilmington, where she took up work as a schoolteacher, opening her own school for children in 1894. She dressed in black mourning dress, a black bonnet and long crepe veil, and wore her hair parted down the middle and combed back for the remainder of her life, which was typical of many Confederate widows. As a war widow, she became active in multiple organizations upholding the Lost Cause of the Confederacy. She volunteered with the Confederate Memorial Association and decorated the graves of seven hundred Confederate soldiers in Wilmington. While working with the memorial association, she and other members learned about the United Daughters of the Confederacy, which had been established in other southern states but not North Carolina. She was appointed as the chairwoman of a committee tasked with inquiring about the purpose of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and received information, a charter, and authority to establish units in North Carolina from the original chapter in Nashville, Tennessee. Her inquiry was answered by Anna Davenport Raines, the vice president of the national organization, who encouraged Parsley to apply for a charter with the authority to form individual chapters. The charter was granted and organized with over fifty members. Parsley and her chapter when then informed that only lineal descendants of Confederate veterans were eligible, which excluded wives, sisters, and mothers of veterans from joining the organization. Parsley took this matter in writing before the National Convention on March 30, 1894, in Nashville, addressing her concerns to Raines and the organization's president, Caroline Meriwether Goodlett, and was successful in having the clause on eligibility amended. In December 1894, Parsley organized the Cape Fear Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy with twenty-four women applicants, calling their first meeting on December 27.
On April 28, 1897, she formed the United Daughters of the Confederacy's North Carolina Division, serving as the division's president for two years. Their first state convention was held in Wilmington on October 3, 1897, with representatives from six chapters in attendance. In her role as president, she advised women who wanted to establish new chapters and travelled around North Carolina promoting the Lost Cause narrative. Under her leadership, the Cape Fear chapter established the Cape Fear Museum of History and Science in March 1898.
A supporter of the dramatic arts, Parsley also arranged and organized productions of amateur plays, pageants, and musicals in Wilmington in the 1890s.
She died on June 11, 1920, and is buried at Oakdale Cemetery.
References
1842 births
1920 deaths
American Civil War nurses
American headmistresses
Burials at Oakdale Cemetery
Episcopalians from North Carolina
Female wartime nurses
Founders of schools in the United States
Members of the United Daughters of the Confederacy
Eliza
People from Wilmington, North Carolina
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The Imperial goby Platygobiopsis akihito is a species of goby known only from the area of Flores, Indonesia. This species reaches a length of .
Etymology
The goby is named for Emeritus Emperor Akihito of Japan (b. 1933), honoring his contribution to the expansion of knowledge of gobioid fishes.
References
Gobiidae
Fish of Indonesia
Taxa named by Victor G. Springer
Taxa named by John Ernest Randall
Fish described in 1992 | [
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Ocean City Seafood Restaurant is a Chinese restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Description
Ocean City Seafood Restaurant serves Chinese cuisine in southeast Portland's Jade District, within the Powellhurst-Gilbert neighborhood. The menu includes dim sum such as fried and steamed dumplings and jian dui (sesame balls), chicken feet, congee, rice cake and turnip cake, and shark fin soup.
KGW has said the business provides a "family-style Chinese dining experience". A representative of the social justice advocacy group Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon said of the atmosphere: "If you go there even when it opens, there's already people sitting there reading their paper and having their tea and enjoying the dim sum. It's almost like the local hangout in the morning. People are there to convene."
History
Co-owners Lisa Fan and Shao Wei Feng, both of whom previously worked at Wong's King, opened Ocean City in June 2009. The restaurant operated via take-out and delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic. Fan said fear of COVID-19 reduced business by as much as fifty percent. In March 2020, the restaurant hosted U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer and members of the Portland Asian American Business Community to discuss "coronavirus discrimination".
Reception
Drew Tyson included Ocean City in Thrillist's 2014 "guide to Portland's 6 best dim sum spots". He wrote, "One of the big three on 82nd and a well-known haven for Asian food, Ocean City might not get the general recognition of Wong's King... but if you ask most of the city's top chefs they'd say this spot is their favorite. Tables fill up fast so make sure to get there early or be relegated to the edge of the dining room where, by the time the cart gets to you, they'll only have chewy chicken feet left." In 2016, Samantha Bakall of The Oregonian wrote, "Ocean City's trump card is chicken feet, which are the best I've eaten anywhere to date. They're shiny and glazed, resting in a pool of brick red, almost chunky black bean sauce. They were a little too salty this visit, but I'm going to look past that here." She also included the dim sum in a 2017 list of Southeast Portland's 39 "best cheap eats". The newspaper's Michael Russell included the golden corn dumplings in a 2016 overview of the best dumplings along Southeast 82nd Avenue.
See also
Cantonese restaurant
History of Chinese Americans in Portland, Oregon
List of Chinese restaurants
References
External links
Ocean City at Portland Monthly
Ocean City Seafood Restaurant at Zomato
2009 establishments in Oregon
Cantonese cuisine
Chinese restaurants in Portland, Oregon
Powellhurst-Gilbert, Portland, Oregon
Restaurants established in 2009 | [
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The goby Platygobiopsis dispar is a species of goby known only from the area off central Vietnam in the South China Sea. This species reaches a length of .
References
Gobiidae
Fish of Vietnam
Taxa named by Artem Mikhailovich Prokofiev
Fish described in 2008 | [
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1996,
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3762,
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Unintentional is a 2021 Nigerian romantic drama film directed by Olufemi Bamigbetan, written by Zeina Otonjo, produced by Obinna Okerekeocha and Bola Atta as Executive Producer and stars Efa Iwara, Omowumi Dada and Beverly Osu
Unintentional is the first feature film by United Bank for Africa's lifestyle and entertainment channel, REDTV (Online TV channel) and was released on YouTube on boxing day, December 26, 2021.
Plot
Filmed in Enugu State, Nigeria, the movie delves into the lives of two young African girls on a road trip that leads to the discovery of love in the most expected place. Unintentional is a feel-good, love story that follows Sefi Madaki (played by Omowumi Dada) and her best friend Rosy (Beverly Osu) on a journey of self-discovery after a tumultuous heartbreak during the start of their National Youth Service year.
Cast
Release
The official trailer for the film was released on 20 December 2021 and Unintentional premiered on YouTube on Boxing Day, 26 December 2021.
Critical reception
Unintentional received reviews from critics.
According to Flora Nnamaka of Nigerian content review “This film had a good storyline. I totally love how realistic and relatable it was. It was conventional yet “new” the plot is. This is a typical love story but with some twists and turns here and there. Which in my opinion is really the juice of the story.”
Okediran Adeyemi of What Kept Me Up had this to say “In Unintentional, the writer has a great idea, and the beauty of it is they have the right cast to bring the idea to reality. The movie immerses the audience who are not from the Eastern soil—to the air, the characters breathe and everything in between— such as the introduction to Uzor and his family, other little details with his brother cleaning his car and over to Rosie and Sofie’s bus journey that highlights roadside spectacle like the palm wine visuals, and the panning in on the bus passengers vehemently complaining about the frequent stops.”
See also
List of Nigerian films of 2021
References
External links
2021 films
Nigerian films
2021 drama films | [
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The goby Platygobiopsis tansei is a species of goby found around Japan. This species reaches a length of .
Etymology
The goby is named for the research vessel Tansei-maru of the Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo which is now Japan Marine Science and Technology Center. The ship was involved in collecting many specimens from Suruga Bay, including the type specimen of this goby.
References
Gobiidae
Fish of Indonesia
Taxa named by Muneo Okiyama
Fish described in 2008 | [
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Matthew Soukup (born 31 August 1997) is a Canadian ski jumper. Soukup started skiing at the age of three, and later on picked up the sport of ski jumping. His surname is pronounced as "soh-koop" (shortly).
Career
Soukup has competed at two World Championships. Soukup trains in Slovenia, as the jumps at the Canada Olympic Park in Calgary were shut down.
2022 Winter Olympic Games
In January 2022, Soukup was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team.
On February 7th, Soukup won the bronze medal as part of Canada's entry into the mixed team competition. This was Canada's first ever Olympic medal in the sport of ski jumping.
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Calgary
Canadian male ski jumpers
Ski jumpers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic bronze medalists for Canada
Olympic ski jumpers of Canada
Medalists at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic medalists in ski jumping
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Lanzelin (c. 940-981/991) was a Germanic noble and was a distant ancestor of the House of Habsburg. His father, Guntram the Rich, was a powerful nobleman. He married Liutgarda of Nellenburg (daughter of Eberhart III of Thurgau) from whom he inherited part of his possessions in present-day Switzerland, whilst from his father he inherited the titles of Duke of Muri and Count of Sundgau. He also possessed the titles of Duke of Altenburg and Count of Klettgau, and had lands in Alsace.
An alternate theory on Lanzelin's ancestry suggests that he was only adopted by Guntram, whilst actually being directly descended from the Carolingians.
Several male children were born to him, amongst which are:
Lanzelin II or Lanzelin the Younger († 1027), who was Count of Reichenau, as well as a predecessor of the House of Zähringen.
Werner († 1028), Bishop of Strasbourg.
Radbot († 1045), Count of Klettgau and builder of Habsburg Castle. He was the ancestor of what would become the House of Habsburg.
Rudolf I († 1064), Count of Habsburg.
He also produced a daughter, Ita von Habsburg.
References
10th-century German nobility | [
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Alexandria Loutitt (born 7 January 2004) is a Canadian ski jumper.
Career
Loutitt competed in four events at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2021, finishing 46th on the normal hill, 38th on the large hill, 11th on the women's team normal hill and finally 10th in the mixed team normal hill. In December 2021, Loutitt had her best performance on the World Cup circuit with a 14th-place finish in the large hill event in Lillehammer.
Loutitt trains in Slovenia, as the jumps at the Canada Olympic Park in Calgary were shut down.
In January 2022, Loutitt was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. On February 7th, Loutitt won the bronze medal as part of Canada's entry into the mixed team competition. This was Canada's first ever Olympic medal in the sport of ski jumping.
References
External links
2004 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Calgary
Canadian female ski jumpers
Olympic bronze medalists for Canada
Ski jumpers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic ski jumpers of Canada
Medalists at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic medalists in ski jumping
Canadian expatriates in Slovenia | [
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The seventh season of the American television series The Masked Singer will premiere on Fox on March 9, 2022, following a sneak peek episode that aired on February 20.
Panelists and host
Nick Cannon, singer-songwriter Robin Thicke, television and radio personality Jenny McCarthy, actor and comedian Ken Jeong, and recording artist Nicole Scherzinger all return as host and panelists.
Contestants
The season will feature 15 contestants split into three teams known as "The Good", "The Bad", and "The Cuddly". Six then-unnamed costumes were revealed on January 30, 2022. "Ram" was revealed on February 13, while "Thingamabob", "Baby Mammoth", "Space Bunny", and "Cyclops" were revealed on February 18, "Firefly", "Queen Cobra", and "McTerrier" were revealed on February 19, "Lemur" was revealed on February 20, "Jack in the Box" and "Ringmaster" were revealed on February 25 and 26 respectively. "Prince" was revealed on February 27, and "Miss Teddy" was revealed on March 1.
Controversial figure Rudolph Giuliani was reportedly unmasked during the taping of the first episode of the season, which prompted Jeong and Thicke to storm off the set as an act of protest. The casting was widely criticized.
Ratings
References
2022 American television seasons
Upcoming television seasons
The Masked Singer (American TV series) | [
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Glyptotrox insularis is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1864 | [
101,
1043,
2135,
13876,
4140,
3217,
2595,
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2483,
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The AM/MS08 series is a three-part electric multiple unit of the Siemens type Desiro Main Line ( Desiro ML ), a so-called lightweight train with a low-floor section for regional passenger transport and local passenger transport for the National Railway Company of Belgium(SNCB/NMBS).
History
In 2008, the board of directors of the Belgian national railway company NMBS decided to purchase 305 electric multiple units of the "Desiro ML" type from Siemens. With a value of 1.291 billion euros, this is the largest investment file ever for the NMBS. The ordered carriages have a total of 85,400 seats and were delivered between the spring of 2011 and the end of 2016, at a rate of five to eight sets per month.
The train set was developed by Siemens Mobility from the Desiro MainLine intended for the north western Germany region. Siemens Mobility built 105 trainsets and Bombardier Transportation built 200 trainsets.
During the open days of the NMBS workshops over five weekends from September 24 to October 23, 2011, the trainsets were officially presented to the public.
On 1 October 2013, the NMBS requested guarantees from Siemens in response to the worldwide announced personnel adjustments of the German multinational and whether this would have any consequences for the delivery and follow-up of 305 trains to the NMBS as well as the quality follow-up of 120 locomotives already delivered.
On March 19, 2015, the trainsets 08594 and 08595 were the last of a total of 305 trainsets delivered to NMBS by Siemens Mobility.
Interior
The couples has an area that is adapted for wheelchairs and strollers or for storing bicycles. The seats are for the most part in a coach arrangement. luggage rack is available. There are 220V sockets for connecting a laptop or a phone charger. Mobile Internet reception has been severely weakened by the electromagnetic shielding of three-layer glass and the thermal insulation of the walls. In the first class, the seats have folding tables. there is also a toilet on board.
The exterior doors only open when the traveler presses the open button. These doors have a motion sensor that automatically closes the doors when no people are detected for more than five seconds. This is to promote the proper functioning of the climate control system. There are no interior doors, but there are fire doors between the carriages that close automatically in the event of a fire.
References
SNCB multiple units
Siemens multiple units | [
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Abigail Strate (born 22 February 2001) is a Canadian ski jumper.
Career
Strate competed in four events at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2021, finishing 27th on the normal hill, 28th on the large hill, 11th on the women's team normal hill and finally 10th in the mixed team normal hill.
Strate trains in Slovenia, as the jumps at the Canada Olympic Park in Calgary were shut down.
2022 Winter Olympics
In January 2022, Strate was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. On February 7th, Strate won the bronze medal as part of Canada's entry into the mixed team competition. This was Canada's first ever Olympic medal in the sport of ski jumping.
References
External links
2001 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Calgary
Canadian female ski jumpers
Ski jumpers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic ski jumpers of Canada
Olympic bronze medalists for Canada
Medalists at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic medalists in ski jumping
Canadian expatriates in Slovenia | [
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Glyptotrox mandli is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1931 | [
101,
1043,
2135,
13876,
4140,
3217,
2595,
2158,
19422,
2072,
2003,
1037,
2427,
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1996,
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The Newry, Warrenpoint and Rostrevor Railway (NW&RR) was a former railway line linking Newry and the port of Warrenpoint on the Carlingford Lough inlet in Ireland, and the company operating it. The railway was absorbed into the Great Northern Railway of Ireland in 1886 and the line closed in 1965.
History
The NW&RR was incorporated on 27 July 1846 but was only able to reach the to the port of Warrenpoint, the additional stretch to Rostrevor some further on was never to be built. The directors contracted William Dargan to construct the line which was completed in 1.5 years, publicly opening on 28 May 1849.
The line was not initially connected to any other. In 1954 the Newry and Armagh Railway (N&AR) made a branch from on the Belfast to Dublin main line to their station at Edward Street. At the same time the NW&RR, who had recognised the need to connect to main Irish rail network since 1852, crossed the Newry (Clanrye) River and relocated northern terminus station from Kilmorey Street to Dublin Bridge. In the event following protracted negotiations with the Newry Navigation Company parliamentary permission was granted for the Town of Newry Connecting Railway company to establish the line crossing the Newry Canal, the link costing £12,700 opening on 2 September 1861, and involving five level crossings.
On 1 August 1876 the Dundalk, Newry and Greencore Railway (DN&GR), backed by the London North Western Railway (LNWR) of England, opened their line to a temporary terminus at Newry Bridge Street, the connection Albert Street and the rest of the Network at Newry only opening 1 July 1800. The LNWR began their Holyhead to Greenore service on 2 August 1876, and Patterson observes the NW&RR would likely have realised it was then implausible that Warrenpoint, which had never really challenged Newry as a port, would ever establish itself for cross-channel trade.
The enterprise was amalgamated into the GNRI by an act of 4 June 1886. The GNRI provided an improved W. H. Mills-style station building in 1891. The line was transferred to the Ulster Transport Authority on 1 October 1958, with the final train from Warrenpoint running on 2 January 1965.
References
Notes
Footnotes
Sources
Railway lines in Ireland
Railway lines opened in 1849
Railway lines closed in 1965
Irish gauge railways | [
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Glyptotrox kerleyi is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1996 | [
101,
1043,
2135,
13876,
4140,
3217,
2595,
17710,
12866,
2072,
2003,
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2427,
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1999,
1996,
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19817,
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2649,
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Glyptotrox kiuchii is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1996 | [
101,
1043,
2135,
13876,
4140,
3217,
2595,
11382,
15217,
2072,
2003,
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2427,
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19817,
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2649,
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2727,
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1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
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1,
1,
1
] |
Glyptotrox matsudai is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1999 | [
101,
1043,
2135,
13876,
4140,
3217,
2595,
22281,
14066,
2072,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
19817,
8649,
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1012,
7604,
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8649,
6096,
14538,
2649,
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2639,
102
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Calum Graham Kavanagh (born 5 September 2003) is a professional footballer who plays as a forward for EFL League Two club Harrogate Town, on loan from club Middlesbrough. Born in Wales, he has represented the Republic of Ireland internationally at under-17 level.
Early and personal life
Kavanagh is the son of former professional footballer Graham Kavanagh, who played internationally for the Republic of Ireland. He was born in Cardiff, whilst his father was playing for Cardiff City and grew up in England once his father returned there after leaving Cardiff City.
Club career
After coming through Middlesbrough's academy, he made his debut for the club's under-18 side during the 2019–20 season and, after a string of impressive performances, was linked with a potential transfer to Premier League clubs Arsenal and Chelsea. He signed a scholarship deal with the club in summer 2020, before signing a three-year professional contract in September 2020.
On 28 January 2022, it was announced that Kavanagh had joined EFL League Two club Harrogate Town on loan until the end of the season.
International career
Kavanagh made 4 appearances for the Republic of Ireland national under-17 team, scoring one goal.
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
Irish footballers
English footballers
Welsh footballers
Footballers from Cardiff
Association football forwards
Middlesbrough F.C. players
Harrogate Town A.F.C. players
English Football League players
Welsh people of Irish descent
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Glyptotrox mutsuensis is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1937 | [
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Glyptotrox opacotuberculatus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1860 | [
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Glyptotrox simi is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1940 | [
101,
1043,
2135,
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2595,
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2003,
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Glyptotrox uenoi is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1961 | [
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Glyptotrox vimmeri is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1931 | [
101,
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2135,
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2595,
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Glyptotrox yamayai is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Troginae.
References
Trogidae
Beetles described in 1983 | [
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George Felt (February 28, 1601 – ) was a 17th-century English emigrant to the New England Colonies. He is one of the three main early settlers of North Yarmouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony (now Yarmouth, Maine).
Arrival in the Thirteen Colonies
After arriving in Charlestown, Massachusetts, in 1625, he moved north to what was then North Yarmouth, Maine (now Yarmouth) in 1643. He purchased 300 acres of land at Broad Cove from John Phillips, a Welshman.
Felt later owned a lot at the foot of the northern end of Pleasant Street in Yarmouth, adjacent to Stony Brook, in an area that became known as Grantville.
In 1684, military officer and fellow Englishman Walter Gendall claimed to own all of Felt's two thousand acres in Casco Bay. He had purchased one hundred acres from him in 1680.
Personal life
Felt's family in Bedfordshire, England, went by the family name Felce. He called himself George Felch, however, when he moved to America. He began to be known as George Felt in his later years.
In 1630, Felt married 29-year-old Elizabeth Wilkinson (1601–1694), with whom he had six children: Elizabeth (born ), George Jr. (1638–1676), Mary (1639–1725), Moses I (1641–1650), Aaron and Moses II (1651–1733).
Around 1649, the family moved back to Malden, Massachusetts, just as it was being incorporated into a city. They returned to Casco Bay in 1667, shortly after which Felt bought 2,000 more acres of land from Phillips.
Conflicts forged by King Philip's War caused the Felts to abandon their home. In 1676, Felt's son and Mussel Cove resident, George Jr., was killed on Peaks Island during the conflicts. The deceased's wife of fourteen years, Londoner Phillippa Andrews, moved to Salem, Massachusetts, where she married twice (to Samuel Platt in 1682 and Thomas Nelson in 1690) before her death in 1709. She had emigrated to America with her parents in 1635.
Death
In 1684, Felt moved back to Massachusetts. He died in Malden in 1693, aged 92, with Elizabeth surviving him by one year. The couple had become the first citizens of Malden to receive town aid, such was their fall from wealth during the latter stages of their time in Maine.
References
1601 births
1693 deaths
People from Bedfordshire
People from North Yarmouth, Maine
Kingdom of England emigrants to Massachusetts Bay Colony
Kingdom of England emigrants to the Thirteen Colonies
People of colonial Massachusetts
People from colonial Boston | [
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Albert Costa was the 2-time defending champion, but lost in the third round to Francisco Clavet.
Àlex Corretja won the title after Emilio Benfele Álvarez was forced to retire due to an injury. The score was 6–3, 6–1, 3–0.
Seeds
All seeds received a bye to the second round.
Draw
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
References
External links
Official results archive (ATP)
Official results archive (ITF)
Austrian Open Kitzbühel
2000 ATP Tour | [
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Ruth Grützbauch (born 3 October 1978) is an Austrian astronomer, planetarium director and science communicator. After earning her doctoral degree in 2007, she conducted extragalactic research until 2013, and worked as an educator and science communicator afterwards. Since 2017, she runs the Public Space pop-up planetarium.
Biography
Grützbauch was born as the youngest of six children in the Viennese district of Währing and completed her Matura at a school in Simmering. In 1996, she began to study astronomy at the University of Vienna and obtained her diploma in 2003. During her subsequent doctorate, she gained international experience at the University of Nottingham in England, the Padua Observatory in Italy, and the La Silla Observatory in Chile. In 2007, she was awarded the academic degree Dr. rer. nat. after completing her dissertation on dwarf galaxies.
As a postdoc, Grützbauch did extragalactic research at the University of Nottingham and the University of Lisbon, and observed at the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope in Hawaii. Her h-index is at least 26. In 2013, Grützbauch ended her academic career and became an environmental educator. From 2015 to 2017, she worked as a science communicator at the Jodrell Bank Discovery Centre.
Grützbauch has been known to a broader public since 2017 through her planetarium, Public Space. The inflatable planetarium does not have a fixed location, but is transported by Grützbauch with a cargo bike from her home in Vienna to schools and other event locations.
Since 2020, Grützbauch hosts the astronomy podcast Das Universum () together with celestial mechanic . She publishes a different podcast series on the night sky together with .
In 2021, she published Per Lastenrad durch die Galaxis (), a popular science book on extragalactic astronomy and her planetarium.
Grützbauch is part of the , a science kabarett group founded by Heinz Oberhummer, and Werner Gruber. She had worked in their prop department since 2018 and made her stage debut in 2021.
Works
References
External links
Public Space, the pop-up planetarium
Das Universum (Podcast, co-hosted with )
WRINT Wissenschaft (Podcast, co-hosted with )
Homepage at the University of Vienna
Living people
1978 births
21st-century Austrian astronomers
University of Vienna alumni
Academics of the University of Nottingham
Science communicators
Podcasters
Austrian non-fiction writers
21st-century non-fiction writers
21st-century Austrian women writers | [
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The Chicamacomico River is a river in southern Maryland in the United States. It starts in northern Dorchester County and flows to the southwest ending within the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge, approximately wide at its mouth on the east bank of the Transquaking River, near the Chesapeake Bay to the west. The Chicamacomico River has a watershed area of about .
See also
List of Maryland rivers
References
Chesapeake Bay watershed
Rivers of Maryland
Rivers of Dorchester County, Maryland | [
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The Omaha Streetcar is a proposed streetcar in Omaha, Nebraska.
History
The Omaha-Council Bluffs streetcar era began operations in 1868. By 1890, the metropolitan area had 90 miles of tracks — more than any city except Boston. The Omaha Traction Company was the dominant private streetcar provider of the time; it was engulfed in repeated labor disputes. On June 14, 1935, Omaha was put under martial law as the result of three days of streetcar strike rioting in which a man was killed and more than ninety persons, including women and children, were wounded. Governor Robert Leroy Cochran ordered arbitration later in the week; however, new riots were reported by the end of the month. 1,800 National Guardsmen were called in to quell the violence. The final count was two people killed and 100 injured. By 1955, the city closed its streetcars in favor of buses. Planning and research for a new streetcar began between 2008 and 2009. A advanced conceptual engineering plan was first announced in 2014 and revised in 2018 by Metro Transit (Omaha), with an estimated cost of 170 million. However, an 8-million-dollar federal earmark for the project was uncessfully sought by Rep. Don Bacon in 2021.
In 2022, a revised plan was announced by Mayor Jean Stothert and the Greater Omaha Chamber of Commerce's Urban Core Committee. The streetcar will be built, operated, and maintained without a property tax rate increase or sales tax increase. It will run on a three-mile route from Cass to Farnam on South 10th street, Farnam west to 42nd Street, and back to 10th Street on Harney. The streetcar will be operational in 2026, and free for all riders. Future expansions north, south, and west in Omaha and Council Bluffs, Iowa are also proposed. The proposal was endorsed by Governor of Nebraska Pete Ricketts, Union Pacific Railroad President, chairman and CEO Lance Fritz, and Mayor Matt Walsh of Council Bluffs.
References
See also
Light rail in the United States
Transportation in Omaha
Public transportation in Nebraska
Streetcars in Omaha, Nebraska
Streetcars in Nebraska
Proposed public transportation in Nebraska | [
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Christmas Flow is a 2021 French streaming television series created by Henri Debeurme, Marianne Levy and Victor Rodenbach and starring Tayc, Shirine Boutella and Marion Séclin. It premiered on Netflix on 17 November 2021 and consists of 3 episodes.
Cast
Tayc as Marcus
Shirine Boutella as Lila
Marion Séclin as Alice
Aloïse Sauvage as Jeanne
Camille Lou as Mel
Walid Ben Mabrouk as Zack
Estelle Meyer as Safia
Stéphan Wojtowicz as Pascal
Yasmine Kefil as Sara
Isabelle Candelier as Danièle
Philippe Rebbot as Daniel
Nuts as Le Chien
References
External links
2021 French television series debuts
French-language Netflix original programming | [
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Tina Muir is a former elite marathoner who is now CEO of Running for Real, and hosts a podcast of the same name. As a professional runner she was a 2:36 marathoner, represented Great Britain and was sponsored by Saucony.
In her first race following retirement at what was considered the peak of her career, Muir won the 2019 Disney World Half Marathon. In that same year, she published Overcoming Amenorrhea: Get Your Period Back. Get Your Life Back. In 2022 she and Zoe Rom will release Becoming a Sustainable Runner.
As of 2020, she is sponsored by Altra_Running.
References
External links
British runners
British marathon runners
British podcasters
British writers
Year of birth missing (living people)
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Kurtis Rourke (born October 25, 2000) is a Canadian American football quarterback for the Ohio Bobcats football.
College career
He is starting quarterback of Ohio Bobcats football. He was named MAC student athlete of the week on October 27, 2021.
Personal life
He is the brother of the CFL BC lions starting quarterback Nathan Rourke
References
External links
https://ohiobobcats.com/sports/football/roster/kurtis-rourke/2280
https://www.cfl.ca/2020/12/02/kurtis-rourke-no-stranger-following-brothers-footsteps/
https://www.thestar.com/sports/football/2020/11/12/kurtis-rourke-very-familiar-with-following-in-the-footsteps-of-older-brother-nathan.html
Living people
2000 births
Ohio Bobcats football players | [
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UFC Fight Night 210 (also known as UFC on ESPN+ 68) is an upcoming mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship that will take place on May 21, 2022, at a TBD location.
Announced bouts
Featherweight bout: Felipe Colares vs. Chase Hooper
Heavyweight bout: Ben Rothwell vs. Alexander Gustafsson
Women's Bantamweight bout: Ketlen Vieira vs. Holly Holm
Women's Strawweight bout: Polyana Viana vs. Tabatha Ricci
Lightweight bout: Omar Morales vs. Uros Medic
Middleweight bout: Joseph Holmes vs. Alen Amedovski
See also
List of UFC events
List of current UFC fighters
2022 in UFC
References
UFC Fight Night
2022 in mixed martial arts
May 2022 sports events in the United States
Scheduled mixed martial arts events | [
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Hakuoki: OVA 2021 is three-part OVA adaptation in the continuing anime series of Hakuoki. The events follow on from Season 3 Hakuoki: Dawn of the Shinsengumi and the story centers on a plot to assassinate the shogun by a group of ronin supported by the Tosa clan who attempt to discredit the Shinsengumi, including a young girl who impersonates Chizuru. It also introduces the Shinsengumi treasurer Sakai who is injured defending Chizuru and later becomes a Fury after being given the "Water of Life".
The anime is produced by Studio Deen and the OVAs were released by U-NEXT between November 13, 2021, and January 29, 2022. The staff from the previous series return to produce the episodes.
Aiko Yoshioka is performs the opening theme song "Setsuna no Kodō" (Split-Second Heartbeat), while Maon Kurosaki performs the ending theme song "Kenran -I'll never forget you-."
Episode list
References
External links
Official website (anime)
:Category:Hakuoki episode lists
2021 anime OVAs
2022 anime OVAs
Hakuoki episode lists
Studio Deen | [
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Vinny Thomas is an American writer and comedian. He is best known for his viral videos on Twitter and TikTok. His work has been recognized by Vanity Fair, The Hollywood Reporter, and Just for Laughs.
Life and career
Thomas was raised in Denver, Colorado, where he trained in improvisational comedy at the Bovine Metropolis Theater and Rise Comedy. He moved to Chicago in 2018 to pursue a comedy career. Thomas trained at The Second City and was a member of the house improv group Twisty.
After the onset of the pandemic in 2020, Thomas gained wider prominence for self-produced videos posted to Twitter and other social media sites. In particular, his video as an extraterrestrial member of the fictional Intergalactic Federation reviewing Earth's application for entry went viral. In other videos he has appeared as various creatures and exaggerated characters including a warthog, a fly, and a Southern attendee at the Kentucky Derby. His videos sometimes respond to current events such as one video where he posed as a female condor that reproduced asexually, based on an actual instance that was reported on in October 2021. In one parody video released in 2022, he posed as a Mars Inc. spokesperson announcing the changes to the green M&M's costume: "So you’re welcome, feminists, the green M&M is no longer a perfect 10." One video where he impersonates a pigeon at a Pride parade urging attendees to throw him bread was named to Vanity Fair's list of 2021 Best Performances. He was also recognized by The Hollywood Reporter as one of six notable social media comics.
In 2021 he was a guest writer for Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me!.
Accolades
2021 New Faces, Just for Laughs
Best Performances of 2021, Vanity Fair
References
External links
Official website
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
African-American comedians
Comedians from Colorado
Writers from Denver
African-American writers | [
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was a Japanese soldier who became famous for his actions in the First Sino-Japanese War. Some sources record his given name with the spelling .
Biography
Jūkichi was born the second son of , a farmer in the village of Hiaki, Mikawa Province. In 1888, he passed the standard conscription examination and was assigned to the 18th Infantry Regiment based in Toyohashi.
In 1894, the Sino-Japanese War broke out, and Jūkichi was called up to participate in the Battle of Pyongyang. On September 15, the order was given to attack Pyongyang in full force, and his regiment approached the heavily fortified .
The Japanese force tasked with assaulting the gate found itself outnumbered and immobilized by Chinese suppression fire. Jūkichi was selected as one of a 13-member forlorn hope charged with climbing the walls. Once inside, Jūkichi and his team were engaged by numerous Chinese warriors. Fending them off, Jūkichi himself opened the Hyeonmu Gate and thereby admitted the Japanese into the city. Pyongyang quickly fell as the Chinese forces within the city routed.
Jūkichi's activities became known in Japan through various forms of media including newspapers and popular songs. At the time, he was regarded as a national hero. Jūkichi was promoted to and received the Order of the Golden Kite, seventh class.
In 1895, at the end of the war, Jūkichi returned home and soon found himself in debt. In order to pay off his debts, he cooperated with a showman in Nagoya who staged performances of the battle of the Hyeonmu Gate. The play was well received in many places, and there even appeared another show featuring a different person impersonating Jūkichi. After he finished paying off his debts, he quit acting and went back to farming. In 1904, he was called up to fight in the Russo-Japanese War, and returned to Japan in 1905.
Returning to his hometown, Jūkichi devoted the remainder of his life to agriculture. He developed his own fertilizer based on rice hull ash and managed to double the harvest of rice and wheat. For this, he received commendations from the governor of Aichi Prefecture and the prefectural agricultural association in 1923 and 1924. He died in 1938 at the age of 69.
References
1868 births
1938 deaths
Japanese soldiers
Imperial Japanese Army personnel | [
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Princess Amelia was launched in 1798 at Liverpool. She made eight complete voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. After the end of British participation in the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, she became a merchantman. She was probably the Princess Amelia, from Liverpool, lost in 1810.
Career
Princess Amelia first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1798.
1st slave voyage (1798–1799): Captain John Livingston acquired a letter of marque on 9 October 1798. He sailed from Liverpool on 21 November 1798. Princess Amelia acquired her slaves at Bonny and arrived at Kingston, Jamaica on 14 May 1799 with 441 slaves. She sailed from Kingston on 17 June and arrived back at Liverpool on 17 September. She had left Liverpool with 51 crew members and she had suffered 20 crew deaths on her voyage.
2nd slave voyage (1799–1800): Captain Livingston sailed from Liverpool on 26 December 1799. Princess Amelia acquired slaves at Bonny and arrived at Demerara on 20 June 1800 with 295 slaves. She sailed from Demerara on 2 July and arrived back at Liverpool on 12 September. She had left Liverpool with 38 crew members and suffered eight crew deaths on her voyage.
3rd slave voyage (1801): Captain Livingston sailed from Liverpool on 20 May 1801. On 29 May 1801 Princess Amelia, Livingston, master, was all well at . She was in company with Lottery, Whittle, master, and '"Louisa, Bernard, master. Princess Amelia acquired slaves at Bonny and arrived at St Vincent on 20 October. She sailed from St Vincent on 4 November and arrived back at Liverpool on 27 December. She had left Liverpool with 40 crew members and she had suffered two crew deaths on her voyage.
4th slave voyage (1802–1803): Captain Thomas Mullion sailed from Liverpool on 2 April 1802. Because the voyage began during the Peace of Amiens, Captain Thomas Mullion did not acquire a letter of marque. Princess Amelia acquired slaves at Angola and arrived at St Croix on 6 October 1802. She left there on 13 December and arrived back at Liverpool on 2 February 1803. She had left with 33 crew members and had suffered one crew death on her voyage.
5th slave voyage (1803–1804): [[Napoleonic Wars|With with France had resumed before Princess Amelia sailed on her fifth slaving voyage. Captain Donald McDonald acquired a letter of marque on 25 May 1803. Princess Amelia sailed from Liverpool on 19 June. She acquired her slaves at Bonny and arrived at Demerara on 10 December with 300 slaves. She sailed from Demerara on 19 January 1804 and arrived back at Liverpool on 26 March. She had left with 33 crew members and had suffered one crew death on her voyage.
5th slave voyage (1804–1805): Captain McDonald sailed from Liverpool on 22 June 1804. Princess Amelia acquired slaves at Bonny and arrived at Dominica on 11 December with 309 slaves. She sailed for Liverpool on 22 February 1805 and arrived back there on 1 April. She had sailed from Liverpool with 41 crew members and she had suffered seven crew deaths on her voyage.
6th slave voyage (1805–1806): Captain James Dickson acquired a letter of marque on 20 June 1805, and sailed from Liverpool on 11 July. Princess Amelia gathered slaves at Bonny and arrived at Dominica on 14 February 1806, after stopping at Barbados on 18 January. Princess Amelia was sold at Dominica. She sailed from Dominica on 17 March and arrived back at Liverpool on 1 May. She had left Liverpool with 44 crew members and had suffered five crew deaths on her voyage.
7th slave voyage (1806–1807): Captain Dickson sailed from Liverpool on 27 June 1806. Princess Amelia acquired slaves at Bonny and arrived at Dominica on 5 December. She sailed from Dominica on 26 February 1807 and arrived back at Liverpool on 12 April.
8th slave voyage (1806–1807): The Slave Trade Act 1807, which banned British vessels from participating in the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, took effect on 1 May 1807. However, by clearing customs before the deadline, Captain Dickson was able to squeeze out one last legal slave-trading voyage even though she did not actually sail until 18 May. Princess Amelia gathered slaves at Bonny and arrived at Dominica on 21 November with 282 slaves. She arrived at London on 14 August 1808 from Grenada. She had left Liverpool with 40 crew members and she had suffered 11 crew deaths on her voyage.
Captain Robert Allam acquired a letter of marque on 6 May 1809.
Fate
In February 1810 Lloyd's List reported that Princess Amelia, from Liverpool, was lost in "River St Mary's.
Princess Amelia was last listed in Lloyd's Register in the volume for 1810.
Citations
1798 ships
Liverpool slave ships
Age of Sail merchant ships of England
Maritime incidents in 1810 | [
101,
4615,
11556,
2001,
3390,
1999,
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Ledbury Market Hall, also known as Ledbury Town Hall, is a municipal building in the High Street in Ledbury, Herefordshire, England. The structure, which is used as an events venue, is a Grade I listed building.
History
In the early 17th century, a market trader, John Phillips, launched an initiative to demolish an existing row of buildings in Shoppe Row and to erect a market hall in their place. The building, which has been attributed to the master mason, John Abel, was designed in the Tudor style using half-timbered construction and was completed in 1617. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with seven bays facing onto the High Street; the building was open on the ground floor, so that markets could be held, with a storeroom for grain on the first floor. The first floor, which was jettied out over the pavement, was supported by 16 oak posts and was accessed by a wooden staircase at the north end of the building. The first floor was fenestrated, on the west side, by three six-light mullioned and transomed windows and the half-timbering was executed in a Herringbone pattern.
The Royalists defeated the Roundheads in a minor skirmish in the Market Place in April 1645 during the English Civil War. The store room on first floor was converted for civic use in the early 19th century, enabling it to be used as a town hall and also as a venue for theatrical performances: early performers included the actor, Ira Aldridge, who appeared in a series of melodramas in lare January and early February 1831.
Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, visited the building during a tour of the county in April 1957. The building continued to be used for meetings of Ledbury Town Council and for wedding ceremonies until 2004 when these uses were discontinued because of the lack of disabled access. An extensive programme of restoration works, which involved temporarily raising the building by so that the oak posts could be restored, was completed in 2006.
See also
Grade I listed buildings in Herefordshire
References
Government buildings completed in 1617
City and town halls in Herefordshire
Grade I listed buildings in Herefordshire | [
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Platygobiopsis hadiatyae is a species of goby, commonly known as a Renny's Flat Goby.
Distribution
Currently only known from Panaitan Strait along the Sunda Strait in Indonesia.
Etymology
This species is named Renny Kurnia Hadiaty (21 August 1960 to 30 January 2019) of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Hadiaty co-authored 19 gobioid species names in addition to many other taxa.
References
External links
Platygobiopsis hadiatyae on FishBase
Gobiidae
Fish of Indonesia
Taxa named by Helen K. Larson
Fish described in 2020 | [
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CSS Carondelet was a sidewheel steamer that served in the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Construction for the vessel started in 1861, and she was launched on January 25, 1862, and commissioned on March 16. Her sister ship was CSS Bienville. On April 4, Carondelet, along with CSS Oregon and CSS Pamlico, took part in a small naval action near Pass Christian against USS New London, USS John P. Jackson, and the troop transport USS Henry Lewis. Carondelet suffered damage to her wheel during the fight, and likely fired the only two shots that struck John P. Jackson. Later that month, with the Confederates abandoning New Orleans, Louisiana, Carondelet was scuttled by her crew in either Lake Pontchartrain, the Tchefuncte River, or the Bogue Falaya River.
Service history
In late 1861, during the American Civil War, Confederate authorities were establishing a naval force to defend New Orleans, Louisiana. Many vessels had been sent north up the Mississippi River to help defend Columbus, Kentucky, but a smaller fleet remained in the New Orleans area. To strengthen the New Orleans fleet, two sister ships were constructed on Bayou St. John: Carondelet and the steamer CSS Bienville. Carondelet was built by S. D. Porter of the Confederate States Navy and by John Hughes. A sidewheel steamer, she was launched on January 25, 1862 and commissioned on March 16. She weighed 700 tons and was long, with a small draft. Naval historian Paul Silverstone states that she was armed with five 42-pounder cannon, while historian W. Craig Gaines and the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships state that she was also armed with a 32-pounder rifled cannon.
After her commissioning, Carondelet was placed under the command of First Lieutenant Washington Gwathmey. As sailors were in short supply, the ship's crew was supplemented by 30 Confederate States Army soldiers from the garrison of Fort Pike. The 42-pounder guns had also come from Army stockpiles. On April 3, two Union Navy shipsthe steamers USS New London and USS John P. Jackson and the troop transport USS Henry Lewis left Biloxi, Mississippi, to move against Confederate positions at Pass Christian. Along with the gunboats CSS Oregon and CSS Pamlico, Carondelet moved to combat the Union vessels on April 4. Henry Lewis withdrew after a Confederate shot struck her deck, wounding three men, and two shots probably fired by Carondelet caused minor damage to John P. Jackson. However, after both Oregon and Carondelet were hit in their wheels and the steamer USS Hatteras arrived to reinforce the Union ships, the Confederate vessels withdrew to Lake Pontchartrain, guarding the Chef Menteur Pass and the Rigolets. The 1,200 troops aboard Henry Lewis were then unloaded onto shore, and the Union forces captured the Pass Christian area and destroyed a local Confederate camp.
On April 24, Union Navy ships passed the Confederate positions of Fort Jackson and Fort St. Philip and passed the weaker defenses at Chalmette the next day. New Orleans was now essentially indefensible. Oregon was sunk as a blockship, but the location of the wreck later interfered with attempts by Carondelet, Bienville, Pamlico, and the transport CSS Arrow to escape. After ferrying Confederate troops out of the city to Covington across Lake Pontchartrain, Carondelet, Bienville, and Pamlico were scuttled by their crews on April 25. Their cannons were sent to Vicksburg, Mississippi, via the Confederate training facility Camp Moore. Naval historian Neil P. Chatelain, Silverstone, and the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships both state that Carondelet was sunk in Lake Pontchartrain, with Chatelain specifying the northern part of the lake. Gaines states that she was sunk in either the Tchefuncte River or the Bogue Falaya River. The wreck later became covered with sand and was a hazard to navigation. According to Gaines, it was likely removed in 1871 by the United States Army Corps of Engineers.
References
Sources
Gunboats of the Confederate States Navy
Ships built in New Orleans
Shipwrecks of the American Civil War
1862 ships
Maritime incidents in April 1862
Scuttled vessels | [
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20116,
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Ron Hutchinson (born 14 December 1927) is a retired Australian jockey, who won over 1000 races in Europe. In a 37-year racing career, he was successful across three continents.
Early life
Ronald Robert Hutchinson was born in Yarraville, eight kilometres outside Melbourne, to a plumber and a housewife. At the time, Yarraville was a heavily industrialised suburb which was struggling amid the Great Depression. He attended the Powell Street State School in the town.
He had no contact with horses as a young child, but became a fan of jockeys Harold Badger and Bill Duncan through reading about them in newspapers. He was also inspired by the 1938 film Stablemates and the horseracing newsreels shown before films at the local Sun Theatre where he worked selling sweets.
At school, he was asked to write an essay on what he wanted to be when he grew up and he chose to write about becoming a jockey. A woodwork teacher, who also gambled, knew the trainer Claude Goodfellow and introduced the young boy to him. Goodfellow had tutored champion jump jockey Laurie Meenan, Melbourne Cup winner Ossie Phillips, and Peter Simonds who had a 70-year riding and training career. He took Hutchinson on as apprentice. It helped that Hutchinson was very small, at the time just 157.5 cm. Hutchinson's parents actively discouraged him from pursuing a career in the sport, believing everyone involved to be crooks, although an uncle had a hairdressing salon opposite the stables at Flemington and would tell colourful stories about racing, which may have been a further influence on the boy. His father and uncle would later keep a scrapbook of his successes.
Career
Hutchinson started work at Goodfellow's Ascot Vale stable at the age of 14 - he remembers it being on one of the days the Japanese bombed Darwin - and lived in the stable block. Every morning, he rode his bike from Ascot Vale to Glenroy to learn how to ride with Bobbie Lewis, an ex-Melbourne Cup winner. Goodfellow had a limited number of horses, and as part of the war effort, also worked a night job canning sausages for the soldiers, before arriving at the track at 4am. This limited good racing opportunities.
Early success
He did not have his first race ride until December 1944, but displayed a natural talent for riding and soon became a leading apprentice. His first winner, on his 12th ride, was Busybody at the now defunct Mentone Racecourse and his first major success came quickly. After only three months, he won the Australian Cup on grey mare Spectre, trained by Cecil Godby. The day's race report commented on how Hutchinson "handled Spectre with excellent judgment". After the race, Hutchinson asked Goodfellow if he could go home and celebrate with his parents, but the trainer gave him some small change and told him to "go down to the shop and buy the Sporting Globe, go to bed and read about yourself". In his first eight months, he rode 12 winners and 26 placed horses from 160 rides.
Goodfellow was strict with Hutchinson. On one occasion, he forgot to bring some gear to the track and was banned from riding at the next meeting. He was told to ring the trainers who had already booked him and tell them he wouldn't be riding. Goodfellow would also vet the girls he chose to go out with. Hutchinson would be an apprentice with him until he was 21.
That first Australian Cup in 1945 was the first of 60 Cup winners he would ride in Australia. After becoming a senior jockey in the 1949–50 season, he won the Coongy Handicap and Moonee Valley Cup on top stayer Hoyle, then a second Australian Cup. In 1953, he won another Australian Cup on the three year old Arbroath, who won the VRC St Leger, Cup and Carbine Stakes in the space of eight days.
Throughout the 1950s, he was one of Australia's leading riders and won the Melbourne jockeys' premiership in 1958–59. He had wins in the Newmarket Handicap, Futurity Stakes, Metropolitan Handicap, VRC Oaks and Doomben Cup. One of his other key associations was three times Victorian champion trainer Lou Robertson.
Move to Europe
By the late 1950s, he had won most of Australia's major races. Inspired by his idol and compatriot, Scobie Breasley, who had done similarly a few years earlier, he relocated to Europe in search of further success. He was one of several jockeys who did likewise, including Bill Williamson and Jack Purtell. Hutchinson had watched and learned from Breasley at Flemington Racecourse as an apprentice. He said he "worshipped" him, often trying to copy his dress sense. Eventually, they ended up meeting, and became friends.
He moved first to Ireland to work for Paddy Prendergast and on his first ride in England won the 2000 Guineas riding Prendergast's Marshall He then gained a retainer from the Duke of Norfolk and would become the Duke's stable jockey for 16 years. During his time in Europe, he won over 1000 races, including the Ascot Gold Cup, Goodwood Cup, St Leger, 1000 Guineas, 2000 Guineas, Irish 1000 Guineas (three times), and an Irish 2000 Guineas, as well as riding Sheikh Mohammed's first winner.
He concluded his career with a year in Malaysia and Singapore, where he won the 1978 jockeys' premiership. His intention had been to retire before that, but on a cross-Atlantic flight he called into Singapore and visited the racecourse. He won nine races in four days and was invited to stay for the season.
After retirement as a jockey, he was an investor in the Lindsay Park training centre of Colin Hayes, trained horses and acted as racing manager for an American billionaire.
Hutchinson was inducted into the Australian Racing Hall of Fame in 2005 and now lives in Mornington, Victoria, swimming a kilometre most days in his 90s.
Riding style
Hutchinson's style has been described as "vigorous, well-balanced and close to the horse's neck and withers to save wind resistance." As a youngster, Claude Goodfellow told him to "keep a 'Jim Pike' hollow in his back and one day he would be at the top of the tree". He became "world renowned for his skill on the racetrack".
Personal life
Hutchinson married Norma Gum, of Sunshine, Victoria, at the Sunshine Presbyterian Church on 23 April 1953. The two met at a social gathering. Before they started dating, his trainer Claude Goodfellow had taken her out for a drive to see if he approved of her and came back saying "she's a good girl". Norma was not interested in racing and newspapers ran the story of their marriage with the headline "Ron marries a non-bettor". The groomsman at the wedding was fellow jockey Bill Williamson who at the time had a two win lead over Hutchinson in the jockeys' premiership and went on to win it.
He had four children with Norma - Raymond, Susan, Sally and Peter. Both Raymond and Peter worked in the racing industry. Raymond used to exercise horses at Scobie Breasley's yard in Epsom, and was leading amateur rider in England for four years before graduating in Veterinary Science at the University of London. Peter was apprentice to Colin Hayes and became premier jockey in Adelaide in 1989-90 and 91 before moving to Melbourne. He won the 1993 Caulfield Cup on Fraar.
Major wins
Great Britain
1000 Guineas Stakes - Full Dress (1969)
2000 Guineas Stakes - Martial (1960)
Coronation Stakes - Sovereign (1968)
Dewhurst Stakes - Pretendre (1965)
Eclipse Stakes - Scottish Rifle (1973)
Gold Cup - Ragstone (1974)
Goodwood Cup - Gaulois (1966)
July Cup - (2) - Merry Madcap (1965), Parsimony (1972)
Lockinge Stakes - (2) - Supreme Sovereign (1968), Habitat (1969)
Nunthorpe Stakes - Floribunda (1961)
Observer Gold Cup - Pretendre (1965)
Prince of Wales's Stakes - Arthur (1971)
Queen Anne Stakes - Roi Soleil (1971)
St Leger Stakes - Intermezzo (1969)
Sussex Stakes - (3) - Queen's Hussar (1963), Carlemont (1965), Paveh (1966)
Ireland
Irish 1,000 Guineas - (3) - Lacquer (1967), Black Satin (1970), Gaily (1974)
Irish Champion Stakes - North Stoke (1977)
See also
List of jockeys
References
1927 births
Living people
Australian jockeys | [
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Magdalena Maleeva was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.
Martina Müller won the title by defeating Myriam Casanova 6–2, 3–6, 6–4 in the final.
Seeds
Draw
Finals
Top half
Bottom half
References
External links
Official results archive (ITF)
Official results archive (WTA)
Budapest Grand Prix - Singles
Budapest Grand Prix | [
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The Phoenician Adoration steles are a number of Phoenician and Punic steles depicting the adoration gesture (orans).
In Umm al-Amad, Lebanon, 23 such steles have been found. These date to between 100-400 BCE. Many of the steles contain inscriptions; these usually reference religious titles such as "priest", "chief", or "chief of gates". Of the males depicted, most images show the person in a long robe holding a bowl with an elongated handle in the shape of a naked girl considered to be the Ancient Egyptian Cosmetic Spoon: Young Girl Swimming.
Baalyaton stele
The Baalyaton stele is a stele dated to 150BC found in 1900 in three parts at Umm al-Amad, Lebanon.
On the front side is a representation of a man in bas-relief, with a three-line inscription engraved below the left hand. At the top is solar disk, in Egyptian style, flanked by two uraeuses (cobras). The main portrait is full length, beardless, in a tunic down to bare feet; the open right hand stretched forward in the habitual gesture of adoration.
The three line inscription is known as KI 15. The inscription has been translated as follows: “This is the memory stone of Baalyaton, son of Baalyaton hrd/b”
It is currently at the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen.
Gallery
Bibliography
General
Caubet, Annie ; Fontan, Elisabeth ; Gubel, Eric, Art phénicien : la sculpture de tradition phénicienne (Paris, Musée du Louvre), [Musée du Louvre/Département des Antiquités orientales], Paris, RMN/Snoeck, 2002, Disponible sur : M:\AO\Ouvrages numériques\Caubet-Fontan-Gubel_ArtPhénicien_2003.pdf , p. 144, n° 157
Maës, Antoine, « Le costume phénicien des stèles d'Umm el-'Amed », dans Lipinski, Edward (dir.), Phoenicia and the Bible, Louvain, Peeters, (Studia Phoenicia, 11), 1991, P. 209-230, p. 212-213, fig. 2
Maximilian F. Rönnberg, Bemerkungen zur phönizisch-punischen Priesterikonographie, Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins, Bd. 133, H. 1 (2017), pp. 84-105
Henrike Michelau, Hellenistische Stelen mit Kultakteuren aus Umm el-ʿAmed, Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina Vereins 130/1, 2014, 77-95
Henrike Michelau, Adorantendarstellungen karthagischer und phönizischer Grabstelen, in: H. Töpfer / F. Schön (ed.), Karthago-Dialoge. Karthago und der punische Mittelmeerraum – Kulturkontakte und Kulturtransfers im 1. Jahrtausend vor Christus (RessourcenKulturen, 2; Tübingen), 137–158.
Baalyaton stele (RES 250)
RES 250
Clermont-Ganneau, La stèle phénicienne d'Oumm el'Aouâmid, Receuil d’Archéologie Orientale 5, 1903, 1-8 and 84.Paris
Note di Epigrafia fenicia I-IV, A.Catastini, Rivistate di studi fenicie XIII, 1985
Lidzbarski, Mark, Ephemeris für semitische Epigraphik, volume I, p.280 ff
RES 307 (at the Louvre)
RES 307
Clermont-Ganneau, Un prêtre de Malak-Astarté, Recueil d'archéologie orientale (RAO V), Paris, 1903, p. 150-154
Heuzey Léon. Archéologie orientale. In: Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, 46ᵉ année, N. 2, 1902. pp. 190-206. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3406/crai.1902.17111
Louvre (AO 4047, AO 4062, AO 3137)
References
Phoenician inscriptions | [
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John Sullivan Deas (1838 – July 22, 1880) was a Black tinsmith who helped found the salmon canning industry on the Fraser River in southern British Columbia, Canada. His cannery was located on Deas Island, which bears his name to this day. In 2017, he was named one of 150 noteworthy British Columbians by The Vancouver Sun.
Early life and career
John Sullivan Deas was born in South Carolina in 1838. He began advertising himself as a tinsmith by 1856, when he would have still been a teenager.
San Francisco
By 1860, he relocated to San Francisco where he shared an address with other Black South Carolinians Louis and Susan Mortimer and Z. Deas. Deas worked as a tinsmith from 1860-1861 in San Francisco and was employed by Martin Prag, who also owned an establishment on Vancouver Island.
Victoria
By 1862, Deas was established in Victoria in the colony of Vancouver Island. By late 1868, he was operating a hardware and stove business called Birmingham House at the corner of Fort and Broad Streets.
Salmon canning
John Sullivan Deas entered the salmon canning business in 1871, when he was hired by Captain Edward Stamp to make the cans for his pioneering canning business. Deas continued this work after Stamp died of a heart attack during a trip to England and eventually built his own cannery on what is now known as Deas Island in 1873. Labels for canned salmon produced at the cannery read "Fresh Salmon, John S. Deas, Frazer [sic] River, British Columbia" and were lithographed by San Francisco firm G.T. Brown & Co. owned by Black artist Grafton Tyler Brown. Deas was the lead canner on the Fraser River during this time and produced twice as much as his competitors during the 1872 and 1873 seasons. More competitors began canning businesses along the Fraser River in the years that followed, and Deas' canning business fell from its lead position. On August 19, 1878 Deas announced he had "sold all right, title, and interest in the fishery on Deas' Island, Fraser River to Messrs. Findlay, Durham and Brodie and my connection with the same ceases from this date." The business sold for fifteen thousand dollars.
Personal life
John Sullivan Deas married Fanny Harris from Hamilton, Canada West on September 4, 1862. After selling the cannery on Deas Island, he moved to Portland, Oregon to rejoin his family and died only two years later. He was survived by his wife Fanny and seven children when he died on July 22, 1880.
References
Black Canadian businesspeople
1838 births
1880 deaths | [
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Fuel Research Aluminium Stearate (FRAS), is mixture of chemical substances, used as an incendiary agent by United Kingdom during the Second World War. It is hygroscopic fuel, composed of "aluminium stearate", petrol, and peptized by xylenol, developed by the Fuel Research Station of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research.
In the conflict in Europea, it was the K fuel of the M1A1 flamethrower. Delivered ready to use. It was used as fuel for individual flamethrowers, for the Churchill Crocodile flamethrower tank, and as a precursor in the 5B incendiary paste used in the flame-fougasse.
It was adopted by the Canadian Army (1942) and War Office (1943).
History
After the start of the Second World War, concerned with the development, research and technical mastery of incendiary mixtures, the Mixture Committee was formed in the second half of the year 1940 by the Director of Fuel Research, Dr. Frank Sturdy Sinnatt. The development of material, such as a substitute for rubber, was started in January 1942, in several works, by several members of the committee.
The initial component was the most commercially available sodium stearate (FRSS), but the gel underwent syneresis. It was then opted for its respective aluminium salt. The work on this component was the most important. The gelling power of aluminium stearate has been known.
In early investigative work, the standard component was rubber, being the constituent in several incendiary mixtures. Its anomalous viscosity being essential for flamethrower fuel. The use of this component deteriorated with the fall of Malaysia in February 1942.
With this series of events, efforts were directed towards the feasibility and standardization of aluminium stearate. The initial results of the development of the thickened fuel turned out to be unsatisfactory. An additive remedied the deficiencies of the gel. After this resolution, a special investigation into the manufacture of soaps was carried out, solving the problems of the thickener.
Work with F.R.A.S. gels was then carried out at the Fuel Research Station until fuel production was taken over by the Ministry of Supply. The Fuel Research Station continued to serve as an advisor on the industrial scale production and improvement of F.R.A.S. and its precursors, of which around 41 million litres were manufactured and used in the European theatre.
Military use
The service fuel has undergone various degrees of requirements, both due to the seasons and the war zone. In general, production plants prepared two types of fuel for flamethrowers.
F.R.A.S. was mainly used in Europe, designated for the M1A1 flamethrower as British "K" (FTF fuel, Heavy No. 1). The British fuel was widely used by American forces and some units used it in preference to napalm. The napalm gel had a tendency to channel, resulting in incomplete exhaustion of the fuel. Due to Britain's economic condition, K fuel was in short supply, particularly when the US Third Army landed on the continent.
Transport and handling
The batches of fuel were conditioned in drums, then stored in open spaces and in a stacked manner. The transfer process, to flamethrowers or other devices, were problematic, particularly for mechanized flamethrower fuel.
The process of working with the drum for Crocodile proved to be especially laborious, requiring the construction of a high structure and a side opening in the drum to facilitate its handling. US Army flamethrower users were given a 5 US gallon "Jerrycan".
Preparation
During World War II, Gel-Gas was prepared in batches using mobile plants. The process consisted of the digestion of the thickener in the liquid medium under special conditions.
See also
Napalm
Isooctal
W
Hydroxy-aluminum 2-ethylhexanoate
Notes
References
External links
Incendiary weapons
Flamethrowers
British inventions
World War II weapons | [
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The Hôtel De Brouckère (, ) is an Art Nouveau building designed by Octave van Rysselberghe in collaboration with Henry van de Velde on Rue Jacques Jordaens/Jacob Jordaensstraat in Brussels, Belgium.
Location
The Hôtel De Brouckère is located in Brussels, at number 34 of rue Jacques Jordaens, at the corner of rue Jacques Jordaens and rue De Crayer, a few steps from avenue Louise.
History
The Hôtel de Brouckère was built in 1898 for Florence De Brouckère, born Florence Tant, widow since 1887 of Gustave De Brouckère, mother-in-law of Louis de Brouckère, and friend of Élisée Reclus. It was in fact Élisée Reclus who was the true promoter of this construction and who put her companion in contact with Henry van de Velde and the creative world of the time.
It was classified as a monument in 1997 and currently houses the Représentation de la Communauté germanophone de Belgique.
Architecture
Material
The Hôtel De Brouckère was built in freestone of golden color, with the exception of the basement which is made of blue stone.
The facades
It has a short facade overlooking rue De Crayer and a long facade facing rue Jordaens, the two facades being connected by a canted side.
The building is sober in style, and it is does not have the same profusion of volumes as the nearby Hotel Otlet.
The bays on the ground floor are surmounted by low arches with an elegant design, while the first floor, underlined by a marked cordon, is pierced by a series of windows with a slightly recessed rectangular frame and surmounted by five keystones. The windows located at the ends of the floor are in triplet.
The facades are crowned by a cornice supported by an elegant freestone frieze punctuated by slender brackets also made of freestone.
The court
The building is extended by a courtyard delimited by an enclosure wall clinging to the main facade with an elegant curve.
The side facade overlooking this courtyard presents an alternation of white stone and red brick.
References
External links
Houses in Belgium
City of Brussels
Octave van Rysselberghe buildings
Houses completed in 1898 | [
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Arthur Eugene Holder (born Waterford, St. Michael) is a Barbadian politician and lawyer. He is a Member of the House of Assembly of Barbados. Holder is currently serving as the Speaker of the House of Assembly of Barbados.
Early life and career
Arthur Eugene Holder was born in Waterford, Saint Michael. He attended the University of the West Indies and had his post-graduate at the Barry University, Miami.
Holder was the senior advocate at Holder and company. He was the Manager of the Barbados Child Care Board and the programme officer with the National Council on Substance Abuse. In 2013, Holder contested for the Barbados House of Assembly and lost. In 2018, he ran again for office and won. He was elected member of the Barbados House of Assembly in 2018. Immediately after being elected he was appointed the Speaker of the Barbados House of Assembly.
He is a member of the Barbados Labour Party.
References
Barbadian politicians
Members of the House of Assembly of Barbados
University of the West Indies alumni
Barry University alumni
Barbados Labour Party politicians
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people | [
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Hightower is a surname.
Hightower may also refer to:
Hightower (band), a French punk rock band
Hightower, Texas, United States, an unincorporated community
Hightower Building, a commercial office building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, on the National Register of Historic Places
Hightower Falls, a waterfall and historic site in Cedartown, Georgia
Hightower Forest, a state forest in Dawson County, Georgia, United States
Hightower High School, Missouri City, Texas
Hightower Park, a small park in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Battle of Hightower, a 1793 battle of the Cherokee–American wars
Hightower Text, a serif typeface
See also
High Tower, a 2014 Swedish children's radio programme
"The High Tower", a first season episode of Star Wars Resistance | [
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Shadows: Awakening is an action RPG video game developed by Games Farm and published by Kalypso Media for Microsoft Windows, Xbox One and PlayStation 4 in August 2018. It is a successor to the 2014 game Shadows: Heretic Kingdoms and is the third installment of the Heretic Kingdoms series.
Gameplay
Shadows: Awakening is played from an isometric perspective with a top-down camera angle. The game focuses on hack-and-slash combat and loot collection, encouraging the player to utilise its core mechanic of switching between the Devourer, a demon summoned from the Shadow Realm, and up to three playable characters.
The game also contains puzzles and quests that players must complete in order to progress the story.
Plot
Like its predecessor, Shadows: Awakening takes place in the fantasy world of the Heretic Kingdoms. The game begins with the player being summoned from the Shadow Realm in the form of a demon named the Devourer by a mysterious hooded man, voiced by Tom Baker. The player is then given three characters to choose from; long-deceased heroes each with their own abilities and storyline, which the Devourer possesses. The hero, now brought back to life, is called upon to stop other demonic forces from taking over the Heretic Kingdoms in the form of the recently-assassinated secret council Penta Nera.
Reception
The game received "generally favorable reviews" according to the review aggregation website Metacritic, with a critic score of 77/100 and user score of 7/10. Push Square also gave the game a rating of 7/10, stating "Shadows: Awakening is a deep action RPG which brings a literal new dimension to the tried and tested Diablo format. It's a great choice for those looking for a meaty fantasy time-sink, and while it does stumble occasionally, it delivers many hours of engaging hack-'n'-slash gaming."
The Sixth Axis gave the game a 6/10 rating, declaring in the conclusion of their review, "Shadows: Awakening ultimately fails to be the action RPG that fans of the genre need. It has some interesting ideas and decent writing, but the story shifts to the backburner after a while and the side missions and combat aren’t enough to maintain interest through the grind it turns into. It’s not bad, it’s just not particularly inspiring either. If you need a new Diablo-like and a lack of polish or a glut of grind doesn’t bother you, there are definitely worse options out there."
The game was ranked 94th in Metacritic's Best PC Video Games for 2018 list. It was nominated in the Technology category in the 2019 Central and Eastern European Game Awards (CEEGA), but lost to Space Engineers.
Expansions
The game's first expansion, The Chromaton Chronicles, was released on 26 October 2018 on Microsoft Windows, Xbox One, and Playstation 4. This expansion added new areas for the player to explore, as well as a new puppet for the player to summon.
The second expansion, entitled Necrophage's Curse, was released on 13 December 2018 for the same platforms, and added new puzzles, quests, enemies and another new puppet.
References
2018 video games
Action role-playing video games
Windows games
Xbox One games
PlayStation 4 games
Video games with isometric graphics
Fantasy video games
Video games about demons
Video games developed in Slovakia | [
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Jan Hernych successfully defended his title, by defeating Jiří Vaněk 3–6, 6–4, 6–3 in the final.
Seeds
Draw
Finals
Top half
Bottom half
References
External links
ITF tournament profile
Main Draw (ATP)
Qualifying Draw (ATP)
2005 Men's Singles | [
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The death of Jeanette Bishop and Gabriella Guerin is a case following the death of Jeanette Bishop and Gabriella Guerin, which occurred on an uncertain date. The disappearance of the two women occurred on 29 November 1980 on Monti Sibillini, near Sarnano. The surveys are also abroad in other countries, mostly in the European Union, and in Brazil.
Background
Ellen Dorothy Jeanette Bishop, known by the surname Rothschild being the former wife of financier Evelyn de Rothschild or by the surname May acquired by her second husband Stephen Charles May, allocated to Sarnano in November 1980 with her secretary and interpreter Gabriella Guerin, to perform restoration work at a house purchased from the hamlet Schito. On November 29, Bishop and Guerin decided to go for a ride near the mountain, heading with their car, a Peugeot 104, towards Sassotetto. That evening the weather conditions were bad, in fact there was a snowstorm that lasted until the next day.
Surveys
Not seeing the return of the two women, in December a helicopter of carabinieri of Nucleus helicopters of Ancona left to their search, managing to locate the car. Law enforcement began the investigation and discovered that the car had been parked voluntarily. Footprints were found near a house and it was thought that Jeanette and Gabriella had used the structure as a refuge because of the snowfall abundant. The car showed no signs of Struggle, forced entry or Theft and Breakdown.
On January 14, her husband Stephen said to give a reward of dollars for those who found Jeanette alive, but on January 18, 1982, the carabinieri of Camerino, not finding the bodies of the two women, hypothesized that they had died assiderate, even if the then husband of Jeanette did not agree with the hypothesis. On 27 January two hunters stumbled upon a forest between Lago di Fiastra and the hermitage of San Liberato, the personal belongings and skeletons of the two women: the bones had been damaged by boars and some of them were missing. The autopsy revealed that both Jeanette and Gabriella died at the site.
In December 1982, the case was taken by the Macerata prosecutor Alessandro Iacoboni, who opened a file for arson. At the same time, Scotland Yard was investigating the death of a Roman antique dealer, Sergio Vaccari, who was killed by 15 stab wounds on 17 September 1982 in his apartment in Holland Park, further complicating the case of the death of the two women, since it turns out that Jeanette was one of the man’s contacts. The figure of Jeanette and the antique dealer are connected with the theft of the auction house "Christie’s" in Piazza Navona and telegrams, sometimes incomprehensible, were found in the possession of the woman. On 25 September 1989, Iacoboni concluded that the case was attributable to a double homicide with unknown causes and perpetrators.
During the investigation, Bishop’s name came up during the investigation of the Institute for Religious Works, then-President Paul Marcinkus, and in the Orlandi case. According to the testimony of Marco Fassone Accetti, one of the six people accused of the disappearance of Orlandi, who decided to carry out an operation against the IOR and other numerous religious figures to stop the funding of John Paul II, Jeanette was one of the women chosen to accuse Marcinkus of sexual assault, as the woman used to frequent salons of the high nobility, but her death blocked the plan. In fact, Bishop, being a friend of the archbishop, perhaps had learned of some information related to the disappearance of Emanuela Orlandi and then killed for this reason.
In 2006, the professor of molecular forensic diagnostics Franco Maria Venanzi, of the University of Camerino, managed to carry out the recognition of Gabriella Guerin through the examination of her DNA.
References
1980 murders in Europe
Rothschild family | [
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An antilibrary is a collection of books that are owned but have not yet been read. The term antilibrary was coined by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, and the concept it describes has been compared to the Japanese tsundoku.
Etymology
The term antilibrary was coined by Nassim Nicholas Taleb in his book The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable to describe the books that many people own but have not read. Taleb argued that such collections of books make people more humble and curious. He based the concept on the books kept by Umberto Eco, writing that Eco "separates visitors into two categories": those who praise the size of his library and those who recognize that a library is a tool for research. Describing books that have been read as "far less valuable than unread ones", Taleb stated that "the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection of unread books an antilibrary." Taleb additionally referred to people interested in antilibraries as antischolars.
Analysis
The Autumn 2015 issue of HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory included an editor's note which stated that "a scholar conscious of the power of his antilibrary is not concerned with treating knowledge as a property to possess or consume; rather [...] how much you don’t know—and how to find out that information when you need it." The editor, Giovanni da Col, further stated that the lower cost of open access publishing "generates more genuine possibilities of an open antilibrary".
In The New York Times in 2018, Kevin Mims compared Taleb's concept of the antilibrary to the Japanese term tsundoku, which also refers to books that have been purchased but not yet read. Mims additionally stated that "people like Taleb [...] and whoever coined the word tsundoku seem to recognize only two categories of book: the read and the unread", pointing out that many reference books are not meant to be read in their entirety and stating that he owned many biographies which he had not not fully read. Writing in Big Think in 2018, Kevin Dickinson stated that the value of the antilibrary comes from the way it "challenges our self-estimation by providing a constant, niggling reminder of all we don’t know", fostering intellectual humility.
References
Further reading
Book collecting
Book terminology | [
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The exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of Ireland extends from the coast. Exclusive economic zones are areas of internationally-recognised rights to conduct certain activities on areas of the high seas but do not give any power over access to those areas, including over shipping or military matters.
Disputes and controversies
Within Ireland's EEZ there is one notable long-running dispute, and from time to time other disputes and issues arise.
Rockall
The area around Rockall is disputed.
Russian military exercise controversy
In January 2022 controversy arose over a proposed Russian military exercise in international waters but inside the EEZ. The Russian government said that they would move the exercises outside the EEZ.
References
External links
Exclusive Economic Zone Boundary Ireland - data.gov.ie
marineregions.org
UK and Ireland's Exclusive Economic Zones - esa.int
Exclusive economic zones
Borders of the Republic of Ireland
Economy of the Republic of Ireland | [
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Balázs Taróczy became the 4-time consecutive champion after defeating Heinz Günthardt 6–3, 6–7, 6–4 in the final.
Seeds
Draw
Finals
Top half
Bottom half
References
External links
Official results archive (ATP)
Official results archive (ITF)
Dutch Open (tennis)
1981 Grand Prix (tennis) | [
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Hazel Dell, also spelled Hazeldell, is an unincorporated community located in Comanche County, in the U.S. state of Texas.
History
The area in what is known as Hazel Dell today was first settled around 1869. A sawmill was established there on Mill Branch, a tributary of the Leon River. It cut most of the rawhide lumber that was used for buildings in the community. Besides the sawmill, it also had a store, a hotel, a bowling alley, and a saloon. More businesses were eventually built as the community continued to grow. A post office was established at Hazel Dell in 1871 but was listed as Resley's Creek in 1870. A nondenominational Christian church named Flat Rock Church served the community but is no longer in operation. The first graves in the cemetery were added in 1873. The community served local ranches during the 1870s, but also brought in cowboys and drifters. Crime also ran rampant in the community, in which it had a history of murders, hangings, cattle rustling, gaming, and mob activities. Hazel Dell became the second-largest city in Comanche County in 1880. It subsequently began to decline when the railroad bypassed the community. Its population was 30 in 1884, 45 in 1890, and 100 in 1896. It had a cotton gin and flour mill that same year. There was a cemetery and several scattered houses in the community in 1940. These, along with the community center, remained in the community in the 1990s and the community continued to be listed on county maps.
Geography
Hazel Dell is located at the intersection of Farm to Market Roads 591 and 1702, southeast of Comanche in southeastern Comanche County.
Education
The first school in Hazel Dell was built in 1873, although the first mention of a school came three years later. It remained in operation in 1940 until it joined the Gustine Independent School District later that decade. The community continues to be served by the Gustine ISD to this day.
References
Unincorporated communities in Comanche County, Texas
Unincorporated communities in Texas | [
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Bill Lane may refer to:
Bill Lane (baseball), American baseball player
Bill Lane (basketball) (1916–1997), American basketball player
Bill Lane (ornithologist) (1922–2000), Australian amateur ornithologist
Bill Lane (publisher) (1919–2010), American publisher and diplomat
See also
William Lane (disambiguation) | [
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Björn Borg was the defending champion, but did not play that year. Borg would eventually retire from professional tennis in January 1983, after playing only one tournament in the entire season at Monte Carlo.
Ramesh Krishnan won the title by defeating Sandy Mayer 5–7, 6–3, 6–3, 7–6 in the final.
Seeds
Draw
Finals
Top half
Bottom half
References
External links
Official results archive (ATP)
Official results archive (ITF)
Stuttgart Singles
Singles 1982 | [
101,
24998,
28709,
2001,
1996,
6984,
3410,
1010,
2021,
2106,
2025,
2377,
2008,
2095,
1012,
28709,
2052,
2776,
11036,
2013,
2658,
5093,
1999,
2254,
3172,
1010,
2044,
2652,
2069,
2028,
2977,
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1996,
2972,
2161,
2012,
10125,
9758,
1012,
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1,
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1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
Ashley Compton-Dando (born 23 August 1951) is a British former professional tennis player.
Compton-Dando, a native of Essex, is the son of an antiques dealer. Deaf since birth, he played with the aide of an earphone connected to a short-wave radio, which was strapped to his side. He received coaching from Lew Hoad at a tennis school in Berkhamsted. In 1973 he partnered Phil Siviter in the doubles main draw at Wimbledon.
References
External links
1951 births
Living people
British male tennis players
English male tennis players
Tennis people from Essex
Deaf tennis players | [
101,
9321,
18592,
1011,
4907,
3527,
1006,
2141,
2603,
2257,
4131,
1007,
2003,
1037,
2329,
2280,
2658,
5093,
2447,
1012,
18592,
1011,
4907,
3527,
1010,
1037,
3128,
1997,
8862,
1010,
2003,
1996,
2365,
1997,
2019,
27763,
11033,
1012,
12419,
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