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The 2022 Rally Sweden (also known as the Swedish Rally 2022) is a motor racing event for rally cars that is scheduled to be held over four days between 24 and 27 February 2022. It will mark the sixty-ninth running of the Rally Sweden, and will be the second round of the 2022 World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2 and World Rally Championship-3. The 2022 event is based in Umeå, in Västerbotten County. The rally was scheduled to cover a total competitive distance of 303.74 km, but was shortened to 264.81 km prior to the start of the rally due to unexpected reindeer movements in the Örträsk area.
Elfyn Evans and Scott Martin are the defending rally winners. Their team, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT, are the defending manufacturers' winners. Mads Østberg and Torstein Eriksen are the defending rally winners in the WRC-2 category, while Jari Huttunen and Mikko Lukka are the defending rally winners in the WRC-3 category.
Kalle Rovanperä and Jonne Halttunen took their third WRC victory. Their team, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT, successfully defended their title. Andreas Mikkelsen was the winner in the WRC-2 category and Eriksen successfully defended his title. The Finnish crew of Lauri Joona and Mikael Korhonen won the WRC-3 category, while Jon Armstrong and Brian Hoy won the junior class.
Background
Entry list
The following crews are set to enter into the rally. The event will be opened to crews competing in the World Rally Championship, its support categories, the World Rally Championship-2 and World Rally Championship-3, and privateer entries that are not registered to score points in any championship. Eleven crews were entered under Rally1 regulations, as are twenty-four Rally2 crews in the World Rally Championship-2 and eight Rally3 crews in the World Rally Championship-3.
Itinerary
The rally was initially covered in nineteen special stages, but it was reduced to seventeen in a total of due to reindeer movements.
All dates and times are CET (UTC+1).
Report
WRC Rally1
Classification
Special stages
Championship standings
WRC-2 Rally2
Special stages
WRC-3 Rally3
Classification
Special stages
Notes
References
External links
2022 Rally Sweden at eWRC-results.com
2022 Rally Sweden at rally-maps.com
2022 in Swedish motorsport
Sweden
February 2022 sports events in Sweden
2022 | [
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The ninth season of the Russian reality talent show The Voice Kids which will premiere on 18 February 2022 on Channel One. Dmitry Nagiev and Agata Muceniece returned as the show's presenters. Basta and Egor Kreed returned as a coach were joined by Polina Gagarina, who returned as a coach after a one-season break.
Coaches and presenters
Basta and Egor Kreed returned as coaches and were joined by Polina Gagarina, who returned as a coach after a one-season break.
Dmitry Nagiev and Agata Muceniece returned as the show's presenters.
Teams
Colour key
Blind Auditions
Blind auditions started on 18 February. As like previous season, each coach has to complete its team with fifteen contestants.
Best Coach
Colour key
Notes
References
9
2022 Russian television seasons | [
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Laurence Ralph is an American writer, filmmaker and researcher. He is a Professor of Anthropology at Princeton University and the Director of Center on Transnational Policing.
Ralph's research interests include urban ethnography, disability studies, social inequality, African American studies, race, policing, theories of violence, popular culture and hip-hop. He authored the books Renegade Dreams: Living Through Injury in Gangland in 2014 and The Torture Letters: Reckoning with Police Violence in 2020. He is also writer and director of the animated short film, The Torture Letters.
Ralph has received the Guggenheim and Carnegie Fellowships, and is a fellow of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. He also received a fellowship from Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University, and a Trustees Fellowship from the University of Chicago. He has received grants from the National Science Foundation, the Wenner Gren Foundation, and the National Research Council of the National Academies and is a member of the Institute for Advanced Study and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. He is the Editor in Chief at Current Anthropology and has been the Associate Editor at Transforming Anthropology.
Education
Ralph received his Bachelor of Science degree in history, Technology and Society from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2004. He then earned his M.A. and Ph.D. in anthropology from The University of Chicago in 2006 and 2010 respectively.
Career
Ralph began his academic career at the University of Michigan in 2010, where he was a Visiting Faculty member and a Mandela-Rodney-Dubois Postdoctoral fellow at the Center for African and Afro American Studies. He was an assistant professor in the Departments of African and African American Studies and Anthropology at Harvard University from 2011 to 2015, after which he became the John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences till 2017 and subsequently became the Professor of Anthropology and African American Studies there. Since 2018, he has been the Professor of Anthropology at Princeton University.
Since 2015, he has been the Director at the Center of Transnational Policing and since 2017, he has been on the Advisory Council of the Wenner Gren Foundation.
Works
Ralph's work focuses on the way police abuse, mass incarceration and the drug trade have historically normalized disease, disability and the premature death of black urbanites as they are often perceived as being expendable. The research he does lies at the junction of critical medical and political anthropology, African-American studies and the emerging scholarship on disability and he combined the literature on these to show for black urban residents, violence and injury plays a central role in their day-to-day lives. He has explored these themes in Disability Studies Quarterly, Transition, Anthropological Theory, and Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power.
In an article, Ralph examines the life and career of a Chicago police detective, Richard Zuley, who tortured criminal suspects in the United States and Guantánamo Bay. He builds on the scholarship on white supremacy, as he discusses the schema of racism that informs state-sanctioned violence which is often subconsciously used as a rationale for fighting terrorism as it is deeply ingrained in people's minds and cannot be "unthought." His findings in the Torture without Torturers paper concluded that the legal categorization of trauma is problematic as it rationalizes the inequality of police brutality on black victims because of the allowances that are given which betray the implicit assumption that they are debilitated because of their racialized status before any reprieve can be offered by the law. In The logic of the slave patrol: the fantasy of black predatory violence and the use of force by the police, he studied the 2014 shootings and discovered that in the instance McDonald shooting, the gun helped in reproducing the fantasy of Black predatory violence that stems from slavery. While examining the mechanisms used by African American residents in a low-income community in the Westside of Chicago, he gained valuable insights in the ways in which they face a dearth of institutional resources, differ from popular expectations of mourning and thus develop the concept of “becoming aggrieved” which is not just mourning death but also about affirming life. In his article on The Qualia of pain, he considers the relationship between the qualitative experience, enactments of violence and the intense silences that obscure its recognition. He argued that black urbanites could convert their experiences of injury into communal narratives by coming to terms with the qualia of pain. In another study, he detailed what wounds revealed about diversity in stigmatized groups and ethnographically examined anti-gang forums hosted by disabled ex-gang members, enabling them to save lives, making a point about it being politically strategic to inhabit the role of a “defective body” as to make claims about a violent society.
Books
In 2014, Ralph wrote the book Renegade Dreams: Living Through Injury in Gangland Chicago, published by the University of Chicago Press, which won the Society for the Study of Social Problems: C. Wright Mills Award and the J.I. Staley Award from the School for Advanced Research. The book emphasizes on the after-math of the “war-on-drugs” along with mass incarceration, the consequences of heroin trafficking for teenagers that are HIV positive, the danger of gunshot violence and the subsequent injuries sustained by gang-members. This allowed him to detail the social forces that make black residents susceptible to diseases and disability. William Julius Wilson, the author of The Truly Disadvantaged, praised his book “Renegade Dreams is a tour de force―extremely well written and engaging, and replete with original insights. Once I began reading Ralph’s book I had a difficult time putting it down. His field research is fascinating. And his explicit discussion of the interconnections of inner-city injury with government, community institutions, as well as how it is related to historical and social processes, is a major contribution.” The Times Higher Education said that “Although it lacks the easy narrative of many traditional ethnographies, this is precisely the book’s strength. There is no convenient valorisation of the ordinary extraordinariness of the lives portrayed here. Their dreams are shown to be chaotic, complex and contradictory. Just like life in ‘Eastwood.’”
Ralph wrote another book in 2020 titled The Torture Letters: Reckoning with Police Violence, also published by the University of Chicago Press, which won the Robert Textor Prize for Excellence in Anticipatory Anthropology This book explored the scandal that spanned over a decade about how 125 black suspects were tortured in police custody. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., author of Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow describes the book as “Devastatingly powerful, The Torture Letters is one of those extraordinary volumes whose contents are accessible to all readers. It is a necessary and important book that measures both the economic and, more importantly, human cost of police violence.” The Publishers Weekly called it "[A] deeply caring work. . . An essential primer on the roots of police violence" and the Kirkus Review said "Ralph brings necessary light to the problem of police torture. A damning indictment of the senseless and seemingly unceasing violence committed by those charged with serving the public." He then adapted this book into an animated short film, also called The Torture Letters which was featured in The New York Times Opinion Documentary series. It won the Best in Show at Spark Animation Film Festival, the Diversity Award at Women in Animation and the Social Impact Award at the Black in Animation. The Torture Letters also qualified for an Academy Award in the animated short category. According to WIA President Marge Dean The Torture Letters uses the medium of animation in the best way possible by telling a story that is not often heard but is critical for the advancement of humanity.”
Awards and honors
2004 - Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship in Humanistic Studies, Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation
2004 - Trustees Fellowship, University of Chicago
2005 - National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Award
2009 - Mellon Dissertation Year Fellowship, University of Chicago
2009 - Erskine Peters Dissertation Year Fellowship, University of Notre Dame
2010 - Du Bois-Mandela-Rodney Post-Doctoral fellowship, University of Michigan
2012 - Ford Foundation Diversity Postdoctoral Fellowship, National Research Council of the National Academies
2015 - Visiting Fellow, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Cambridge, MA
2015 - Andrew Carnegie Fellowship, Carnegie Corporation of New York
2019 - Humanities Council Magic Grant, David A. Gardner ’69 Fund, Princeton University
2021 – Fellowship, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University
2021 - John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship
Bibliography
Books
Renegade Dreams: Living through Injury in Gangland Chicago (2014) ISBN 9780226032719
The Torture Letters: Reckoning with Police Violence (2020) ISBN 9780226729800
References
Living people
American writers
American academics
Princeton University faculty
University of Chicago alumni | [
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Vadh is a Hindi psychological thriller film directed by Raj Bharat, Nana Patekar and Rajesh Kumar Singh trio and produced by Dilip Dhanwani. This film was released on 29 March 2002 under the banner of Megastar films.
Plot
Doctor Arjun Singh is a famous psychiatrist lives with his wife Jyoti and brother Vijay. Vijay is Police Officer loves Deepa. One rainy night a serial killer escapes from Arjun's hospital and the whole city is under threat. But no one is able to capture the killer. After the series of murder of young ladies, Vijay suspects one womanizer Ariyan. Ariyan is the best friend of Dr. Arjun.
Cast
Nana Patekar as Dr. Arjun Singh
Puru Raaj Kumar as Ariyan
Meghna Kothari as Deepa
Anupama Verma as Jyoti
Nakul Vaid as Vijay
Raju Mavani as Serial killer
Shweta Menon as Guest appearance
Arun Bakshi as Deepa's father
Sambhavna Sheth
External links
References
2002 films
Hindi-language films
Indian films
2000s mystery thriller films
Indian mystery thriller films
2000s Hindi-language films
2002 psychological thriller films
Indian psychological thriller films
Indian serial killer films | [
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Stefany Ferrer Van Ginkel (born 17 October 1998) is a professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Angel City FC of the American National Women's Soccer League (NWSL).
Early life
Born in Campo Grande, Brazil, Ferrer Van Ginkel was one of three sisters and was placed in an orphanage at the age of three; all three sisters were eventually adopted by a Spanish family and moved to a village outside Barcelona, Spain.
Ferrer Van Ginkel played youth soccer for C.F.S. Sant Boi, CF Igualada, and Fundació Esportiva Vilafranca. After her college career in the United States, Ferrer Van Ginkel appeared in Ultimate Goal, a British reality competition series on BT Sport.
College career
Ferrer Van Ginkel played American collegiate soccer for the West Virginia Mountaineers.
Club career
RCD Espanyol
Ferrer Van Ginkel helped RCD Espanyol gain promotion.
Tigres UANL
Ferrer Van Ginkel signed for Mexican club Tigres UANL in June 2021; she was the club's first foreign player.
Angel City FC
In January 2022, Ferrer Van Ginkel transferred to American club Angel City FC.
References
1998 births
Living people
People from Campo Grande
Adoptees
Brazilian emigrants to Spain
Naturalised citizens of Spain
Footballers from Barcelona
Spanish women's footballers
RCD Espanyol Femenino players
West Virginia Mountaineers women's soccer players
Tigres UANL (women) footballers
Angel City FC players
Liga MX Femenil players
Spanish expatriate women's footballers
Spanish expatriate sportspeople in the United States
Expatriate women's soccer players in the United States
Spanish expatriate sportspeople in Mexico
Expatriate women's footballers in Mexico
Spanish people of Brazilian descent
Sportspeople of Brazilian descent
Brazilian women's footballers
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The 2022 Rio Open presented by Claro was a professional men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 8th edition of the Rio Open, and part of the ATP Tour 500 of the 2022 ATP Tour. It took place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil between February 14–20, 2022.
Champions
Singles
Carlos Alcaraz def. Diego Schwartzman 6–4, 6–2
Doubles
Simone Bolelli / Fabio Fognini def. Jamie Murray / Bruno Soares 7–5, 6–7(2–7), [10–6]
Points and prize money
Point distribution
Prize money
*per team
Singles main-draw entrants
Seeds
1 Rankings are as of February 7, 2022.
Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
Felipe Meligeni Alves
Thiago Monteiro
Shang Juncheng
The following player received a special exempt into the main draw:
Francisco Cerúndolo
The following players received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:
Pablo Andújar
Pablo Cuevas
Fernando Verdasco
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
Sebastián Báez
Daniel Elahi Galán
Miomir Kecmanović
Juan Ignacio Londero
The following players received entry as a lucky loser:
Roberto Carballés Baena
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Dominic Thiem → replaced by Pablo Cuevas
Casper Ruud → replaced by Roberto Carballés Baena
Doubles main-draw entrants
Seeds
1 Rankings as of February 7, 2022.
Other entrants
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
Rogério Dutra Silva / Orlando Luz
Rafael Matos / Felipe Meligeni Alves
The following pair received entry from the qualifying draw:
Pablo Andújar / Pedro Martínez
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Dušan Lajović / Franko Škugor → replaced by Laslo Đere / Dušan Lajović
During the tournament
Carlos Alcaraz / Pablo Carreño Busta
References
External links
Official Website
2022
Rio Open
Rio Open
Rio Open | [
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Garrett Griffith is an American professional wrestler. He is currently signed to the promotion All Elite Wrestling (AEW), where he performs under the ring name, Griff Garrison. Griffith is one-half of the tag team The Varsity Blonds alongside Brian Pillman Jr..
Early life
Garrison was born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He attended North Davidson High School in Welcome, North Carolina, graduating in 2016. While in high school he played American football as a wide receiver. He went on to attend Guilford College in Greensboro, North Carolina, graduating in 2020 with a bachelor's degree in education and history. During his time at Guilford College, he played American football for the Guilford Quakers.
Professional wrestling career
Early career (2016–2020)
Garrison was trained by LaBron Kozone, debuting in 2016. He initially wrestled for Fire Star Pro Wrestling in his home state of North Carolina. He also appeared with promotions such as the Georgia-based Anarchy Wrestling and Southern Fried Championship Wrestling, winning a variety of championships. In 2019, he began appearing with Ring of Honor. From 2018 to 2020, Garrison teamed with his former schoolmate Markus Cross as "Master and the Machine".
All Elite Wrestling (2020–present)
In June 2020, Garrison began wrestling for All Elite Wrestling (AEW), appearing on AEW Dynamite and AEW Dark as a jobber. In July 2020, he was paired with Brian Pillman Jr., with the duo dubbed "The Varsity Blonds". The duo went on to compete in AEW's tag team division, competing against teams such as FTR, Private Party, Proud and Powerful, and The Hybrid 2. In May 2021, they unsuccessfully challenged The Young Bucks for the AEW World Tag Team Championship. In the same month, Julia Hart joined Garrison and Pillman Jr. as their valet. In July 2021, Garrison and Pillman Jr. were signed to contracts with AEW. In December 2021, Garrison and Pillman Jr. began feuding with Malakai Black after he sprayed Black Mist in Hart's eyes.
Professional wrestling style and persona
Garrison's signature moves include the sleeper hold, spear, spinebuster, and Ivy League Destroyer.
Championships and accomplishments
Anarchy Wrestling
Anarchy Heavyweight Championship (2 times)
Anarchy Tag Team Championship (2 times) – with Ben Buchanan (1) and Marcus Kross (1)
Fire Star Pro Wrestling
FSPW Heavyweight Championship (3 times)
FSPW Zone1 Platinum Championship (1 time)
Pro Wrestling Illustrated
Ranked Nº280 in the PWI 500 in 2021
Southern Fried Championship Wrestling
SFCW Heavyweight Championship (1 time)
SFCW Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Marcus Kross
References
External links
All Elite Wrestling personnel
American male professional wrestlers
Guilford College alumni
Guilford Quakers football players
Living people
People from Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Professional wrestlers from North Carolina | [
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The Erongo Battery Energy Storage System, also Erongo BESS, is a planned battery energy storage system installation in Namibia. The BESS, the first of its kind in the country and in the Southern African region, will be capable of providing 72MWh of clean energy to the Namibian grid.
Location
The BESS unit would be located at the site of NamPower's Omburu Substation, approximately , southeast of the city of Omaruru in the Erongo Region, in central Namibia. The geographical coordinates of this location are:21°29'49.0"S, 16°01'40.0"E (Latitude:-21.496944; Longitude:16.027778).
Overview
The BESS station has storage capacity of 58 megawatts. Its design allows for a discharge capacity of 72MWh of energy into the Namibian grid. The BESS is expected to store "locally generated renewable power as well as electricity imported from the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP)". The electricity will be stored at off-peak times, when it is cheaper. The stored energy can then be discharged "during peak times".
The intended benefits include (a) stabilization of NamPower's grid (b) act as a back-up, if and when existing generation facilities fail (c) reduce the cost of electricity fed through the SAPP.
Developers
The BESS station is under development by the Namibia Power Corporation (Pty) Limited, who own the station. The development receives support (financial and technical) from the German State-Owned Investment and Development Bank (KfW). In December 2021, KfW made a grant of €20 million towards the development of this project, estimated at 80 percent of total cost. NamPower is expected to contribute about 20 percent of the cost and pay any outstanding taxes not covered by the KfW grant.
See also
List of power stations in Namibia
Battery storage power station
References
External links
NamPower gets N$400m battery system grant As of 21 December 2021.
Power stations in Namibia
Erongo Region
Renewable energy power stations in Namibia | [
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Scammell is a British truck manufacturer.
Scammel or Scammell may also refer to:
People
Scammell (surname)
Walter Scammel (died 1286), Bishop of Salisbury
United States Revenue Service vessels
, a revenue cutter in service from 1791 to 1798
, a 14-gun schooner commissioned in 1798
Other uses
Fort Scammell, House Island, Maine, United States
Laurence, Laura and Honor Scammel, characters in New Street Law, a British television series
See also
Scammell's 1781 Light Infantry Regiment, an American Continental Army unit in 1781 | [
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Lung Chien (1916 – May 28, 1975), also known by the name Kim Lung, was a prolific Chinese film director and screenwriter active between the 1950s and the 1970s.
Career
Born in 1916, he directed more than 30 films mostly in Taiwan and Hong Kong. He died in Taipei in 1975 at the age of 59.
Filmography
As screenwriter
As director
The Bridge at Lo-Yang (1975)
Fatal Strike (1974)
Gold Snatchers (1973)
Wang Yu, King of Boxers (1973)
The Angry Hero (1973)
Blood of the Leopard (1972)
Boxers of Loyalty and Righteousness (1972)
Queen of Fist (1972)̽
Extreme Enemy (1971)
Struggle Karate (1971)
Ghost Lamp (1971)
The Bravest Revenge (1970)
The Darkest Sword (1970)
Golden Sword and the Blind Swordswoman (1970)
The Ringing Sword (1969)
Knight of the Sword (1969)
Flying Over Grass (1969)
Dragon Tiger Sword (1968)
Dragon Inn (1967)
Queen of Female Spies (1967)
The Wandering Knight (1966)
As actor
1956: Yun He Xun Qing Ji
1957: Wanhua Skeleton Incident
1957: Murder at Room 7, Keelung City
1957: Mei Ting En Chou Chi
1962: Five Difficult Traps
1963: Father Tiring Child
1964: Ba Mao Chuan
1965: Three Beautiful Blind Female Spies
1971: Darkest Sword
1973: Wang Yu, King of Boxers
1976: Calamity
References
External links
Kim Lung at Hong Kong Cinemagic
Hong Kong film directors
Chinese actors
1916 births
1975 deaths
Deaths in Taiwan
20th-century screenwriters | [
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The 2022 Open 13 Provence was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 30th edition of the Open 13, and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2022 ATP Tour. It took place at the Palais des Sports de Marseille in Marseille, France, from 14 through 20 February 2022.
Champions
Singles
Andrey Rublev def. Félix Auger-Aliassime, 7–5, 7–6(7–4)
Doubles
Denys Molchanov / Andrey Rublev def. Raven Klaasen / Ben McLachlan, 4–6, 7–5, [10–7]
Points and prize money
Point distribution
Prize money
*per team
Singles main draw entrants
Seeds
Rankings are as of February 7, 2022.
Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the main draw:
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
Lucas Pouille
Gilles Simon
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
Damir Džumhur
Mikhail Kukushkin
Tomáš Macháč
Roman Safiullin
The following player received entry as a lucky loser:
Zizou Bergs
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Ričardas Berankis → replaced by Pierre-Hugues Herbert
Ugo Humbert → replaced by Dennis Novak
Gianluca Mager → replaced by Zizou Bergs
Jannik Sinner → replaced by Kamil Majchrzak
Doubles main draw entrants
Seeds
1 Rankings are as of February 7, 2022.
Other entrants
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
Ugo Blanchet / Timo Legout
Lucas Pouille / Gilles Simon
The following pair received entry as alternates:
Hunter Reese / Sem Verbeek
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Sander Arends / David Pel → replaced by Hunter Reese / Sem Verbeek
Hugo Gaston / Ugo Humbert → replaced by Hugo Gaston / Holger Rune
References
External links
Official website
Open 13
Open 13
2022 in French tennis
Open 13 | [
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Viorel Cosma (30 March 1923 – 15 August 2017) was a Romanian musician and teacher who came to wider prominence as an exceptionally prolific musicologist and a pioneering lexicographer. Through his scholarship he also achieved distinction as a teacher, researcher and music critic. Between 1989 and 2012 he produced a ten volume lexikon, running to 2,800 pages, entitled "Muzicieni din România", providing extensive information on approximately 1,500 Romanian composers and musicians, musicologists, music critics, music teachers, folklorists and other contributors to Romanian music and musicianship.
Biography
Viorel Cosma was born at Timișoara, the multi-ethnic economic and administrative capital of Banat, in the western part of the recently expanded Kingdom of Romania. In 1929, despite being just 6, he was accepted as a pupil at the Timișoara Municipal Music Conservatory, where for the next two years he learned to play the violin. He was taught by the violinist Eugen Cuteanu, while Sabin Drăgoi took care of the necessary Solfège and other aspects of music theory knowledge.
Cosma was 18 in 1940/41 when Romania became entangled in the war. He fought for his country in a guards regiment and was seriously wounded twice. His status as a war veteran would remain unpublicised and unknown for more than half a century, but during the final decade of his life, official and public attitudes towards Romania's role in the war grew more nuanced. He became a regular participant at events arranged by the Ministry of Defence to honour surviving war heroes, even taking part in television shows involving war veterans. In 2015, two years before he died, he was promoted to the rank of General (retired).
Back in 1945, after the war ended he progressed his music education between 1945 and 1950 at the National University of Music in Bucharest. Here he was taught by a number of Romania's leading composer-performers and musicologists, including Mihail Jora, Leon Klepper, Marțian Negrea, Constantin Silvestri, George Georgescu, Ion Dumitrescu, Dimitrie Cuclin and Zeno Vancea.
Between 1945 and 1947 he taught at the "Alberto della Pergola" conservatory in Bucharest. Later, still in Bucharest, he taught at the "Dinu Lipatti" and "George Enescu" musical secondary schools. At the university level he also taught, between 1951 and 1966, at the National University of Music and the Hyperion University. Meanwhile, he had already embarked on an intensive parallel career as a critic. Several sources state that in the Romanian and foreign press, in the end, he published over 5,000 essays, studies, articles, reviews and other pieces of music criticism. He delivered academic papers and contributed fully in various other ways at many of the symposia and conferences devoted to musicology, both in Europe and in the United States, at which he participated.
Viorel Cosma was also one of three co-librettists for Gherase Dendrino's 1954 operetta "Lăsați-mă să cânt!" ("Let me sing!"). The piece enjoyed official backing. Translated into Russian and several of the principal languages of middle Europe, it was staged in Romania, Germany, the Soviet Union, Austria, Bulgaria, Belgium and the Netherlands. More than half a century later many of Dendrino's are overlooked, but the central themes of "Lăsați-mă să cânt!" are relatively timeless: it was revived most recently at in 2018, at Cluj-Napoca.
As a musicologist Viorel Cosma published over 100 volumes, many of which appeared not just in Romanian, but in German, Russian, English, Bulgarian and Japanese. His works were a combination of monographic, historiographic, lexicographic and epistolatory. There were works of music criticism, comparative musicology, study guides and anthologies. Of particular note, he produced no fewer than 14 books devoted to Romania's best known composer-polymath, George Enescu (in Romanian, English, Russian, Japanese and Bulgarian). Possibly more regularly consulted than some of these are his lexicons, "Compozitori și muzicologi români" ("Romanian composers and Musicologists",1965) and "Muzicieni români" ("Romanian Musicians", 1970). More formidable still was "Muzicieni din România", the ten volume lexikon, produced by Cosma between 1989 and 2012. This compilation, and "Interpreți din România" ("Romanian Performers"), which he published in 1996, won for Viorel Cosma international recognition. At the time of his death he was engaged in producing a monumental fifteen volume "Enciclopedia muzicii din România" of which the first two volumes ("A" and "B") had already been completed and appeared in book shops.
Viorel Cosma was a member of various professional associations and foundations, both inside Romania and beyond its borders. He was a member of the Georg Friedrich Händel Society in Halle, of the Basel-based International Musicological Society, the Music Research Association in Kassel, the Société française de musicologie in Paris and the Société Fryderyk Chopin in Warsaw.
Evaluation
According to admirers, Viorel Cosma laid the groundwork of modern musical lexicography in Romania, creating the most extensive national lexicographic music exegesis anywhere in the world. His musicological research spans five centuries, between 1500 and 2000, discovering or rediscovering the names of hundreds of Romanian artists who made musical careers in Romania and/or abroad. As a Professor of Musicology, during the twentieth century he created and trained the first generation of Romanian musicologists and music critics, occupying for many years the first high-profile professorial chair at the National University of Music (as it became known) in Bucharest, following its reconfiguration, rebranding and relaunch. Inspired by his involvement in the folk music revival, which emerged with particular force in Romania during the first half of the twentieth century, Cosma played a central role in rediscovering connections between Romanian tradition and the more widespread music cultures of and beyond the European continent: he is credited with having identified more than 100 non-Romanian works inspired by Romanian folklore.
A particular specialism in respect of Cosma's own researches was the life and works of the composer George Enescu. It was indeed in part a reflection of Enescu's own international profile that Cosma travelled abroad on various occasion to deliver lectures on the Romanian composer, notably in France and in the United States. Venues included the Académie des Beaux-Arts and the Sorbonne in Paris, along with Boston University in Massachusetts. He also shared his specialisms in some of the western world's leading music lexicons and encyclopædias, contributing to "Grove's Dictionary", "Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart", the "Dictionnaire des interprètes et de l'interprétation musicale au XXe " of Alain Pâris, "Sohlmans musiklexikon" and other major publications with similar aspirations.
Celebration and recognition (selection)
Viorel Cosma was a recipient of the "Premiile Academiei Române" (award) in 1974
He received the "Artisjus [international music critics' Award] Prize" in 1984.
In 1998 Viorel Cosma accepted a Doctorate in Musicology from the Bucharest Universitatea Națională de Muzică.
He holds an "Doctor Honoris Causa" from the Arts Institute of Chișinău, in Moldova.
Viorel Cosma received awards from the "Uniunea Compozitorilor și Muzicologilor din România" ("Union of Composers and Musicologists") no fewer than ten times.
Viorel Cosma's state honours included the Order of the Crown, the Order of the Star of Romania and the Order of Artistic Merit (Grand Officer).
Viorel Cosma became a corresponding member of the Rome-based "Pontifical Tiberina Academy" in January 2004.
Viorel Cosma was created a "Cetățean de onoare" (honoured citizen) of his birth city, Timișoara.
Output (selection)
References
National University of Music Bucharest alumni
Romanian musicologists
Romanian music critics
Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Romania)
Recipients of the Order of the Star of Romania
Recipients of the Order of Cultural Merit (Romania)
Musicians from Timișoara
Writers from Timișoara
1923 births
2017 deaths | [
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Morrison University is a Private for-profit university located in Reno, Nevada in the United States of America. The university offers degrees in various disciplines at the undergraduate, graduate and doctorate levels.
History and Governing structure
Morrison University was originally founded in 1902 as Nevada Business Institute. In 2014, Morrison closed due to internal issues. Shortly after, Morrison University was reopened under current ownership. Morrison has multiple programs focused in areas of business, education, and computer science. The organization is overseen by a board of directors who elect a Chief Executive Officer. The CEO oversees the other major department leads, who in turn hire managers in their department. Managers are then tasked with hiring and overseeing their own staff.
Faculty
Morrison University has over 8,000 students both on-campus and online. The school employs 54 faculty members including visiting lecturers as well as additional administration and staff.
Notable Members include:
Freddie Brooks, CEO
Allen Smith, Chief Operating Officer (Acting)
Karen Moore, Chief Academic Officer
Allen Smith, Dean of Business
Harold Anderson, Dean of Computer Science
Ian Davis, Dean of Education
Academics
Morrison University offers academic programs in different discipline. Currently it has three main schools.
School of Business
School of Computing
Graduate School of Education
References
Universities and colleges
Lists of universities and colleges in the United States by city
Lists of universities and colleges in the United States
Lists of universities and colleges in North America
Lists of universities and colleges by country | [
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Franklin Oritse-Mueyiwa Atake (6 May 1926 – 1 March 2003) prevalently known by his initials FOM Atake was a prominent Nigerian Judge (1967–1977) and Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (1979–1982).
Early life
Franklin Atake was born 6 May 1926 in Sapele, a town in the British Colony of Southern Nigeria. He was educated at Baptist School, Sapele, where he was a good chorister. He also attended St. Luke’s Church Missionary Society School also in Sapele.
Franklin Atake had his secondary school education in Ibadan Grammar School. In Ibadan Grammar school, Franklin Atake was quite proficient in Latin and often used sophisticated Latin words or phrases in school in his daily conversations. As a result, he was nicknamed: “Atakurus Esse”. Whenever he was called “Atakurus Esse”, he answered: “God bless you my brother”. Atake passed from Ibadan Grammar School with exemption from London Matriculation.
Thereafter, he worked in the Treasury Department in Lagos until 1951.
In 1951, he left for England to study law. He studied law at the University of London and at the Inns of Court School of Law, London. He was called to the English Bar on 18 May 1954 by the Honourable Society of Lincoln’s Inn. By June 1954, he was back in Nigeria. He was enrolled in Nigeria as a Barrister and Solicitor on Friday 16 June 1954. Thus, making him the four hundred and seventh (417th) person to do so on the all-time list of persons so enrolled to practice law in Nigeria.
Career
Having been enrolled to practice law in Nigeria, Atake established his legal practice in Sapele and Warri. After a few years in practice in the 1950s, he opted for the Magisterial Bench in the Colony of Lagos, the Federal Territory.
As a magistrate
In 1957 he was appointed a magistrate in the Colony of Lagos, Nigeria. He sat in what was well known as the Tapa Court in Lagos. As a magistrate, Franklin Atake handled many cases and became well known for the speed and the sense of justice with which he dealt with cases that came before him. In no time the then Chief Justice of Lagos and the Southern Cameroons, The Honourable Sir Clement Nageon De Lestang, CJ, transferred him temporarily to the Cameroons to handle a large backlog of cases. On his return from the Cameroons, he was elevated to the position of Senior Magistrate in 1959.
Rise to prominence
Atake handled many cases as a Magistrate, but charge no. 28175/60 – Police v. AK-N-, AK-NS-L; A-L-B and Ors. is often referred to. It was a case of unlawful assembly by students at the University College, Ibadan who had organized a demonstration in Lagos on the 28 November 1960 at the Tafawa Balewa Square. The students were protesting vehemently against a defence pact that Nigeria was to enter with Great Britain. The protests got completely out of hand and the students who held out against anti-riot police jumped over the fences into Parliament buildings destroying most of the furniture and beating up anyone in sight. Some prominent Parliamentarians such as Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh (Federal Minister for Finance) and Chief T. O. S. Benson (Federal Minister for Information) were caused bodily harm. Messrs Adewale Thompson, A K I Makanju, Aliyi Ekineh, Sobo Sowemimo and some others acted for the students. The Defense Counsel, in that case, advised their clients, the students, to plead guilty in the hope that they would convince the Magistrate, His Worship, Franklin Atake not to impose a prison sentence since most of the students were in their final year and imprisonment would completely ruin their chances of completing their studies. Mr. Adewale Thompson, having addressed the court at length about the harm imprisonment would cause to the lives of the students and that the students meant no harm, Franklin Atake condemned the action of the students and accepted the plea of counsel to caution and discharge them, adding that they should be bound over to be of good behaviour for twelve months. Said Mr. Justice Adewale Thompson writing in 1991 in his book Reminiscences At The Bar at 65:
“We had advised the students to plead guilty so that I could address the court in Allocutus under section 450 of the Criminal Procedure Ordinance, requesting the magistrate to exercise his discretion to dismiss the charge because of the hardship a conviction will cause to the career of the students who were in their final year at the University College. That discretion included a decision of the magistrate to convict, which was not subject to appeal. It was therefore a gamble that was taken because I had implicit confidence in the competence of the magistrate and his courage to do what was proper in the overall interest of society. He was not the type who would be afraid in such a sensitive case, in which parliamentarians had been assaulted and Parliament itself invaded. I am sure our gamble would have failed if that matter had come before another magistrate with timorous proclivities.”
With the creation of the Mid-Western Region, Nigeria in 1963, Franklin Atake left Lagos to take an appointment as Chief Magistrate in Warri. He served also as a Chief Magistrate in Benin before the civil war in Nigeria broke out. At the outbreak of the civil war, he was appointed a Judge of the High Court of Justice in the Mid-Western, Nigeria in 1967.
A judge of the High Court of Justice Mid-Western Nigeria
Atake was appointed a judge of the High Court of the Midwestern Nigeria in 1967 along with three other judges. They are the Hon. Justice Victor Ovie Whisky, Hon. Justice S O Ighodaro and the Hon. Justice M A Aghoghovbia. He was 41 years old. He was assigned to the Sapele Division to join the Hon. Justice E A Ekeruche and the Hon. Justice Akinwunmi Rhodes-Vivour. Other brother Judges at the time of his appointment included: Hon. Justices Mason Begho (Chief Justice, Mid-West), J O Izuora, Andrews Otutu Obaseki, Ayo Gabriel Irikefe, Arthur Edward Prest, J. Omo-Eboh and Uche Omo.
Atake served in various judicial divisions of the High Court in the Mid-West that included the Benin, Warri and Agbor divisions. He handled a wide range of cases. It is on record that he was quick in the uptake. In his court, the dispensation of justice was fast and quick. He was highly principled, strong-willed. That reputation still precedes him in all the divisions he served either as a Magistrate or as a Judge of the High Court. Said Ephraim Akpata, a retired Justice of the Supreme Court of Nigeria, in his autobiography Justice For All And By All (1994) at 148:
“Justice F O M Atake was one of the most efficient Chief Magistrates before whom I practised. He was……very quick in the uptake. His Judgements were well researched, well written and of high intellectual standard. Proceedings in his court were fast. To the best of my knowledge, he harassed no counsel or litigant……. Justice Atake was strong-willed and highly principled and held fast to what he believed in. He was blunt, not deceptive…”
However, when it came to the law of contempt of court, Franklin Atake found himself, somewhat to his surprise, at the centre of controversy. Some of his decisions in contempt of court cases brought him in full collision with the press and brought a renewed bout of national publicity. He sent the President of the Nigerian Bar Association, his cousin, Mr. Godwin Mogbeyi Boyo to prison for contempt of court when he thought he crossed the line. In 1969, he handed down what proved to be a controversial decision in the case reported as Boyo v The Attorney-General, Mid-West [1971] 1 All NLR, 342; [1971] NSCC, 333; See also, Re: GM Boyo v The State [1970] 1 All NLR, 111, [1970] NSCC, 87. Mr. Godwin Mogbeyi Boyo was arrested on a warrant issued by Franklin Atake. On an objection by Boyo’s counsel that the court had no jurisdiction to hear the contempt proceedings, Atake ruled that he was indeed competent to try Boyo for contempt of court.
Naturally, as Godwin Boyo was the President of the Nigerian Bar Association, the decision received a great deal of publicity. The press generally supported Boyo – there were persistent calls in nearly all the Nigerian newspapers for Franklin Atake to resign from the Bench. This went on for a considerable period. Years. The Governor of Mid-Western Nigeria, Brigadier Samuel Ogbemudia, also involved himself in the matter. Having failed to convince the then Chief Justice of the Mid-Western Nigeria, The Honourable Mr. Justice Mason Begho, to refer the matter to the Federal Advisory Judicial Committee (a body responsible, inter alia, for taking disciplinary action against judges), the Governor wrote to the Head of State and Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces, General Yakubu Gowon, asking that some way be found to refer the matter to the Committee. The Governor recommended that Franklin Atake be invited to resign or be removed from the Bench. General Gowon accordingly referred the matter to the Federal Advisory Judicial Committee.
The Chairman of the Committee, the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Dr. Taslim Olawale Elias, called on Franklin Atake for his comments. After a very detailed consideration of the matter, the Federal Advisory Judicial Committee decided (in a decision endorsed by the Head of State) that:
“Although Mr. Justice Atake may have acted indiscreetly, it did not see that a case had been made out for his removal from the Bench or for any disciplinary action to be taken against him. If the then Chief Justice Sir Adetokunbo Ademola felt that disciplinary action was necessary, he would have so directed and raised the matter before the Committee at one of its subsequent meetings. The Committee deprecates the attitude of the press and Military Governors interfering in matters that are essentially judicial, and in calling for the removal of judges. It would be preferable to let the Chief Justice of a State ask that something be done if a judge of his court behaves in an unbecoming manner.” (Excerpts from the minutes of the Advisory Judicial Committee meeting held in Lagos on 28 July 1972).
Franklin Atake was thus absolved and continued his judicial career in the Mid-Western Nigeria Judiciary.
A Senator of The Federal Republic of Nigeria
Atake voluntarily retired from the Bench in 1977. He was persuaded to stand for the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and was elected with a landslide victory as Senator for Bendel Delta Senatorial District with 59,632 votes under the banner of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) in 1979. It was a surprise to many that he went into politics as it was thought that he was not cut out for it. However, having found himself there, he decided to make the most of his time in the Senate. He combined a brilliant intellect with acute political instinct and fought most strenuously and tirelessly for what is right. In a short time in the Senate, the wider public admired him as a figure of integrity and courage. His parliamentary eloquence also led so many to admire him.
He was nominated by the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) to be their candidate for the President of the Senate, the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) nominated Dr. Joseph Wayas. Atake entered fully into the spirit of the occasion hoping to win. The NPN had a very good majority in the Senate and had an accord with the Nigerian Peoples Party (NPP). Senators voted strictly on party lines and Dr. Joseph Wayas became the victorious President of the Senate winning by 52 votes to 42 votes. It was a disappointment to Franklin Atake that votes were cast strictly on party lines and not on a non-partisan basis and on merit. Be that as it may, he was not deterred from commenting on issues of national importance and in no time, he became an outstanding political figure.
On the Senate floor, he gained a reputation for being a doughty fighter. He was a leading advocate and resolute fighter for the principle of derivation; the principle in which resources from states are to be shared in an equitable manner. As a Senator, Franklin Atake was the originator of the Resources Control Movement. Until his death, he advocated Resource Control being carried to its logical conclusion. The local governments concerned should get their share of the resources, especially the derivation of petroleum resources. He advocated for the establishment of 50% derivation, with 25% to the state government and 25% to the local governments. The balance can be retained by the Federal Government.
Atake opposed most vehemently anything that did not conform to the principles and the rule of law. Two of such examples would suffice. First, when the Senate passed what was called the Allocation Of Revenue (Federation Account) Act 1981 and the then President, Shehu Shagari unconstitutionally signed it into law (as was eventually upheld in the Supreme Court – see Attorney-General, Bendel State v Attorney-General, Federation & Others [1982] 3 NCLR, 1,) he went to court challenging the purported law on the ground that it was unconstitutional, void and of no effect having regard to the provisions in sections 149(2) & (3) of the 1979 Constitution of the Federal Republic.
Secondly, when the then Chief Judge of the Bendel State, the Hon. Justice Victor Ovie Whisky was nominated Chairman of the Federal Electoral Commission (FEDECO) and his nomination came before the Senate for ratification, the proceedings of the Senate show that it was Franklin Atake who opposed most strenuously the ratification on the floor of the Senate on the ground that Ovie-Whiskey, CJ was still a public officer (Chief Judge of Bendel State). Atake argued that Ovie-Whiskey had not first resigned or retired as Chief Judge of Bendel State in accordance with a provision in the 1979 Constitution and so any appointment as FEDECO Chairman would be null and void. Notwithstanding that objection, the Senate went ahead to ratify the nomination. In the end, Mr. Justice Victor Ovie Whisky was appointed Chairman of FEDECO. Franklin Atake, who was travelling abroad at the time, could not take up the constitutional issue in Court. However, another prominent Senator did. When the matter finally came up before the Supreme Court of Nigeria, it was decided that, that Senator had no locus standi to bring the action. Hence, the now famous and landmark decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Senator Abraham Adesanya v President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria; The Hon. Justice Victor Ovie-Whiskey [1981] NSCC, 146.
Having served one term in the Senate, Atake did not stand for a second term. He therefore left the Senate in 1982.
In retirement
He was named a Chief with the title Aboludero of Warri Kingdom by His Majesty Erejuwa II the paramount ruler of the Itsekiri and the Olu of Warri Kingdom in 1983.
In retirement, Franklin Atake did not disappear from public life. He became a famous litigant on several issues some of which were personal and others pertaining to the rights of the people of the Niger Delta. Two cases of which he was a litigant set judicial precedents. In Justice F O M Atake v Chief Nelson Asigboro Afejuku [1994] 9 NWLR Part 368, 379, the Supreme Court of Nigeria for the first time in Nigerian Legal Jurisprudence decided that a Judicial Officer who has ceased to be one is entitled to conduct his case in person. That when he appears in person, he is not for that purpose, acting as a legal practitioner within the purview of the Constitution. Similarly, in Justice F O M Atake v Chief Mene-Afejuku [1996] 3 NWLR Part 437, 483. At issue was the Supreme Court decision in which Karibi-Whyte, JSC held that, section 340(2) of the Criminal Procedure Law, Cap. 32, Laws of Lagos State 1973 as amended prohibited the right to private prosecution with respect to all criminal offences. (See Akilu v Fawehinmi (no. 2) (1989) 2 NWLR, part 102, 122).That decision had prevented litigants from prosecuting privately criminal offences in Lagos State. However, Franklin Atake thought that the law had been wrongly construed and caused a private prosecution to be brought. In a landmark decision, the Court of Appeal held that the right to a private prosecution in Lagos State was only barred with respect to indictable offences and that the right is not prohibited with respect to non-indictable offences. That it is fair to imply Karibi-Whyte, JSC in his leading Judgement did not mean to exclude all offences but only indictable offences.
He also continued to produce a stream of opinions on national issues particularly on derivation, and matters pertaining to the Itsekiri tribe and the Warri crisis. For example, he submitted an address to the “Judicial Commission of Inquiry into The Ethnic Conflicts Between Ijaws and Itsekiris In The Warri North, South and South-West Local Government Areas Of Delta State”. He also appeared before the Commission in person. The Commission had been set up inter alia, to find out the immediate and remote causes of the conflict between Ijaws and Itsekiris in the months of March to May 1997. Atake went before the Commission to say and also published in some National newspapers that, the cause of the conflict was the false announcement by the Military Administrator of Delta State, Colonel J Dungs that Warri South Local Government Area had been created with headquarters at Ogbe Ijaw; an Ijaw settlement in Warri Division. Atake blamed the entire cause of the crisis at the door of Colonel Dungs and Dungs’ “acts of gross illegality”.
Right to the very end, Franklin Atake remained a stalwart and vociferous defender of the Itsekiri people and the rights of the people of the Niger Delta. He was one of the strongest advocates of the principle of derivation in the country. It was very dear to his heart and as Senator of the Federal Republic, he moved several motions on the floor of Parliament for this principle to be adopted. Consequently, when the Supreme Court in what has become known as the On-shore/Off-Shore case (see, A-G, Federation v A-G, Abia State(No.2) [2002] 6 NWLR Part 764 at 542) in which that court decided that the seaward boundaries of Nigeria’s littoral states, viz.: Lagos, Ogun, Ondo, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers, Cross Rivers and Akwa Ibom for the purposes of calculating the amount of revenue derived from the natural resources of those states is the low watermark of the land surface of each of those states, Franklin Atake disagreed with the Court and caused his views in a well-articulated article to be published in some national newspapers.
Personal life
He died in Lagos 1 March 2003 at the age of 76 of a heart-related disease. He married Victoria Arugha Patricia Atake (née Foss). They had several children, including Eyimofe Atake, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and Adewale Atake also a Senior Advocate of Nigeria.
References
1926 births
People from Delta State
Itsekiri people
Political office-holders in Nigeria
Alumni of the University of London
Nigerian judges
20th-century Nigerian lawyers
Members of Lincoln's Inn
Nigerian jurists
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The Campiglia Marittima-Piombino railway line, also known as the Cornia Valley Railway is an Italian railway line that connects the junction at Campiglia Marittima with the port town of Piombino.
Traffic
The line is served by regionale and regionale veloce trains operated by Trenitalia, of which most continue from Campiglia Marittima to Pisa Centrale and Florence SMN.
Gallery
See also
Campiglia Marittima railway station,
Tirrenica railway
References
Adriano Betti Carboncini, La ferrovia di Piombino, in "I Treni Oggi" no. 34 (December 1983). (in Italian)
Adriano Betti Carboncini, La ferrovia Campiglia Marittima Piombino e l'industria siderurgica piombinese, La Bancarella, 2016, ISBN 978-88-6615-128-9 (in Italian)
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Cyperus alulatus is a species of sedge that is native to eastern parts of Asia.
See also
List of Cyperus species
References
alulatus
Plants described in 1952
Flora of India
Flora of Nepal
Flora of Afghanistan
Flora of Oman
Flora of Pakistan
Taxa named by Johannes Hendrikus Kern | [
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Noel Callaghan (born 16 May 1955) is an Australian tennis coach and former professional player.
Callaghan, raised in Sydney, was a top ranked junior in New South Wales and trained with Charles Hollis, who had coached Rod Laver. During the 1970s he competed on the European circuit for several seasons and featured at the Wimbledon Championships. He made the Wimbledon mixed doubles round of 16 with Jenny Walker in 1976.
A former New South Wales state coach, Callaghan has been the coach of several professional players, including Brad Drewett, Wally Masur, Jelena Dokic and Samantha Stosur. He was named in the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in 2016 over allegations from three witnesses that he had molested them in the late 1990s, for which he had been was acquitted.
References
External links
1955 births
Living people
Australian male tennis players
Australian tennis coaches
Tennis players from Sydney | [
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Hui Chen is the Nomura Professor of Finance and a Professor of Finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Hui Chen is a co-editor of the Annual Review of Financial Economics.
Education
Chen has a B.A. in economics and finance from Sun Yat-Sen University (Zhongshan University, 2000), an M.S. in mathematics from the University of Michigan (2002), and a Ph.D. in finance from the University of Chicago (2007).
Career
Chen has been a Special-Term Professor of Finance at Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance (SAIF). He is the Nomura Professor of Finance and a Professor of Finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Chen has served on the board of the Macro Finance Society and is a co-editor of the Annual Review of Financial Economics.
Research
Chen studies issues in asset pricing and corporate finance, including credit risk, financing, investment decisions, liquidity, and the macroeconomy. He applies business cycle models to corporate financing and corporate bond pricing. He combines machine learning methods with finance theory and uses machine learning to develop robust algorithms for credit risk forecasting models and protect them against strategic attacks. He is particularly interested in the behavior of Chinese financial markets.
Awards
2019, North America Arthur Warga Award for Best Paper in Fixed Income, Society for Financial Studies
2011, Smith Breeden Prize/Dimensional Fund Advisors Prize, Journal of Finance, American Finance Association
References
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
21st-century economists
University of Michigan alumni
University of Chicago alumni
Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty
National Bureau of Economic Research
Annual Reviews (publisher) editors | [
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The , is a Nara period Buddhist relic located in the Dotō neighborhood of Naka-ku, in the city of Sakai, Osaka, Japan. It is also referred to as the after the temple on whose grounds it is located. It was designated as a National Historic Site in 1953, with the area under protection expanded in 2005.
Overview
According to the , a Kamakura period semi-apocryphal biography of Gyōki, the famed priest established the temple of Ōno-ji in 727 AD, and the Dotō was built per his instructions at that time. This earthen stupa measures 53 meters on each side, with a height of approximately nine meters, and is orientated towards the four cardinal directions. It consists of 13 layers arranged like a step pyramid constructed by stacking clay blocks side by side, and compacting with soil in the spaces in between. The exposed portion each layer was covered with clay roof tiles, totaling about 60,000 in all. Of the tiles excavated, some 1300 are inscribed with letters written using spatula-shaped tools. Most of the inscriptions are the names of people various social strata such as monks, gentry, and commoners, who are believed to have donated the tiles as votive offerings. Some of the tiles have the date Jinki 4, which corresponds to the year 727 AD, and thus providing corroboration for the story in the Gyōki Nenpu. The temple of Ōno-ji was abandoned in the Muromachi period, but was later revived in the Edo Period.
Some of the artifacts recovered from the site (780 engraved roof tiles, 2 round eaves tiles, 4 examples of Sue ware pottery and 2 coins) were collectively designated a National Important Cultural Property in 2016 and are kept at the Sakai City Museum. The site itself has been restored to what archaeologists and historians believe to have been its original appearance, and opened to the public as a park in 2009.
A structure similar to theDotō is the Zutō in the Takabatake neighborhood of Nara city.
Gallery
See also
List of Historic Sites of Japan (Osaka)
References
External links
Sakai city home page
Osaka Prefectural government home page
Buddhist temples in Osaka Prefecture
Sakai, Osaka
Izumi Province
Nara period
Historic Sites of Japan
Buddhist archaeological sites in Japan
Pyramids in Japan
Important Cultural Properties of Japan | [
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Dominika Mrmolja (born 28 April 1994) is a Slovenian handball player for Dunaújvárosi Kohász KA and the Slovenian national team.
She represented Slovenia at the 2021 World Women's Handball Championship in Spain.
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
Slovenian female handball players
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Manca Jurič (born 18 January 1995) is a Slovenian handball player for RK Krim and the Slovenian national team.
She represented Slovenia at the 2021 World Women's Handball Championship in Spain.
References
External links
1995 births
Living people
Slovenian female handball players
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The Iskitim constituency (No.137) is a Russian legislative constituency in Novosibirsk Oblast. Until 2007, the constituency covered suburban and rural territories around Novosibirsk in eastern Novosibirsk Oblast. However, in 2015 the constituency was heavily gerrymandered: it currently takes parts of Novosibirsk itself and stretches alongside oblast's southern border as far as Bagan in the west.
Members elected
Election results
1993
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:#0085BE"|
|align=left|Ivan Starikov
|align=left|Choice of Russia
|
|25.31%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Karpov
|align=left|Independent
| -
|13.30%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1995
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Loginov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|24.39%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Leonid Bochkarev
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|16.67%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Ivan Starikov
|align=left|Independent
|
|14.80%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksey Manannikov
|align=left|Independent
|
|13.88%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Georgy Ivashchenko
|align=left|Independent
|
|5.05%
|-
|style="background-color:#3A46CE"|
|align=left|Nikolay Krasnikov
|align=left|Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats
|
|4.00%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Sverchkov
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.79%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yelena Malygina
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|2.54%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Leonid Goldyrev
|align=left|Agrarian Party
|
|1.72%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Terentyev
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.35%
|-
|style="background-color:#1C1A0D"|
|align=left|Aleksey Pavlenko
|align=left|Forward, Russia!
|
|1.21%
|-
|style="background-color:#2C299A"|
|align=left|Yury Yefimtsev
|align=left|Congress of Russian Communities
|
|1.15%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Getmanov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.86%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Chashkov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.86%
|-
|style="background-color:#DD137B"|
|align=left|Vladimir Anufriyenko
|align=left|Social Democrats
|
|0.61%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|6.18%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1999
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Lyubov Shvets
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|28.75%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Kibirev
|align=left|Independent
|
|10.07%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Liana Pepelyayeva
|align=left|Independent
|
|9.55%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Konstantin Aseyev
|align=left|Independent
|
|8.25%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Gonzharov
|align=left|Our Home – Russia
|
|7.05%
|-
|style="background:#1042A5"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Drugov
|align=left|Union of Right Forces
|
|4.60%
|-
|style="background-color:#3B9EDF"|
|align=left|Anatoly Chechin
|align=left|Fatherland – All Russia
|
|3.65%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Moskalev
|align=left|Independent
|
|3.37%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Sablin
|align=left|Independent
|
|3.24%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nadezhda Glukhova
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.69%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Fofanov
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.33%
|-
|style="background-color:#FF4400"|
|align=left|Andrey Tikhomirov
|align=left|Andrey Nikolayev and Svyatoslav Fyodorov Bloc
|
|1.01%
|-
|style="background-color:#084284"|
|align=left|Anatoly Shabanov
|align=left|Spiritual Heritage
|
|0.91%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Chashkov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.46%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|13.14%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2003
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Lyubov Shvets (incumbent)
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|24.78%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Andrey Shimkiv
|align=left|Independent
|
|23.48%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Loginov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|12.41%
|-
|style="background-color:#00A1FF"|
|align=left|Nikolay Krasnikov
|align=left|Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life
|
|11.43%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Tatyana Novaya
|align=left|Independent
|
|4.52%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Rudnitsky
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|2.87%
|-
|style="background:#1042A5"|
|align=left|Yegor Ternovykh
|align=left|Union of Right Forces
|
|2.43%
|-
|style="background-color:#164C8C"|
|align=left|Sergey Siganov
|align=left|United Russian Party Rus'
|
|0.55%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|14.49%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2016
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Aleksandr Karelin
|align=left|United Russia
|
|44.58%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Abalakov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|16.36%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Suvorov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|12.53%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Danil Ivanov
|align=left|A Just Russia
|
|8.40%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Lyudmila Loskutova
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|4.23%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Yegor Savin
|align=left|People's Freedom Party
|
|3.05%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Mikhail Khazin
|align=left|Rodina
|
|2.81%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Igor Yazykovsky
|align=left|The Greens
|
|1.31%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Madin
|align=left|Civic Platform
|
|0.78%
|-
|style="background:#00A650"|
|align=left|Ivan Grichukov
|align=left|Civilian Power
|
|0.55%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2021
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Aksyonenko
|align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth
|
|29.57%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vitaly Novoselov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|24.79%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Dmitry Starostenko
|align=left|United Russia
|
|13.66%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Andrey Teryayev
|align=left|New People
|
|7.90%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Lebedev
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|5.66%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Natalya Pinus
|align=left|Rodina
|
|5.31%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Aleksandr Averkin
|align=left|Party of Pensioners
|
|5.23%
|-
|style="background: "|
|align=left|Yelena Pivovarova
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|2.14%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Plyushkin
|align=left|Civic Platform
|
|0.97%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Tsybizov
|align=left|Party of Growth
|
|0.64%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
Notes
References
Russian legislative constituencies
Politics of Novosibirsk Oblast | [
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2003,
23615,
5714,
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4884,
5540,
1999,
24576,
5332,
17706,
6711,
10379,
1012,
2127,
2289,
1010,
1996,
5540,
3139,
9282,
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3541,
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Asu Dev (আশু দেব) born as Ashutosh Deb (13 December 1917 - 6 February 1983). Born in Dhubri, Assam India. Asu Dev was a pioneer artist of Assam. He was a painter, sculptor and an Art Educator. During his lifetime he had worked as a Textile Designer in several Cotton Mills in Jessore and Khulna in Bangladesh, Ahmedabad, Surat, Kolkata, at the Janata College Titabor Assam and Assam Textile Institute Guwahati, Assam and at Weavers Training Centre in Dimapur Nagaland in the later part of his life. His distinguished style of painting, were he had experimented using fine and minute dots often like modern pixels, which was often addressed by art critics as pointillism. Asu Dev was a self taught artist who created his artworks from minute observation of the Nature and the working class, and his innate exposure to Srimanta Sankardeva the 15th–16th century Assamese saint-scholar, poet, playwright, artist and social-religious reformer. The miniature paintings from the Chitra Bhagawata and the traditional folk arts and culture of the region, becoming the prime subjects of his paintings. During his career spanning about fifty years of Artistic career dating to the 1930s, he had created around 180 Art works, mostly paintings, oil on canvas, water colour tempara, textile designs and motifs, illustrations, sketches, drawings and a few sculptures. In 1952, Asu Dev was among the first artists to hold, one man show in Assam.
Asu Dev breathed his last on 6 February 1983 in Guwahati Assam India, at the age of 65.
Early Life:
Asu Dev was born to Kadambini Deb and Umesh Chandra Deb in Dhubri Assam. Umesh Chandra Deb, worked as a 'Revenue Shrestadar' (শেরেস্তাদার) in the Office of the Deputy Commissioner Guwahati. Umesh Chandra Deb, was also a research scholar on Srimanta Sankardeva and had published a Bengali publication on Sankardeva in 1327(Bengali calendar) i.e.1920. Asu Dev was the third son of a family of five brothers and three sisters. Asu Dev studied in the Cotton Collegiate H.S. School in Guwahati, and later took up the profession of textile designer in different Mills in India and Bangladesh. He joined the Assam Textile Institute, Guwahati for a some time. Asu Dev's family resided in their ancestral house at 30 Md. Shah Road, Newfield (West) Guwahati 781008 Assam India, till 2003.
Professional Life:
Associated as a Teacher of the Gauhati Art School, at Panbazar, Guwahati, Assam, India established by Jibeswar Baruah which was later upgraded to the Government Art College under the Gauhati University, Guwahati, Assam India.
Associated with the Gauhati Artists' Guild, a premier Art organisation of North East India since 1976, at Chandmari, Guwahati 781003 Assam India, as a founder member.
Stage performances:
Asu Dev had also appeared in stage plays with the local drama groups. His famous plays were 'Tasher Desh', 'Mastermosai etc. The performances were staged in Guwahati, Titabor, Tezpur and Shillong.
Exhibitions:
One Man Shows: 09
April 1952: Guwahati, organised by Sarbeswar Chakravarty, inaugurated by Justice Holiram Deka and presided by Dr. B. Barooah at the Kamrup Academy Hall, Guwahati.
September 1958: Jointly with wife Mrs. Bela Deb in Shillong, organised by Shillong Rotary Club and inaugurated by Bimala Prasad Chaliha, Chief Minister of Assam at the local Hindustan Standard premises.
December 1965: At The State Central Library, Shillong, organised by Indo-Soviet Cultural Society, Assam, and inaugurated by Vishnu Sahay, Governor of Assam and Nagaland at the State Central Library.
November 1967: Organised in collaboration with Gauhati Artists’ Guild, and inaugurated by Kamal Narayan Choudhury at the State Art Gallery, Bhagawati Prasad Barua Bhawan, Guwahati, Assam.
February 1969: Sivasagar organised by ISCUS – Indo-Soviet Cultural Society, Assam
April 1969: Duliajan inaugurated by Chairman, Oil India. Mr. Devkanta Barooah at Club House, Duliajan.
May 1979: in collaboration with Gauhati Artists’ Guild, and inaugurated by Kamal Narayan Choudhury at the State Art Gallery, February 1982asad Barua Bhawan, Guwahati, Assam.
May 1979: New Delhi, organised by the House of Soviet Culture In collaboration with All India Fine Arts & Crafts Society.
February 1982: Gorky Sadan, Kolkata, organised in collaboration with DRUZHBA & Cultural Department of the USSR Consulate General in Calcutta at Gorky Sadan. Exhibition inaugurated by Purnendu Patri, Film Director & Artist and presided by Artist Debabrata Mukherjee.
Group shows: 13
December 1952: 17th Annual All India Exhibition of Fine Arts Academy at the Indian Museum, Chowringhee, Kolkata
December 1955: Academy of Fine Arts, Kolkata
February 1966: Organised by the Indian Progressive Writers Association at District Library, Guwahati.
March 1971: Organised by Assam Academy for Cultural Relations at Cotton College Union Hall, Guwahati.
June 1973: World Youth Festival (Assam State Youth Festival) in Guwahati
April 1975: State Art Gallery, Guwahati, organised by Directorate of Cultural Affairs, Government of Assam.
May 1975: State Art Gallery, Guwahati, organised by the Assam Fine Arts & Crafts Society, Guwahati.
January 1976: State Art Gallery, Guwahati, organised by the Assam Fine Arts & Crafts Society, Guwahati.
August 1976: Rabindra Bhawan, Guwahati, organised by Directorate of Cultural Affairs, Government of Assam.
July 1978: State Art Gallery, Guwahati, organised by Gauhati Artists’Guild. Gauhati
April 1979: State Art Gallery, Guwahati, organised by Gauhati Artists’Guild. Gauhati
September 1980: State Art Gallery, Guwahati, organised by Directorate of Cultural Affairs, Government of Assam.
September 1982: State Art Gallery, Guwahati, organised by Assam Progressive Writers, and Artists, Association on the occasion of Third State Conference and inaugurated by Purnendu Patri, Film Director & Artist.
Retrospective Exhibitions (post 1983) 1983 & 1989: State Art Gallery Guwahati organised by The Directorate of Cultural Affairs, Government of Assam India, Gauhati Artists' Guild Guwahati in collaboration with Asu Dev's family.2007: Held at Srimanta Sankardeva Kalakshetra Guwahati, Assam India, in collaboration with Asu Dev's family.2017: The Centenary Retrospective was held at Gallery 1 & 2 Gauhati Artists Guild, Guwahati, Assam India. Organised by Gauhati Artists' Guild in collaboration with Asu Dev Art Foundation.
Collection of Paintings:
Asu Dev's paintings collected by organisations:
Asudev Art Foundation (a non-profit trust of Asu Dev's family) Guwahati Assam India
AAFTAA, Guwahati Assam India
Assam Oil Division, Assam, India
Assam State Museum, Guwahati, Assam India
Birla Industries, Kolkata, India
Consulates of Chekoslovakia, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Romania and Soviet Union in New Delhi, India
Directorate of Cultural Affairs, Government of Assam, for State Art Gallery, Guwahati Assam India.
Gauhati Artists’ Guild, Guwahati, Assam India
Government of Meghalaya
Gauhati University Library, Guwahati, Assam India
Handique Girls College, Guwahati, Assam India
House of Soviet Culture, New Delhi, India
Oil India Limited, Duliajan, Sibsagar Assam India
Asu Dev's paintings collected by private collectors:
Private Collectors in India: Bengaluru, Duliajan, Sibsagar, Guwahati, Kolkata, Mumbai, Dimapur, New Delhi, Shillong, Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum)
Private Collectors outside India: Soviet Union, U.K and USA
Family:
Asu Dev married Bela Deb (বেলা দেব) (Bela Palit) on 5 June 1951, in Shillong, then Assam. Bela Deb, was educated in Patha Bhavana and Sangeet Bhavana, Visvabharati Santiniketan West Bengal India and joined the Assam Textile Institute, Guwahati Assam India, as a Textile Designer and retired in the same post in 1991.Asu Dev has only one son Anutosh Deb, who is a Graduate in Applied Arts from the Faculty of Fine Arts, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Gujarat India, and is working as an Art Educator with Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan, an autonomous organisation under the Ministry of Education, Government of India, and is presently posted in Guwahati. Asu Dev's daughter in law Tulirekha Deb, is a graduate in Fine Arts (Painting) from Kala Bhavana Viswabharati Santiniketan, West Bengal, and is an Art Educator presently working with Royal Global School, Guwahati Assam India. Asu Dev's grand daughter Anurekha Deb, is a Masters in Visual Arts from Shiv Nadar University, Gautam Budh Nagar, Uttar Pradesh, India, after graduating in Painting from the Faculty of Fine Arts, Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, Gujarat India.
Felicitations: 1982: 25th Rongali Bihu Celebrations, Guwahati Bihu Sanmilani, Latasil, Guwahati Assam India
Death:
Asu Dev was hospitalized when he felt some discomfort and complained of chest pain, and was admitted in the Gauhati Nursing Home, Bharalumukh, Guwahati Assam at 9 PM on the night of February 5, 1983. He expired due to a sudden cardiac arrest at 6:35 AM on February 6, 1983. He was cremated as per the Hindu rites at the Bhoothnath Crematorium, Guwahati. His funeral was attended by family members, fellow Artists, students, and well wishers. Asu Dev was 65 at the time of his demise.
Asu Dev Art Scholarship:
The Asu Dev Art Scholarship has been initiated by the family members of the artist from the Centenary year 2016. Through the non profit trust 'Asu Dev Art Foundation'. The annual scholarship will award one student domicile of Assam, pursuing Masters in Fine Arts at the Post Graduate Level, enrolled as a regular student in any UGC & Government of India recognized Fine Art College/University in India, and outside the State of Assam.
The 'Asu Dev Art Scholarship carries a Memento, a certificate and one time financial grant of ₹ 50,000 only to one applicant, through a process of selection by a constituted jury nominated by the Trustees of the Asu Dev Art Foundation.
Awardees: 2017: Seemanta Bhagawati 2018: Debangona Paul
Asu Dev Centenary Retrospective 2017:
The Asu Dev Centenary Retrospective 2017 was organised by Gauhati Artists' Guild in collaboration with Asu Dev Art Foundation, from 13 December to 27 December 2017 in Gallery 1 & 2 of Gauhati Artists Guild, Guwahati Assam India. The First Asudev Art Scholarship was also presented to Seemanta Bhagawati a final year student of Kala Bhavana Santiniketan pursuing MFA Graphics.
Gallery:
Among some of Asu Dev's notable works, include The Wake c.1948, The Cage c.1958, Harijan c.1966, Humanity Uprooted c.1968, Symphony c.1973, Life Moves on c.1973, Night Awake c.1978, The Contenders c.1978, The Hunt c.1978, Birth of a New Rhythm c.1981, Shadow of Life c.1981, and early water colour tempara, have the pixel effects whereas other canvasses had bold strokes and dabs as in The Birth of a new life c.1962, Virginity c.1964, On the way to work c.1964, The Silent flutter c.1965, My Comrade c.1966, A lazy evening on the Brahmaputra c.1966''''' are among the few Oil on canvas paintings Art works documented and photographed at Asu Dev Art Foundation permanent gallery
References:
https://indianreview.in/nonfiction/an-introduction-to-the-contemporary-paintings-in-assam/
https://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/assam-s-pioneering-contemporary-artist-asu-dev-s-centenary-celebrations-118031600469_1.html
https://www.asianage.com/life/art/250717/founding-works-of-modern-assamese-art-on-display.html
https://artanddeal.com/?p=5943
https://books.katha.org/product/big-book-earth/
https://indianreview.in/nonfiction/remembering-my-father-asudev/
https://tulirekha.org/taa/
https://janambhumi.in/VFZScmVVNTZVVDA9/en/Assam%60s%20pioneering%20contemporary%20artist%20Asu%20Dev%60s%20centenary%20celebrations.html
https://www.indiatoday.in/pti-feed/story/exhibition-showcasing-pioneer-artists-of-assam-1002802-2017-07-23#:~:text=Among%20the%20other,and%20Tapan%20Bordoloi.
http://www.ptinews.com/news/8913410_Exhibition-showcasing-pioneer-artists-of-Assam.html#:~:text=Among%20the%20other,and%20Tapan%20Bordoloi.
External Links
Official Website of Asu Dev
[[Category:Artists from Guwahati]]
[[Category:Painters from Assam]]
[[Category:Painters from Assam]] | [
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The Cecina-Volterra railway line is an Italian railway line that connects the coast town of Cecina to Saline di Volterra in Tuscany. Until 1958 it continued up into the medieval hilltop town of Volterra.
History
The construction began in 1860, with the line opening between Cecina and Saline di Volterra. There was a plan announced in 1863 to extend the line to the Central Tuscan railway at Poggibonsi, but this was never realised. The line had a small connection to a mine at Monterufoli, which provided a substantial freight traffic until it was dismantled in 1928. In 1912, a rack railway using the Strub system was opened, connecting Saline di Volterra with Volterra town. This line was closed in 1958.
Traffic
The line is kept open to provide connections to school for residents of the valley. The line was served by regionale services until early 2020, when they were suspended due to the Covid-19 pandemic. These were expected to recommence for the 2020-21 school period but this never happened and replacement bus services have been continued indefinitely.
Gallery
References
Railway lines in Italy | [
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Davide Vione (born October 14, 1974) is an Italian chemist and academic. He is a professor of chemistry at the University of Torino. His research is focused on photochemistry of surface and atmospheric waters, heterogeneous photocatalysis and other advanced oxidation processes for water treatment. Vione has authored over 350 publications, has been cited over 12,000 times.
He is the author of two books entitled, Photobiogeochemistry of Organic Matter: Principles and Practices in Water Environments, and Surface Water Photochemistry. He also developed a software, named APEX (Aqueous Photochemistry of Environmentally-occurring Xenobiotics), which predicts half-life times and phototransformation kinetics of pollutants as a function of water chemistry and depth, including the photochemical formation of intermediates.
Vione is associated to the European Association of Chemistry and the Environment, and has served as its president from 2016 and 2017.
Education
Vione studied at the University of Torino, and received his master's degree in chemistry in 1998, and a Doctoral degree in chemistry in 2001, under the supervision of Ezio Pelizzetti. His Ph.D. dissertation is entitled "Transformations of Aromatic Compounds in the Presence of Nitrate and Nitrite in Aqueous Systems."
Career
Following his work as Assistant Professor from 2002 till 2011, Vione held appointment as an associate professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Torino in 2011, and became a Professor of Chemistry in 2018.
Research
Vione has focused his research on photochemistry of surface and atmospheric waters, and on advanced oxidation processes for water treatment. He has been project coordinator within a Marie Curie fellowhip as well as the Scientific and Technological Co-operation Agreement between Italy and Romania, and has taken part in several research projects, including PNRA - Antarctica Project, CNR - Agenzia 2000, PRIN 2003, PRIN 2007, and PRIN 2009, among others.
Vione wrote a review paper in 2015 where he discussed the role of hydroxyl radical in different environmental compartments and in laboratory systems. He also highlighted the impact of the reactivity of indoor hydroxyl radicals in terms of health and well-being as a great concern of the present time. Furthermore, he described sources and sinks of hydroxyl radicals upon irradiation of natural lake water and groundwater samples, proportionally to the nitrate levels. While demonstrating photocatalytic transformation of phenol on TiO2 and on TiO2/F, he contributed to the determination of the usage of alcohols as a diagnostic tool for the analysis of the photocatalytic mechanism. He also investigated photodegradation processes of the antiepileptic drug carbamazepine in the context of estuarine waters, where acridine was detected as a major photodegradation intermediate of carbamazepine, and investigated the connections between photochemical reactions in surface waters and climate change.
Vione explored photonitration processes under different conditions, and determined several pathways in the formation of the aromatic nitroderivatives. He also studied Fenton-based oxidation, electro-oxidation, and homogeneous advanced oxidation processes, and discussed applications of advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) in terms of removing organics from produced water. Furthermore, his research highlights ZVI-Fenton as a suitable technique to achieve effective degradation of ibuprofen and phenol under several operational conditions. In his study, he also provided insights into mechanisms of sunlight-mediated and dark production of hydroxyl radicals in lake waters.
Awards and honors
1998 - Award Federchimica, Italian Federation of Chemical Industries, 10th edition
2000 - Award Federchimica, 12th edition
2003 - Young Researcher Award, Italian Chemical Society
2003 - European Young Researcher of the Year Award, European Association of Chemistry and the Environment (ACE)
2017, 2020 - Excellence in Review Awards: Environmental Science & Technology, and Water Research
2021- Super-reviewer award, Environmental Science & Technology
2017 - Editorial advisory board member, Environmental Science & Technology
Listed among the Top Italian Scientists
Bibliography
Books
Photobiogeochemistry of Organic Matter: Principles and Practices in Water Environments (2012) ISBN 9783642322235
Surface Water Photochemistry (2015) ISBN 9781782622154
Selected articles
Minero, C., Mariella, G., Maurino, V., Vione, D., & Pelizzetti, E. (2000). Photocatalytic transformation of organic compounds in the presence of inorganic ions. 2. Competitive reactions of phenol and alcohols on a titanium dioxide− fluoride system. Langmuir, 16(23), 8964–8972.
Harrison, M. A., Barra, S., Borghesi, D., Vione, D., Arsene, C., & Olariu, R. I. (2005). Nitrated phenols in the atmosphere: a review. Atmospheric Environment, 39(2), 231–248.
Vione, D., Falletti, G., Maurino, V., Minero, C., Pelizzetti, E., Malandrino, M., ... & Arsene, C. (2006). Sources and sinks of hydroxyl radicals upon irradiation of natural water samples. Environmental Science & Technology, 40(12), 3775–3781.
Chiron, S., Minero, C., & Vione, D. (2006). Photodegradation processes of the antiepileptic drug carbamazepine, relevant to estuarine waters. Environmental science & technology, 40(19), 5977–5983.
Gligorovski, S., Strekowski, R., Barbati, S., & Vione, D. (2015). Environmental implications of hydroxyl radicals (• OH). Chemical reviews, 115(24), 13051–13092.
References
Living people
Italian chemists
1974 births
University of Turin faculty
University of Turin alumni | [
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Joseph-Alexandre Auzias-Turenne, born on March 1, 1812, in Pertuis (Vaucluse) and died on May 27, 1870, in Paris, was a French doctor.
Biography
He advocated the preventive inoculation of syphilis, on the model of the variolation, and dedicated his life to this idea that posterity has not ratified.
In 1859, with Camille-Melchior Gibert, he took part in a controversial experiment in which human patients were deliberately infected with syphilis in order to prove the infectious nature of secondary syphilis.
He supported a theory of immunization as depletion, in the subject, of a substance necessary for the infectious agent. This theory, although adopted by Louis Pasteur, has not been ratified by posterity either.
He advocated the use of microbial antagonisms for therapeutic purposes (cure of diseases like favus, elephantiasis, lupus and cancer). This idea was also defended by Pasteur and, this time, ratified by posterity, but was not implemented neither by Auzias-Turenne, nor by Pasteur.
Publications
Jenner et la vaccine, Paris : Imprimerie Divry et cie., 1862
Questions, 1° Des causes des scrofules : 2° Des luxations, des causes qui les déterminent et de leur mécanisme : 3° Quelles sont les diverses substances qui entrent dans la composition du cervelet ? Quelle est leur situation respective et dans quelles propositions concourent-elles à la formation de l'organe ? : 4° Quelles sont les préparations dont l'aconit fait la base. Les décrire et les comparer entre elles, Paris : Imp. Rignoux, 1841
Théorie ou mécanisme de la migraine, Paris, Plon, 1849
La variole et la vaccine ne sont pas produites par un même principe virulent, Paris, 1850
De la syphilisation et de la contagion des accidents secondaires de la syphilis : communications à l'Académie Nationale de Médecine, par MM. Ricord, Bégin, Malgaigne ; avec les communications de MM. Auzias-Turenne et C. Sperino à l'Académie des Sciences de Paris et à l'Académie de Médecine de Turin, Paris : J.-B. Baillière, 1853
Lettre à M. le préfet de police sur la syphilisation, Paris, 1853
Discussion sur la syphilis : Extrait des procès-verbaux de la Société médicale du Panthéon, Paris : Imprimerie de Moquet, 1856
Correspondance syphilographique, suivi du Rapport fait par M. Gibert à l'Acad. imp. d. Méd., Paris : Leclerc, 1860
Communication sur le traitement de la blennorragie et de la blennorrée, faite à la Société médicale du Panthéon, le 10 août 1859, Paris, L. Leclerc, 1860
Discours sur la syphilisation..., Paris : Bailly, 1861
De la syphilis vaccinale : Communications à l'Académie impériale de médecine, par Depaul, Suivies de mémoires sur la transmission de la syphilis par la vaccination et la vaccination animale, par A. Viennois, Paris : J.-B. Baillière et fils, 1865
Les Virus au tribunal de l'Académie & dans la Presse, Paris : Imp. Divry, 1868
La syphilisation, Publication de l'oeuvre du docteur Auzias-Turenne faite par les soins de ses amis. Paris, G. Baillière, 1878
Théorie ou mécanisme de la migraine, Paris, Plon, 1849. Electronic edition online.
Discours prononcés sur la tombe de M. Isidore Geoffroy-St-Hilaire, le 13 Octobre 1861, Henri Milne-Edwards, Paris, F. Didot
Bibliography
Burke D. S. , « Joseph-Alexandre Auzias-Turenne, Louis Pasteur, and early concepts of virulence, attenuation, and vaccination », Perspectives in biology and medicine, 1996, vol. 39, n° 2, pp. 171–186.
Dracobly, Alex. « Ethics and Experimentation on Human Subjects in Mid-Nineteenth-Century France: The Story of the 1859 Syphilis Experiments », Bulletin of the History of Medicine, vol. 77, n° 2, 2003, online.
Notes and references
External links
Daniel Wallach, « Les inoculations dans l'histoire des maladies vénériennes », Société française d'histoire de la dermatologie.
French physicians
1812 births
1870 deaths
Deaths in Paris | [
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Johann Christoph von Ponickau (21 March 1652 – 31 October 1726), a member of the , was a counselor and chamberlain at the Dresden court of the elector of Saxony, who was at the same time King of Poland (Königlich-polnischer und kurfürstlich-sächsischer Rat). Ponickau was also head (Stiftshauptmann) of the . He owned several estates, including the Rittergut in Pomßen near Leipzig.
Ponickau was married to Eleonora Elisabeth von Bernstein. One of their children, Johanne Eleonore Caroline Poickau, married in Altenburg on 14 December 1727.
Ponickau died in Pomßen on 31 October 1726 at age 74. A memorial service was held for him at the on 6 February 1727, for which Johann Sebastian Bach composed a cantata, Ich lasse dich nicht, du segnest mich denn, BWV 157, for which Ponickau had selected the scripture text on which it is based.
References
1652 births
1726 deaths
18th-century German civil servants
Privy counsellors
Chamberlains
People from Eilenburg | [
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Al Ain FC is a professional football club, based in Al Ain, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. It is one of many sport sections of the multi-sports club Al Ain Sports and Cultural Club () Al Ain SCC for short. Founded in 1968 by players from Al Ain, members of a Bahraini group of exchange students and the Sudanese community working in the United Arab Emirates.
Al Ain made a successful debut by beating a team made up of British soldiers and went on to play friendly matches against other Abu Dhabi clubs. In 1971, the team played their first match against international opposition when they were defeated 7–0 by the Egyptian club Ismaily in a friendly match for the war effort. Has amassed various records since its founding, quickly gained popularity and recognition throughout the country, being the team with the most trophies 34 in total.
Honours
33 official Championships.
Doubles and trebles (5–1)
Doubles
League and President's Cup doubles (1) (shared record):
2017–18
President's Cup and GCC Champions League (1):
2000–01
President's Cup and Federation Cup (2):
2004–05, 2005–06
President's Cup and League Cup (1):
2008–09
Treble
League, Super Cup and Champions League (1) (record):
2002–03
Players records
Most appearances
All competitions
As of match played 25 February 2022
The below list is since the Pro League era starting in 2008–09.
Notes
Top goalscorers
All competitions
As of 25 February 2022.
Bold indicates player is still active at club level.
Note: this includes goals scored in all competitions.
UAE Pro League
Statistics correct as of match played on 11 February 2022
AFC Champions League
Since 2002–03 AFC Champions League, includes goals scored in qualifying play-offStatistics correct as of match played against Al Nassr on 24 September 2020
FIFA Club World Cup
Statistics correct as of match played against Real Madrid on 22 December 2018
Asian Cup Winners' Cup
GCC Champions League
Asian Club Championship
Players' individual honours and awards while playing with Al Ain
Al Ain players that have been the top scorer of UAE Pro League:
Mohieddine Habita (1977–78, 20 goals)
Ahmed Abdullah (1981–82, 13 goals); (1983–84, 20 goals)
Saif Sultan (1992–93, 21 goals)
José Sand (2009–10, 24 goals)
Asamoah Gyan (2011–12, 21); (2012–13, 31); (2013–14, 29)
Marcus Berg (2017–18, 25 goals)
Kodjo Fo-Doh Laba (2019–20, 19 goals)
Al Ain players that have won the GCC Golden Boot:
Ahmed Abdullah (1982–83, 20 goals in 18 games)
Saif Sultan (1992–93, 21 goals in 22 games)
José Sand (2009–10, 24 goals in 22 games)
Asamoah Gyan (2011–12, 22 goals in 22 games); (2012–13, 31 goals in 26 games); (2013–14, 29 goals in 26 games)
Al Ain players that have won the Best player award at AFC Champions League:
Seydou Traoré (1): 1999
Omar Abdulrahman (1): 2016
Al Ain players that have been the top scorer of AFC Champions League:
Asamoah Gyan (2014, 12 goals in 12 games)
Al Ain players that were included in the AFC Champions League Team of the Season:
Omar Abdulrahman (3), Lee Myung-joo (2), Asamoah Gyan (1), Ismail Ahmed (1), Caio Lucas (1), Danilo Asprilla (1)
Al Ain players that have won Player of the week awards at AFC Champions League:
Omar Abdulrahman (1), Khalid Eisa (1)
Al Ain players that have won man of the match at FIFA Club World Cup:
Khalid Eisa (2), Hussein El Shahat (1)
Al Ain players that have won Adidas Silver Ball at FIFA Club World Cup:
Caio Lucas (1): (2018)
See also
List of Al Ain FC seasons
Al Ain FC in international football
References
External links
Records And Statistics
Al Ain
Records | [
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The Terai–Madhesh Loktantrik Party () is a political party in Nepal. Although the party's primary base is still in Terai Madhesh of Madhesh Province only, it has tried to expand its throughout Terai and Tharuhath regions of Nepal.
The party was officially registered at Election Commission on 13 December 2021. Brikhesh Chandra Lal is the chairman of the party and former member of constituent assembly, Dr. Bijay Kumar Singh is the senior leader of the party.
History
The party was officially registered on 3 December 2021 for the second time under the name.
Later it was reported that senior leaders Brikhesh Chandra Lal and Bijay Kumar Singh had played role in registering the party under the chairmanship of Ravi Shankar Karna (Subhash). Karna who previously served as the deputy chairman of student's union of old Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party. Similarly leader Lal and Singh were active as central committee member of Loktantrik Samajwadi Party, Nepal. They were also the founding leader of previously Mahantha Thakur led Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party (Defunct). They had left Nepali Congress along with Thakur to form the party.
On 22 February 2021, hundreds of party caders and leaders from Loktantrik Samajwadi Party, Nepal led by Lal and Dr Singh joined the party. Among them were Ramji Ray, Dhirendra Bahadur Singh, Satis Lal Das, Yogendra Rai, Umesh Mandal and Mohammad Asgar Ali. This created a huge loss to former party organization in Dhanusha and Mahottari district.
See also
Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party (2007)
Brikhesh Chandra Lal
Bijay Kumar Singh
Reference
Socialist parties in Nepal
Social democratic parties in Nepal
2021 establishments in Nepal
Madhesh Province | [
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Aoife-Grace Moore is a Northern-Irish journalist and political correspondent, from Derry. Based in the Republic of Ireland, she is best known for breaking the Oireachtas Golf Society scandal, "Golfgate", story with Paul Hosford for the Irish Examiner in 2020.
Background
A Derry native, Moore is the niece of Bloody Sunday victim Patrick Doherty. She is a graduate of Glasgow Caledonian University.
Career
Moore has worked for Press Association, and the Irish Examiner.
While working for the Examiner, Moore was the target of tweets as part of the Eoghan Harris Twitter scandal, and has been the subject of workplace sexual harassment.
She has been commissioned to write a non-fiction book about Sinn Féin for Sandycove publishing.
Golfgate
Una Mullally described Moore and Hosford's Golfgate coverage as the "scoop of the year", and they shared the NewsBrands Ireland "Journalist of the Year Award".
References
External links
People from Derry (city)
Journalists from Northern Ireland
21st-century women writers from Northern Ireland
Irish women journalists
Living people
1991 births
Date of birth missing (living people)
Alumni of Glasgow Caledonian University | [
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Cyperus crypsoides is a species of sedge that is native to Sulawesi.
See also
List of Cyperus species
References
crypsoides
Plants described in 1952
Flora of Sulawesi
Taxa named by Johannes Hendrikus Kern | [
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Merab Turava (born 23 September 1964) is a Georgian jurist and professor serving as the President of the Constitutional Court of Georgia since June 25, 2020. Previously, he had held the office of a Justice and the Vice President of the Constitutional Court of Georgia.
Biography
Merab Turava was appointed as the Justice of the Constitutional Court of Georgia by the Parliament of Georgia on March 20, 2015. He started to exercise his authority as the Justice of the Constitutional Court on March 30, 2015, after taking the oath. On November 2, 2016, he was elected as the Secretary of the Constitutional Court of Georgia by the Plenum of the Constitutional Court. On January 12, 2018, he was elected as the Vice President and the Chairman of the First Board of the Constitutional Court of Georgia by the Decision of the Plenum of the Constitutional Court of Georgia. On June 25, 2020, Merab Turava was elected as the President of the Constitutional Court for a five-year term by the Plenum of the Constitutional Court of Georgia.
References
External links
President of the Constitutional Court of Georgia
1964 births
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Ilya Masodov (unknown; some sources state 1966) is a modern Russian writer.
Biography
According to the publisher, Ilya Masodov was born in 1966 in Leningrad. He worked as a school teacher for a while and moved to Germany. There is no trustworthy evidence of the existence of the writer. An agent of the writer, Dmitry Volchek, stated that Masodov is a real person, but Volchek himself is not aware of the fate of the writer after 2003.
Debate over the identity of Masodov and the authorship
There is a discussion about whether Ilya Masodov is a real writer. According to one theory, Masodov is a pseudonym derived from the names of other Russian writers such as "Ma-" for Mamleev, "-so-" for Sorokin and "-dov" for Radov (or less commonly, for "Dovlatov"). Other people consider the name as an anagram from von Sacher-Masoch and Marquis de Sade. It is also argued that Ilya Masodov is a project of Marusya Klimova or his publisher named Dmitry Volchek.
Style and language
Some critics found Masodov uses the "pared to the bones" сreative approach of Vladislav Krapivin. Masodov works between two genres, namely "Necrorealism" and "guro" or "vampire horror". Indeed, Masodov's world is surreal and pedophilic although there are no explicit pornographic scenes. The reality of the USSR is mixed with children's scary stories (so-called Childlore) and urban legends.
Works
Trilogy of novels 2001:
The Darkness of Your Eyes () - a mocking and surreal story about a teenage vampire girl who travels to Black Moscow in order to raise Lenin from the dead.
The Heat of Your Hands () - the novel is about Masha Sinitsina who runs away from home because of bad grades at school. She meets another little girl, Yulia, and they started living in an abandoned house. Eventually the reader learns that Yulia is a zombie who stays in the world to take revenge on all men.
The Sweetness of Your Soft Lips () - The young pioneer Katya Kotova finds out that her parents are enemies of the Soviet people. She is sent to a boarding school. After that, Katya commits suicide because of sexual assault and abuse there. Eventually she turns into a demon named Snegurochka.
Additionally, a publisher of Masodov has stated that there is at least one unpublished novel by the author.
References
Living people
1966 births
Russian writers
Occult writers
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Celebrity Camp was a reality show created by TV JOJ based on Survivor. Twenty-six celebrities were sent to the Philippines where they competed in two tribes in a series of challenges with the losing tribe going to Tribal Council to vote out one of its members. Apart of Survivor, Celebrity Camp was more about challenges than survival (contestant has luxury items and food on the beach), but it maintained some similarities with Survivor like tribe division, Tribal Council, and merge into one tribe. Each day contestants competed in a series of challenges and each night the losing tribe must vote out one of its members on Tribal Council. All episodes were shot in Philippines only last two episodes, starting with semi-final were shot in a studio in Slovakia. In the final not jury but public vote determined winner who won prize of 5,000,000 SKK (US$200,000).
Contestants
The game
Voting history
Tribal phase (Day 1–15)
Individual phase (Day 16–23)
References
Slovak reality television series
Television shows filmed in the Philippines | [
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Sir Eric St John Bamford, KCB, KBE, CMG (14 October 1891 – 13 April 1957) was an English civil servant.
Background and career
Born on 14 October 1891, Bamford attended Corpus Christi College, Oxford, before passing the examinations to enter HM Civil Service in 1914. Service in the First World War interrupted his entry; he was wounded in France which left him in worsening health for the rest of his life. After demobilisation, he entered the Civil Service as an official in HM Treasury in 1919.
Bamford was private secretary to the Financial Secretary to the Treasury from 1919 until 1921. He was then Secretary to the Trade Facilities Advisory Committee from 1926 to 1933, and then to the Imperial Communications Advisory Committee until 1938, when he returned to the Treasury. When the Second World War broke out in 1939, he moved to the new Ministry of Information; he was appointed Deputy Director-General in 1941 and Director-General in 1945. He was then Director-General of the Central Office of Information (the Ministry of Information's successor) in 1946, before returning to the Treasury, where he remained for two years. Finally, he was Chairman of the Board of Inland Revenue from 1948 to 1955. He died on 13 April 1957. Alongside two knighthoods (the KCB and KBE awarded in 1949 and 1946 respectively) and the CMG, he was awarded with an honorary fellowship by his old college.
References
1891 births
1957 deaths
English civil servants
Alumni of Corpus Christi College, Oxford
Knights Companion of the Order of the Bath
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George | [
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The 2022 Delray Beach Open (officially known as 2022 Delray Beach Open by VITACOST.com for sponsorship reasons) is a professional men's tennis tournament to be played on hard courts. It will be the 30th edition of the tournament, and it is part of the 2022 ATP Tour. It will take place in Delray Beach, United States between February 14 and February 20, 2022. This is the first edition where an exhibition mixed doubles event will be played.
Champions
Singles
Cameron Norrie def. Reilly Opelka, 7–6(7–1), 7–6(7–4)
Doubles
Marcelo Arévalo / Jean-Julien Rojer def. Aleksandr Nedovyesov / Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, 6–2, 6–7(5–7), [10–4]
Point and prize money
Point distribution
Prize money
*per team
Singles main draw entrants
Seeds
† Rankings are as of 7 February 2022.
Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the main draw:
Grigor Dimitrov
Tommy Paul
Jack Sock
The following players received entry from qualifying draw:
Liam Broady
Denis Istomin
Stefan Kozlov
Mitchell Krueger
The following player received entry as a lucky loser :
Emilio Gómez
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Jenson Brooksby → replaced by Emilio Gómez
James Duckworth → replaced by Thanasi Kokkinakis
Kei Nishikori → replaced by Steve Johnson
Frances Tiafoe → replaced by Denis Kudla
Doubles main draw entrants
Seeds
1 Rankings are as of 7 February 2022.
Other entrants
The following pairs received wildcards into the main draw:
Robert Galloway / Alex Lawson
Thanasi Kokkinakis / Jordan Thompson
The following pair received entry into the doubles main draw as alternates:
Jack Vance / Jamie Vance
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Thanasi Kokkinakis / Jordan Thompson → replaced by Jack Vance / Jamie Vance
References
External links
Tournament overview on ATP Tour website
Official website
Delray Beach Open
Delray Beach Open
Delray Beach Open
Delray Beach Open | [
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The Barabinsk constituency (No.138) is a Russian legislative constituency in Novosibirsk Oblast. Until 2007, the constituency was based in central and western Novosibirsk Oblast, covering most of rural territory of the region. During 2015 redistricting, the constituency was heavily gerrymandered, so it currently snakes from Novosibirsk through the middle of Novosibirsk Oblast all the way to the west.
Members elected
Election results
1993
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Kharitonov
|align=left|Agrarian Party
|
|54.21%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Igor Malkov
|align=left|Yavlinsky–Boldyrev–Lukin
| -
|16.40%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1995
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Kharitonov (incumbent)
|align=left|Agrarian Party
|
|35.05%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Donchenko
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|20.59%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Andrey Dorovsky
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|15.79%
|-
|style="background-color:#F5821F"|
|align=left|Vitaly Trunov
|align=left|Bloc of Independents
|
|8.53%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Viktor Nozdryukhin
|align=left|Our Home – Russia
|
|6.52%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|10.88%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1999
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Kharitonov (incumbent)
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|53.34%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Loginov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|13.93%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Melnik
|align=left|Independent
|
|11.05%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Panin
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|6.63%
|-
|style="background-color:#084284"|
|align=left|Mikhail Fedotov
|align=left|Spiritual Heritage
|
|2.35%
|-
|style="background-color:#FF4400"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Sokolkov
|align=left|Andrey Nikolayev and Svyatoslav Fyodorov Bloc
|
|1.67%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|8.30%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2003
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Kharitonov (incumbent)
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|56.40%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Loginov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|11.82%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Natalya Melnichenko
|align=left|Agrarian Party
|
|5.65%
|-
|style="background:#1042A5"|
|align=left|Anatoly Gvozdev
|align=left|Union of Right Forces
|
|4.93%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Boris Mironov
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.87%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Kargapolov
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.52%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|12.49%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2016
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Viktor Ignatov
|align=left|United Russia
|
|39.19%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Roman Yakovlev
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|16.70%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Dmitry Golovanev
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|15.80%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Vandakurov
|align=left|A Just Russia
|
|7.36%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Olga Shmendel
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|6.11%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Dmitry Lukashev
|align=left|Rodina
|
|3.70%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Dmitry Kholyavchenko
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|2.05%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Bulat Barantayev
|align=left|People's Freedom Party
|
|1.95%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Dmitry Popov
|align=left|Patriots of Russia
|
|1.56%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2021
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Viktor Ignatov (incumbent)
|align=left|United Russia
|
|35.88%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Roman Yakovlev
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|28.31%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Timur Gostyayev
|align=left|New People
|
|8.23%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Eduard Kozhemyakin
|align=left|Party of Pensioners
|
|7.08%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Roman Kazakov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|6.82%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Andrey Filimoshkin
|align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth
|
|5.47%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Tatyana Samkova
|align=left|Party of Growth
|
|2.87%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Maksim Teppo
|align=left|Civic Platform
|
|0.64%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
Notes
References
Russian legislative constituencies
Politics of Novosibirsk Oblast | [
101,
1996,
3347,
28518,
25564,
5540,
1006,
2053,
1012,
15028,
1007,
2003,
1037,
2845,
4884,
5540,
1999,
24576,
5332,
17706,
6711,
10379,
1012,
2127,
2289,
1010,
1996,
5540,
2001,
2241,
1999,
2430,
1998,
2530,
24576,
5332,
17706,
6711,
10379... | [
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1,
1,
1,
1... |
Islamic Broadcasting Union (IBU ; ) formerly known as Islamic States Broadcasting Organization (ISBO), is a media and public relations wing and one of the specialised body of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation focused on the promotion of Islam and mutual cooperation between the 57 member states through by producing several radio programs. It also televises programs concerning the same issues, in addition to working for the promotion of Arabic languages. Predominantly working in the field of journalism, it highlights the social, political and cultural challenges across the Muslim nations.
History
IBU was established as Islamic States Broadcasting Organization (ISBO) by adopting a resolution in the 6th summit of the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers hosted in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia in July 1975. It also headquartered in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
In 2022, IBU signed a formal agreement with the Jordanian and Arab States Broadcasting Union to produce and telecast joint radio and television programs across the Arab world. Both unions established a representative office to supervise radio and television networks affiliated with IBU.
Prior to signing an agreement with the Arab States Broadcasting Union, the IBU signed a formal deal with the members states to form a committee focused on the development of the IBU. The committee consist members from different countries such as Saudi Arabia, Palestine, Egypt, Tunisia, Jordan and Qatar. The idea to form a committee was originally introduced by the IBU president or director general Amr El-Leithi.
Objectives
It is objectively focused on propagating dawah and promotion of the mutual cooperation between the member states pertaining to broadcasting. It also serves as one of the main sources to highlight the objectives of the OIC.
References
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation specialized agencies
1974 establishments in Saudi Arabia
International radio networks
Television channels and stations established in 1974
Islamic television networks
Islamic radio stations | [
101,
5499,
5062,
2586,
1006,
21307,
2226,
1025,
1007,
3839,
2124,
2004,
5499,
2163,
5062,
3029,
1006,
2003,
5092,
1007,
1010,
2003,
1037,
2865,
1998,
2270,
4262,
3358,
1998,
2028,
1997,
1996,
17009,
2303,
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1996,
3029,
1997,
5499,
679... | [
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Brikhesh Chandra Lal () is a Nepali politician belonging to Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party. He is also a former member of Rastriya Sabha and was elected under open category.
He is the founding leader of Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party.
Political life
Lal is former mayor of Janakpur. He's one of those who left Nepali Congress in the year 2007 along with Mahantha Thakur to form regional party named Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party.
He refounded the party in the year deciding the Loktantrik Samajwadi Party, Nepal 2022 citing that both People's Socialist Party, Nepal and Loktantrik Samajwadi Party, Nepal had been un generous and authoritarian while going against the mandate of Madhesh Movement. He also criticized the party decision of forging alliance time and again with the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) which has the nature they fighter together in past.
See also
Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party
Bijay Kumar Singh
References
People from Dhanusha District
Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party politicians
Nepali Congress politicians from Madhesh Province
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people | [
101,
7987,
28209,
9953,
16469,
21348,
1006,
1007,
2003,
1037,
23418,
3761,
7495,
2000,
28774,
4886,
5506,
15689,
2232,
13660,
5794,
18886,
2243,
2283,
1012,
2002,
2003,
2036,
1037,
2280,
2266,
1997,
20710,
18886,
3148,
11200,
1998,
2001,
27... | [
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Katalin Gennburg (born 5 March 1984) is a German politician of The Left who has been a member of the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin since 2016.
Education and life
Gennburg attended the Lise-Meitner-Gymnasium in Falkensee and earned her Abitur in 2004. She then studied at the Technical University of Berlin, graduating with a bachelor's degree in culture and technology in 2010, and later a master's degree in historical urbanism in 2014 with her thesis The materiality of the commuter belt: On the privatization of land in East Germany since 1990 – the Berlin suburb of Falkensee and the construction of the Herlitz works. She has a daughter and lives in Alt-Treptow.
From 2005 to 2007, Gennburg was a student assistant to member of the Bundestag Jan Korte. During 2007 she did freelance work and public relations work for the European Left in the European Parliament. She then worked as a women's representative in the humanities faculty at the TU Berlin until 2010, before becoming a tutor at the Department of Urban and Regional Sociology. From 2014 to 2016, she was a research assistant for Berlin Senator for Urban Development Katrin Lompscher.
Politics
Gennburg joined the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) in 2002. In 2003, she was elected to the city council of Falkensee, serving until 2005. She was the youngest member of the council and was responsible for developing an urban development plan for the area, which later spurred her to study historical urbanism. From 2007 to 2008, she was co-spokeswoman for The Left's youth branch, Left Youth Solid, along with others including Lena Kreck.
She was elected to the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin in the 2016 Berlin state election, winning the direct constituency of Treptow-Köpenick 1 with 26.4% of votes. She became The Left's spokeswoman for urban development. She was re-elected in the 2021 Berlin state election, again winning her constituency with 26.2% of votes.
After the 2021 election, Gennburg campaigned for Left members to vote "no" to the proposed coalition agreement with the SPD and Greens. She cited concerns about housing and development policy, particularly the shift of the urban development portfolio from The Left to the SPD. She suggested that the SPD and Greens could not be trusted to protect tenants' interests, and would take a pro-business approach to housing construction and the result of the Deutsche Wohnen & Co. enteignen referendum. She also criticised her party for being insufficiently assertive in the previous coalition and ceding too much ground to the more moderate parties. The coalition agreement was ultimately passed with 75% approval.
References
External links
1984 births
Living people
The Left (Germany) politicians
Members of the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin
21st-century German politicians
21st-century German women politicians
People from Weißenfels | [
101,
29354,
4115,
8991,
22642,
1006,
2141,
1019,
2233,
3118,
1007,
2003,
1037,
2446,
3761,
1997,
1996,
2187,
2040,
2038,
2042,
1037,
2266,
1997,
1996,
11113,
3351,
8551,
7159,
2368,
13821,
1997,
4068,
2144,
2355,
1012,
2495,
1998,
2166,
8... | [
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The National School of Journalism and Public Discourse, (abbreviated as NSoJ) is an independent nonprofit institution in Bengaluru, India that was established in 2015 to produce journalists who are committed to truth, justice and democracy in India.
The School offers undergraduate honours degrees in journalism, Psychology, Political Science, and English; and post graduate diplomas in Print, Broadcast and Digital Media. NSoJ also produces the NSoJ Tannoy Podcast, available on Spotify and Apple Podcasts, as well as a digital news and features website.
History
NSoJ was founded by Obama Scholar Timothy Franklyn under the stewardship of senior media professionals in India, including Franklyn James, former vice-president, The Times of India, H.S. Balram, former resident editor, The Times of India, and Saswati Chakravarty, former resident editor, The Economic Times. H.S. Balram also served as the first Director of NSoJ.
Since inception, NSoJ has offered postgraduate courses in print, digital and broadcast media for mid career professionals including engineers, doctors, lawyers and accountants.From 2020, NSoJ has been ranked by India Today as one of India's best mass communication colleges.
In 2018, NSoJ was granted affiliation by Bengaluru City University to offer full time undergraduate degree programmes in its residential campus in Hebbal, Bengaluru.
Organisation and administration
NSoJ is managed by a global advisory board that includes Francesca Folda, former editor-in-chief of Sky Italia and Dipti Kumar, director of digital engagement at the Consulate General of the United States. The Director of postgraduate programmes is Baba Prasad, former senior editor of The Hindu. The Dean of Studies is Princess Franklyn, former principal of Bishop Cotton Girls' School.
Slant
NSoJ conducts Slant, a national level journalism, literary and cultural festival for high school and university students. Keynote speakers at Slant have included Kanhaiya Kumar, Ricky Kej, Swara Bhaskar, Charu Sharma, Aditya Sondhi, Raghu Karnad.
Public lectures and debates
NSoJ provides a free speech platform for public persons and academics from around the world. Prominent speakers include Ulrik Haagerup, Bill Grueskin, Kirsten Brosbøl, Ambassador Ashok Sajjanhar, B.V. Acharya, Nidhi Razdan, Kalyan Varma, Rajeev Gowda, Sadanand Maiya, Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, Akkai Padmashali, Justice N. Santosh Hegde, Dinesh Gundu Rao, Krishna Byre Gowda and Anita Nair.
References
Journalism schools in India
Universities and colleges in Bangalore
Educational institutions established in 2015
2015 establishments in Karnataka | [
101,
1996,
2120,
2082,
1997,
8083,
1998,
2270,
15152,
1010,
1006,
12066,
2004,
24978,
29147,
1007,
2003,
2019,
2981,
14495,
5145,
1999,
8191,
14129,
1010,
2634,
2008,
2001,
2511,
1999,
2325,
2000,
3965,
8845,
2040,
2024,
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2000,
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1,
1,
1,
1... |
Stephen Walter Samarakkody (17 July 1919 - 1969) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Polgahawela representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.
He was elected to parliament from Polgahawela in the March 1960 general election and was re-elected in the July 1960 general election defeating D. B. Welagedara. He lost the 1965 general election to M. D. Banda.
Edmund Samarakkody and Siripala Samarakkody were his brothers, while Panini Ilangakoon and Robert Edward Jayatilaka were his brother-in-laws. He was married to Neeta Senanayake.
References
1919 births
1969 deaths
Sri Lankan politicians
Members of the 4th Parliament of Ceylon
Members of the 5th Parliament of Ceylon
Sri Lanka Freedom Party politicians | [
101,
4459,
4787,
3520,
5400,
22426,
5149,
1006,
2459,
2251,
4529,
1011,
3440,
1007,
2001,
1037,
5185,
16159,
3761,
1012,
2002,
2001,
1996,
2266,
1997,
3323,
1997,
5185,
7252,
2013,
14955,
3654,
14238,
10581,
5052,
1996,
5185,
7252,
4071,
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1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
This article lists Fellows of the Royal Society who were elected in 2021.
Fellows
Julie Ahringer, Director, Wellcome Trust/Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge
Glen Barber, Professor and Chairman, Department of Cell Biology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, United States
Paul Bates, Professor of Hydrology, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol
Richard Benton, Professor, Center for Integrative Genomics, University of Lausanne
William Bond, Emeritus Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town
Ian L. Boyd, Professor in Biology, School of Biology, University of St Andrews
Nigel Brandon, Chair, Sustainable Development in Energy and Dean, Faculty of Engineering, Imperial College London
Peter Campbell, Head, Cancer, Ageing, and Somatic Mutations Programme, Wellcome Sanger Institute
Frank Close, Professor of Theoretical Physics Emeritus and Fellow Emeritus of Exeter College, University of Oxford
David Craik, Director, ARC Centre of Excellence for Innovations in Peptide and Protein Science, Group Leader, Chemistry and Structural Biology Division and Director, Clive and Vera Ramaciotti Facility for Producing Pharmaceuticals in Plants, Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland
Donald B. Dingwell, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Connie Eaves, Distinguished Scientist, Terry Fox Laboratory, British Columbia Cancer Research Institute and University Professor, Departments of Medical Genetics, Medicine, Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, and the School of Biomedical Engineering, University of British Columbia
Sadaf Farooqi, Professor of Metabolism and Medicine, Wellcome-MRC Institute of Metabolic Science, University of Cambridge
Ten Feizi, Director, Glycosciences Laboratory, Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London
Michael Finnis, Professor, Department of Materials and Department of Physics, Imperial College London
Julie Forman-Kay, Senior Scientist and Program Head, Molecular Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) and Professor, Department of Biochemistry, University of Toronto
Jane Francis, Director, British Antarctic Survey
Vernonica Franklin-Tong, Professor in Plant Cell Biology, School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham
Usha Goswami, Professor of Cognitive Developmental Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge
Hugh Griffiths, Royal Academy of Engineering / Thales Chair of RF Sensors, Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, University College London
Andy Haldane, Chief Economist, Bank of England (until June 2021) and Chief Executive Officer, Royal Society for Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (September 2021 - onwards)
Geoffrey Hall, Professor of Physics, Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London
Karen Heywood, Professor of Physical Oceanography, Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia
Adrian V. S. Hill, Lakshmi Mittal and Family Professor of Vaccinology and Director, The Jenner Institute, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford
Richard Horne, Head, Space Weather and Atmosphere, British Antarctic Survey
Gregory Houseman, Emeritus Professor of Geophysics, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds
Rebecca Kilner, Professor of Evolutionary Biology and Director, University Museum of Zoology, University of Cambridge
Roger Lemon, Sobell Chair of Neurophysiology, Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London
Fiona Marshall, Senior Vice President Head of Discovery Sciences and Translational Medicine, Merck & Co.
Thomas Muir, Van Zandt Williams Jr. Class of '65 Professor of Chemistry, Princeton University
Frances Platt, Professor of Biochemistry and Pharmacology, Department of Pharmacology, University of Oxford
Jeremy Quastel, Professor, Department of Mathematics, University of Toronto
Marilyn Renfree, Melbourne Laureate Professor and Ian Potter Chair of Zoology, School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne
David Rowitch, Professor of Paediatrics and Head of Department, Department of Paediatrics, University of Cambridge and Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco
Richard Samworth, Professor of Statistical Science and Director, Statistical Laboratory, University of Cambridge
Sjors Scheres, Group Leader, Structural Studies Division, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Bernard F. Schutz, Professor, School of Physics and Astronomy, and Fellow and founding Director, Data Innovation Research Institute, Cardiff University; and Director (retired), Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute)
Abigail Sellen, Deputy Lab Director, Microsoft Research
David Silver, Principal research scientist, DeepMind and Professor of Computer Science, Department of Computer Science, University College London
Benjamin Simons, Royal Society EP Abraham Professor, Gurdon Institute and Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge
Endre Süli, Professor of Numerical Analysis, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford
Richard S. Sutton, Professor, Department of Computing Science, University of Alberta, Canada and Distinguished Research Scientist, DeepMind
Louis Taillefer, Professor, Department of Physics and Institut quantique, Université de Sherbrooke
Christopher G. Tate, MRC Investigator, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Philip Torr, Professor, Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford
Thirumalai Venkatesan, Director, Center for Quantum Research and Technology and Professor of Physics and ECE, University of Oklahoma (from July 2021), and Affiliate Scientist, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and Adjunct Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, National University of Singapore
Karen Vogtmann, Professor, Mathematics Institute, University of Warwick and Goldwin Smith Professor Emeritus, Cornell University
Bruce Weir, Professor, Department of Biostatistics, University of Washington
Simon Wessely, Regius Chair of Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neurosciences, King's College London and Past President, Royal College of Psychiatrists and Royal Society of Medicine
Stanley Whittingham, Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Materials Science and Engineering, Department of Chemistry, Binghamton University
Charlotte Williams, Professor of Inorganic Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford
Honorary Fellows
John Kingman, Chair, UK Research and Innovation; Group Chairman, Legal and General plc; Chairman, Tesco Bank; Deputy Chair, The National Gallery; Trustee, Royal Opera House; and a World Fellow, Yale University
Foreign Members
Stephen J. Benkovic, Evan Pugh University Professor and Eberly Chair in Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University
Anny Cazenave, Emeritus scientist at LEGOS/CNES, France and Director for Earth Sciences, International Space Science Institute
Elena Conti, Director and Scientific Member, Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry
Stanley Deser, Senior Research Associate, Brandeis University and Institute of Theoretical Physics, Caltech
Vishva Dixit, Vice President, Early Discovery Research, Genentech Inc
Michael I. Jordan, Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences and Department of Statistics, University of California, Berkeley
V. Narry Kim, Professor, School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University and Director, Center for RNA Research, Institute for Basic Science
Sang Yup Lee, Distinguished Professor, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, and Vice President for Research, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)
Giacomo Rizzolatti, Emeritus Professor, Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Parma
Claire Voisin, Senior researcher, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)
References
2021
2021 in the United Kingdom
2021 in science | [
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Sir Kenneth Lee, 1st Baronet (1879 – 18 October 1967) was an English businessman and civil servant.
Born in 1879, his family were "long connected with the cotton industry". His grandfather Henry Lee had founded the cotton manufacturer Tootal Broadhurst Lee and his father Harold Lee, JP (died 1936) had been a senior executive in the company. Lee was involved in the company's management by the late 1900s, when he met the American soprano Giulia Strakosch (daughter of the impresario Max Strakosch) while he was in the United States on business; they married in London in 1910. Lee was subsequently chairman and president of his family's business. He was pioneered the use of scientific research in the industry and played a role in inventing crease-resistant processes.
During the First World War, Lee sat on the Imperial Shipping Committee and government advisory committees on trade, industry and patents. From 1925, he was a member of the commission investigating the coal industry. He was knighted in 1934. When the Second World War broke out, he was appointed Director-General of the Ministry of Information in 1939, serving until 1940. In 1940, he was a member of the UK's trade mission to South America and in 1941 was appointed one of the Board of Trade's representatives in the US. He was created a baronet in 1941 and died on 18 October 1967.
References
1879 births
1967 deaths
English businesspeople
English civil servants
Knights Bachelor
Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom | [
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Bijay Kumar Singh () is a Nepali politician belonging to Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party. He is also a former member of Constituent Assembly and was elected under proportional list.
He is the founding leader of Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party.
See also
Brikhesh Chandra Lal
References
People from Mahottari District
Terai Madhesh Loktantrik Party politicians
Nepali Congress politicians from Madhesh Province | [
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The Year We Learned to Fly is a children's picture book written by Jacqueline Woodson and illustrated by Rafael López. Told in verse, the story is about two Black siblings, who use their imagination to escape their boredom. The book was published on January 4, 2022, by Nancy Paulsen Books and is a follow-up to the authors' previous collaboration, The Day You Begin.
Reception
The picture book was received positively, gaining starred reviews from multiple publications. Kirkus Reviews, which summarized the book as "[a]n intergenerational family story of freedom", praised López' illustrations, such as the contrast between the indoor and outdoor scenes, and said "[t]he ebullient mixed-media artwork explodes with color and extends the richness of the text." Kirkus also commented on the reference to Virginia Hamilton's The People Could Fly made by the authors.
The Booklist praised the narrative, calling it "simultaneously simple and profound" and commented on how the book could be used to give confidence to children during challenging points in their lives. In their review, Publishers Weekly highlighted López' multimedia illustrations and how they worked alongside the poems to vividly depict the children's imagination.
References
2022 children's books
American picture books
Children's books about race and ethnicity
Children's poetry books | [
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Parliamentary elections are expected to be held in Mauritania in 2023.
Electoral system
The 157 members of the National Assembly are elected by two methods; 113 are elected from single- or multi-member constituencies using either the two-round system or proportional representation; in single-member constituencies candidates require a majority of the vote to be elected in the first round and a plurality in the second round. In two-seat constituencies, voters vote for a party list (which must contain one man and one woman); if no list receives more than 50% of the vote in the first round, a second round is held, with the winning party taking both seats. In constituencies with three or more seats, closed list proportional representation is used, with seats allocated using the largest remainder method. For three-seat constituencies, party lists must include a female candidate in first or second on the list; for larger constituencies a zipper system is used, with alternate male and female candidates.
The other 40 seats are elected from a single nationwide constituency, also using closed list proportional representation, with half elected on separate lists reserved for women. A further four members are elected by the diaspora.
References
2023 elections in Africa
2023 in Mauritania
2023 | [
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Braulio Sánchez Fuentes, S.D.B. (4 August 1922 – 18 November 2003) was a Mexican Roman Catholic prelate.
Life
Sánchez Fuentes entered to religious congregation of the Salesians of Don Bosco and after his profession was ordained as priest on 28 October 1950.
Pope Paul VI appointed him on 16 March 1966 as the Apostolic Administrator and on 14 January 1970 as the first prelate of the newly created Roman Catholic Territorial Prelature of Mixes and Titular Bishop of Aquae Novae in Proconsulari. Archbishop of Mexico, Miguel Darío Miranda y Gómez, consecrated him on 1 May of the same year in the Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Paul in San Pedro y San Pablo Ayutla; co-consecrators were Archbishop Ernesto Corripio y Ahumada and Bishop José de Jesús Clemens Alba Palacios.
On 15 February 1978, Sánchez Fuentes renounced his titular bishop seat in the course of the new allocation guidelines of the Roman Curia. On 16 December 2000, Pope John Paul II accepted his retirement because of the age.
Sánchez Fuentes died at the age of 81.
References
External links
Bishop Braulio Sánchez Fuentes, S.D.B.
1922 births
2003 deaths
People from Mexico City
Salesian bishops
20th-century Roman Catholic bishops in Mexico
21st-century Roman Catholic bishops in Mexico | [
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Sir Anthony Keith Rawlinson, KCB (5 March 1926 – 22 February 1986) was a British civil servant.
Born on 5 March 1926, Rawlinson studied at Christ Church, Oxford, before service in the Army from 1944 to 1947. He then entered HM Civil Service and spent many years in HM Treasury. From 1972 to 1975, he was the UK's executive director at the IMF and the economic minister at the British Embassy in the US. He was then appointed a Deputy Secretary in the Department of Industry; after serving briefly as Second Permanent Secretary there from 1976 to 1977, he moved to the Treasury, where he was Second Permanent Secretary (with responsibility for public expenditure) from 1977 to 1983.
Rawlinson was then briefly Permanent Secretary of the Department of Trade in 1983, before it was merged to form the Department of Trade and Industry, where he was jointly Permanent Secretary until 1985. There, he was responsible for competition policy and negotiating with the London Stock Exchange over regulations which ultimately abolished the distinction between the stockjobber and the stockbroker, a key part of the government's reforms of the City. He was then chairman of the Gaming Board for Great Britain until he died after a fall while climbing Mount Snowdon on 22 February 1986. An avid climber, he had been elected president of the Alpine Club shortly before his death.
References
1926 births
1986 deaths
British civil servants
Knights Companion of the Order of the Bath | [
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Kabaddi Kabaddi may refer to
Kabadi Kabadi (2001 film), 2001 Indian Tamil-language film
Kabaddi Kabaddi (2003 film), 2003 Indian Telugu-language film
Kabaddi Kabaddi (2015 film), 2015 Nepalese film
See also
Kabaddi, a contact team sport | [
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Wendell Cleophus Labrooy (born 25 September 1971) is a former Sri Lankan domestic cricketer who also currently serves as an international match referee. He played as a left handed batsman and bowled right arm medium fast in domestic matches.
Although he couldn't make it into the national team, his elder brother Graeme Labrooy managed to represent in Sri Lanka in international matches on the back of impressive domestic performances. Wendell has also worked as a banker at the Hatton National Bank.
Biography
His elder brother Graeme is also an elite international match referee. His younger brother Maxwell Labrooy who was also the third brother in the Labrooy family also played school cricket. His father Donald Labrooy was a renowned national level boxer who had represented Sri Lanka in many boxing competitions. Donald died in June 2020.
Early years
He pursued his education at Maris Stella College in Negombo just like his other two brothers. He played school cricket for Maris Stella College and captained the Maris Stella College cricket team.
His major achievement during school cricket came in 1990 when he went onto score 1000 runs in a single school cricket season while also capturing 73 wickets opening the bowling. He incidentally served as the captain of the Maris Stella College when he achieved the double of 1000 runs and 50 wickets in 1990 season.
He was also the first schoolboy cricketer representing Maris Stella College to score 1000 runs in a single season. For his stellar performances, he also received the first runner-up award among outstation schoolboys during the Sunday Observer Schoolboy Cricketer of the Year award ceremony in 1991 and also won the runner-up awards for best batsman and bowler.
He played for Sri Lanka U19 team primarily during the early 1980s and late 1990s although he was never in contention for a place in the senior side mainly due to lack of international matches for Sri Lanka during the time. He was an established and proven performer at domestic cricket arena as an allrounder and has played club cricket for Burgher Recreation Club, Nondescripts Cricket Club, Colombo Cricket Club and Sebastianites Cricket and Athletic Club.
He joined HNB in 1993 and has also went onto play for HNB in mercantile cricket tournaments.
Umpiring career
It was revealed that he initially wanted to be an umpire at first-class level and international level and he even attended the local umpire's examination way back in 2006 alongside the likes of Kumar Dharmasena, Lyndon Hannibal and Ruchira Palliyaguruge. However, his umpiring dream did not materialize due to his decision to play club cricket in Australia in 2006. On his return from Australia to Sri Lanka, he realized that Sri Lanka Cricket had stuck with a set number of referees and decided to umpire at low-tier competitions including mill division III and mill division II.
Career as referee
In November 2017, he was inducted to the ICC Panel of Match Referees and his first assignment as international match referee came during Sri Lanka women's bilateral home series against Pakistan in March 2018. Since then he had primarily served as a match referee in Women's ODIs and T20Is. He also officiated as match referee in 2020 Lanka Premier League and 2021 Lanka Premier League.
In January 2022, he stood in as match referee for the first time in a men's international match during the first ODI between Afghanistan and the Netherlands in Qatar.
References
Burgher sportspeople
1971 births
Living people
Sri Lankan cricketers
Alumni of Maris Stella College
Colombo Cricket Club cricketers
Negombo Cricket Club cricketers
Burgher Recreation Club cricketers
Sebastianites Cricket and Athletic Club cricketers
Nondescripts Cricket Club cricketers
Cricket match referees
Cricket umpires
People from Western Province, Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan bankers | [
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Elsie Paitai-Hovell (b. 20 February 1963) is a former rugby union player. She made her debut for the Black Ferns on 30 August 1990 against the United States at Christchurch. She was selected for the 1991 Women's Rugby World Cup squad, but didn't feature in the World Cup itself.
Paitai-Hovell played club rugby for Ponsonby.
References
1963 births
Living people
New Zealand female rugby union players | [
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Aridulodrilus molesworthae is a large species of Australian earthworm occurring, unusually, in a semiarid region of New South Wales. It was recognised as a species of Megascolecidae, a family with extreme diversity in the wetter coastal regions of the continent, but distinguished as a new monotypic genera Aridulodrilus, a name derived from Latin meaning a semi-desert worm. This animal was first recorded by a Broken Hill property's manager, Rosalind Molesworth, after substantial rain had brought them to the surface; the specific epithet molesworthae honours its discoverer.
As a species greater than 250 mm in length, it is considered to be a large earthworm, specimens may be up to 1.5 metres when extended.
Aridulodrilus molesworthae is known at locations with low annual rainfall, an average of 260 mm, whereas most megascolecid species occur in areas receiving at least 400 mm rainfall isohyet. Their diet of microscopic organisms within the soil, rather than vegetive matter near the surface, may allow the species to subsist in a more arid environment. They are unknown outside its type locality, an area of ten hectares.
References
Megascolecidae
Fauna of New South Wales
Monotypic genera | [
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Sallye Brooks Mathis (1912 - 1982) was a teacher and civil rights activist in Jacksonville, Florida who served as an elected official in local government along with Mary Singleton. She served on Jacksonville's city council for 15 years. Sallye B. Mathis Elementary School is named for her, and she was inducted into the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame in 2015.
Life and career
Mathis was born in Jacksonville, Florida to parents Sallie Garrett (née Adams) and Henry Pickens Brooks. She grew up in the area, attending local schools. In 1930, she graduated from the Stanton Institute, a school in Jacksonville. She later attended Benedict College in South Carolina, and Bethune-Cookman College in Florida. In 1945, she graduated from Tuskegee Institute with a Bachelor of Science in education. In 1955, she graduated from Florida A & M University with a master's degree in secondary education.
She was a teacher in the Duval County School System, including at Stanton Junior High School, and continued to teach in public schools for more than 25 years. She additionally worked as a school counselor, and was also the girl's dean at Matthew V. Gilbert Junior-Senior High School. After her husband's death, Mathis retired from schoolwork in 1962.
After her retirement, she started to commit herself fully to community service and activist issues. She was a member of the NAACP and the League of Women Voters. She participated in civil rights marches, and as part of the League of Women Voters, she attended city council meetings. Alongside Wendell Holmes, she worked on the issue of school desegregation. She integrated the Jacksonville YWCA and their board of leaders. She was also an organizer for the Jacksonville Opportunities Industrial Council, and founded the Jacksonville Minority Women's Coalition.
In 1966, Mathis organized a NAACP voter-registration drive. A year later, she won the first annual Pearson Award from the Florida branch of the NAACP. Mathis was also involved in the NAACP Youth Council.
City Council
Fellow NAACP members encouraged Mathis to run for a city council seat in Jacksonville. After deciding to run, Mathis' campaign platform focused on the idea of "one-government". She suggested that a change in city council would be better for black voters, who made up 40% of the vote in Jacksonville. She also won favor with white constituents, including in predominantly white precincts.
Mathis ran against incumbent city council member Barney Cobb in the primary election on June 6, 1967. She won the Democratic nomination for Ward 3, beating Cobb with 19,260 to his 16,872 votes. On the June 20th general election, Mathis ran against Republican Theodore Forsyth Jr. for Ward 3 and won with 19,416 to 14,528 votes.
The general election took place after a grand jury indictment for various corruption charges were brought against eight Jacksonville officials. Once the city council election ended, it was considered a "sweep"; Democrats were elected in all 7 of the contested races, and the election ended with 8 of 9 incumbent members being replaced on the city council.
In 1967, Mathis and Mary Singleton became the first women to sit on the Jacksonville City Council, as well as the first black members of the council since 1907. After the election, Mathis was selected to be on the council's City Pardon Board.
In 1977, she was one of the Florida delegates for the National Women's Conference. Mathis continued to serve on the Jacksonville City Council until her death in 1982.
Legacy
The Jacksonville Branch of the NAACP named a community service award after Mathis. The Sallye B. Mathis Elementary School was also named in honor of Mathis.
In 2015, she was posthumously inducted into the Florida Civil Rights Hall of Fame.
Further reading
References
1912 births
1982 deaths
NAACP activists
American civil rights activists
African-American city council members in Florida
Tuskegee Institute alumni
Florida A&M University alumni
20th-century American educators
20th-century African-American educators
20th-century American women educators | [
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J. Vaidhyanathan affectionately known as JV is a Mridangam exponent from Tamil Nadu, India. He was the first mridangist to receive the Yuva Kala Bharathi Award, Vellore Gopalachariar Memorial award and Isai Peroli Award. He also received several other awards including Kalaimamani the highest civilian award for artists in Tamil Nadu and Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, the highest Indian recognition given to practicing artists.
Biography
J. Vaidhyanathan was born on 22 April 1965 to Carnatic musician D. K. Jayaraman and J. Jayalakshmi in Damal near Kanchipuram in Tamil Nadu. He was the youngest of his parents' three children. The family moved to Chennai a few years after he was born.
He is the nephew of D. K. Pattammal. Hails from a family of legendary Carnatic musicians, he started learning music at a very young age. Vaidhyanathan studied mridangam under T. K. Murthy. His sister C. Sukanya is a Carnatic vocalist.
He had performed mridangam with many famous Carnatic musicians like D.K. Jayaraman, D. K. Pattammal, M. S. Subbulakshmi, M. L. Vasanthakumari, K. V. Narayanaswamy, Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer, M. Balamuralikrishna, T. N. Krishnan, M. S. Gopalakrishnan, S. Balachander and Lalgudi Jayaraman. He was awarded a Junior Scholarship by the Government of India in 1985.
Personal life
His wife Poorna, who holds a doctorate in music on Pattammal's music, has been a violin lecturer at the S. V. College of Music and Dance in Tirupati, run by Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams, since 2005.
Awards and honors
Sangeet Natak Akademi Award 2016
Kalaimamani 2006
Yuva Kala Bharathi Award
Vellore Gopalachariar Memorial award from Sruti Magazine
Isai Peroli from Kartik Fine Arts
Award from Chennai Music Academy 2019
References
1965 births
Living people
Mridangam players
Carnatic instrumentalists
Indian male classical musicians
Recipients of the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award
Indian Tamil people
People from Kanchipuram district | [
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Claudio Adrián Fernández Leal (born 30 January 1977) is a Uruguayan football manager and former player who played as a forward. He is the current manager of Cerrito.
Playing career
Born in Montevideo, Fernández represented Albion, Liverpool Montevideo, Salus, Uruguay Montevideo, Progreso, Sud América and Deportivo Maldonado.
Managerial career
After retiring, Fernández began his managerial career with Oriental. In July 2016, he took over Villa Teresa, but left the following January.
In May 2017, Fernández was named in charge of Cerro Largo, but was dismissed in November. On 25 January of the following year, he returned to Villa Teresa.
On 26 July 2019, Fernández was appointed manager of Sud América, but left the following February. He returned to Villa Teresa for a third spell shortly after, before being named in charge of Cerrito on 15 January 2022.
References
External links
1977 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Montevideo
Uruguayan footballers
Association football forwards
Albion F.C. players
Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo) players
Uruguay Montevideo players
C.A. Progreso players
Sud América players
Uruguayan football managers
Uruguayan Segunda División managers
Cerro Largo F.C. managers
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Fulata Lusungu Mbano Moyo is a Malawian systematic and feminist theologian who is an advocate for gender justice.
Early life and education
Fulata Mbano was born in northern Malawi, a member of the Ngoni people from Mzimba District. Her great grandfather, Songea, was a warrior chief. Her name, Fulata, means she was born feet first. Her father started his own church after he was not accepted in mainline churches due to his polygamy.
Moyo is a survivor of childhood sexual abuse. She grew up in a small village called Engcongolweni Lazaro Jere and went to school in the nearest town, Ekwendeni. She attended a Roman Catholic high school, Marymount Girls Secondary School, before going on to study education at the University of Malawi, Chancellor College.
Moyo completed a master's degree in Christian thought, systematic and feminist theology from the University of Zimbabwe in 1993, and earned a PhD from the School of Religion and Theology at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa in 2009, with a focus on ethics, gender and religion, including some work as a research fellow at Yale University's Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS. She has also trained as a mediator and studied Viktor Frankl's Logotherapy.
Career
Moyo served as a teaching assistant in the School of Religion and Theology at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, and then as a member of the faculty at the University of Malawi in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies. She was also involved in the Tamar Campaign, which sought to address violence against women and children using contextual study of the Bible. She undertook ethnographic research in Malawi, hoping that the matrilineal system would "translate into something of a matriarchy", but was disappointed to see the pervasiveness of patriarchy due to Christianity. During this time, the nation experienced the peak of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, which also shaped her research into gender and sexual justice. She applied for ordination in the Presbyterian Church but was "silently refused."
Moyo worked for the World Council of Churches as Program Executive for Women in Church and Society from 2007 until 2019. She was based in Geneva and oversaw the project "A Just Community of Women and Men". She encouraged churches to adopt the "Thursdays in Black" campaign against rape and violence, which was inspired by the Mothers of the Disappeared in Argentina who protested at the Plaza de Mayo on Thursdays, and Women in Black in Israel.
For the 2016–2017 academic year, Moyo was a visiting lecturer on Women's Studies and African Religions at Harvard Divinity School, where she developed an Ethic of Care to help religious communities respond to women who had survived sex trafficking. She also worked with Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza on feminist hermeneutics. In 2018, she was appointed to an independent expert panel to review UNAIDS policies and processes for addressing and preventing harassment.
In 2020, Moyo founded "Stream", a US registered NGO that supports and mentors survivors of sex trafficking.
Moyo is a member of the Circle of Concerned African Women Theologians, first participating in Nairobi and then restarting the Malawi chapter and serving as Secretary of the Board for Theological Studies in 1996 She was General Coordinator from 2007 to 2013. She is also a member of the Community Voices in Peace and Pluralism in Africa, and the Board of Life and Peace Institute in Sweden. She is the Vice President of the AfriAus iLEAC Board.
Writing
Moyo has written more than 29 publications in five languages. Her writings have predominantly addressed religious and cultural influences on gender construction and women's sexuality. She argues that religious scripture must be interpreted in the context of women's experiences, which will help raise awareness of issues that dehumanize women.
Moyo was a contributor to AfricaPraying : a handbook on HIV-AIDS sensitive sermon guidelines and liturgy, published in 2003. She co-edited Women Writing Africa: Eastern African Region, published by Feminist Press in 2007. She has been a guest editor for the Ecumenical Review in 2012 and the International Review of Mission in 2015.
Selected publications
Journal articles
Book chapters
Personal life
Moyo was married to Solomon Moyo until his death from liver cancer in 1999. She has written about her experience of forgiving his infidelity.
References
External links
Living people
University of Malawi alumni
University of Malawi faculty
University of KwaZulu-Natal alumni
University of KwaZulu-Natal faculty
University of Zimbabwe alumni
Harvard Divinity School faculty
Malawian theologians
Women Christian theologians
21st-century Protestant theologians
Christian feminist theologians
Malawian women writers
Malawian human rights activists
Malawian feminists
Malawian Presbyterians
People of the World Council of Churches | [
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2022 Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly election are scheduled to be held from 10 February to 7 March 2022, in seven phases, to elect all 403 members of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly. The votes will be counted and the results will be declared on 10 March 2022.
The following is a list of Candidates contesting in the election.
Constituency No. 1-42
Constituency No. 43-80
Constituency No. 81-110
Constituency No. 111-136
Constituency No. 137-191
Constituency No. 192-243
Constituency No. 244-301
Constituency No. 302-342
Constituency No. 343-403
References
Notes
Citations
2022 State Assembly elections in India
State Assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh
2022 Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly election | [
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Sarkin Dawa is a village located in the Kam District Area in Bali Local Government Area, Taraba State, central eastern Nigeria. There is no reliable data available to estimate the total population of the village. The place falls in the territory of the Kam (Nyingwom) ethnic group but also hosts residents from various other ethnic groups. The name Sarkin Dawa (Hausa for 'king of guinea corn') refers to the village head, who is also the political king of the Kam people.
References
Populated places in Nigeria
Taraba State | [
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George is a private members club at 87-88 Mount Street in London's Mayfair district. It was established by Mark Birley in 2001. Birley sold the club with his four other Mayfair clubs, Annabel's, Mark's Club, Harry's Bar, and the Bath & Racquets Club, to Richard Caring in 2007. The club is dog friendly.
History
George is located at 87-88 Mount Street in London's Mayfair district. George was established by Mark Birley in 2001. The club is named for George Hobart, who was the head barman of Annabel's. Birley said that the name of the club was "just plain George, not George's or George's Bar". Birley described the ideal prospective member of George as "a reasonably well-heeled 35 to 40-year-old, who preferably takes out very pretty girls".
He had previously opened the members clubs Annabel's in 1963 and later, Harry's Bar. In 2007 Birley sold his four Mayfair clubs, including George, to Richard Caring for £90 million. The club is now part of the 'Birley Clubs' owned by Caring including Annabel's, Mark's Club, Harry's Bar, and the Bath & Racquets Club.
George had 500 requests for membership prior to its opening. The initial membership fee was £400. Prospective members must be proposed and seconded by current members of the club. Birley stated that the club would be the last he opened, saying that "I have no intention of doing anything else, for better or for worse". George was designed to offer a more relaxed and less formal setting than Birley's previous clubs.
Upon opening in 2001 the "cool section" of George was the "one farthest from the front door". Birley, Cosima von Bülow and the art dealer Harry Fane were seated there on opening day. The downstairs of George has a bar described by Birley as a "nighterie... not a nightclub. You move downstairs at the end of dinner, sit around on sofas, have a drink, and listen to a little bit of music". A red private dining room seats 12. The George Private Bar opened in the basement of George in 2005. The George Private Bar was established by Birley's son, Robin, and his sister, India Jane, who ran Birley's clubs during his ill health.
Food
The head chef upon opening was Luca dal Bosco. He had previously been at Harry's Bar under head chef Alberico Penati. Dal Bosco described the food at George as possessing the "freshness of Italian cuisine, the technique of the French, and with an English taste". Birley's great-nephew, Daniel de la Falaise, was the assistant head chef upon opening. The kitchen of George is visible to the diners and runs the length of the restaurant. The restaurant of George seats 90. There is outside seating on Mount Street.
George and dogs
The club features David Hockney's sketches of his dachshunds Stanley and Boogie. Birley worried that he "[hadn't] got enough" Hockney etchings for the decoration of George as the decoration of his clubs typically took "several years to get right".
The club has a bespoke menu for pet dogs. In 2020 the club hosted a number of events to raise money for dog welfare. The events were organised by the George Dog Committee; its members include David Gandy, Carole Bamford, Yasmin and Amber Le Bon and Lily Fortescue. Birley's daughter, India Jane, hosted an exhibition of her paintings, "Canines and Companions" shortly before the opening of George.
References
External links
2001 establishments in England
British companies established in 2001
Buildings and structures in Mayfair
Gentlemen's clubs in London
Restaurants established in 2001
Mount Street | [
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Kimiatu Tiriamai (born 5 December 1964) is a former New Zealand rugby union player. She played at Lock for the Black Ferns and Auckland. She also played club rugby for Ponsonby. She debuted for the Black Ferns against the California Grizzlies at Christchurch on 22 July 1989.
Tiriamai was a member of the 1991 Women's Rugby World Cup squad. She featured in their pool games against Canada and Wales.
References
1964 births
Living people
New Zealand female rugby union players | [
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Tipped Off may refer to:
Tipped Off (1920 film), American short silent Western film
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The Tarn is a site on Court Road between Mottingham and Eltham, in the Royal Borough of Greenwich, southeast London, United Kingdom, consisting of a public garden, a bird sanctuary nature reserve and a lake amongst woodland. The woodland and lake, which was historically known as Starbuck's Pond, were previously the southern part of the Great Park, one of three parks belonging to the estate of Eltham Palace and used as a royal deer hunting park for several centuries up until the English Civil War. As a garden The Tarn opened in 1935, after the Metropolitan Borough of Woolwich acquired the site from the adjacent Royal Blackheath Golf Course. The Tarn remains largely unchanged since the 1930s and several shelters, benches, a public toilets building and a circular path which crosses a wooden footbridge spanning the lake. There is also an 18th-century ice house in the garden, which is a listed structure.
Description
The Tarn, is a site between Mottingham, and Eltham in the Royal Borough of Greenwich, containing a public park, or garden a bird sanctuary, and a lake, the vast majority of which is covered in woodland. The whole site is in size, being water, and land; half the total area, or is open to the public as a park and garden, and the other half is not usually open to the public, and is designated as a bird sanctuary nature reserve. The whole site of The Tarn is around across east to west, and north to south.
Public Park
Half The Tarn's total area is a public park or garden in size, although only of the public space is land, the lake taking up the other . The part open to the public occupies the central area of the site, almost surrounding the lake, and the western part following Court Road. There are several crossing concrete paths north and south of the lake at the western end, and a single path along the western bank of the lake parallel to Court Road and connecting the two gated entrances, the road is higher than the park, so there is a slight embankment here, higher at the northern end where some of the path requires steps. A single path extends along most of the northern bank of the lake, and another opposite following the southern shore, a wooden and concrete footbridge spans the lake on the eastern side, where it is narrowest, and joins the two banks, and creating a circular walk around the park and lake. The Tarn contains, many wooden and iron benches, bins, and picnic benches; there is a public toilet building with a veranda shelter in the northwest of the park, and a circular gazebo structure in the southwest. The Tarn is wheelchair accessible, although there are steps near the northwest entrance, the southwest entrance and most of the park have wide paved paths with no steps. The park does not permit dogs, as they may disturb the wildlife. An 18th century brick ice house is located in the gardens, next to the steps near the northwest bank of the lake, encircled by a small metal fence. The ice house is a Grade II listed structure, and a section of the top has been cut out, but fenced over so people can safely see inside.
Lake
Since 1903, the lake itself has been referred to as The Tarn,, before this time it was called Starbuck's Pond, but this name is no longer used. The lake is approximately long, east to west, and its width fluctuates between and , being wider at the western end. The lake is just over in area, mostly within the public park section, with the eastern end being within the bird sanctuary part, and the easternmost tip of the lake falling outside the grounds onto Royal Blackheath Golf Course. There are two small circular islands on the western side of the lake, and on the other side are a series of weirs, east of the footbridge. The eastern side of the lake, is fed by several inflows, several small straight drainage streams, coming from Royal Blackheath Golf Course to the east and northeast, and a larger natural stream coming from the south named, Little Quaggy. The Lake drains into a natural stream on the west side keeping the name Little Quaggy, which flows west from the lake, and joins the River Quaggy near Horn Park. Sometimes the lake has been covered in algae, but there has been efforts to reduce this, as it has caused harm to the birds.
Few species of fish live in the lake, but there is a population of stickleback.
Bird sanctuary, nature reserve
While birds and other wildlife obviously live and visit the whole wooded area, half The Tarn site is not usually open to the public, and is designated specifically as a bird sanctuary nature reserve in size. The majority of the bird sanctuary is a wooded area northeast of the park and lake and fenced off from the public area, although a smaller strip extends round south of the lake following the railway line. Numerous bird species are seen in The Tarn Bird Sanctuary and lake including Mallard, Feral pigeon, Canada goose, rose-ringed parakeet, Eurasian blue tit, coal tit, common blackbird, Eurasian collared dove, great tit, long-tailed tit, Eurasian magpie, tufted duck, cormorant, carrion crow, Jay, European robin, house sparrow, starling, dunnock,. and swan In connection with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, people have used The Tarn site to help with the Big Garden Birdwatch. A butterfly garden has also been set up in the garden near the bridge. Other wildlife that appears in The Tarn includes, foxes, squirrels and frogs.
Location
The Tarn is located on the eastern side of Court Road in Mottingham opposite Mottingham railway station in the Royal Borough of Greenwich, southeast London, United Kingdom; its postcode is SE9 5AQ. The park is around north of Mottingham centre, south of Eltham and east of Middle Park. Opposite the park is a timber yard, and south of the park gates there is parade of shops on the west side of Court Road, including a convenient store, café, hairdressers, off-licence and dry cleaners, there is also a pub named The Royal and a Shell petrol station on the east side of the crossroads to the south.
Boundaries
The western boundary of The Tarn is an iron fence with two gates which join to Court Road, the road is higher than the park so there is a slight embankment here, larger at the northern end. The southern boundary is chain link fence separating the woodland from the railway line, just east of Mottingham railway station. The northern wooden fence of the bird sanctuary separates the area from the flats of a residential road named Tarnwood Park and the eastern edge of The Tarn is bordered by the grounds of Royal Blackheath Golf Course and Eltham Lodge.
Transport
The Tarn is located on Court Road which runs north to south and is part of the A208 road. Sidcup Road, a dual carriageway and part of the A20 road passes east to west around to the south of the nature reserve, joining Court Road at a traffic light controlled crossroads. Immediately west of The Tarn, on the opposite side of Court Road is Mottingham railway station, which lies between Lee and New Eltham railway stations on the Dartford Loop Line, and is southeast from Charing Cross railway station. The Tarn is also part of South East London Green Chain, a series of footpaths connecting green areas in southeast London.
There are bus stops immediately outside of the park's gates on both sides of Court Road, which are served by London Bus routes, 124, 126, 161, and 624, which take passengers to Eltham, Bromley, Woolwich, Chislehurst, Catford, and Grove Park among other areas.
History
The area of The Tarn was previously the southern part of the Great Park, one of three parks belonging to Eltham Manor, later called Eltham Palace. Historically, Mottingham and Eltham Manor were part of the Eltham Parish, within the Hundred of Blackheath, in the Lathe of Sutton at Hone, west division of Kent. The land to the south of Eltham High Street, part of the London to Kent road, belonged to the estate of Eltham Manor. There were three parks belonging to Eltham Manor named, Middle Park, West Horne Park and Great Park. Great Park was the easternmost of Eltham Manor's Parks, it was around long north to south following the road south of Eltham, about wide east to west, and was a wooded park with a lake at the southern end.
During the reign of William the Conqueror, the estate of Eltham Manor was recorded to belonging to Odo of Bayeux. During the following centuries, the ownership of Eltham Manor including the area of woodland with a lake later known as The Tarn included, fell in and out of Crown ownership several times. The land belonged to John de Vesci then William de Vesci in the 13th century followed by Gilbert de Aton, 1st Baron Aton and Geoffrey le Scrope in the 14th century. In 1315 King Edward II established the Great Park as a royal deer hunting park., which it would remain for several centuries, including the leases of Henry Guildford, Sir John Gates in the 16th century.
In the mid 17th century the lake had come to be known as Starbuck's Pond, at this time Edward Sackville, 4th Earl of Dorset was in charge of the land until the English Civil War when Charles I was captured in 1648, and Rich the rebel with commonwealth soldiers and common people sacked Eltham Palace, destroyed the parks and killed the deer, ending their use as deer parks. After Charles I was executed in 1649, Great Park came into the possession of Thomas Walsingham followed by Sir John Shaw, 1st Baronet in 1663. in 1664 Shaw ordered the construction of Eltham Lodge, a manor house within the Great Park, just north of the park's centre. The Great Park stayed with the Shaw family until the 19th century, when most of its area was turned into a golf course, which would later be named Royal Blackheath Golf Course, Eltham Lodge became the golf clubhouse.
A brick ice house was constructed in the 1750s, on the northwest side of The Tarn lake, it was used by the staff of Eltham Palace, which is around to the north-northwest. The ice house is still mostly intact, but with a section cut out of the top, but fenced over to allow people to safely see inside, it's in a fenced off area of the park, and was designated a Grade II listed structure on 8 June 1974. In February 2001, Greenwich Council was awarded £19,100 by the National Lottery Heritage Fund for restoration work on the ice house.
In 1889 the County of London was created, Eltham ceased being in Kent and was included in the new county, then in 1900 the County of London was divided into boroughs, Eltham became part of the newly created Metropolitan Borough of Woolwich. By 1903 the lake was referred to as The Tarn, Walter Claude Johnson, a civil engineer and architect purchased the land around the lake in 1904 and built a large house on the grounds. Famous gunsmith, Edwin Churchill, purchased the land and house in 1907 and spent £500 improving the house and grounds. Around this time a boathouse was constructed on the west side of the lake on the northern shore, it stood there until the 1940s when it was taken down.
In the early 20th century The Tarn was the southern part of the land owned by the Royal Blackheath Golf Course but in 1934 the Metropolitan Borough of Woolwich acquired the woodland and lake from the golf course, excluding the house built by Johnson. The Metropolitan Borough of Woolwich constructed a wooden bridge with stone foundations across the lake's narrowest part and landscaped the woodland, then opened the area as a garden and bird sanctuary in 1935. Much of the park's layout and features are the same as they were in the 1930s. In 1965 The Tarn along with the rest of Eltham became part of the newly created London Borough of Greenwich, of Greater London.
The wooden bridge across the lake was rebuilt in 1987, using the same stone foundations, and was opened by Mrs Ann Stroud on 24th April that year, with a plaque marking the occasion. In the 1980s and 1990s the Greenwich borough electoral ward covering the park was named Tarn the ward boundaries and names have been revised twice since then, and The Tarn is now within the ward named Eltham South. The Tarn has won the Green Flag Award several times between 2012 and 2021
Greenwich Council worked with Thames Water and the Environment Agency in 2009, and again in 2014 when the wildlife in The Tarn had been effected by pollution, toxins, and algae in the lake, causing many of the birds to contract Botulism, many of which died, although others were saved by animal rescue volenteers. In 2009 a pump was installed in the lake to improve oxygen levels, as were a number of small booms, to catch pollution and litter in the water. In early 2020, Greenwich Council, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, decided to leave many of its parks, including The Tarn, unlocked and open to the public 24 hours a day, but had to reverse this decision in June the same year, and lock them again at dusk because of concerns of vandalism and other antisocial behaviour.
Nearest places
References
External links
Media relating to The Tarn at Wikimedia Commons
Media relating to the ice house at The Tarn at Wikimedia Commons
The Tarn at www.royalgreenwich.gov.uk
The Tarn at www.visitgreenwich.org.uk
The Tarn at Quaggy Waterways Action Group
The Tarn at www.tripadvisor.co.uk
The Tarn at www.inspirock.com
The Tarn at thetarn.org
Buses from Mottingham Station at tfl.gov.uk
Nature reserves in the Royal Borough of Greenwich
Parks and open spaces in the Royal Borough of Greenwich
Forests and woodlands of London
Lakes of London
Eltham
Thames drainage basin
1935 establishments in England | [
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Spatulifimbria is a genus of stinging cup moths described by George Hampson in 1893.
Species
There are currently two species:
Spatulifimbria castaneiceps Hampson, 1892
Spatulifimbria grisea Hering, 1935
References
Moths of Asia
Limacodidae
Insects described in 1893 | [
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The , is an archaeological site with the ruins of a Hakuhō period Buddhist temple located in the Shindachionoshiro neighborhood of the city of Sennan, Osaka, Japan. The temple no longer exists, but the temple grounds were designated as a National Historic Site in 1987.
Overview
Kaeji temple ruins are located near the coast of Osaka Bay, on a stepped hill with an elevation of about 20 meters at the southernmost tip of the Sennan region, and mostly within the precincts of a Shinto Shrine named . The site first came to academic interest in 1936, when a preliminary archaeological excavation found the foundations of a temple with a layout patterned after Hōryū-ji in Ikaruga, Nara, and the site of large residence belonging to a powerful local clan leader. The design of the roof tiles indicated that the temple was built in the Asuka period, or the latter half of the 7th century. The foundations of the Kondō in the east and a Pagoda in the west, surrounded by a cloister, as well as the foundations of the Lecture Hall were confirmed in subsequent excavations from 1981 through 1986. The temple appears to have survived into the Muromachi period; however, there is no documentary record of the temple. The name "Kaie-ji" is a modern local geographic name, and may or may not correspond to the name of this temple.
Of the excavated items, 302 pieces were collectively designated as National Important Cultural Properties in 1995 and are stored and exhibited in the adjacent . These include many varieties of roof tiles, fragments of statuary and metal decorations from the ruined pagoda, as well as ceramic shards. Portions of the site have been preserved as an archaeological park.It is located a 25-minute walk from Okadaura Station on the Nankai Main Line.
Gallery
See also
List of Historic Sites of Japan (Osaka)
References
External links
Sennan city home page
Sennan Tourist Information
Buddhist temples in Osaka Prefecture
Sennan, Osaka
Izumi Province
Asuka period
Historic Sites of Japan
Buddhist archaeological sites in Japan
Important Cultural Properties of Japan | [
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Sergio Nelson Zeballos Martínez (born 26 September 1987) is a Bolivian football manager.
Career
Born in Cochabamba, Zeballos began his career as an assistant at Municipal Tiquipaya's youth categories before joining Aurora in 2016, as a youth manager. On 17 December 2020, he was named interim manager of the latter, after Julio César Baldivieso was sacked.
Zeballos returned to his former role after the appointment of Humberto Viviani, but was named manager of the team on 18 October 2021, after Viviani resigned.
References
External links
1987 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Cochabamba
Bolivian football managers
Bolivian Primera División managers
Club Aurora managers | [
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Furir Bari Iftari (Sylheti: - Furir Barit Istari) is a tradition of giving various kinds of seasonal fruits, sweetmeats and different Iftar item to the house of one's daughter-in-law during the month of Ramadan, which is an age old custom in Sylhet region. This term has come from Sylheti word Furi (daughter) as the custom is based on a daughter and her family. Although the celebration is not any obligatory practice, many unpleasant incidents were reported in different places because of unable to give the Iftar. Statistics show that many women have also been tortured as a result of this custom. Many have lost their lives due to this system, while others have even committed suicide. Muslims observe the custom of their holy month of Ramadan, but this practice has no linking and obligation in Islam to be celebrated. Rather it is considered as a superstition or an evil practice at present days. Simultaneously it has become a mental, financial and social disorder for the father or family of a poor woman.
See also
White House Iftar dinner
Dinner
References
Culture in Sylhet
Dinner
Iftar foods | [
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The Chamber of Deputies of Santiago del Estero Province () is the unicameral legislative body of Santiago del Estero Province, in Argentina. It comprises 40 legislators, elected in a single province-wide multi-member district through proportional representation using the D'Hondt system.
The Chamber convenes in the provincial capital, the City of Santiago del Estero. The president ex officio of the Chamber is the vice governor of the province, who is elected every four years alongside the governor of Santiago del Estero. For day-to-day affairs, the presidency of the chamber is held by the provisional president.
History
The establishment of the first legislature of Santiago del Estero was brought about by the adoption of the province's first constitution, in July 1956, during the governorship of Manuel Taboada. The first legislative body was known as the Hall of Representatives, and counted with 16 sitting members and 6 alternate members: the sum of all of these served as the first constitutional convention. Members of the Hall of Representatives initially served only two years in their post.
In 1870, the cabildo of Santiago del Estero became the seat of the provincial legislature. Later, in 1928, the body moved to the old building of the Teatro 25 de Mayo. This would remain as the legislature's official seat until 2004.
In 2002, following a declaration of a state of "political instability" by governor and caudillo Carlos Juárez, elections were rescheduled to take place a year earlier than anticipated. Subsequent federal interventions continued to alter the province's electoral schedules. Since then, Santiago del Estero has maintained an altered electoral calendar wherein all province-wide offices (both the governor and the Chamber of Deputies) are elected the same year midterm elections to the National Congress are held. Santiago del Estero and Corrientes are the only two provinces currently employing this electoral calendar.
Building
Since 2014, the Chamber of Deputies has convened in a new building built with the exclusive purpose of housing both meetings of the body and legislative offices of its members. It is located on the corner of Avenida Roca and Patagonia, in the provincial capital, near the city's central bus station and not far from the governor's offices. The building was inaugurated by Governor Claudia Ledesma Abdala on 8 April 2014.
References
External links
Constitution of Santiago del Estero Province
1856 establishments in Argentina
Politics of Argentina
Santiago del Estero Province
Santiago del Estero | [
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Altemir is a given name. Notable people with the name include:
Altemir Gregolin (born 1964), Brazilian veterinarian and politician
Altemir Cordeiro Pessôa Neto or Neto Pessoa (born 1994), Brazilian footballer | [
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is a Kofun period keyhole-shaped burial mound, located in the Uedai neighborhood of the city of Izumi, Osaka in the Kansai region of Japan. The tumulus was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 2008. It is noted for the bronze mirrors found within. These and other artifacts excavated from the tumulus are collectively designated a National Important Cultural Property.
Overview
The Izumi Koganezuka Kofun is a , which is shaped like a keyhole, having one square end and one circular end, when viewed from above. It is located at the northwestern end of Shintayama hill, surrounded paddy fields, but the location is also close to the ancient provincial capital of former Izumi Province. The tumulus has a total length of about 94 meters. The presence of a kofun at this location has been known since antiquity, but in November 1945, a 17-year-old student noticed that the tumulus was severely damaged and convinced local authorities that a rescue archaeology excavation be performed. At that time, a leather-lacquered shield with copper decorations, iron swords and other metal artifacts were discovered. In 1950 to 1951, further excavation of the posterior circular portion by the Osaka Prefectural Board of Education and the Japanese Archaeological Association found the burial chamber within which three clay-covered wooden caskets were found side by side. The central casket had the remains of a woman, and she was flanked on either side with the remains of two men. Within and surrounding these coffins were a large quantity of grave goods, including Shinju-kyo mirrors, magatama beads and other jewelry, fragments of armor and a helm, iron swords, spears and other weapons, and other artifacts. The inscription of one of the mirror gave the reign date of Keisho 3, which corresponds to 238 AD. This drew great attention by historians, as per the Chinese chronicle ( "Records of Wei"), which is part of the Records of the Three Kingdoms (), in the year 239 AD Emperor Cao Rui sent "one hundred bronze mirrors" to Queen Himiko of Wa , and it was possible that this was one of these mirrors. These excavated items are now are in the possession of the Tokyo National Museum.
Further excavation were conducted from 2001 to 2005 by the Izumi City Board of Education which confirmed the scale of the tumulus, and recovered many cylindrical and figurative haniwa. From the haniwa and other artifacts, is thought that the tumulus was completed in the latter half of the 4th century.
The tumulus is about 20 minutes on foot from Tonoki Station on the JR West Hanwa Line.
Total length 94 meters:
Anterior rectangular portion 42 meters wide x 6.5 meters high, 2-tier
Posterior circular portion 57 meter diameter x 9 meters high, 2-tiers
See also
List of Historic Sites of Japan (Osaka)
References
External links
Izumi City home page
History of Osaka Prefecture
Izumi, Osaka
Historic Sites of Japan
Archaeological sites in Japan
Kofun | [
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A Model Family () is an upcoming South Korean streaming television series directed by Kim Jin-woo. Starring Jung Woo, Park Hee-soon, Yoon Jin-seo and Park Ji-yeon. The series depicts the journey of realizing the importance of family and finally becoming a model family against drug gangs. It is slated to release in 2022 on Netflix.
Synopsis
A Model Family is about an ordinary man, Dong-ha (Jung woo), who is on the brink of bankruptcy and divorce, accidentally discovers a car with a lot of money and takes drugs. The story unfolds as he gets entangled with Gwang-cheol (Park Hee-soon), the second-in-command of the drug gang who is putting pressure on him. Meet the hot energy of two men who have to protect their families and money, respectively.
Casts
Main
Jung Woo as Dong-ha
Park Hee-soon as Gwang-cheol
Yoon Jin-seo as Eun-joo
Park Ji-yeon as Joo-hyun
Supporting
Kim Sung-oh as Choi Kang-jun, the new face of a drug gang whose eyes show madness.
Won Hyun-jun
Kim Shin-bi as Oh Jae-chan
Production
Casting
In January 2021 it was reported that Jung Woo was considering to appear in the series. In April 2021 it was reported that Park Hee-soon will joined the cast replacing the role of So Ji-sub, who is known to have declined his appearance. On August 31, 2021, they were officially joined by Yoon Jin-seo and Park Ji-yeon, casting lineup was announced by releasing photos.
References
External links
Korean-language Netflix original programming
South Korean crime television series
2022 South Korean television series debuts
Upcoming Netflix original programming
Upcoming television series | [
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Richard of Northampton (died 13 January 1304) was an English-born Crown servant, judge and cleric in Ireland of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, who ended his career as Bishop of Ferns.
He was a native of Northamptonshire, but little is known of his early life. He was a Crown servant by the early 1260s, and clearly a valued one: in the 1280s he received several rewards for "laudable service", and in 1264 he was granted a pension of three silver marks to be paid annually by the Abbey of St Thomas the Martyr, in Dublin city.
He became Dean of Ferns in 1272 and a prebendary of the Diocese of Killaloe in 1282. He was appointed an attorney to audit the accounts of the Lord Treasurer of Ireland in the latter year. He was appointed a justice in eyre (itinerant justice) in 1276 and a justice of the Court of Common Pleas (Ireland) shortly afterwards.
He was elected Bishop of Ferns in 1282 and consecrated in 1283. One historian states that he has left little trace on the history of the Diocese. However a complaint from Bishop Richard to the Lord Chancellor of England in 1285 survives, alleging that the liberties of the Church were being infringed by the hearing of a probate case in the civil courts (such cases then were governed by ecclesiastical law, and were dealt with exclusively in the Church courts).
During the dispute in 1299 between rival candidates for the office of Archbishop of Dublin, both candidates complained that he was taking advantage of the vacancy by attempting to exercise the functions of Archbishop, but the controversy died down with the appointment of a third candidate as Archbishop.
He died on 13 January 1304 and was buried in Ferns Cathedral.
Sources
Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 London, John Murray, 1926
D'Alton, John Memoirs of the Archbishops of Dublin Dublin, Hodges and Smith, 1838
Grattan Flood, W.H. History of the Diocese of Ferns Waterford, Downey and Co., 1916
UK National Archives SC/1/24/32 Richard de Northampton, Bishop of Ferns to Robert Burnell, Bishop of Bath and Wells, Chancellor, 14 May 1285
People from Northamptonshire
Bishops of Ferns
Deans of Ferns
Justices of the Irish Common Pleas
1304 deaths | [
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Camryn Elise "Cam" Wong (born 5 September 2000), also known by the Chinese name Huang Huier (), is a Canadian ice hockey player and member of the Chinese national ice hockey team, currently playing in the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL) with the KRS Vanke Rays.
Wong represented China in the women's ice hockey tournament at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
References
External links
Living people
2000 births
Sportspeople from Vancouver
Ice hockey people from British Columbia
Canadian women's ice hockey defencemen
Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays players
UConn Huskies women's ice hockey players
Olympic ice hockey players of China
Ice hockey players at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in China
Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in Russia
Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in the United States
Canadian sportspeople of Chinese descent | [
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Jung Yi-seo (; born August 13, 1993) is a South Korean actress. She is known for her roles in dramas such as Tale of the Nine Tailed, Mine, Snowdrop and All of Us Are Dead. She also appeared in movies such as Parasite, Samjin Company English Class, Real and Josée.
Filmography
Television series
Film
References
External links
1993 births
Living people
21st-century South Korean actresses
South Korean television actresses
South Korean film actresses | [
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The Velestino–Kalambaka railway was an unelectrified Metre-gauge single-track railway regional railway line that connected Velestino in Central Greece, with Kalampaka.
History
The line from Velestino–Kalampaka was width, with a length of 142 km that connected Velestino in Magnesia with Kalampaka in Trikala, crossing the whole southern and western Thessaly. It was one of the two lines of the Thessaly Railways (the other being the Larissa-Volos line). The connection with the Athens-Larissa-Thessaloniki standard gauge mainline at Palaiofarsalos, had a maximum gradient of 3% between Velestinon and Aerinon. The line Velestinou-Kalampaka was closed in stages, with the section Velestino-Paleofarsalos ceasing operations in 1999, while in 2001 the section from Paleofarsalos to Kalampaka was converted to standard gauge (1435 mm), to facilitate a direct connection with the Athens–Thessaloniki line at Paleofarsalos.
The tourist use of the line in the Velestino–Aerino section has been planned.
Stations
Velestino (return by line to Larissa and Volos)
Airy
Farsala
Palaiofarsalos (to Athens and Thessaloniki)
Karditsa
Trikala
Kalambaka
References
External links
OSE
Railway lines in Greece
Metre gauge railways in Greece
Railway lines opened in 1884 | [
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Departmental elections to elect the membership of the Departmental Councils of France's 100 departments were held on 20 and 27 June 2021.
It was delayed by three months due to the COVID-19 pandemic in France.
Results of councils
References
Elections postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic
French cantonal elections
2021 elections in France
June 2021 events in France | [
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Rodrigo Andrés Venegas Pérez (born 4 October 1988) is a Chilean football manager, currently in charge of Bolivian club Blooming.
Career
After starting his career as manager of an Unión Española youth school, Venegas later worked at Academia de Fútbol de Juvenal Olmos and Universidad de Chile before being named under-17 manager of San Luis de Quillota in 2015. In 2019, he moved to Bolivia after being named Miguel Ponce's assistant at San José.
Venegas continued to work as Ponce's assistant in the following years, at Blooming and Deportes La Serena. On 28 November 2021, he returned to Blooming after being named manager, in the place of departing Hernán Meske.
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
Chilean football managers
Bolivian Primera División managers
Club Blooming managers
Chilean expatriate football managers
Chilean expatriate sportspeople in Bolivia
Expatriate football managers in Bolivia | [
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Kasundra Primylean "Kassy" Betinol (born June 14, 2001), also known by the Chinese name Kang Mulan (), is a Canadian ice hockey player and member of the Chinese national ice hockey team, currently playing in the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL) with the KRS Vanke Rays.
Betinol represented China in the women's ice hockey tournament at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
Career statistics
Regular season and playoffs
International
References
External links
Living people
2001 births
Ice hockey people from Alberta
People from Okotoks
Canadian women's ice hockey forwards
Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs women's ice hockey players
Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays players
Olympic ice hockey players of China
Ice hockey players at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in China
Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in Russia
Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in the United States | [
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Chu Kwok-keung is a Hong Kong teacher and pro-Beijing politician, elected as a member of Legislative Council in 2021.
Chu currently serves as the vice-chairman Hong Kong Federation of Education Workers, a pro-Beijing teachers union, and as a secondary school principal. Chu supported teachers pledging allegiance to the Chinese Government, and rejected calls of quashing criminal records of students arrested during protests.
Electoral performances
References
Hong Kong educators
Hong Kong politicians
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
HK LegCo Members 2020–2024
Members of the Election Committee of Hong Kong, 2021–2026 | [
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Christine Papali’i (born 30 July 1962) is a former New Zealand rugby union player. She played for the Black Ferns and Auckland. She made her debut for New Zealand against the California Grizzlies at Christchurch on 22 July 1989.
Papali'i featured at RugbyFest 1990 against the Netherlands, the United States and a World XV. She also played club rugby for Ponsonby.
Personal life
Papali'i is the mother of Phoenix Karaka who plays for the Silver Ferns.
References
1962 births
Living people
New Zealand female rugby union players | [
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Alberto Jacometti (10 March 1902 – 10 January 1985) was an Italian journalist and socialist politician. He served as a deputy at the Italian Parliament and as a secretary general of the Italian Socialist Party for a short period between 1948 and 1949. He resigned from the party one year before his death in 1985.
Biography
Jacometti was born in Novara on 10 March 1902. He became a member of the Italian Socialist Party and participated in World War I. When the oppression of the Fascist rule intensified he left Italy and settled in Paris in 1926. There he edited a publication entitled L'iniziativa. In 1929 he settled in Belgium and contributed to a publication, Problemi della Rivoluzione italiana. From 1941 he joined the National Committee of Liberation for the Novara province.
Following his return to Italy Jacometti became a member of the National Council. He continued to serve at the Italian Parliament until 1963. In the congress dated 18 April 1948 was elected as the secretary general of the Italian Socialist Party. His term as the secretary general ended in 1949 when he was forced to resign from the office due to the opposition of Pietro Nenni and Lelio Basso. Jacometti left the Italian Socialist Party in 1984 due to his conflict with the party leader Bettino Craxi. Jacometti died in hometown, Novara, 10 January 1985.
References
External links
20th-century Italian journalists
1902 births
1985 deaths
Italian exiles
Members of the Consulta Nazionale
Deputies of Legislature I of Italy
Deputies of Legislature II of Italy
Deputies of Legislature III of Italy
Italian Socialist Party politicians
Italian military personnel of World War I
People from Novara | [
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Adam Nathan Campbell Thoseby (born 25 November 1991) is a British-Australian professional basketball player for the Perry Lakes Hawks of the NBL1 West. Born in Melbourne, Victoria, Thoseby grew up in England and began playing for the Reading Rockets in 2009–10 before moving to the United States. He played college basketball between 2011 and 2016 for Utah State, South Dakota and Georgia Southwestern State. He played in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL) for the Sydney Kings in 2017–18 and the British Basketball League (BBL) for the Worcester Wolves in 2018–19. He played in Germany and Austria over the next two seasons.
Thoseby has represented both the England and Great Britain national basketball teams and is a joint British-Australian passport holder.
Early life and career
Born in Melbourne, Victoria, Thoseby moved to England with his British mother at the age of nine. He grew up in Henley-on-Thames and played junior basketball for the Reading Rockets in nearby Reading.
Thoseby debuted for the Reading Rockets in the English Basketball League (EBL) during the 2009–10 season. He averaged 8.8 points in 19 games.
In 2010, Thoseby moved to United States to attend prep school at Maine Central Institute in Pittsfield, Maine. During the 2010–11 season, he helped the Huskies to a 20–11 record and the New England Preparatory School Athletic Council (NEPSAC) Class AAA title. He averaged 7.3 points, 1.4 rebounds and 1.1 assists per game and scored a season-high 21 points.
College career
In June 2011, Thoseby signed a National Letter of Intent to play college basketball for Utah State.
As a freshman with the Aggies in 2011–12, Thoseby played in 28 of the team's 37 games and made two starts. He averaged 1.6 points in 8.0 minutes per game. He scored a season-high 16 points against Idaho State on 26 November 2011.
In July 2012, Thoseby transferred to South Dakota. He subsequently sat out the 2012–13 season due to NCAA transfer rules.
As a sophomore in 2013–14, Thoseby played in all 30 games for the Coyotes and started the first 11 at small forward. He averaged 7.7 points and 2.3 rebounds in 18 minutes per game. He had 12 double-digit scoring performances including a season-best 16 points against Kansas State on 10 December 2013 and against Omaha on 20 February 2014.
As a junior in 2014–15, Thoseby played in 25 of the Coyotes' 33 games and averaged 2.2 points in 5.7 minutes per game. He scored a then career-high 18 points against Wofford on 22 November 2014.
Thoseby transferred to Georgia Southwestern State of the NCAA Division II in 2015 after graduating from South Dakota with an undergraduate degree in computer science. He led the Hurricanes in scoring at 15.3 points per game, starting all 26 contests in which he appeared in during the 2015–16 season. He scored 20 or more points on seven occasions, including a career-high 34 points against Columbus State on 7 January 2016, and 31 against Francis Marion on 13 February. He was named the Peach Belt Conference (PBC) Player of the Week on 15 February. He was a third-team All-PBC selection and was named to the PBC All-Academic team after holding a 3.67 GPA while majoring in computer science.
Professional career
After attempting to pick up a deal in Europe, Thoseby returned to Australia in 2017 to play in the Big V for the Knox Raiders. In 22 games, he averaged 18.1 points, 3.2 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game. He was subsequently named to the Big V All-Star Five.
On 11 August 2017, Thoseby signed with the Sydney Kings of the Australian National Basketball League (NBL) for the 2017–18 season. He averaged 1.1 points in 18 games for the Kings.
On 22 August 2018, Thoseby signed with the Worcester Wolves of the British Basketball League (BBL) for the 2018–19 season. In 26 games, he averaged 10.8 points, 3.2 rebounds and 1.7 assists per game.
For the 2019 NBL1 season, Thoseby re-joined the Knox Raiders. In 19 games, he averaged 14.4 points, 2.9 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game.
In January 2020, Thoseby moved to Germany to play for Basketball Löwen of the ProB. He quickly became the team's top scorer, averaging of 25.8 points in his first six games. In eight games during the 2019–20 season, he averaged 24.6 points, 4.8 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.8 steals per game.
In August 2020, Thoseby signed with Traiskirchen Lions of the Austrian Basketball Superliga for the 2020–21 season. In February 2021, he was ruled out for the rest of the season with partial tears in his Achilles tendon.
In April 2021, Thoseby returned to the Knox Raiders and played three games during the NBL1 South season.
On 1 February 2022, Thoseby signed with the Perry Lakes Hawks of the NBL1 West for the 2022 season.
National team career
As of 2015, Thoseby had represented England or Great Britain in international basketball approximately 40 times. During the summer of 2011, he played for Great Britain's Under 20 basketball team that participated in the European Championships. He averaged 8.9 points per game in the tournament. In 2018, he played for England at the Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. He averaged 14.5 points per game in the tournament.
Personal life
Thoseby is the son of Andrew Thoseby and Sue Baker. His mother is British.
Thoseby holds Australian and British citizenship and has a joint British-Australian passport.
References
External links
2018 Commonwealth Games profile
Utah State Aggies bio
South Dakota Coyotes bio
Georgia Southwestern State Hurricanes profile
Career statistics at daveowenbasketball.co.uk
1991 births
Living people
Australian expatriate basketball people in England
Australian expatriate basketball people in Germany
Australian expatriate basketball people in the United States
Australian men's basketball players
Basketball players from Melbourne
British expatriate basketball people in Australia
British expatriate basketball people in Austria
British expatriate basketball people in Germany
British expatriate basketball people in the United States
British men's basketball players
Georgia Southwestern State University alumni
Maine Central Institute alumni
Shooting guards
Small forwards
South Dakota Coyotes men's basketball players
Sydney Kings players
Traiskirchen Lions players
Utah State Aggies men's basketball players
Worcester Wolves players | [
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Great Coastal Railway Journeys is a BBC documentary series produced by Naked, and presented by Michael Portillo, a former Conservative MP and Minister of State for Transport.
Following the format of the highly successful Great British Railway Journeys and related series with Portillo as presenter, each episode features a coastal railway journey through England, Scotland or Wales.
Portillo has also presented 7 other programmes with a similar format: Great Continental Railway Journeys (7 series; 2012–2020), Great American Railroad Journeys (4 series; 2016–2020), Great Indian Railway Journeys (2018), Great Alaskan Railroad Journeys and Great Canadian Railway Journeys (broadcast consecutively in January 2019), Great Australian Railway Journeys (2019), Great Asian Railway Journeys (2020).
Classified by the BBC in both the travel and history genres, the series features Portillo using the guide to plan his journeys, in the process visiting points of interest picked out in the guide and comparing its content with the modern world, both the physical and cultural ones.
Synopsis
Victorian guidebooks written by George Bradshaw under the title Bradshaw's Guide were the first comprehensive timetable and travel guides to the railway system in Great Britain, which at the time although it had grown to be extensive, still consisted of a number of fragmented and competing railway companies and lines, each publishing their own timetables.
Classified by the BBC in both the travel and history genres, the series features Portillo using the guide to plan his journeys, in the process visiting points of interest picked out in the guide and comparing its content with the modern world, both the physical and cultural ones.
Format
Each series features Portillo travelling on a different route each week, with each daily episode being one short leg of the journey. The weekly journey is chosen to fit with a theme, either geographic, such as coast to coast, or historic. Filmed entirely on location, the series features a mix of Portillo delivering dialogue to camera, as well as performing ad-hoc interviews with members of the public or fellow travellers, in addition to pre-arranged interviews.
Broadcast
All episodes were originally broadcast on consecutive weekdays on BBC Two and simulcast on BBC HD.
Episodes
Series 1 (2022)
Dunbar to Peterhead
The first journey takes Portillo from coast to coast, from Dunbar to Peterhead.
Inverness to Orkney Islands
Portillo's second journey, is from Inverness to the Orkney Islands.
Tynemouth to Berwick-upon-Tweed
Portillo's third journey takes him across North East England, from Tynemouth to Berwick-upon-Tweed.
Fairlie to Isle of Lewis and Harris
In his fourth journey, Portillo explores the west coast of Scotland, starting in Fairlie and finishing in Lewis and Harris.
Avonmouth to Fishguard
Portillo's fifth journey takes him along Wales' southern coastline, beginning in Avonmouth and ending in Fishguard.
See also
Great Railway Journeys
Notes
References
External link
2022 British television series debuts
2020s British documentary television series
2020s British travel television series
BBC television documentaries
BBC travel television series
Documentary television series about railway transport
Rail transport in Great Britain
Television series by Fremantle (company)
Television shows set in England
Television shows set in London
Television shows set in Northern Ireland
Television shows set in Scotland
Television shows set in Wales | [
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Luís Filipe Montenegro Cardoso de Morais Esteves (born 16 February 1973) is a Portuguese Social Democratic Party (PSD) politician.
Biography
Montenegro graduated in Law from the Catholic University of Portugal, and was president of the Social Democratic Youth in Espinho from 1994 to 1996. He served on the city's council from 1997 to 2001, and ran for mayor in 2005, losing to José Mota of the Socialist Party (PS).
In 2002, Montenegro was elected to the Assembly of the Republic for the Aveiro District. In 2010, he became the PSD parliamentary group's deputy leader, and in June 2011 he received 86% of the votes to lead the group. He left parliament in February 2018 after the defeat of party leader Pedro Passos Coelho, warning that the party should not turn into new leader "Rui Rio's group of friends".
In January 2020, Montenegro was a candidate in the SPD leadership election, challenging Rio. During the campaign, Rio attacked Montenegro for being a Freemason. In the run-off, Rio won with 53.2% of the votes.
References
1973 births
Living people
Catholic University of Portugal alumni
Social Democratic Party (Portugal) politicians
Members of the Assembly of the Republic (Portugal)
Portuguese Freemasons | [
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Alexander Borisovich Kosarev (March 15, 1944 – January 19, 2013) was a Soviet Russian film director, writer, actor, poet and lyricist.
Biography
Born March 15, 1944, in Moscow. Father is a famous Soviet photographer, the official photographer of the Government of the USSR Boris Kosarev.
In 1965 he graduated from the Schepkin Theater School, acting department (combined course GITIS and VTU - teachers V. I. Tsygankov and L. A. Volkov).
Studied on the same course with Inna Churikova, Tamara Degtyareva, auditioned with them at the Moscow Youth Theater, where he entered service after graduation.
Kosarev's first film practice was with People's Artist of the Soviet Union Grigory Alexandrov on the set of the film "Starling and Lyra". In 1973 he graduated from the directing department VGIKa (workshop of Igor Talankin). Alexander Kosarev's graduation film One Hundred Steps in the Clouds amazed Sergey Bondarchuk, who happened to be in the studio to re-record the music for the film: "Before I knew, only one film about the working class -" Height "Zarkhi… Today I saw the second film.” Bondarchuk brought a talented debutant to the 1st creative association "Mosfilma" to the director N. T. Sizov with the words: “Here is a man who will make a big movie”.
After graduating from VGIK Alexander Kosarev makes films, attaching great importance to scripts and being a co-author of many of them. Kosarev appreciated professionalism in his work, he almost always worked with the same film crew of cameramen, lighting, make-up artists.
A number of actors starred with Alexander Kosarev in several films, including Peter Velyaminov, Ivan Lapikov, Roman Filippov, Daniil Netrebin, Mikhail Gluzsky, Irina Korotkova.
The director attached great importance to the music that sounded in his films. Alexander Kosarev has worked with such composers as Alexey Rybnikov, Igor Krutoy, Yuri Antonov. A number of films featured songs written to the verses of Alexander Kosarev.
In 1997, Alexander Kosarev suffered a stroke, after which he could no longer return to the profession. The director died on January 19, 2013. He was buried in Moscow at Danilovskoye cemetery.
Family
Father - Boris Maksimovich Kosarev, (1911 - 1989) - photographer, photojournalist.
Mother - Nina Pavlovna Kosareva, (1916 - 2012) - teacher of biology and chemistry.
Wife - Irina Yuryevna Korotkova, (born August 25, 1947) - actress.
Daughter - Maria Alexandrovna Kosareva
Creativity
Filmography
Directing work
1971 - Staircase (short)
1973 - One Hundred Steps in the Clouds - thesis (short)
1974 - My "Zhigulyonok" (short)
1975 - When the Earth Shakes
1977 - Night over Chile
1980 - I wish you success
1982 — Urgent… Secret… Gubchek (also lyricist)
1984 — Before parting (also lyricist)
1989 — Souvenir for the prosecutor (also songwriter)
1991 — Predators (also songwriter)
1993 - Hostages of The Devil
Movie roles
1970 - Two in December (short) - He
1973 - Origins - episode (uncredited)
1989 - Souvenir for the prosecutor - Fadey Fadeyevich
1991 - Predators - Guy, director of the reserve
1993 - Hostages of the "Devil" - investigator Chikurov
Scenarios
1984 - Before parting
1989 - Souvenir for the prosecutor
1991 - Predators
1993 - Hostages of The Devil
Poetry
Songs in collaboration
with Yuri Antonov (performed by him):
"About You and Me" (in the movie "Before we part")
"Intoxicated Lilac" (in the film "Predators")
“Somewhere…” (in the film “Before we part”)
"The long-awaited plane" (in the film "Before we part")
“Eccentric in love”, performed by Ekaterina Semenova from the movie “Predators”.
with Igor Krutoy for the film "A souvenir for the prosecutor":
“Day of Love” (for the first time sounded in the film, performed by Igor Talkov)
"Four Brothers" (for the first time sounded in the film, performed by the singer Larisa Dolina)
"A moment of luck" (for the first time sounded in the film, performed by the singer Alexandra Serov)
“How to be” / “Maybe not to rush the night and repeat everything from the beginning” (sounded for the first time in the film, performed by Aleksandr_Kosarev singer Alexandra Serov)
Plays
"Jolly Cake" (Moscow Puppet Theatre)
Geese-Swans (Moscow Puppet Theatre)
Short films
"Ladder" (1971)
Short film 1971, academic work at VGIK. Plot: A simple comeback story.
Cast:
Anatoly Bystrov
Maria Zorina
Film crew:
Director's work - Alexander Kosarev (Chair of Film Directing, workshop of Igor Talankin, teachers Emilia Kirillovna Kravchenko, V.T. Romanova)
Camera work - Boris Kustov (department of cameramanship, workshop of L.V. Kosmatova, master-director V.A. Ginzburg)
Film director — T. Austriavskaya
"One Hundred Steps in the Clouds" (1973)
Short film of 1973, diploma work at VGIK. Plot: after demobilization, Vasily and his friends arrive at the shock construction site of a hydroelectric power station, the crooked Sanka Prokhorov is in charge of a team of high-rise assemblers. Vasily comes into conflict with him.
Cast:
Mikhail Gluzsky - foreman, Mitroshin
Boris Rudnev - Vasily
German Kachin - foreman, Senka Prokhorov
Irina Korotkova - girl operator
Alexander Lebedev — worker
Film crew:
Director — Alexander Kosarev
Screenwriter — Anatoly Bezuglov
Director of photography - Igor Bogdanov
ArtistNickname - Vasily Golikov
Composer — Alexey Rybnikov
The song in the film is performed by Valentina Nikulina to lyrics by A. Alshutov
"My Zhiguli" (1974)
A satirical film about what can happen to a car enthusiast if he turns to the private services of "masters" and all kinds of lovers to earn extra money. The film was shot by order of the UGAI of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR.
Cast:
Georgy Vitsin - Uncle Zhenya
Galina Mikeladze — client
In episodes (uncredited):
Anatoly Obukhov — uncle Zhenya's partner
Boris Rudnev - GAI officer
Film crew:
Director — Alexander Kosarev
Screenwriter - Tikhon Nepomniachtchi
Operator - V. Masevich
Artist — Vasily Golikov
On the glass of Uncle Zhenya's truck are photographs Yury Nikulin - in the role of Stooge (magazine clipping) and a photo postcard "Actors of Soviet cinema", which in Soviet times were sold in kiosks "Soyuzpechat".
Awards
Honored Art Worker of the Dagestan ASSR (1976) - for the film "When the earth trembles" (1975)
Special Prize Moscow International Film Festival for the film "Night over Chile" (1977)
References
External links
Alexander Kosarev on the website of the Guild of Film Directors of Russia
Songs based on verses by Alexander Kosarev on the site 100 records
Irina Korotkova about Alexander Kosarev, Expert Online 17 Mar 2014
Alexander Kosarev in Vyacheslav Sergeechev's story "Chukhlin's Childhood" (excerpt)
Memories of childhood and Alexander Kosarev in Vyacheslav Sergeechev's story "Chukhlin's Childhood"
Boris Maksimovich Kosarev in Vyacheslav Sergeechev's Stalin's Album
Short film Ladder (1971)
Short film One Hundred Steps in the Clouds (1973)
Short film My Zhiguli (1974)
Russian songwriters | [
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The 2022 Professional Women's Bowling Association (PWBA) Tour season currently has a total of 12 title events scheduled in eight locations. These include 8 standard singles title events, three major title events, and one mixed doubles event. While the 2022 schedule has a reduced number of tournaments from 2021, there will be more events televised. All qualifying and match play rounds will be on BowlTV, the PWBA's YouTube channel, as will four final rounds. Seven final rounds will be broadcast on CBS Sports Network, including the finals of three major events: USBC Queens, U.S. Women's Open and PWBA Tour Championship.
There will be two Classic Series tour stops (versus three in 2021). These include the PWBA Classic Series–Long Island and PWBA Classic Series–Dallas. The first two tournaments in a Classic Series stop have fully open fields, while the third tournament starts with only the top 24 players in pinfall from the qualifying rounds of the first two tournaments.
Tournament summary
Below is a list of events that are scheduled for the 2022 PWBA Tour season. Major tournaments are in bold.
References
External links
PWBA.com, home of the Professional Women' Bowling Association
2022 in bowling | [
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The 2001 Safari Rally (formally the 49th Safari Rally Kenya) was the eighth round of the 2001 World Rally Championship. The race was held over three days between 20 July and 22 July 2001, and was won by Mitsubishi's Tommi Mäkinen, his 23rd win in the World Rally Championship.
Background
Entry list
Itinerary
Results
Overall
World Rally Cars
Classification
Special stages
Championship standings
FIA Cup for Production Rally Drivers
Classification
Special stages
Championship standings
References
External links
Official website of the World Rally Championship
Safari
2001
2001 in Kenyan sport | [
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Tufanbeyli power station is a 450 MW coal-fired power station in Turkey in Tufanbeyli, built in the 2010s, which burns lignite mined locally. The plant is 40% owned by Sabancı Holding via Enerjisa Enerji and 40% by E.ON and in 2022 received capacity payments.
References
External links
Tufanbeyli power station on Global Energy Monitor
Coal-fired power stations in Turkey | [
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Atelopus orcesi is a species of frog in the family Bufonidae. It has not been seen since 1988, and is believed to be possibly extinct.
Taxonomy
Atelopus orcesi was first described in 2010. Its specific epithet honors Gustavo Edmundo Orcés Villagómez, a pioneering Ecuadoran zoologist.
Description
Atelopus orcesi is a medium-sized member of its genus, with males averaging 30mm in length and females averaging 40mm. Males and females can also be distinguished from each other by the longer, more slender forelegs females possess, and the distinct rows of warts down the sides of the males. Both sexes possess distinct X-shaped marks on the back of their heads.
Habitat and Distribution
The species is only known from its type locality, in the eastern portion of Cordillera Occidental (Ecuador) in the Sucumbíos Province in Ecuador. Its preferred habitat consists of montane cloud forest.
History and Conservation
The only known specimens of Atelopus orcesi were collected in May of 1988 by Ana María Velasco. No further individuals have been seen since then despite surveys, including an intensive survey at the species' type locality in 2009. It's believed that its main threats are climate change and disease. Chytridiomycosis is not known to have played a role in the population decline of Atelopus orcesi, but it is known to have caused other populations of amphibians in Ecuador to decrease dramatically. In 2018, the IUCN listed the species as Critically Endangered and possibly extinct.
References
Atelopus
Amphibians of Ecuador
Endemic fauna of Ecuador
Amphibians described in 2010
Taxa named by Luis Aurelio Coloma
Taxa named by William Edward Duellman | [
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Tien Tran is an American comedian, actress, and writer.
Early life
Tran was born in Chester, Pennsylvania and grew up in Erie and Mill Creek. Her parents are Vietnamese refugees who immigrated to the United States in 1979. She graduated from Boston College with a degree in biology, where she was part of a sketch comedy group.
Career
In 2017, she was a cast member at The Second City in Chicago, where she had previously been a recipient of the Second City's Bob Curry Fellowship.
During 2017–2020, she appeared in guest roles in several TV series, including Easy, Hot Date, Sherman's Showcase, and Space Force. In 2021, she was a staff writer for the second season of Work in Progress, and co-wrote and appeared in one episode. She also appeared in the Chicago-set horror film Candyman and an episode of the comedy series South Side.
In 2021, Tran was cast as a series regular in the Hulu sitcom How I Met Your Father, a spin-off of the series How I Met Your Mother. She plays Ellen, who moves to New York from a small farming town in Iowa after divorcing her wife. The series was released on January 18, 2022. On February 15, 2022, Hulu renewed the series for a 20-episode second season.
Filmography
Film
Television
Personal life
Tran is openly lesbian. Tran's older sister Tram-Ahn Tran starred in the 1990s children's television series Ghostwriter.
References
External links
Tien Tran at IMDb
American television actresses
American women comedians
Actresses from Pennsylvania
21st-century American actresses
21st-century American comedians
American people of Vietnamese descent
Living people
Boston College alumni | [
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Daniel Ermindo Lanata (born 10 August 1962) is an Argentine football manager.
References
External links
1962 births
Living people
People from Casilda
Argentine football managers
Monagas S.C. managers
Deportivo Anzoátegui managers
Estrella Roja F.C. managers
Argentine expatriate football managers
Argentine expatriate sportspeople in Venezuela
Argentine expatriate sportspeople in Paraguay
Argentine expatriate sportspeople in Bolivia
Expatriate football managers in Venezuela
Expatriate football managers in Paraguay
Expatriate football managers in Bolivia | [
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The Honourable Legislature of Tucumán Province () is the unicameral legislative body of Tucumán Province, in Argentina. It convenes in the provincial capital, San Miguel de Tucumán.
It comprises 49 legislators, elected in three multi-member electoral sections through proportional representation every four years. Elections employ the D'Hondt system. The electoral sections do not correspond to the 17 departments of Tucumán, but rather group different departments together.
Its powers and responsibilities are established in the provincial constitution. The legislature is presided by the Vice Governor of Tucumán (presently Osvaldo Jaldo of the Justicialist Party), who is elected alongside the governor.
History
The first legislative body in Tucumán was the Hall of Representatives, which convened for the first time on 25 January 1822, during the governorship of José Víctor Posse to write the first Constitution of Tucumán. During its first years of existence, the Hall of Representatives clashed with the colonial ayuntamiento, which did not yet recognize its authority. The Hall's work was interrupted by the period of anarchy that followed the uprising led by Martín de Bustamante. A new legislature would not convene until 7 January 1823.
The new constitution of the province, adopted in 1884, established a bicameral legislature comprising a Senate and a Chamber of Deputies. The Chamber of Deputies was due to be made up of one member for every six thousand inhabitants in the province, who would serve for three-year terms, and would be allowed to run for re-election. In addition, the Chamber would use staggered elections and renew a third of its members every year. The Senate, on the other hand, would count with one member for every 12 thousand inhabitants, who would serve for four-year terms and be allowed to run for re-election. The Senate would also count with staggered elections, and a fourth of its members would be renewed every year. A constitutional reform in 1907 extended legislative terms for both senators and deputies to four years, and established staggered elections by halves every two years.
This system was in place until 1990, when a new constitutional reform established a single legislative chamber by the name of "Honourable Legislature", counting with 40 members who would be elected for four-year terms and allowed to run for re-election.
Electoral sections
References
External links
Constitution of Tucumán Province
1822 establishments in Argentina
Politics of Argentina
Tucumán Province
Tucumán | [
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Estaleiro Atlântico Sul (EAS) is a Brazilian shipbuilding company. Estaleiro Atlântico was founded in 2005 by Brazilian construction groups Grupo Camargo Corrêa and Grupo Queiroz Galvão in response to growing demand in the shipbuilding market in Brazil. Samsung in South Korea supplied the shipbuilding technology. The shipyard facility is located in the deep water port of Porto de Suape, in the state of Pernambuco, and is situated between the municipalities of Ipojuca and Cabo de Santo Agostinho, at the mouth of the Ipojuca River, about 40 km from the major city of Recife. The dry dock, with two 1500 ton wing gates has a length 400 meters, is 73 meters wide and had a water depth of 12 meters.
In 2019 the shipyard closed its activities in the Suape Industrial Port Complex. It resumed operations in October 2021.
History
The shipyard consortium received its first major order from Petrobras in 2010 for a series of 49 Suezmax tanker-class vessels. However, it had problems finding workers right from the start. For example, there was a shortage of welders. The shipyard operators retrained sugar cane workers and housewives, but the result was so poor that the first oil tanker ordered by Petrobras, "João Cândido," showed leaks at the welds as early as the launch in 2011. As a result, the João Cândido was not certified until April 2012. Samsung withdrew from the joint venture after this mishap. The new partner is now a subsidiary of the Japanese Mitsui Group.
After the start-up difficulties ended, Petrobras stuck to its mission. Today, the company says it employs around 2800 people and is an important employer for the residents of the low-income five communities surrounding the shipyard.
In May 2013, the company was also able to hand over another Suezmax tanker "Zumbi dos Palmares" with a length of 274.2 meters to the client Petrobras Transporte S.A. without any problems.
The EAS was also involved in the construction of the P-55 drilling platform, Petrobras largest semi-submersible platform capable of producing up to 180,000 barrels of oil and six million cubic meters of natural gas per day. It started work in early 2014 at the Roncador oil field in the Campos Basin off the coast of Brazil.
Recent vessel production
A not extensive list of Atlântico Sul's production:
See also
Exclusive economic zone of Brazil
Pre-salt layer
Estaleiro Mauá
References
External links
Naval Union site
Manufacturing companies of Brazil
Engineering companies of Brazil
Manufacturing companies established in 2005
Shipbuilding companies of Brazil
Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 2005
2005 establishments in Brazil | [
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Warta Malaya (English: Malayan Report), also known as Warta Melayu was a Singaporean and Malayan Malay-language daily newspaper. Written in Jawi script, the newspaper released its first issue in 1930. It later emerged as one of the highest circulating Malay newspapers of the 1930s. The newspaper was politically involved in the early stages of Malay nationalism, and became a paper for the Kesatuan Melayu Muda, an early Malayan left-wing political party. The final issue of the newspaper was published in 1942.
History
Warta Malaya was printed by Anglo-Asiatic Press Limited, founded in 1929 by Syed Hussein bin Ali Alsagoff, part of the Alsagoff family at Singapore. The first issue of the newspaper was officially published on 1 January 1930, at a price of 10 cents each. The original edition had 12 pages, but within a month it was expanded to 16. On 1 January 1934, Anglo-Asiatic Press Limited was renamed to Warta Malaya Press Limited. Prices per copy were reduced to 6 cents each due to rising profits. The success of the newspaper led to the release of two weekly companions, the Warta Ahad ("Sunday Times") in 1935, and Warta Jenaka ("The Comedian") in 1936.
The paper, characterized as "fiery and pungent", aimed to raise issues related to the Malay race and to alert Malays of ongoing events throughout the world. The paper covered events in Muslim countries outside Singapore and British Malaya, and claimed to be the first Malay-newspaper to subscribe to international news agencies. The paper discussed a wide range of issues affecting Malay rights, including education, political rights, and the economy. The staff of the newspaper included future prominent political figures of both Singapore and Malaya. Former staffs include Onn Jaafar, the first president of the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), Abdul Rahim Kajai, dubbed as the "Father of Malay Journalism", and Yusof Ishak, the first President of Singapore.
In April 1941, Ibrahim Yaacob, a Malayan nationalist, and then-president of the Kesatuan Melayu Muda (KMM), bought the newspaper for use of anti-British propaganda. After the Fall of Singapore in 1942, the newspaper was permitted by the Japanese military government at Singapore. The newspaper ceased publications on 14 August 1942.
Editors
The first editor of the newspaper was Onn Jaafar, who remained in his position from 1930 to 1933. He was replaced by Syed Sheikh Syed Ahmad Al-Hadi (1933-34), a notable leader in the Kaum Muda movement, supportive of progressive Islam under Islamic modernism. Syed Hussein bin Ali Alsagoff, the proprietor of the newspaper, took control after 1934 until 1941. Ibrahim Yaacob became the final editor until its closure in 1942.
See also
Warta Negara
Utusan Melayu
References
Works cited
Malay-language newspapers
Newspapers published in Singapore
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Lake Charles, Louisiana in various seasons between 1906 and 1957. Lake Charles teams played as members of the South Texas League (1906), Gulf Coast League (1907–1908), Cotton States League (1929–1930), Evangeline League (1934–1942), Gulf Coast League (1950–1953) and Evangeline League (1954–1957).
Lake Charles was a minor league affiliate of the Cincinnati Reds in 1935, Detroit Tigers in 1937, Chicago Cubs in 1941 and New York Giants in 1956.
History
Lake Charles minor league baseball began with the 1906 Lake Charles Creoles. The Creoles played in the South Texas League in 1906 and the Gulf Coast League in 1907 and 1908. Later, after a two decade stretch without a professional team, the Lake Charles Newporters formed as members of the Cotton States League, playing in 1929 and 1930. The 1934 Lake Charles Explorers, , Lake Charles Skippers (1935–1942) and Lake Charles Giants (1956–1957) played as members of the Evangeline League.
The Lake Charles Creoles rebounded from a 30–94 initial season and captured the 1907 Gulf League Championship. On May 8, 1907, Thomas Haley of the Creoles pitched a no–hitter in defeating the Lafayette Browns 3–0. In 1908, the Creoles were leading the 1908 standings with a 18–9 record, when the South Texas League folded.
The Lake Charles Newporters were formed when the Meridian Mets franchise moved to Lake Charles on June 17, 1929. On August 9, 1929, Newporters pitcher Pete Newman pitched a no–hitter against the Vicksburg Hill Billies in a 5–0 victory. The Newporters finished the 1929 season with a 28–43 record. The Lake Chares Newporters were 24–37, when the team disbanded on June 17, 1930.
A new Legion Field was constructed in 1934. However, a fire destroyed the grandstands on May 29, 1934. Therefore, the Lake Charles Explorers of the Evangeline League were forced to finish the season in Jeanerette, Louisiana, playing as the Jeanerette Blues and spawning a new franchise in Jeanerette. The team had a 14–13 record based in Lake Charles and finished with a 39–42 overall record.
The Lake Charles Skippers were formed in 1935, beginning play in the rebuilt Legion Field. The Skippers were affiliates of the Cincinnati Reds in 1935, Detroit Tigers in 1937 and Chicago Cubs in 1941 while playing as members of the Evangeline League. The Skippers captured the Evangeline League Championship in 1938. The Evangeline League folded on May 30. 1942.
The 1950 Lake Charles Lakers were founding members of the revised Gulf Coast League and remained in the league through 1953. After the demise of the Gulf Coast League, the Lakers joined the 1954 Evangeline League, remaining as members through 1957. The unaffiliated Lakers finished no higher than 4th in any of their six seasons and never had a winning record.
In 1956, the franchise played as an affiliate of the New York Giants, becoming the Lake Charles Giants in the Evangeline League. The Giants finished 62–62 in 1956, losing in the playoffs. The Lake Charles Giants finished 43–67 in 1957, missing the playoffs. Lake Charles permanently folded after the 1957 season. Lake Charles has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballparks
The Lake Charles Creoles were noted to have played home games at Athletic Field from 1906 to 1908. The Athletic Field was owned by the Lake Charles Athletic Association. The ballpark was utilized as a baseball spring training site by the Philadelphia Athletics.
The Lake Charles Newporters reportedly played home games at American Legion Park. American Legion Park was located on 3rd street, near Enterprise Avenue in Lake Charles, Louisiana. The original ballpark was later re-purposed and renamed Killen Field. Today, the site is still in use today as a high school football stadium and is called Cougar Stadium. There is an historical marker at the site honoring Killen Field.
Opening in 1934, Lake Charles minor league teams played home games at the new Legion Field. The ballpark is still in use today, located directly across the street from Cougar Stadium. The original grandstands burned down just two months after the ballpark originally opened, but they were rebuilt for the 1935 season. The ballpark also hosted games by the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro leagues. In 2009, Legion Field was renovated and renamed "Alvin Dark Stadium at Legion Field", after Lake Charles native and big league player and manager Alvin Dark.
Alvin Dark Stadium at Legion Field is located at 1450 5th Street, Lake Charles, Louisiana. In 2019, the ballpark was chosen as a four-year host site for the "New Balance Future Stars Series National Championships" baseball series. The series is a national tournament for teams of top high school players.
Notable alumni
Ace Adams (1934–1935) MLB All–Star
Felipe Alou (1956) 3x MLB All–Star; 1994 NL Manager of the Year; San Francisco Giants Wall of Fame
Josh Billings (1935)
Dave Garcia (1939)
Art Griggs (1906)
Johnny Hudson (1934)
Denny Lyons (1906)
Mike McCormick (1956, MGR)
Pat Mullin (1937) 2x MLB All-Star
Al Nixon (1930, MGR)
Leo Posada (1954)
Ben Paschal (1934)
See also
Lake Charles Skippers playersLake Charles Lakers playersLake Charles Newporters playersLake Charles Creoles playersLake Charles Giants players
References
External References
Clark Field PhotosBaseball Reference Bullpen
Sports teams in Lake Charles, Louisiana
Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana | [
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Low Blue Flame is an album by drummer Andrew Cyrille. It was recorded in January 2005 at Kampo Studios in New York City, and was released by Tum Records in 2006. On the album, Cyrille is joined by saxophonist Greg Osby. Cyrille and Osby met backstage after sharing a bill at a festival in France, and first performed publicly at Tonic in New York City in early 2004.
Reception
Brandt Reiter, in an article for All About Jazz, stated that the album is characterized by "melodic improvisation within a tight compositional framework, with intensity coming not from highflying pyrotechnics but synchronized, concentrated searching." He commented: "Rarely does Osby resort to the honks and squeals one would expect from this type of encounter, instead using his trademark lacerating tone to plumb the depths of each number... Cyrille's resources are seemingly limitless, his instincts uncanny and his choices startlingly right. He is, in short, magnificent and anyone interested in the varietal possibilities of the drums would do well to check out this disc."
Track listing
"Equalatogram" (Osby) - 3:05
"Work" (Thelonious Monk) - 4:24
"With You In Mind (Instrumental)" (Cyrille) - 3:30
"Cyrille In Motion" (Osby) - 5:38
"No. 11" (Cyrille) - 8:22
"Noodle" (Osby) - 3:29
"Striation" (Cyrille) - 4:28
"With You In Mind (Recital)" (Cyrille) - 3:47
"Low Blue Flame" (Cyrille) - 6:20
"Pop Pop" (Osby) - 3:22
"Concepticus" (Osby) - 3:33
"The Music In Us" (Cyrille) - 7:48
"Roscoe" (Cyrille) - 3:46
Personnel
Andrew Cyrille – drums
Greg Osby – alto saxophone, soprano saxophone
References
2006 albums
Andrew Cyrille albums | [
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Jessica Low (born 5 November 1999) is an Australian rules footballer playing for the Fremantle Football Club in the AFL Women's (AFLW).
Low was drafted by Fremantle with their fifth selection, and 52nd overall in the 2021 AFL Women's draft. In 2019 she won the Cath Boyce Rookie of the Year award for her debut season for Claremont in the WAFL Women's league.
Low made her debut in the opening round of the 2022 AFLW season. Whilst recruited as a midfielder, Low played her first AFLW games as a defender, often on the opponent's best forward. She performed very well, keeping her direct opponents goalless during the first four games.
References
External links
WAFL playing statistics
1999 births
Living people
Fremantle Football Club (AFLW) players
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First Coast is a small settlement in Wester Ross in the North West Highlands of Scotland. It is situated on the south shore of Gruinard Bay and on the A832 road, east of Laide and west of the similarly-named Second Coast.
References
Populated places in Ross and Cromarty | [
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"Bop Bop!" (stylized in all caps) is a song recorded by South Korean girl group Viviz for their debut extended play Beam of Prism. It was released as the lead single by BPM Entertainment on February 9, 2022. "Bop Bop!" was written by Hwang Yu-bin and Mi Lee-mu (PaperMaker), composed by Lim Soo-ho (PaperMaker), Woong Kim (PaperMaker), Anna Timgren, and PaperMaker, and arranged by Lim Soo-ho (PaperMaker) and Woong Kim (PaperMaker).
Background and release
On October 6, 2021, it was announced that Eunha, SinB, and Umji, who were former members of GFriend, has signed with BPM Entertainment and would be debuting as a trio. On January 24, 2022, BPM Entertainment announced the trio would be making their debut on February 9, 2022, with the release of their first extended play Beam of Prism. On February 2, the track listing was released with "Bop Bop!" announced as the lead single. Four days later, the highlight teaser video was released. On February 7, the first music video teaser was released.
Composition
"Bop Bop!" was written by Hwang Yu-bin and Mi Lee-mu (PaperMaker), composed and arranged by Lim Soo-ho (PaperMaker), Woong Kim (PaperMaker), with PaperMaker with Anna Timgren. The song was described as a "hybrid" pop dance song with "latin-style rhythm and disco [rhythm]" with lyrics about "[the group's] aspiration to enjoy music". "Bop Bop!" was composed in the key of C major, with a tempo of 126 beats per minute.
Commercial performance
"Bop Bop!" debuted at position 114 on South Korea's Gaon Digital Chart in the chart issue dated February 6–12, 2022; on its component charts, the song debuted at position 4 and 73 on the Gaon Download Chart and Gaon BGM Chart, respectively.
Promotion
Prior to the extended play's release, on February 9, 2022, Viviz held a debut showcase to introduce Beam of Prism along with its lead single "Bop Bop!". Following the release of the extended play, the group performed "Bop Bop!" on two music programs: Mnet's M Countdown on February 10, and on February 17 where they won the first place, and SBS's Inkigayo on February 20.
Credits and personnels
Hwang Yu-bin – lyrics
Mi Lee-mu (PaperMaker) – lyrics
Lim Soo-ho (PaperMaker) – composition, arrangement
Woong Kim (PaperMaker) – composition, arrangement
Anna Timgren – composition
PaperMaker – composition, arrangement
Charts
Accolades
Release history
References
Viviz
2022 songs
Korean-language songs | [
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1000,
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The Bogonos Stream () is a small river (stream) in Tomsk Oblast, Russia. Its length is about 8 km. It flows into the Oskina River, a basin of the Ob River.
The right bank of the stream is included in the Verkhne-Sorovsky Zakaznik.
Reflist
Sources
Лист карты O-45-85. Масштаб: 1 : 100 000.
Топографическая карта масштаба 1:50000 // ГОСГИСЦЕНТР.
Rivers of Tomsk Oblast
Ob basin | [
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