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USS Panther (IX-105) was SC-1466-class submarine chaser during the World War II. Her namesake is a black variant of jaguars or leopards. Design and description She has a displacement of 99 tons, length 111'6", beam 17'9", draft 5'6", speed 15 knots, complement 16. Her armaments consist of 2 2-pounders (dual purpose), 2 .30 caliber machine guns, 2 depth charge tracks, 1 depth charge projector (Y-gun). Construction and career The vessel was built at the Leblanc Shipbuilding Co. at Weymouth, Nova Scotia. She was laid down in 1942 and launched on 17 June 1942. The ship was transferred to the U.S. Navy by Lt. Cmdr. Freeborn of the Royal Canadian Navy and commissioned as submarine chaser SC-1470 at her building yard on 23 October 1942, Lt. Edward P. Parker, USNR, in command. 1942 SC-1470 got underway for Digby, Nova Scotia, at 15:16 on 27 October 1942, but paused briefly alongside the Weymouth North Government Wharf to await her sister ship SC-1471, after which time she resumed her passage out of Weymouth. The new submarine chaser carried out gunnery trials on the 30th, expending 25 rounds of 2-pounder ammunition, two 300-pound depth charges, one Y-gun impulse charge, seven Holman projector grenades, and two hand flares. She reached Digby the next day. Underway for the Boston Navy Yard at 10:30 on 31 October 1942, again in company with SC-1471, the two vessels became separated during the trip, necessitating SC-1470’s firing a flare and three rounds of 2-pounder ammunition “to enable her to locate us.” SC-1471 regained position at 08:52 on 1 November. Almost an hour into the afternoon watch, SC-1470 moored alongside SC-1463 at the Boston Navy Yard's South Boston Annex. The next afternoon, the submarine chaser shifted to another pier, alongside an ammunition lighter to which she transferred booster charges, Holman grenades and impulse cartridges for their projectors, depth charges, pistols, 2-pounder shells, impulse charges, signal flares and arbors, returning thence to her previous mooring. Completing her fitting-out period on 23 November 1942, the vessel was rearmed at Boston, with U.S. 3-inch/23 caliber guns replacing the British 2-pounder weapons with which she had been equipped. SC-1470 got underway on 30 November to conduct structural firing trials. She expended three Mk. VII depth charges, four rounds of 3-inch/23 caliber, and 75 rounds of 20 millimeter before the port Oerlikon jammed after 40 rounds and the barrel could not be removed. Having reported to Commander in Chief U.S. Fleet (ComInCh) and Commander Eastern Sea Frontier for shakedown and onwards routing on 2 December 1942, SC-1470 continued fitting out at Boston until 4 December, when she sailed four minutes into the forenoon watch in company with SC-1471 and SC-766, bound for Tompkinsville, Staten Island. Proceeding via the Cape Cod Canal, she reached New Bedford harbor later that afternoon, remaining there until the following morning, when she sailed for Port Jefferson harbor, reaching her destination at 18:00 and mooring alongside SC-766 at the ferry docks there. SC-1470 ultimately reached Tompkinsville shortly after mid-day on 6 December. 1943 After undergoing alterations at Tompkinsville through mid-January 1943, SC-1470 sailed on 21 January in accordance with Commander Eastern Sea Frontier orders to proceed to Miami, Florida, in company with SC-1471 and report to the commanding officer of the Submarine Chaser Training Center (SCTC). Upon completing her shakedown, SC-1470 was then to report to Commander Gulf Sea Frontier for onward routing to the Caribbean. Pausing to fuel at the Naval Operating Base, Norfolk, Virginia, on 22 January 1943, SC-1470 and SC-1471 continued on, encountering heavy fog off Frying Pan Shoals late on the 24th. Lt. Parker ordered engines slowed to two-thirds speed, stationed a lookout in the eyes of the ship, and had the navigation lights turned on. Eventually, shortly before the start of the mid watch, the fog cleared enough for the ships to resume standard speed. Stopping again, at the Section Base at Charleston, late on 25 January, SC-1470 resumed her coastwise passage after a brief fog-induced delay the following morning. She fueled at the Section Base at Mayport, on the morning of the 27th, and stood into the swept channel at Miami at 16:10 on the 28th. SC-1470 got underway for her shakedown on 3 February 1943, then conducted a night patrol encompassing an area from five miles east of the sea buoy that lay to the southwest, to five miles abeam of the Fowey Rocks Light. She stood in to moor at Pier 2, SCTC at 05:40 on the 4th.   She then conducted her gunnery shakedown on the 7th, as well as ran various emergency drills. On the morning of 8 February, SC-1470 transferred her allowance of 16 Mousetrap projectiles ashore, the equipment removed and delivered to the SCTC. She then began a period of maintenance and minor repairs that continued until the 12th, after which time she shifted to a berth alongside the County Causeway. A brief interval underway on 15 February, with student officers and SCTC faculty on board, and formation steaming off Miami Beach in company with SC-1467, SC-1469 and her old running mate SC-1471, punctuated that availability period that continued into late February. As that month drew to a close, she “painted ship” on the 22th, took on supplies, underwent an inspection on the 24th by Capt. Benson on the staff of the Commandant of the Seventh Naval District, and the following day by Cmdr. Olson, the Port Director at Miami. On the 26th, workmen removed the Marconi wireless gear that had equipped the ship when commissioned, replacing it with new equipment, a process concluded the following day. Collision with PC-1123 After undergoing alterations and taking on supplies (1-4 March 1943), SC-1470 stood out to sea on 5 March. At 22:37 that day, SC-1470 passed Molasses Reef Light abeam to starboard, 1.5 miles away. An hour later, she changed course in response to orders from the officer in tactical command, but at 23:54 sighted a ship on her starboard beam “heading toward us on a collision course.” SC-1470’s officer of the deck ordered “hard left rudder,” but the steel-hulled submarine chaser PC-1123, the approaching ship, plowed into the wooden-hulled vessel and rammed a hole in the starboard side of the engine room, the damage extending from the gunwale to below the waterline, flooding that compartment and putting all electrical circuits out of commission. PC-1123’s several attempts to come alongside and pass a towline only caused further damage -- to SC-1470’s port side above the waterline -- when the heavy seas pushed the ships together. Finally, shortly before the end of the mid watch on 6 March, PC-1123 managed to get a line to the damaged vessel and set course for Miami. Passing the sea buoy at the mouth of the Miami River at 16:55 on 6 March 1943, SC-1470 cast off from PC-1123 five minutes later and hoisted “not under command” signals until a tug could arrive. A navy tug came alongside about two and a half hours later, taking the tow line at 1935, and turned the damaged ship over to the district tug YT-333 (ex-Daniel Ladd) at 20:30, the latter taking SC-1470 to the Dade Drydock Co. yard, where the submarine chaser immediately entered a floating drydock at 20:47. Yard workmen began repair work almost immediately, and installed a soft patch on the starboard side on the 7th. Workmen removed all ammunition, work continuing throughout the day, while Lt. Cone H. Johnson, USNR, the commanding officer, noted “several inspections by interested officials.” The following afternoon [8 March], SC-1470 was taken from the drydock by YT-333, and moored to the north side of Pier 2 at the SCTC. YT-333 took the vessel to a berth at the County Causeway, where all fuel was removed from the damaged ship, then back to Pier 2, where SC-1470 “awaited orders” for the remainder of March. Those who inspected the ship at Miami deemed SC-1470 to require two months for repairs. Subsequently, ComInCh suggested on 19 May 1943 that “if [SC-1470 was] so badly damaged that she may be scratched from the Navy list or even be subject to long repairs” the ship be turned over to the Vice Chief of Naval Operations (VCNO). Her assignment to the Caribbean Sea Frontier cancelled by ComInCh, SC-1470 was accordingly turned over to the VCNO for further disposition by the Commander of the Operational Training Command, Atlantic, on 24 May 1943. Redesignated as a “miscellaneous” type of vessel, of an “unclassified” nature, SC-1470 was named Panther and given the identification number IX-105 on 26 June 1943. She was assigned to the Seventh Naval District on 1 July 1943. Evaluated as unseaworthy, she was decommissioned at Miami on 9 July 1943 and her hulk delivered to the Head of the Seamanship Department at the SCTC the same day. Lt. Robert C. Colwell, her commanding officer, and Lt. (j.g.) Herbert W. Sadler, her executive officer, reported for temporary duty at the SCTC immediately thereafter. Panther was assigned to Service Squadron 1, Service Force, Atlantic Fleet, on 29 September 1943. 1945 The Secretary of the Navy, on 4 December 1945, deemed Panther “not essential to the defense of the U.S.” and authorized the Chief of Naval Operations to dispose of her.  Placed out of service on 21 January 1946, the vessel was stricken from the Navy Register the same day, by that point deemed in “extreme condition” and the cost of repairs “excessive.” Ex-Panther was sold for scrapping on 13 February 1947. References External links NavSource Online: USS Panther (IX-105) Panther Ships built in Nova Scotia 1942 ships Panther Maritime incidents in 1943
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The 2022 All Thailand Golf Tour is the 24th season of the All Thailand Golf Tour, the main professional golf tour in Thailand since it was established in 1999. It is the fourth season in which world rankings points are given. Tournament results The table below shows the schedule for the season. References All Thailand Golf Tour All Thailand Golf Tour All Thailand Golf Tour All Thailand Golf Tour
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Kieron Lake-Bryan is an Anguillan association footballer who currently plays for Aldershot Town under 23s and the Anguilla national team. Club career He has played for the Wingate & Finchley Under 23 team and in the 2021–22 season has appeared in the Aldershot Town Under 23 squad. International career He made his senior international debut on 27 January 2022 in a friendly match against the British Virgin Islands. International career statistics References External links Global Sports Archive profile Living people Anguillan footballers Anguilla international footballers Association football defenders Aldershot Town F.C. players Wingate & Finchley F.C. players Anguilla under-20 international footballers
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The chipotenses, sometimes the libra chipotensis, capotois or the pound chipot was a currency in medieval south-west France. The origin of the currency's names is unknown as is the location where it was minted. Towards the end of the 13th century it was sometimes the currency of Gascony and also Bigorre and Agenais. Edward I of England sent his moneyer William de Turnemire to Gascony in 1285 to take control of the mint there and introduce new currency. In 1289-1290 the mayor of Bordeaux ordered that the new English money should be the unit of measure in the city and that the chipotense would no longer be accepted for trade but could be exchanged for new currency. There afterwards followed a rapid decline in the value of the chipotense from around English pounds to 0.125 pounds by 1312. References Coins of France Medieval currencies
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Justin Outten (born October 26, 1983) is an American football coach who is the offensive coordinator for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League (NFL). He previously served as the tight ends coach for the Green Bay Packers and also served as an assistant coach for the Atlanta Falcons. Outten played college football as a center at Syracuse University. Early years A native of Doylestown, Pennsylvania, Outten attended and played high school football as a center at Central Bucks High School West. He then went on to play college football at Syracuse University. Coaching career Syracuse In 2007, Outten began his coaching career at his alma mater, Syracuse University, as a graduate assistant. Westfield HS In 2008, Outten was hired to become Offensive Line Coach at Westfield High School in Houston, Texas. He later added titles of assistant head coach and offensive coordinator at the school. Atlanta Falcons In 2016, Outten joined the Atlanta Falcons as a coaching intern. In 2017, he was hired by the Falcons as an offensive assistant under head coach Dan Quinn. Green Bay Packers On January 24, 2019, Outten was hired by the Green Bay Packers as their tight ends coach under head coach Matt LaFleur. On December 12, 2021, Outten missed the Packers' Week 14 game against the Chicago Bears due to COVID-19 protocols. Denver Broncos On February 2, 2022, Outten was hired by the Denver Broncos as their offensive coordinator under head coach Nathaniel Hackett. References External links Denver Broncos profile Syracuse Orange profile 1983 births Living people American football centers Atlanta Falcons coaches Denver Broncos coaches Green Bay Packers coaches National Football League offensive coordinators People from Doylestown, Pennsylvania Players of American football from Pennsylvania Syracuse Orange football coaches Syracuse Orange football players
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Kolkata–Silghat Town Kaziranga Express is an Express train belonging to Eastern Railway zone that runs between and Silghat Town in India. It is currently being operated with 13181/13182 train numbers on a weekly basis. The train is named after Kaziranga National Park of Assam, which is famous for the great one-horned rhinoceroses. Service The 13181/Kolkata–Silghat Town Kaziranga Express has an average speed of 49 km/hr and covers 1175 km in 23h 55m. The 13182/Silghat Town–Kolkata Kaziranga Express has an average speed of 50 km/hr and covers 1359 km in 23h 20m. Rake sharing The train shares its rake with 13167/13168 Kolkata–Agra Cantonment Express. References External links Kolkata–Silghat Town Kaziranga Express India Rail Info Silghat Town–Kolkata Kaziranga Express India Rail Info Transport in Kolkata Express trains in India Rail transport in West Bengal Rail transport in Assam Named passenger trains of India
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The following list of W Series drivers lists the 27 drivers who have entered or taken part in a W Series event since the series' inception in 2019. Lists are accurate up to and including the 2021 W Series Austin round. By driver – Percentages are of the races contested by said driver. By country See also List of female racing drivers Notes References W Series drivers
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Maulana Gauhar Rehman (1936 – 18 March 2003) was a Pakistani Islamic scholar, Mufassir and Muhaddith as well as a politician who had served as a member of the 7th Assembly National Assembly of Pakistan from 20 March 1985 to 29 May 1988. Maulana Gohar Rehman was born in 1936 to Muhammad Sharifullah in Chamrasi village, Dara Shangoli, Mansehra district, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. His great-grandfather Maulana Abdul Karim was a great religious scholar who took part in the jihad against the Sikhs in the company of Akhund Darweza. His father was also a great religious scholar and Imam who offered valuable religious services in the Gobhai, Mansehra district. References 1936 births 2003 deaths Pakistani MNAs 1985–1988 Pakistani Islamic religious leaders People from Mansehra District People from Charsadda District, Pakistan
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Gambyong is a traditional Javanese dance originating from Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia. This dance has existed since ancient times and began to be displayed at the Mangkunegaran Palace in the era of 1916 to 1944. Gambyong became famous for his smooth and graceful dance moves that amazed the audience who saw him. History In Serat Centhini, a Javanese book written during the reigns of Pakubuwana IV (1788-1820) and Pakubuwana V (1820-1823), has mentioned the existence of gambyong as a tledhek dance. At that time, one of the dance stylists in the reign of Pakubuwana IX (1861-1893) named K.R.M.T. Wreksadiningrat worked on this folk dance so that it was appropriate to be performed among the nobles or aristocrats. This refined folk dance became popular and was usually performed in front of guests at the Mangkunegaran Palace. An important change in Gambyong Dance occurred when in 1950, Nyi Bei Mintoraras, a dance trainer from the Mangkunegaran Palace during the Mangkunegara VIII period, created a "standardized" version of gambyong, known as Gambyong Pareanom. This choreography was first performed at the wedding ceremony of Gusti Nurul, Mangkunegara VIII's sister, in 1951. This dance was liked by the public so that other versions were developed for public consumption. Meaning The meaning of Gambyong is likened to a rice goddess (Dewi Sri) who is dancing. Therefore, in the past this dance was used for agricultural ritual ceremonies to get rice fertility and an abundant harvest. In its development, Gambyong dance has been appointed as an entertainment to enliven the wedding reception, to welcome guests of honor or state. Form and movement The characteristics of the Gambyong Dance include: The clothes used are shades of yellow and green as a symbol of prosperity and fertility. Before the dance begins, it is always opened with a gendhing Pangkur. Movement techniques, dance accompaniment rhythms and drum patterns are able to display the dance characters that are flexible, kenes, kewes, and tregel. Gambyong dance movement consists of three parts, namely the beginning (awal), content (isi), and end (akhir). The uniqueness of the Gambyong dance is in the movement that focuses on the legs, arms, body, and also the head. The movement accompanies or follows every hand movement by looking at the direction of the fingers. Every movement even goes hand in hand with the music that is sung. The opening dance is also accompanied by Gendhing Pangkur. Then this rhythm makes the movement techniques performed by the dancers with flexibility. Usually the dancers of the Gambyong Dance are equipped with a bun. Even so, their appearance is still elegant and shows a graceful expression. See also Bedhaya Lengger Javanese dance Dance in Indonesia References Dances of Indonesia Dances of Java Javanese culture
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Peter A. Hatch is an American government official who served as the Commissioner of New York City Department of Consumer and Worker Protection. Biography Hatch graduated from Columbia College in 1992, and received his MPA from Harvard Kennedy School and JD from Fordham University School of Law. He practiced law at Schulte Roth & Zabel in between his stints in public service. He befriended future mayor Bill de Blasio during Senator John Edwards' 2004 presidential campaign, while Hatch was the deputy state director for New York, and de Blasio co-chair of the New York campaign. Hatch then worked for de Blasio as his chief of staff when he was a councilman. He served as chief of staff to John Edwards' 2008 presidential campaign before being hired by Senator Kirsten Gillibrand as state director for New York in 2010. In 2014, he joined the de Blasio administration as a senior advisor to the First Deputy Mayor Anthony Shorris. From 2016 to 2020, he served as chief of staff to the Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services and concurrently in 2019, a senior advisor to the mayor on homelessness issues. In March 2020, Hatch was named New York City's COVID-19 Public-Private Partnership Czar. Hatch was named by Bill de Blasio to serve as commissioner of the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection in September, 2021. Personal life and family Hatch is a native of New York City. He married Hillary Rubenstein, daughter of Philadelphia-based real estate developer Mark Rubenstein, in a 2005 ceremony that was officiated by then-Los Angeles City Councilman Eric Garcetti. His father was a professor of architecture at New Jersey Institute of Technology and his mother an epidemiologist at National Cancer Institute. References Living people Columbia College (New York) alumni Harvard Kennedy School alumni Fordham University School of Law alumni 21st-century American lawyers American civil servants Lawyers from New York City Commissioners in New York City New York City Department of Consumer and Worker Protection
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Mohanbhog is a village located in the Indian state of Tripura in Sipahijala district. As of 2011 census, Mohanbhog had a population of 4,829. 2,457 people are male. 2,372 are female. See also List of cities and towns in Tripura References Villages in Sipahijala district
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In India, a digvijaya was originally a military conquest of the "four quarters." In medieaval times, it came to refer to the religious conquest of India by the reputed founders of the major Hindu renunciate traditions, namely Madhva, Sankara, Chaitanya, and Vallabha. Military conquest Digvijaya as a military conquest is often mentioned in Indian history. It was followed by rituals confirming the divine grace and royal authority of the conqueror. Religious conquest According to Sax, the religious digvijaya-litarature may have been a response to the demise of royal digvijaya, due to the Muslim conquest of most of India. Madhva Digvijayam Sumadhva Vijaya (also referred as Sri Madhva Vijaya or simply as Madhva Vijaya) ("The story of the victory of Madhva"), is a biographical work of the great Dvaita philosopher Sri Madhvacharya. It is authored by Sri Narayana Panditacharya, who was the son of Sri Trivikrama Panditacharya, one of the direct disciples of Madhvacharya. Sri Trivikrama Panditacharya was a famous advaita exponent of his time and converted himself to the Madhva faith after disputation with Sri Madhvacharya himself for 7–8 days in Kasargod of Kerala. He is also the author of the famous "Vayu Stuti" which is recited by all devote Madhvas, daily, till date. Sumadhva Vijaya is a Sanskrit work and is composed of 16 sargas or cantos. It starts with a description of the first two Avatars of Vayu, namely Hanuman and Bhima. It then proceeds to describe the life of Sri Madhva, who is considered the third avatar. Sumadhva Vijaya contains detailed descriptions of various incidents of Sri Madhva's life and is the only authentic source of information about Madhvacharya that exists. Sri Narayana Panditacharya was a contemporary of Sri Madhva which greatly adds to the authenticity of the work. The work contains many personal and intimate details of Sri Madhvacharya's daily routine. Sumadhva Vijaya is a Maha Kavya and its style meets all the requirements of a Maha Kavya of Sanskrit Literature. Sumadhva Vijaya has several commentaries written on it which greatly helps the understanding of the Maha Kavya. Sri Narayana Panditacarya himself has written a commentary on his Maha Kavya Madhva Vijaya. This commentary is called Bhava Prakashika. This is a very useful commentary because the poet himself gives the Kannada and Tulu names of several persons who are a part of Sri Madhvacharya's Biography and the places which Sri Madhvacarya has visited. In the Kavya these names are Sanskritised. The next oldest commentary on Sumadhva Vijaya is by Sri Vedanga Tirtha, one of the saints of the Sode Mutt. This commentary is called Padartha Dipika. Another commentary which is also in vogue is the "Padartha Dipikodbodhika" of Sri Vishwapati Tirtha of Pejavara Mutt. "Mandopakarini" of Sri Chalari Sheshacharya is also quite popular. All the commentaries are in print. Sumadhva Vijaya has also been recited by many artists, such as Sri Vidhyabooshana. Shankara Digvijayam Shankara Vijayams (IAST ) are traditional hagiographies of the Advaita philosopher Adi Shankara, describing his 'conquest of the four quarters'. In these hagiographies, Shankara is deified as a ruler-renunciate, bringing harmony to the four quarters. The genre may have been modelled on the digvijayas of Madhva, since the oldest Shankara-hagiography post-dates Madhva (1238-1317). The Shankara-digvijayams mimick the royal digvijayams, as his 'conquest of the four quarters' and the establishment of his kingdom is followed by his coronation with this ascent of the Throne of Omniscience (sarvajña-pīṭha), akin to the rajasuya rites. The main Shankaravijayams are: Anandagirīya Shankaravijayam (of Anandagiri, not extant) Anantanadagiri Shankaravijayam (extant from 15th century, but controversial in nature) Cidvilāsīya Shankaravijayam (of Chidvilasa, c. between 15th century and 17th century Keralīya Shankaravijayam (extant in Kerala, c. 17th century) Madhavīya Shankara (Dig)vijayam (of Madhava). Usually attributed to Madhava-Vidyaranya, and dated to the 14th century. The attribution and dating is disputed; the author was a Madhavi, and the correct date seems to be the 17th or even 18th century. See also Shiva Digvijaya Notes References Sources External links Madhva Discourse on Sumadhva Vijaya (Kannada) by Vidwan Vyasanakere Prabhanjanacharya. Biographical links to Madhvacharya and other dvaita resources Madhva and other Dvaita saints text resource Complete Biography of Sriman Madhvacharya Madhwa Vijaya Audio Shankara The Sankaravijaya Literature— a detailed discussion of the various Shankara Vijayams Hinduism
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Steven E. Zipperstein ("Steve Zipperstein") is an attorney, and a lecturer in history at University of California, Santa Barbara. He is also a Senior Fellow at the UCLA Center for Middle East Development, and a visiting professor at the Tel Aviv University Law School. He is the author of several books and other publications on the legal status of Palestine and Jerusalem. Education He received a B.A. in political science at the University of California at Los Angeles in 1979, and J.D. from the University of California at Davis in 1983. Career He was initially a prosecutor in the United States Attorney's office in Los Angeles, and then Chief Legal Officer for Verizon Wireless from 2003 to 2011, and subsequently Chief Legal Officer for Blackberry Ltd. In 2020 Zipperstein published a newly discovered document in which Mohammed Ali Tewfik, Regent of Egypt during the minority of Farouk of Egypt, responded to the 1929 Palestine riots at Jerusalem's Western Wall by proposing that "instead of fighting or dealing unjustly by one party or the other, it would be infinitely better to come to an understanding. The Mohametans may be willing to accept a sum of money which would help them to do good for the community and as the Jews are rich, if this thing (the Wailing Wall) is so much desired by them, there seems no reason why they should not pay for it. If this could be done, it would avoid coercion and possibly injustice to one or other of the parties... Let them give £100,000 and I feel sure this would settle the difference." Publications books Zionism, Palestinian Nationalism and the Law: 1939-1948 (Routledge, 2021) Law and the Arab-Israeli Conflict: The Trials of Palestine (Routledge, 2020) journal articles References Living people University of California, Davis alumni University of California, Los Angeles alumni
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Aziz Abdukhakimov (; ; born 17, June, 1974) is an Uzbek Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Uzbekistan, Minister of Tourism and Sports. Biography Aziz Abdukaharovich Abdukhakimov was born on June 17, 1974, in the city of Tashkent. Graduated from Tashkent State Economic University. An economist by profession, he graduated from the Japanese University of Hitotsubashi with a master's degree. Career 1993-1996 - held various positions in the Silk Road Bank. 1996-2004 - Chief Specialist of the Central Bank of the Republic of Uzbekistan, Head of the Tashkent Office of Berliner Bank AG, Head of the Board of Uzpromstroybank. 2004-2008 - Head of the Department of Finance, Economy and Foreign Economic Relations of the Cabinet of Ministers of the Republic of Uzbekistan. 2008-2012 - Chairman of the State Committee for State Property Management of the Republic of Uzbekistan. 2012-2014 - Chairman of the State Antimonopoly Committee of the Republic of Uzbekistan 2017-2018 - Chairman of the State Committee for Tourism Development of the Republic of Uzbekistan 2018-2021 - Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Uzbekistan - Head of Education, Health and Social Affairs. 2020-2021 - Chairman of the State Committee for Tourism Development of the Republic of Uzbekistan From 2021, Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Uzbekistan - Minister of Tourism and Sports. References External links Aziz Abduhakimov Facebook Aziz Abduhakimov Instagram 1974 births Living people People from Tashkent Government ministers of Uzbekistan Hitotsubashi University alumni Tourism ministers Sports ministers
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The 2022 American Athletic Conference football season will be the 31st NCAA Division I FBS Football season of the American Athletic Conference (The American). The season will be the tenth since the former Big East Conference dissolved and became the American Athletic Conference and the ninth season of the College Football Playoff in place. The American is considered a member of the Group of Five (G5) together with Conference USA, the MAC, Mountain West Conference and the Sun Belt Conference. In September 2021 UCF, Cincinnati, and Houston accepted bids to join the Big 12, the schools are contractually required to remain with the AAC through 2024. All indications are that the three schools would prefer to leave in 2023. The 2022 season is expected to be the program's last season as members of the American Athletic Conference. The entire schedule was released on February 17, 2022. Previous season Cincinnati finished with a 13–1 (8–0 AAC) record, winning the AAC Championship Game against Houston. It was the second consecutive AAC championship and third consecutive AAC Championship game appearance in program history. The Bearcats were ranked fourth in the final College Football Playoff rankings, thus becoming the first Group of Five team to make the playoffs. After the Bearcats loss to Alabama in the Cotton Bowl,Cincinnati finished fourth in the final AP Poll marking the best finish in program history. Seven AAC teams participated in bowl games during the 2021 season; the league finished 4–1. Tulsa defeated Old Dominion 30–17 in the Myrtle Beach Bowl. With the win, Tulsa concluded their season with an 7–6 record. With the win, Tulsa achieved their first bowl win since the 2016 Miami Beach Bowl In the 2021 Gasparilla Bowl, UCF defeated Florida 29–17, behind standout performances by wide receiver, and game MVP, Ryan O'Keefe and running back Isiah Bowser. In the Birmingham Bowl Number 20 Houston defeated Auburn 17–13. Cincinnati was selected to participate in the Cotton Bowl as part of the College Football Playoff against Alabama. The Bearcats lost to the Crimson Tide 27–6. Three bowl games involving American teams were cancelled due to COVID-19: Memphis was slated to play in the Hawaii Bowl versus Hawaii. Hawaii had to withdraw from the bowl due to a shortage of available players, stemming from a combination of an COVID-19 outbreak within the team, players already out with injury, and players who transferred away from the school at the conclusion of the regular season. East Carolina was slated to play in the Military Bowl versus Boston College, the game was cancelled after Boston College said it did not have enough players to field a team because of coronavirus issues, season-ending injuries, opt-outs and transfers. SMU was originally slated to play in the Fenway Bowl versus Virginia. Virginia had to withdraw from the game due to a number of COVID cases impacting its roster. Preseason Recruiting classes American Athletic Conference media day The 2022 American Athletic Conference is scheduled to be held in late July or early August 2022. The site of the 2022 AAC media day is to be determined. Preseason poll The preseason poll was released in July 2022. First place votes in () Award watch lists Coaches Coaching changes The American will enter the 2022 season with two new head football coaches: November 30, 2021 TCU hired Sonny Dykes of SMU as its new head coach. On November 29 SMU hired Rhett Lashlee formally the Offensive Coordinator at Miami as its new coach. November 29, 2021 Temple head coach Rod Carey was fired after having an 12–20 record in three seasons at Temple, including a 3–9 record in 2021. On December 15, Temple hired Texas associate head coach and run game coordinator Stan Drayton as its new head coach. Coaches Head coaching records Note: Records shown after the 2021 season Years at school includes 2022 season Source: Rankings Schedule The 2022 American Athletic Conference football schedule was released on February 17, 2022. The regular season begins on Thursday September 1, 2022 and will end on Saturday December 15, 2022. The American Athletic Conference Football Championship Game is scheduled to be played on Saturday December 3, 2022 at the site of the regular season champion. All times Eastern time. Regular season schedule Week one Week two Week three Week four Week five Week six Week seven Week eight Week nine Week ten Week eleven Week twelve Week thirteen Championship Game Week fifteen The American vs other conferences AAC vs Power Five matchups The following games include AAC teams competing against Power Five conferences teams from the (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, BYU/Notre Dame, Pac-12, and SEC). All rankings are from the AP Poll at the time of the game. AAC vs Group of Five matchups The following games include AAC teams competing against "Group of Five" teams from C-USA, MAC, Mountain West and Sun Belt. AAC vs FBS independents matchups The following games include AAC teams competing against FBS Independents, which includes Army, Liberty, New Mexico State, UConn and UMass. AAC vs FCS matchups The following games include AAC teams competing against Football Championship Subdivision teams, which comprises 14 conferences and two independent programs. Note:† Denotes Neutral Site Game AAC Records against other conferences 2022–2023 records against non-conference foes: Regular Season Post Season Postseason Bowl games Bowl games will begin on December 17, 2022, and will end with the College Football Playoff National Championship on January 9, 2023. For the 2020–2025 bowl cycle, The American will annually send teams to the Military Bowl, Fenway Bowl, and a third annual spot alternating between the Armed Forces Bowl and Hawaii Bowl annually. The American will have annually four appearances in the following bowls: Birmingham Bowl, Gasparilla Bowl, Boca Raton Bowl, Frisco Bowl, Cure Bowl, First Responder Bowl, Myrtle Beach Bowl and New Mexico Bowl. The American champion will go to a New Year's Six bowl if a team finishes higher than the champions of Group of Five conferences in the final College Football Playoff rankings, American teams are also eligible for the College Football Playoff if they're among the top four teams in the final CFP ranking. Rankings are from AP Poll • All times Eastern Time Zone. Selection of teams Bowl eligible (0): Bowl-ineligible (0): Awards and honors Player of the week honors American Athletic Individual Awards The following individuals received postseason honors as chosen by the league's head coaches. All-Conference Teams * Denotes Unanimous Selection All Conference Honorable Mentions: All-Americans The 2022 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following College Football All-American first teams chosen by the following selector organizations: Associated Press (AP), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Walter Camp Foundation (WCFF), Sporting News (TSN, from its historic name of The Sporting News), Sports Illustrated (SI), The Athletic (Athletic), USA Today (USAT) ESPN, CBS Sports (CBS), College Football News (CFN), Athlon Sports, Phil Steele, and Fox Sports (FOX). Currently, the NCAA compiles consensus all-America teams using a point system computed from All-America teams named by coaches associations or media sources. Players are chosen against other players playing at their position only. To be selected a consensus All-American, players must be chosen to the first team on at least half of the five official selectors as recognized by the NCAA. Second- and third-team honors are used to break ties. Players named first-team by all five selectors are deemed unanimous All-Americans. Currently, the NCAA recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine consensus and unanimous All-Americans. List of All American Teams American Football Coaches Association All-America Team Associated Press All-America Team CBS Sports All-America Team ESPN All-America Team Football Writers Association of America All-America Team The Athletic All-America Team Sporting News 2022 College Football All-America Team USA Today All-America Team Walter Camp Football Foundation All-America Team National Award Winners 2022 College Football Award Winners NFL Draft The following list includes all AAC players who were drafted in the 2023 NFL Draft. References
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Appointocracy is a form of government in which governing officials effectively appoint each other, thus it is rule by appointees. The term has been used pejoratively to refer to some representative democracies in which the influence of the citizens through voting has been effectively minimized through multiple degrees of separation between the people they elect and the appointed people who actually influence the government. References Government-related lists
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Conrad Joseph is an Anguillan association footballer who currently plays for Singh Sabha Slough in the premier League Premier Division<1></noinclude> and the Anguilla national team. International career He made his senior international debut on 27 January 2022 in a friendly match against the British Virgin Islands. International career statistics References External links Global Sports Archive profile Living people Anguillan footballers Anguilla international footballers Association football midfielders
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The 2017 Korean Basketball League rookie draft (Korean: 2017 KBL 국내신인선수 드래프트) was held on October 30, 2017, at the Jamsil Students' Gymnasium in Seoul, South Korea. Out of the 44 participants, 27 players were drafted. In September 2017, the KBL announced its confirmed list of 44 participants for the upcoming draft. The order of selection was chosen through two lotteries and announced on October 23. Busan KT Sonicboom won the right to the first overall pick and also obtained the second pick via a player trade with Changwon LG Sakers. Draft selections This table only shows the first twenty picks. Players Traditionally, players joined the draft after completing their senior season and were fourth-year students at their respective universities. This draft marked the first time two freshmen, Yang Hong-seok and Yoo Hyun-jun, were picked so early in the first round, leading observers and pundits to note that "early entry" would likely become a trend in Korean basketball in the future. Point guard Heo Hoon became the first Yonsei University player since Ha Seung-jin in 2008 to be picked first overall. In March 2021, Yang and Heo simultaneously recorded double-doubles during the play-offs against Anyang KGC. It marked the first time in KBL history two domestic players from the same team simultaneously recorded double-doubles in a single game. Notes See also Korean Basketball League draft References External links Draft: 2017 KBL Domestic Player draft results / 드래프트: 2017 KBL 국내신인선수 드래프트 결과 — Korean Basketball League official website Korean Basketball League draft October 2017 sports events in South Korea 2017–18 in South Korean basketball
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The 2022 FIL World Luge Championships were held on 30 January 2022 in Winterberg, Germany. There was only one, non-Olympic discipline of women's doubles. Results References FIL World Luge Championships World Championships FIL Luge in Germany Sports competitions in North Rhine-Westphalia International sports competitions hosted by Germany FIL
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14 + 14, also spelled 14 plus 14, is a CD and DVD compilation album by Bachata group Aventura. It contains the songs and music videos from 5 studio albums and from the live album K.O.B. Live. Every song that has had a music video is on this album with the exception of All Up 2 You which featured Akon and Wisin & Yandel. Tacklist Charts References External links Aventura official site 2011 compilation albums Aventura (band) compilation albums
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Şükrü Uzuner (born 2 February 1969) is a Turkish former footballer who is last known to have played as a forward for FC Blackbird. Career Uzuner started his career with Turkish second tier side Kartalspor. In 1992, he was sent on loan to Darıca Gençlerbirliği in the Turkish fourth tier. In 1994, Uzuner signed for Finnish fourth tier club Huima. In 1995, he signed for JJK in the Finnish third tier, helping them earn promotion to the Finnish second tier. Before the 1998 season, Uzuner signed for Finnish top flight team FinnPa, where he made 24 league appearances and scored 9 goals. Before the 1999 season, he signed for HJK in the Finnish top flight. Before the 2000 season, Uzuner signed for Finnish second tier outfit Atlantis FC, helping them earn promotion to the Finnish top flight. Before the 2002 season, he signed for JJK in the Finnish third tier. In 2009, Uzuner was sent on loan to Finnish fourth tier side BET, where he was suspended for a month due to walking off the field after getting a red card before going back to the field and head butting the opponent he fouled. References External links Turkish footballers Kolmonen players Kakkonen players Association football forwards Living people 1969 births Turkish expatriate sportspeople in Finland Veikkausliiga players Expatriate footballers in Finland Atlantis FC players Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi players Kartalspor footballers FinnPa players FC Hämeenlinna players JJK Jyväskylä players Darıca Gençlerbirliği footballers Maltepespor footballers Kotkan Työväen Palloilijat players 3. Liga players Footballers from Istanbul Turkish expatriate footballers
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Dawn Road was a German Hard rock band playing neoclassicism, formed in February 1972. The original and only line-up of Dawn Road features Uli Jon Roth (guitar, vocals), Jürgen Rosenthal (drums), Francis Buchholz (bass) and Achim Kirsching (keyboards, vocals). The band's repertoire consists mainly of their own compositions, written by Ulrich Roth and Achim Kirschng, recorded in demo versions without releasing an album or single. For a short period between 1972 and 1973, Rudolf Schenker and Klaus Meine of the Scorpions joined the group, before all four Don Road musicians joined the Scorpions in 1973, then only by Rudolf Schenker and Klaus Meine. References Citations German hard rock musical groups
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DGWHyperloop is an Indian transportation technology research company based in Indore, Madhya Pradesh, that designs ultra-high-speed transportation technology and vehicles. Founded in 2015, DGWHyperloop is the first hyperloop company from Asia and gained recognition for its Delhi-Mumbai Hyperloop Corridor project. References Hyperloop Engineering companies of India Companies based in Indore
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Jacklyn may refer to: People Jacklyn Frank, Antiguan and Barbudan politician first elected in 2017 Jacklyn H. Lucas (1928–2008), American World War II Marine awarded the Medal of Honor Jacky Rosen (born 1957), American politician Jackie Trad (born 1972), Australian former politician Jacklyn Wu (born 1968), Taiwanese actress and singer Jacklyn Zeman (born 1953), American actress Robert Jacklyn (1922–2014), Australian physicist Other uses Jacklyn (ship), a landing platform ship Mount Jacklyn, part of the Athos Range, Mac. Robertson Land, Antarctica See also Jaclyn, a feminine given name Jacqueline (disambiguation)
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Nqobile is a given name. Notable people with the name include: Nqobile Nunu Khumalo (born 1992), South African actress and model Nqobile Ntuli (born 1996), South African field hockey player Nqobile Sipamla (born 1984), South African actress, singer, and businesswoman
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Eugenio Rojas Apaza (6 September 1962 – 30 July 2020) was a Bolivian politician who served as Minister of Productive Development and Plural Economy of Bolivia from 2017 to 2019 and as a Senator from 2010 till 2015. He died from COVID-19 La Paz during the COVID-19 pandemic in Bolivia on 30 July 2020, aged 57. References 1962 births 2020 deaths People from La Paz Members of the Senate of Bolivia 21st-century Bolivian politicians Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Bolivia
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Thasycles is a genus of leaf beetles in the subfamily Eumolpinae. It is endemic to New Caledonia. For a long time it was treated as a synonym of Dematochroma, until it was reinstated as a valid genus in 2022. Species Eleven species are included in the genus: Thasycles castaneus Gómez-Zurita, 2022 Thasycles compactus Gómez-Zurita, 2022 Thasycles cordiformis Chapuis, 1874 Thasycles fuscus (Jolivet, Verma & Mille, 2007) Thasycles grandis Gómez-Zurita, 2022 Thasycles laboulbenei (Montrouzier, 1861) Thasycles magnus Gómez-Zurita, 2022 Thasycles panieensis (Jolivet, Verma & Mille, 2007) Thasycles puncticollis Gómez-Zurita, 2022 Thasycles tenuis Gómez-Zurita, 2022 Thasycles variegatus Gómez-Zurita, 2022 References Eumolpinae Chrysomelidae genera Beetles of Oceania Insects of New Caledonia Taxa named by Félicien Chapuis Endemic fauna of New Caledonia
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The Triple Crown or the Grand Slam are an unofficial terms used in the entertainment industry to describe individuals who have won the three highest accolades recognised in British film, television, and theatre: a British Academy Film Award, a British Academy Television Award, and a Laurence Olivier Award respectively. Triple Crown winners The year in the BAFTA Film, BAFTA TV, and Olivier columns indicates the year the actor first won the award For the BAFTA TV and Olivier this is the year of the award ceremony, for the BAFTA Film the year when the film was released The total wins column indicates the total number of competitive BAFTA and Olivier wins Additional recipients (including non-competitive awards) Two competitive awards The following individuals have each won two out of the three major awards in competitive categories: Missing a BAFTA Film Award Eileen Atkins◊ Rowan Atkinson Simon Russell Beale David Bradley Cheryl Campbell Michaela Coel Benedict Cumberbatch◊ Monica Dolan Michael Gambon Derek Jacobi◊ Toby Jones Penelope Keith◊ Warren Mitchell† Vanessa Redgrave◊ NCA Beryl Reid† Andrew Scott Fiona Shaw Sheridan Smith Margaret Tyzack† Gwen Watford† Missing a BAFTA Television Award Dora Bryan† Pauline Collins Stephen Daldry◊ Chiwetel Ejiofor John Gielgud† John Hodge Ian Holm◊ † Ayub Khan Din Martin McDonagh Virginia McKenna† Anthony Minghella† Sam Mendes◊ Eddie Redmayne Kristin Scott Thomas Imelda Staunton◊ Rachel Weisz Missing a Laurence Olivier Award Jim Broadbent Peter Capaldi Olivia Colman Steve Coogan Tom Courtenay Denholm Elliott† Alec Guinness◊ † Anthony Hopkins◊ NCA John Hurt† Glenda Jackson◊ Celia Johnson† Ray McAnally◊ Peter Morgan◊ Bill Nighy Emma Thompson Tracey Ullman Billie Whitelaw† Notes † – Person is deceased. ◊ – Person has been nominated at least once for a competitive category of the missing award, but has failed to win. NCA – Person won a Non-Competitive Award in this category. Three nominations The following individuals have not won all three awards in competitive categories, but have received at least one nomination for each of them: Eileen Atkins Benedict Cumberbatch Stephen Daldry Anne-Marie DuffN/A Andrew Garfield Alec Guinness† Ian Holm† Anthony Hopkins Rupert EverettN/A Glenda Jackson Derek Jacobi Penelope Keith Nicole Kidman Rosemary Leach† Robert Lindsay Lesley Manville Ian McKellen Alfred MolinaN/A Peter Morgan Sam Mendes Vanessa Redgrave Lesley SharpN/A Michael SheenN/A Maggie Smith Imelda Staunton Juliet Stevenson Dorothy Tutin† Zoë Wanamaker Emily Watson Ben Whishaw Notes † – Person is deceased. N/A – Person has not won any of the three awards (excluding non-competitive awards). See also Triple Crown of Acting (U.S.) Notes References
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The Black Point Railroad Bridge is a truss swing bridge across the Petaluma River, located in Black Point-Green Point, California. The bridge was built in 1911, and has been operated by Northwestern Pacific since 2011, despite previously having been in disuse for 10 years. Although for 100 years the bridge required an operator to get in the operator house to turn the bridge, when Northwestern Pacific was upgrading the bridge, they installed control boxes on either side of the bridge. The backup engine for the bridge an old Ford Model T engine, which is still located in the operator's house. As for the design of the bridge, it is 50 feet long with a deck width of 18 feet, and is a single track center bearing swing bridge. It is flanked by timber trestle approaches on either bank of the river. The west approach trestle is 311 feet long and the east approach trestle is 877 feet long. Trains coming from Schellville bring grain across the bridge to 3 locations in Petaluma: Hunt and Behrens' Feed, Lagunitas Brewing Company, and Dairyman's Feed. It is for this reason that trains crossing the bridge rarely to have any cars other than covered hoppers. References Railroad bridges in California
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Gerald Matticks (born 4 July 1940) is a Canadian gangster and the long-time leader of the West End Gang of Montreal. Criminal career From rags to riches Matticks was born in Goose Village section of the Pointe-Saint-Charles district of Montreal, the youngest of 14 children in a very poor family of Irish immigrants. His father worked as a driver of a wagon for the city of Montreal while his mother was a housewife. Matticks was married at the age of 17 and had fathered four children by the time he was 21. By the 1960s, Matticks together with his brothers John, Fred, Robert and Richard were leaders of a gang whose forte was hijacking trucks. The Matticks brothers eventually joined the West End Gang led by Frank Ryan. In 1971, Matticks was charged with attempted murder of a Montreal dockworker who had complained to the police that he and his brothers were stealing from the Port of Montreal. At his trial, Matticks was acquitted when three witnesses gave him an alibi, saying they were drinking with him at a local pub. One of the men who gave Matticks an alibi, an officer of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, later joined the West End Gang. In 1977, Matticks was found by the police to have some stolen jewelry worth $5,000 in his house, but was acquitted when the Crown was unable to establish that he had stolen the jewelry. In 1981, Matticks was again acquitted of charges of hijacking a truck in 1973. Increasingly prosperous, Matticks became the owner of a trucking firm, a farm for cattle and a beef wholesaling company. Matticks left Montreal and purchased a rural estate outside La Praire consisting of nine buildings. In the South end of Montreal, Matticks became celebrated for dressing up as Santa Claus every Christmas to hand out free food to the poor. Matticks in particular was known for handing out frozen chickens and turkeys for Christmas and Thanksgiving, which he seemed to posses an endless supply of. A devout Catholic, his parish priest, Father Marc Mignault, has praised him for his generosity in supporting the Catholic Church, saying that Matticks had the leaking roof of his church repaired for free. Father Mignault argues that Matticks is a fundamentally decent and good man. A different picture of Matticks was presented by Commander André Bouchard, the head of Montreal police's Major Crimes Unit. Bouchard stated that starting in the 1980s: "People were literally sniffing it [cocaine] right there on the bar and on the tables, even on boards' bellies. I mean they weren't even hiding it in the toilets... So we said, 'Wait a minute, how the fuck is all this shit coming in?' And that's when the name Matticks kept popping up. We'd bust a [drug] dealer downtown and he'd give up a name. It was always Gerry Matticks and the West End Gang". In 1992, when Allen "The Weasel" Ross, the boss of the West End Gang, was convicted of drug charges in the United States and at that point, Matticks replaced him as leader of the gang. The West End Gang controls the Port of Montreal, making them into critical players in the Montreal underworld as the gang to a large extent controls the supply of illegal drugs imported into Canada. In 1990, Matticks was convicted of a 1988 hijacking of a truck, for which he served 24 weekends in row in prison for. L'Affaire Matticks In April 1994, a Norwegian container ship, the Thor 1, docked in Montreal. Acting on an anonymous phone tip, the Sûreté du Québec searched the Thor 1 and discovered some 26.5 tons of hashish hidden within the ship in the precise location where the anonymous caller said it would be found. On the basis of the drugs seized from the Thor 1, Matticks was charged with conspiracy to import drugs in May 1994. The case against Matticks collapsed in the courtroom in 1995 when Mattick's lawyers established that the Sûreté du Québec had planted evidence, most notably documents written in French that were found in Mattick's house. Matticks had never attended school, spoke English as his first language, was illiterate, and was quite incapable of writing anything in either French or English. The fall-out from the Thor 1 affair was a royal commission headed by Justice Lawrence Poitras which criticized the Sûreté du Québec for routinely engaging in unprofessional actions such as planting evidence, threatening witnesses, and perjury. According to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) informer Dany Kane, the anonymous caller was Hells Angels Montreal chapter president Maurice Boucher who had also bribed the Sûreté du Québec detectives to plant the evidence, as this would be a "win-win" for him. If Matticks was convicted, he would eliminate a potential rival or if Mattick's lawyers would expose the planted evidence, the resulting backlash would bring disgrace and discredit upon the Sûreté du Québec. The scandal, known as L'Affaire Matticks, did much damage to the reputation of the Sûreté du Québec. Operation Springtime As part of an investigation into the Hells Angels, the police observed Boucher meeting Matticks on 25 May 1999 at his office at Viandes 3–1, an office complex owned by Matticks. On 2 December 1999, Boucher was again observed meeting Matticks at Viandes 3–1. On 10 October 2000, Mattick's business partner, Louis Elias Lekkes, was observed by the police picking up two boxes full of money from the Hells Angels and taking it to Viandes 3–1, and from there to Mattick's estate. On 16 November 2000, Lekkes was observed taking a bag with some $500, 000 in cash from the Hells Angels to Matticks's estate. On 7 December 2000, Matticks and Lekkes were observed meeting with Normand Robitaille of the Hells Angels' Nomad chapter at an Italian restaurant. Robitaille handed over to Matticks a briefcase. The Hells Angels in their records referred to Matticks as "Beef 1" and Lekkes as "Beef 2". According to the police, in the year 2000 Matticks oversaw the importation of eight shipments of drugs into Montreal totaling some 44 093 tons of hashish and 265 kilos of cocaine with a total street value of some $2 billion. Matticks and Lekkes preferred to use walkie-talkies instead of cellular phones, and Matticks was constantly on his guard for phone bugs. On 28 March 2001, Matticks was arrested as part of Operation Springtime, a crackdown aimed at the Hells Angels, but which also embraced him. As part of Operation Springtime, the police seized the records of the Hells Angels, which showed that Matticks was one of their main suppliers of drugs. At the time of Operation Springtime, the Hells Angels owned Matticks some $7 million accordingly to the records seized by the police. In Mattick's office at Viandes 3–1, the police found a refrigerator with a note-tag reading "Mom" (Boucher's nickname) and "Guy" together with two phone numbers. One number was for the cell phone number for Guy LePage, a former policeman turned chauffer for Boucher while another was for a pager registered in LePage's name. In Mattick's house, the police found some $6,200 U.S dollars in cash and $41,000 Canadian dollars in cash. After the arrests, Lekkes turned Crown's evidence in exchange for a lesser sentence. Lekkes tried to commit suicide on 16 July 2001 and the next day as he recovered decided to turn Crown's evidence. According to Lekkes, the West End Gang controlled the port of Montreal, which Matticks used for drug smuggling, selling drugs to the Rizzuto family, the Hells Angels and the Rock Machine. Lekkes testified that he started working for Matticks in 1995 in his meat-processing plant. Soon after, Lekkes was involved in stealing a shipment of Tommy Hilfiger clothing from Asia for Matticks at the port of Montreal, and he was also became involved in stealing chickens intended for Europe. Having gained Mattick's trust, Lekkes testified that he was sent to Colombia to make contact with the Cali Cartel. Lekkes signed a statement for the Crown stating that Matticks, who controlled the longshoreman's union at the Port of Montreal, had made profits of $22 million from smuggling drugs into the city and had sold the Angels at least 700 kilos of cocaine in the last two years. Lekkes testified: "From different series of importations, we would take a percentage of the product. The first one was 33 percent. That is what we could charge to bring in merchandise for either ourselves or the people who owned it...We had different people we sold to. Namely one was Norm Robitaille. He was a Hells Angel". On 6 August 2001, Matticks pleaded guilty to the drug charges in exchange for a lesser sentence. Matticks was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Lekkes later testified at other trials in 2002 and 2003 that he regularly took cardboard boxes containing about $500,000 in cash from the Hells Angels as payments to the West End Gang and that the chicken which Matticks was so generous in donating to Catholic charities at Thanksgiving and Christmas times were stolen from container ships meant to export the chickens to grocery stores in Europe. Inspired by Lekkes's example, John McLean, one of Mattick's lieutenants, agreed to turn Crown's evidence and to testify against Matticks's son, Donald, in exchange for an 8-year prison sentence. Lekkes received a 7-year prison sentence with the promise that he would receive a new identity and police protection for the rest of his life when he was released, and as a result Donald Matticks pleaded guilty in 2002 rather than face extradition to the United States, where he was wanted on charges of smuggling cocaine. At his sentencing hearing, Gerald Mattrick's own lawyer admitted that his client controlled the port of Montreal and would demand a cut of anything illegal coming in. During his time in prison, Matticks became a friend of Danny Wolfe, the imprisoned leader of the Indian Posse gang. As Matticks was illiterate while Wolfe was literate, the latter wrote and read letters for the former. Wolfe in a letter to his brother Richard wrote "Running the fucking shit yet he couldn't read or write". Matticks served as a mentor for Wolfe, recounting his youth in a working-class Montreal neighborhood and recalled how the West End Gang fought off the attempts by the Mafia to take over the port of Montreal. In Montreal, Matticks is widely considered to be a folk hero, seen as the champion of the working class, and his conviction led to a campaign to have him released early. Books . References 1940 births Living people Canadian gangsters of Irish descent Canadian crime bosses 20th-century Canadian criminals Canadian male criminals Criminals from Montreal Organized crime in Montreal Anglophone Quebec people Quebec people of Irish descent Canadian drug traffickers Canadian people convicted of drug offences Canadian prisoners and detainees Prisoners and detainees of Canada
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Matias Maccelli (born October 14, 2000) is a Finnish professional ice hockey left wing who currently plays for the Arizona Coyotes of the National Hockey League (NHL). Maccelli was drafted in the fourth round, 98th overall, by the Coyotes in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft. Early life Maccelli was born to an American-born mother and Finnish father in Turku, Finland. His mother had moved to Finland when she was seven years old. Maccelli is of Italian descent through his maternal great-grandfather who was from Italy. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs International Awards and honours References External links 2000 births Living people Arizona Coyotes draft picks Dubuque Fighting Saints players Finnish ice hockey players Finnish people of American descent Finnish people of Italian descent Ice hockey left wingers Ilves players Sportspeople from Turku Tucson Roadrunners players Sportspeople of Italian descent
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Islamic Summit of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (; ) is one of the five highest decision-making bodies of the OIC others four being OIC Council of Foreign Ministers, Standing Committees, Executive Committee, and the International Islamic Court of Justice. Islamic summit is a principle organ of the OIC focused on formulation, development, and implementation of decisions made by 57 member states. Summit is attending by the concerned head of states such prime ministers, presidents, emirs and other equivalent heads. Summit is held once after every three years incorporated with achieving goals under the framework of OIC'S charter. They formulate policies and adopt resolution at the end of summit. Likewise the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers sessions, an Islamic summit is alternatively hosted by the concerned governments on geographical groups such as Arab, Asia and Africa. As of 2022, a total number of 14 Islamic Summits and 7 Extraordinary Summits have been hosted in various countries across the three continents. Voting Likewise the United Nations General Assembly, each Islamic summit participant table their resolution on a specific matter which is decidedly adopted or declined by the member states under the voting system. Summits are literally considered declaration based on the common feeling of participants. secretary general of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation plays a significant role in declaration implementation. Role of Turkey Turkey represents the OIC as a host and permanent member and has hosted one Islamic summit and two extraordinary summits, including 13th Islamic summit between 14 and 15 April 2016 titled Unity and Solidarity for Justice concerning the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. It has also hosted 6th on 13 December 2017 and 7th extraordinary summit on 18 May 2018 regarding the Israeli role in Palestine. List of summits Islamic summit is based on three principles; Final Communique, Resolution, and Declaration. The first summit was attended by the nations in September 1969 in Rabat, Morocco, while the last and the 14th summit was held on 31 May 2019 in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. As of January 2022, Saudi Arabia and Morocco are the only countries with the maximum number of summits hosted. References Organisation of Islamic Cooperation Intergovernmental organizations Organizations established in 1968
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SS Peter H. Burnett was an American Liberty ship built in 1942 for service in World War II. She was later acquired by the United States Navy and renamed USS P.H. Burnett (IX-104). Her namesake was Peter Hardeman Burnett, an American Governor from 1849 to 1851. Description The ship was long overall ( between perpendiculars, waterline), with a beam of . She had a depth of and a draught of . She was assessed at , , . She was powered by a triple expansion steam engine, which had cylinders of , and diameter by stroke. The engine was built by the Worthington Pump & Machinery Corporation, Harrison, New Jersey. It drove a single screw propeller, which could propel the ship at . Construction and career This particular ship was built by California Shipbuilding Corporation in Los Angeles. She was laid down on 29 June 1942 and launched on 10 August 1942, later delivered on 29 August 1942. The United States War Shipping Administration gave the operations of the ship to American President Lines. On 22 January 1943, Peter H. Burnett was on her voyage carrying 18,154 bales of wool from Newcastle to San Francisco. At 21:55, she was traveling at 11 knots when a torpedo, fired by Japanese submarine I-21, exploded on the ship's starboard side, at the no.5 hatch. 5 lifeboats were launched and stayed alongside the damaged ship for the night. But the no.3 lifeboat drifted 90 miles southeast to be rescued by USS Zane. HMAS Mildura then towed the damaged ship to Sydney for repairs. One armed guard onboard the ship was seriously injured and later died from his injuries. Peter H. Burnett carried cargo in the Pacific until 15 June 1943 when she was acquired by the Navy from the Maritime Commission under a bareboat charter. Renamed USS P. H. Burnett and designated as an unclassified vessel, IX-104, on 18 June, she was accepted by Commander Service Force, Seventh Fleet, at 8:00 a.m. on 2 July 1943 at Sydney, Australia, and placed in service as a freighter on 30 August 1943, Lt. D. Ruos, officer-in-charge. As a dry cargo provisions ship, P. H. Burnett served at staging areas in the Pacific during the remainder of the war. With a cargo capacity in excess of 130,000 cubic feet, she hauled and discharged thousands of tons of supplies, joining Service Squadron 8 on 1 February 1944 and continuing her vital logistical operations as the westward advance of the Allies progressed. Following the Japanese surrender in 1945, P. H. Burnett remained in the Pacific theater until ordered to return to the United States early in 1946. On 20 April 1945, she left Hollandia for Manila with Convoy GI 22. Under tow, she proceeded from the Western Pacific, via Midway, to Seattle, Washington, where she arrived that summer. Placed out of service on 7 August 1946, P. H. Burnett was transferred to the Reserve Fleet Division of the War Shipping Administration the following day (8 August 1946) at Olympia, Washington, at 3:00 p.m. Stricken from the Naval Register on 8 October 1946, P. H. Burnett remained in custody of the Maritime Administration (formerly Maritime Commission) until purchased by the National Metal & Steel Corp., on 20 October 1958. Removed from the Reserve Fleet at 1000 hours on 17 November 1958, she was broken up for scrap subsequently. Awards Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal World War II Victory Medal References Liberty ships Ships built in Los Angeles 1942 ships Maritime incidents in 1943
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The Chekanovsky Ridge (; ) is a range of mountains in the Bulunsky District, Yakutia, Russian Federation. The area of the range is uninhabited. The range was named after explorer of Siberia Alexander Chekanovsky (1833–1876). History Rising in a remote and unexplored area, the range was formerly unknown. In 1875, during his third Siberian expedition, Alexander Chekanovsky intended to "go along the banks of the Lena to the mouth and, if possible, then go to the mouth of the Olenyok from the Laptev Sea." He hoped to have time to conduct geological exploration of the banks of the Lena River before the onset of winter, but a short summer frustrated his plans. From a barge Chekanovsky navigated the Lena River for a distance of about from Yakutsk to the mouth to the Eyekit river, its last major left tributary. He explored inland from the deep and wide lower course of the Eyekit, and then along the rocky and mountainous watershed area lying between the Lena and the Olenyok, descending along the Kelimyar river to the Olenyok. In this way he discovered a roughly long ridge. From the Kelimyar he traced the course of the Olenyok to its mouth. By the 26 August Chekanovsky saw the ocean from the top of Mount Karanchat. By the 18 September the expedition was already in Bulun, having safely travelled along the frozen Lena. Chekanovsky went across the mountains and tundra terrain by reindeer reaching Irkutsk on 20 December 1875. The mountain chain that Chekanovsky had discovered was later named Chekanovsky Ridge at the suggestion of Russian Arctic explorer Edward Toll. Geography The Chekanovsky Ridge is located about north of the Arctic circle, It rises by the northern end of the Lena, west of the last section of its course and southwest of its delta. The Laptev Sea lies to the north beyond the delta and the Kharaulakh Range stretches along the facing bank of the Lena. The Olenyok flows to the west and the Kystyk Plateau (Плато Кыстык) rises in the southwest. Elevations range between and . The highest point of the range is an unnamed peak reaching located near the northern end. The slopes look barren and are covered mainly with lichen bush tundra. Hydrography From the eastern slopes of the Chekanovsky Ridge originate small tributaries of the Lena, the largest of which is the Ulakhan-Yuryakh. The Eyekit river cuts eastwards across the southern part. The Kelimyar, one of the right tributaries of the Olenyok, has its sources in the western flank of the ridge. See also List of mountains and hills of Russia References External links Wild reindeer natural reserve ALROSA-Rangifer Chekanovsky created in Yakutia Late Quaternary history of the accumulation plain north of the Chekanovsky Ridge (Lena Delta, Russia) - a multidisciplinary approach Mountain ranges of the Sakha Republic Central Siberian Plateau
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Slash/Back is an upcoming Canadian Inuit science fiction film directed by Nyla Innuksuk in her feature debut from a screenplay by Innuksuk and Ryan Cavan. It is set to premiere at the 2022 South by Southwest Festival in Texas. Cast Tasiana Shirley as Maika Alexis Wolfe as Jesse Nalajoss Ellsworth as Uki Chelsea Prusky as Leena Frankie Vincent-Wolfe Production Principal photography took place on location on Baffin Island in summer 2019. It became the first production to film in the Inuit hamlet of Pangnirtung. Release The concept for Slash/Back was first presented at the 2018 Frontières Co-Pro Market in Montréal, followed by the 2019 Frontières Finance and Packaging Forum in Helsinki and then the Marché du Film at the Cannes Film Festival, after which point Sierra/Affinity boarded the project as an international distributor. A first look still was revealed in March 2021. References External links Upcoming films Alien invasions in films Canadian science fiction adventure films Films about Inuit in Canada Films set in Nunavut Films shot in Nunavut 2022 films
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Carl Oscar Malm, also known as C. O. Malm and Carl Oskar Malm (12 February 1826 – 8 June 1863) was Finland's first teacher of the deaf, founder of the first school for the deaf in the country, and the father of Finnish Sign Language. Life Upbringing and education Malm was born on 12 January 1826 in Eura, Finland, to a well-off and educated family. His parents were Anders Gustaf Malm, a military officer and city treasurer, and Katarina Juliana Tandefelt. Malm was deaf either from birth or a very young age. In 1834, his parents sent him at eight years of age to , ('the Institute for the deaf-mute and blind', 'the Manilla School') in Stockholm. There he learned Swedish Sign Language and was the private student of teacher Johan Gerhard Holtz. Two years later, Malm returned home having studied a number of subjects, learning written Swedish to an "unusually" high level, and becoming the school's top student. He would later learn to read Finnish, German, and French. Malm found an early passion for education. He was appointed assistant teacher at the school in 1843, gaining his first experience as an educator. First schools for the deaf In 1845, Malm went to Porvoo. He began tutoring two deaf boys in Koivisto, David Fredrik Hirn and Sten Sirén in early 1846. Later that year, with the assistance and support of role model , son of the founder of the Manilla School, Malm opened a private school for the deaf, with his students being the first two students. The school was opened in his father's house at Kankurinkuja 5 and was the first school for the deaf in Finland. Malm knew there must be more potential deaf students, so he placed an advertisement for the school in the newspaper and later requested the Diocese of Porvoo to determine the number of deaf people in the country: 1,466, with 602 under the age of 20. In contrast to the oralism commonly used in deaf education at the time, his school focused primarily on sign language and written Swedish (see manualism). Lessons were initially taught in what would be the beginnings of Finnish Sign Language. The school, being private, charged parents tuition. This was an obstacle for poor families, particularly since the Manilla School no longer accepted students from Finland. Malm fought for more support and his efforts were noted by Johan Vilhelm Snellman in the Swedish-language newspaper Saima. The school eventually attracted influential patrons, including priest and poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg and bishop and pioneering educator of the deaf Carl Henrik Alopaeus, who initiated a fundraising campaign for its benefit. After ten years of operation, the school received state support through a personal grant to Malm from the emperor. In 1859, it was taken over by the state. In 1858, the state planned to establish a school for the deaf in Turku, a more convenient location and home to more deaf people. Malm, Alopaeus, and some students followed; the school opened in 1860 with 22 students. Malm worked there as a teacher; both his brother Gustaf Emil Malm and Alopaeus applied for the role of headmaster and Alopaeus was chosen. As a priest, he could provide religious education at the school as well. Alopaeus also had "perfect speech and hearing", a requirement which disqualified and marginalized Malm and which he struggled with. The Turku school for the deaf was noted in an 1868 report by the United States Secretary of the Interior, who remarked on the focus on instruction in sign language and written text, unusual at the time. (These methods were to remain until the 1892 decree mandating oralism and lip reading.) It was also noted that education for the deaf existed in Finland for some time before such education was available in Washington, D.C. The deaf school in Porvoo, the only one in Swedish-speaking Finland, was eventually closed in 1993 due to a lack of students. Influence His pioneering work in deaf education helped lead to the founding of a Swedish-language school for the deaf in Jakobstad by Henrik and Anna Heikel in 1861 and a Finnish-language school in Kuopio in 1862. As these separate-language schools were founded, the sign languages diverged into Finnish Sign Language and Finland-Swedish Sign Language. Philanthropy Malm and his brother Gustaf Emil's philanthropic mindset led them to found a people's library in Turku. Malm had an interest in photography and planned to open a photo studio in the 1860s, with which he would fund a number of social programs, including a bath house, sewing classes for poor women, and grants for Svenska fruntimmersskolan i Åbo, a girl's school. Death Malm died in Turku on 8 June 1863, at 37 years of age, due to pneumonia. His gravestone features a relief by deaf artist Karl Albert Tallroth. A bust (made by ) was erected in 1926 on the site where the school for the deaf had operated in Porvoo. See also Pär Aron Borg, pioneer of deaf education in Sweden and founder of the Manilla School History of institutions for deaf education References 1826 births 1863 deaths Educators of the deaf People from Eura Finnish educators Swedish-speaking Finns Deaf culture in Finland
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Sandi Ćoralić (born 12 February 1998) is a Slovenian professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Pohronie of Slovak Super Liga. Career Ćoralić made his professional Slovenian PrvaLiga debut for Rudar Velenje on 26 August 2017 against Gorica. He came on to the pitch in the 43rd minute to replace Anže Pišek. References External links Sandi Ćoralić at NZS 1998 births Living people Slovenian footballers Association football fullbacks Slovenia youth international footballers NK Olimpija Ljubljana (2005) players NK Rudar Velenje players NK Brda players NK Fužinar players FK Pohronie players Slovenian PrvaLiga players Slovenian Second League players Slovak Super Liga players Slovenian expatriate footballers Slovenian expatriate sportspeople in Slovakia Expatriate footballers in Slovakia
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Mohammad Anwar Latif Khan is a Bangladesh Army Colonel and the Sector Commander of Border Guards Bangladesh in Rajshahi. He is the former Additional Director General (Operations) at the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) an elite multi-service unit of the Bangladesh Police and oversaw crackdowns on Islamist militants. He has been sanctioned by the United States for his activities in RAB. He had previously commanded RAB-5, RAB-7, and RAB-11. Early life Khan was born on 1 December 1971 in Bogra District, Rajshahi Division, Bangladesh. Career Khan received his commission in Bangladesh Army on 9 June 1992 as part of the 26th Bangladesh Military Academy long course. He had served in various units of East Bengal Regiment and the President Guard Regiment. He also served in the 24th Infantry Division. He had served in United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone and United Nations Mission in Sudan. Khan served as the Commanding Officer (CO) of Rapid Action Battalion-5 based in Chittagong in 2012. Khan served as the Commanding Officer (CO) of Rapid Action Battalion-5 in Rajshahi in 2013–2014. He led raids against Islami Chhatra Shibir in 2013 and recovered weapons from their dorms. On 8 March 2015, Khan was appointed the Commanding Officer (CO) of Rapid Action Battalion-11 based in Narayanganj. He replaced Lieutenant Colonel Tareque Sayeed Mohammad who was dimissed from service for his role in the Seven Murders of the Narayanganj, a case of extrajudicial killing in which Tareque would later be convicted. He worked on improving the image of the force in Narayanganj which had been damaged by the seven extrajudicial killings. He oversaw the investigation into the death of Tanwir Muhammad Taqi. Khan was appointed Additional Director General (Operations) at the Rapid Action Battalion on 28 April 2016. He was deputation from Bangladesh Army. He replaced Ziaul Ahsan who had been promoted to Brigadier General and made the Director of the National Security Intelligence. He briefed the media following a RAB operation on 22 March 2017 in Dhaka that resulted in the arrest of five members of the militant Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh. In November 2017, he led operations when three alleged militants were killed in a shootout with RAB ahead of a visit by Pope Francis to Bangladesh. In 2019, he was awarded the Bangladesh Police Medal. Khan left his post of Additional Director General (Operations) at the Rapid Action Battalion on 17 September 2018 and was succeeded by Colonel Mohammad Jahangir Alam. U.S. sanctions On 10 December 2021, the U.S. Department of the Treasury placed sanctions on Alam and added him to its Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list for engaging in serious human rights abuses relating to his tenure at RAB, including the Killing of Ekramul Haque. References Living people 1971 births People from Bogra District Bangladesh Army colonels Rapid Action Battalion officers Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List
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Lawrence Canfield Turville (June 4, 1949 – October 10, 2020) was an American professional tennis player. Turville, raised in St. Petersburg, Florida, was the son of Edward Turville, a non playing captain of the U.S. Davis Cup team during the early 1970s. The top ranked 18s player in Florida, Turville played collegiate tennis for Georgia Tech and earned All-American honors in 1970, reaching the fourth round of the NCAA championships. In 1971 he set up a series of satellite tournaments in Florida with his friend Armistead Neely, which were known as the World Association of Tennis Champions (WATCH) Circuit. His professional career included doubles main draw appearances at the French Open and Wimbledon. In 1979 he began an 18-year long reign as the Rice University men's head coach. References External links 1949 births 2020 deaths American male tennis players Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's tennis players Rice Owls men's tennis coaches American tennis coaches Tennis people from Florida Sportspeople from St. Petersburg, Florida
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BMS-F is a chemical from the aminoalkylindole family invented by Bristol-Myers Squibb around 1999, that acts as a potent and selective agonist for the cannabinoid receptor CB2, with a Ki of 8 nM at CB2 and 500x selectivity over the related CB1 receptor. It has antiinflammatory effects and inhibits release of TNF-α. See also A-796,260 APP-FUBINACA JWH-200 MDMB-FUBINACA MN-25 Pravadoline S-777,469 WIN 55,212-2 References Aminoalkylindoles Designer drugs
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Kaetaeta Watson is a master weaver from Kiribati. Her art work and collaborations advocate for and support the maintenance and transmission of Kiribati culture and heritage. Biography Watson was born on the island of Tabiteuea in Kiribati in Eita village. In 1973 she moved to New Zealand. Watson is based in the Coromandel Peninsula. Watson often collaborates with Louisa Humphry to create artworks. In 2021 the national museum of New Zealand Te Papa acquired into their collection a piece called Otintaai, by Watson and Louisa Humphry made from harakeke (flax), nets, and copper. At the ceremony Denise Ratieta, president of Ribanaia Women’s Club (Wellington branch) said: "Their work shows a lot of authentic artistic skill that is both inspirational and very encouraging to us I-Kiribati women." Watson is part of a revival of weaving techniques. Part of this research is to see examples in museums, seek out traditional knowledge, and recreate the techniques applying masterful weaving skills. An example of this is a traditional suit of armour made by Watson, Chris Charteris, Lizzy Leckie and Tungaru: The Kiribati Project team. Through this research and weaving a community is strengthened, Watson says: "I think it's part of me as a Kiribati person to be ready to share, otherwise these skills won’t survive." In 2019 Watson was awarded Pacific Heritage Artist Award at the annual Arts Pasifika Awards (Creative New Zealand) along with Louisa Humphrey. Exhibitions 2018 – Asia Pacific Triennial in Brisbane. Kiribati body armour – created by Chris Charteris, Lizzy Leckie, Kaetaeta Watson and Tungaru: The Kiribati Project team. 2019 – Names held in our mouths, Te Uru, Waitakere Contemporary Gallery. Curated by Ioana Gordon-Smith. Group exhibition with Sosefina Andy, Nikau Hindin, Louisa Humphry, Wikuki Kingi, Pacifica Mamas, Kaetaeta Watson 2020 – Ā Mua: New Lineages of Making, craft exhibition at The Dowse Art Museum featuring 20 makers. Presentation of Otintaai, by Kaetaeta Watson and Louisa Humphry References Weavers I-Kiribati people Kiribati culture Year of birth missing (living people) Living people
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Peter Gorschlüter (b. 30 September 1974 in Mainz) is a German art historian and curator. He was deputy director of the Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt am Main from 2010 to 2018 and has been director of the Museum Folkwang in Essen since July 1, 2018. In 2021 Gorschlüter was awarded an honorary professorship for "Art and the Public" at the Folkwang University of the Arts. Origin, education and studies Peter Gorschlüter was born as the son of Hans-Peter Gorschlüter (1939-1992), head of the department of culture of the city of Koblenz, and Vittoria Spani Molella (* 1941), an Italian scholar of German studies. He is a German and Italian citizen. From 1994 to 1998 he studied theater, film and television studies at the University of Cologne, as well as German studies and philosophy. This was followed by studies in art history and media theory at the Hochschule für Gestaltung in Karlsruhe from 1998 to 2003. During his studies, he was a staff member of the Bonn Biennale '96 and '98 and worked as an assistant director. In Cologne, Gorschlüter curated exhibitions of works by young artists in private spaces. Professional career From 1999 to 2001 Gorschlüter worked as an employee of the Karlsruhe gallery Meyer Riegger. In 2001 and 2002, he curated his own exhibition space there, "c/o Peter Gorschlüter," and showed exhibitions by Armin Boehm, Rosa Barba, and Zilla Leutenegger (30 Minuten vor Abfahrt), among others, as well as by Benita Liebel, Yasmin Müller, and Ulf Neumann and by Lee Taylor. From 2002 to 2007 Peter Gorschlüter worked as curator and assistant director at the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf under Ulrike Groos. He curated exhibitions on art and music, e.g. in 2002 for the reopening of the Kunsthalle the exhibition "Back to Concrete - The Beginnings of Punk and New Wave". In 2007, he conceived the festival "düsseldorf sounds." In the same year, together with Groos, he curated a project with art in public space in Wuppertal entitled "SICHT WEISEN - Kunst auf der Talachse" [Ways of Viewing - Art on the Valley Axis]. Furthermore, he supervised solo exhibitions and publications on Blinky Palermo and Martin Honert at the Kunsthalle. In 2005, Gorschlüter co-founded Passenger Books, a small publishing house that published books by artists David Shrigley, Simon Lewis, and Wilhelm Hein, among others. On January 1, 2008, Gorschlüter became chief curator of Tate Liverpool, heading the Exhibitions and Displays Department. He worked there with director Christoph Grunenberg primarily on the re-presentation of the collection. Within this framework, a collaboration developed with artist Michael Craig-Martin, film director Mike Figgis, and theater maker and author Tim Etchells. As head of exhibitions at Tate Liverpool, he was involved in major presentations on Gustav Klimt and Pablo Picasso, among others, and curated with Tanya Barson the exhibition "Afro Modern: Journeys through the Black Atlantic." In 2010 he was co-curator of the Liverpool Biennial. Museum director in Frankfurt am Main and Essen, teaching positions On July 1, 2010, Gorschlüter became curator and deputy director at the MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt am Main under Susanne Gaensheimer - succeeding Andreas Bee. From September 1 to December 31, 2017, he served as the museum's acting director. In 2012, Gorschlüter also co-founded the Triennale Ray Fotografieprojekte Frankfurt/RheinMain and co-curated its follow-up editions in 2015 and 2018. From 2010 to 2018, Gorschlüter held a lectureship at the Institute of Art History in the field of study Curatorial Studies Theory-History-Criticism at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main / Städelschule Frankfurt am Main. From 2015 to 2018, he held another lectureship on Vergangenheitsdiskurs und Gegenwartskunst at the Department of Philosophy and Humanities at the University of Frankfurt am Main. Gorschlüter has been chairman of the board of trustees of the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation since 2015 and spokesperson for the RuhrKunstMuseen together with Regina Selter since 2020. Since July 1, 2018, Peter Gorschlüter has succeeded Tobia Bezzola as director of the Museum Folkwang Essen. Under his leadership, the Museum Folkwang was named "Museum of the Year" in 2019 by the international art critics association AICA - German section. Private Peter Gorschlüter is married to the art historian and filmmaker Maria Anna Tappeiner and is the father of two children. Publications by Peter Gorschlüter (selection) “Martin Kippenbergers The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’”, in: Museum Folkwang in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Estate of Martin Kippenberger (Ed.), Martin Kippenberger. The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s ‘Amerika’, exhibition catalogue Museum Folkwang, Köln 2021. with Victoria Noorthoorn et al. (Ed.), A Tale of Two Worlds. Experimentelle Kunst Lateinamerikas der 1940er- bis 80-er Jahre im Dialog mit der Sammlung des MMK, exhibition catalogue MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst und Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires, Bielefeld 2017. „Propose to Propose“, in: Stefanie Heraeus (Ed.), Hélio Oiticica. Curating the Penetráveis, Bielefeld 2016. „Through the Looking-Glass, and What I Found There. Places and Non-Places in Works by Fiona Tan“, in: Peter Gorschlüter et al. (Ed.), Fiona Tan. Geography of Time, exhibition catalogue, MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst et al., London 2015. with Susanne Gaensheimer (Ed.), Rineke Dijkstra. The Krazy House, Ausst.-Kat. MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst, Amsterdam 2013. „Making History“, in: RAY Fotografieprojekte Frankfurt/RheinMain (Ed.), Making History, Ostfildern 2012. „Introduction“, in: Lewis Biggs et al. (Hg.), Liverpool Biennial 2010. The Guide, exhibition catalogue Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool 2010. with Tanya Barson (Ed.), Afro Modern. Journeys Through The Black Atlantic, exhibition catalogue Tate Liverpool, London 2010. „Whose space is it anyway? Working on the Fifth Floor“, in: Peter Gorschlüter (Ed.), The Fifth Floor. Ideas Taking Space, exhibition catalogue, Tate Liverpool, Liverpool 2009. with Ulrike Groos, Thomas W. Rieger, Allen Ruppersberg (Ed.), Allen Ruppersberg. One of Many – Origins and Variants, exhibition catalogue, Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, Köln 2006. „Welcome Dilemma!“, in: Stefan Bidner, Thomas Feuerstein (Ed.), Plus ultra. Jenseits der Moderne?, exhibition catalogue, Kunstraum Innsbruck, Frankfurt am Main 2005. „The Gentle Art Of Making Enemies“, in: Peter Gorschlüter (Ed.), Armin Boehm. Paintball, exhibition catalogue, Meyer Riegger Galerie, Karlsruhe 2001. „Duty Free Jugoslavija“, in: Berliner Zeitung, Nr. 268, 16. November 1999. „Belgrad – Stadt der Geschichten“, in: SchauspielhausMagazin, Nr. 21, Deutsches Schauspielhaus, Hamburg 1998. Weblinks Prof. Peter Gorschlüter on Folkwang University of the Arts' website References 1974 births People from Mainz German art historians Living people Directors of museums in Germany Curators Museum directors Art historians People associated with the Tate galleries
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Ran Banda Ratnamalala (13 December 1912 - 1974) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Kalawewa representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He was elected to parliament from Kalawewa in the March 1960 general election and was re-elected in the July 1960 general election, the 1965 general election and the 1970 general election. On his death, A. M. S. Adikari succeeded him having been elected in a by-election. References 1912 births 1974 deaths Sri Lankan politicians Members of the 4th Parliament of Ceylon Members of the 5th Parliament of Ceylon Members of the 6th Parliament of Ceylon Members of the 7th Parliament of Ceylon Sri Lanka Freedom Party politicians
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Anri Kawamura (born 15 October 2004) is a Japanese freestyle skier specializing in moguls. She started competing internationally in December 2019. Kawamura won three World Cup races in the 2022-22 season and qualified for the 2022 Winter Olympics. Kawamura was leading the moguls standings in the 2021–22 season at the start of the Olympics, after 7 of 8 races. As of mid-January 2022, at the age of 17, she achieved 10 podium finishes in 23 career starts. At the 2022 Olympics, she qualified for Final C (the medal round), but only finished fifth. Olympics results References External links Living people Japanese freestyle skiers Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Japan 2004 births
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Wandal is a village in the southern state of Karnataka, India. It is located in Sindagi Taluk of Bijapur. Demographics 2011 References Villages in Bijapur district, Karnataka
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Adikari Mudiyanselage Somapala Adikari (24 November 1935 - 14 December 2015) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the Minister of Posts and Telecommunications, Minister of Tourism and the member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Kalawewa representing the United National Party. Adikari was elected to parliament from Kalawewa in a by election in 1974 following the death of R. B. Ratnamalala. He was re-elected 1977 general election. References 1935 births 2015 deaths Sri Lankan politicians Government ministers of Sri Lanka Members of the 7th Parliament of Ceylon Members of the 8th Parliament of Sri Lanka United National Party politicians
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The 2018 Takhti Cup, were held in the Greco-Romane style in Mahshahr 25–26 January 2018; the men's Freestyle style in Tabriz 8–9 February 2018 in Iran. This tournament was held as 38th. It was held as the first of the ranking series of United World Wrestling, it is only men's Greco-Roman ranking. Medal table Team ranking Medal overview Freestyle Greco-Roman Participating nations 287 competitors from 16 nations participated. (11) (21) (4) (8) (3) (24) (79) (5) (25) (21) (4) (6) (11) (9) (42) (18) Ranking Series Ranking Series Calendar 2018: 1st Ranking Series: 25–26 January, Iran, Mahshahr ⇒ 2018 Takhti Cup (GR) 2nd Ranking Series: 26–28 January, Russia, Krasnoyarsk ⇒ Golden Grand Prix Ivan Yarygin 2018 (FS) 3rd Ranking Series: 15-23 February, Cuba, La Havana ⇒ 2018 Granma y Cerro Pelado (FS,WW,GR) 4th Ranking Series: 16-18 February, Sweden, Klippan ⇒ Klippan Lady Open (2018) (WW) 5th Ranking Series: 9-10 June, Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar ⇒ 2018 Mongolia Open (FS,WW) 6th Ranking Series: 22-23 June, China, Taiyuan ⇒ 2018 China Open (WW) 7th Ranking Series: 23-24 June, Hungary, Győr ⇒ 2018 Hungarian Grand Prix (GR) 8th Ranking Series: 3-5 July, Georgia, Tbilisi ⇒ 2018 Tbilisi Grand Prix of V. Balavadze and G. Kartozia (FS,GR) 9th Ranking Series: 20-22 July, Turkey, Istanbul ⇒ 2018 Vehbi Emre & Hamit Kaplan Tournament (GR) 10th Ranking Series: 27-20 July, Turkey, Istanbul ⇒ 2018 Yasar Dogu Tournament (FS,WW) 11th Ranking Series: 7-9 September, Poland, Warsaw ⇒ Ziolkowski, Pytlasinski, Poland Open (FS,WW,GR) 12th Ranking Series: 14-16 September, Belarus, Minsk ⇒ Medved (Test Event Minsk 2019) References Takhti Cup Takhti Cup February 2018 sports events in Iran Sports competitions in Mahshahr Sports competitions in Tabriz Wrestling in Iran International wrestling competitions hosted by Iran
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Cool Wakushima (born 10 May 2002) is a New Zealand snowboarder, specialising in slopestyle and big air competitions. She is representing New Zealand in the slopestyle and big air events at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China. BiogrAphy Born in Tokyo, Japan, Wakushima moved to New Zealand with her family when she was nine years old, settling in Queenstown, where she was educated at Wakatipu High School. She is coached by Mitch Brown, the high-performance snowboard coach for Snow Sports NZ. In 2021, Wakushima began studying psychology at Massey University. Wakushima was first named to represent New Zealand in 2020, and began competing on the FIS Snowboard World Cup circuit in 2021. In her first season, her best results in slopestyle and big air were seventh and seventeenth, respectively, and she ended the season ranked 19th in slopestyle and 17th in big air. In the 2021–2022 season, she has two top-ten finishes in slopestyle, including a fifth placing at Laax, and a best finish of 18th in big air. At the 2021 FIS Snowboard World Championships in Aspen, Wakushima placed eighth in slopestyle and 13th in big air. ReferEnces 2002 births Living people Sportspeople from Tokyo Japanese emigrants to New Zealand People educated at Wakatipu High School Olympic snowboarders of New Zealand Massey University alumni Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics
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Roohani Sisters - Dr. Jagriti Luthra Prasanna and Dr. Neeta Pandey Negi are a Sufi singing duo from New Delhi, India. They also write and compose Sufi Qalams. They started performing in 2009 together in India and outside and their first international performance was in 2017 at the Dhaka International Folk Fest. They sing mainly Sufiyana Qalams, Qawwali, Kafi, Punjabi Folk and Ghazals, in traditional style merging it with the Jugalbandi style of Indian classical and semi-classical music. They sing in various languages such as Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi, and Persian. Their YouTube hit song is "Mennu ishq Samajh na Aave". Early life Dr. Jagriti and Dr. Neeta are born and raised in Delhi, India. Dr. Jagriti has origins from Punjab and Dr. Neeta is from Uttarakhand. Dr. Jagriti has taken her basic Raagdari Taleem under Mrs. Ketaki Banerjee from Kirana Gharana. She learnt Indian classical music from Shri. Ritesh Mishra and his father Padma Bhushan Pt.Rajan and Sajan Mishra of the Banaras Gharana. She is also a sincere disciple of Ustaad Sakhawat Hussain, Grandson of Padma Bhushan Ustaad Mushtaq Hussain Khan of Rampur-Sahaswan gharana from whom she learnt the technicalities of Sufi and Ghazal Gayaki. Dr. Neeta, inspired by her grandfather Shri Shiv Charan Pandey, started learning Indian classical music at an early age. She learnt Indian Classical Music from Lt. Shri Vipin Mudgaliya and Smt.Indu Mudgal of Gandharva Mahavidyalaya, New Delhi and Mrs.Ketaki Banerjee from Kirana Gharana. She learnt, Ghazal and semi-classical from Smt.Charanjeet Soni and Sufiyana Gayaki under the able guidance of her guru Lt. Ustad Iqbal Ahmad Khan, Khalifa of Dilli Gharana. Dr. Neeta appeared in various Indian TV reality shows like Voice of India, Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Challenge 2005 and Indian Idol. Meanwhile, both did their PhD in Music from Delhi University and were toppers in their respective institution. Career They performed at Jahan-e-Khusrau to commemorate the death anniversary of the saint Amir Khusrau in Delhi. In 2021, they had performed at Dada Saheb Phalke International Film Festival in Mumbai. In 2021, they performed in 'Peer Prayi Jaane Na', a cultural program to commemorate the death anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, at the Lokrang Festival in Bhopal. In 2020, they performed at Wajid Ali Shah Festival in Lucknow, UP. In 2019, they performed at Jahan-e-Khusrau, Jaipur Literature Festival, Dilli Durbaar, Sahitya Aajtak and Jashn-e-Adab. In 2019, they performed at Swarganga Music Festival in collabration with Pracheen Kala Kendra, Chandigarh. They released their song “Bedardan” on 12 March 2019 under the T-Series label. Their music video ”Mennu Ishq Samajh Na Aave” was composed by Dj Sheizwood and released by Apeksha Films & Music on YouTube. In 2019, they performed Amrit Rasvaadan (Sufi Night) organized by JMV Global Foundation in association with the Club Patio. In 2018, they performed in New Year Celebration at CM Arvind Kejriwal’s Residence. They came live during a Thalassemia awareness initiative curated by SUBURB in association with Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India, Private Limited. In 2017, they performed at Dhaka International Folk Fest, 2017 in Bangladesh. They also have performed at ICCR, SPIC MACAY and Sangeet Natak Akademi’s music festivals. Awards and Recognitions Narishakti Puruskar (2019) awarded by Brijbhoomi foundation for being amongst 51 most influential women in India. REX Karmaveer Global Fellowship & Karmaveer Chakra Award (2019) given by Rex Foundation Personal life In 2012, Dr. Jagriti Luthra Prasanna got married to Sh. Rajesh Prasanna well-known flute artist performing in various national and international arenas. He is the son of renowned Indian classical flautist and shehnai (Indian oboe) player Pt. Rajendra Prasanna from Benares Gharana. In 2012, Dr. Neeta Pandey Negi got married to Sh. Rajneesh Negi, founder of PMT India Learning and shifted to Dehradun. References External links Official Website Sufi artists Indian Sufis Sufi music Qawwali‎ Performers of Sufi music Indian women folk singers Indian folk singers Indian musical duos Indian qawwali singers Sa Re Ga Ma Pa participants Singers from Delhi Women musicians from Delhi
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Sir Trevor Poulton Hughes, KCB (28 September 1925 – 8 September 2017) was a British engineer and civil servant. Born on 28 September 1925, he was in the Royal Engineers from 1945 to 1948 and then worked in engineering. In 1961, he entered HM Civil Service, working in the Ministry of Transport and, from 1962 in the Ministry of Housing and Local Government and its successor the Department of the Environment. He was successively the Department's Deputy Chief Engineer from 1970 to 1971, Director of Water Engineering from then to 1972 and the Director-General of Water Engineering from 1972 to 1974. He was promoted to Deputy Secretary in 1974, moving in 1977 to the Ministry of Transport. From 1980 to 1985, he was Permanent Secretary of the Welsh Office. For his service, he was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1974 Birthday Honours and was promoted to Knight Companion in the 1982 Birthday Honours. After leaving, he sat on the British Waterways Board and chaired several limited companies. He died on 8 September 2017. His brother was John Richard Poulton Hughes, DL (1920–2006), the county clerk and chief executive of Staffordshire County Council from 1978 to 1983. References 1925 births 2017 deaths British civil servants British engineers Knights Companion of the Order of the Bath
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Urban vitality is the quality of those spaces in cities that are capable of attracting heterogeneous people for different types of activities throughout varied time schedules. The areas of the city with high vitality are perceived as alive, lively or vibrant and they tend to attract people to carry out their activities, stroll or stay. However, the areas of low vitality repel people and can be perceived as unsafe. The urban vitality index is a measure of this quality and in recent years it has become a fundamental tool for planning urban policies, especially for the intervention of spaces with low vitality. In addition, it is used for proper management of spaces with high vitality, as the success of certain areas can lead to processes of gentrification and touristification that, paradoxically, end up reducing the vitality that made them popular. The concept of urban vitality is based on the contributions of Jane Jacobs, especially those of her most influential work, The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Jacobs criticized in the 1960s the modern and rationalist architecture defended by Robert Moses or Le Corbusier whose protagonist was the private car. She argued that these types of urban planning overlooked and oversimplified the complexity of human life in diverse communities. She opposed large-scale urban renewal programs that affected entire neighborhoods and built freeways through inner cities. Instead, she advocated for dense mixed-use development and walkable streets, with “eyes on the street” of passers-by helping to maintain public order. Currently, the concept of urban vitality is revaluing Mediterranean urbanism and its history, in which public space, pedestrianity and squares are of great importance as centers of interaction and social cohesion, in opposition to the Anglo-Saxon urbanism of large urban infrastructures, long distances and car-centric. Conditions for high urban vitality Urban vitality can be quantified thanks to the analysis of the elements that determine it. Among them are: Diversity of uses of the space that can attract different types of people for diverse activities and at various times, making the space constantly occupied, improving its security. Opportunities for personal contact with blocks, buildings and open spaces that are not too large, as they reduce the number of possible intersections and social interactions. Diversity of buildings with varied characteristics and ages, allowing people with different purchasing power to live in all areas of the city, avoiding the formation of ghettos. High population density, residential areas are essential to attract other types of activity. Accessibility for all people without depending on private transport, with pedestrian access being the most important, as it is the most democratic, sustainable and cheap, followed by access by bicycle and public transport. Distance to border elements, such as large buildings, ring roads, surface train tracks or large urban parks that discourage the use of the street. See also References Human ecology Human geography Sustainable transport Urban planning Urban sociology
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Sir Hywel Wynn Evans, KCB (30 May 1920 – 2 June 1988) was a British civil servant and university administrator. Born on 30 May 1920, he attended the University of Liverpool. He then served in the Royal Artillery and the Intelligence Corps during the Second World War, before entering HM Civil Service as an official in the Ministry of Labour. He was secretary to the National Economic Development Council, before transferring to the Welsh Office in 1968, where he served as Permanent Secretary from 1971 until 1980. His service was recognised by his appointed as a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1972 New Year Honours and his promotion to Knight Companion (KCB) in the 1976 Birthday Honours. After retiring, he served as chairman of the Welsh Arts Council and as a member of the court of the University of Wales. In 1986, he became both vice-president of the University College of Swansea and deputy chairman of the Prince of Wales Committee. He died on 2 June 1988. References 1920 births 1988 deaths British civil servants Alumni of the University of Liverpool Knights Companion of the Order of the Bath
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St Mary's Church is a Roman Catholic church in Morecambe, Lancashire, England. It is the first Catholic Church in Morecambe to be built after the Reformation. It is located on the corner of Lord Street and Matthias Street in the centre of the town. It was built in 1895 and designed by Pugin & Pugin in the Gothic Revival style. History Construction On 21 April 1895 the foundation stone of the church was laid by the Bishop of Liverpool Thomas Whiteside. The architects were Pugin & Pugin, an architectural firm that composed of Cuthbert Welby Pugin and Peter Paul Pugin, brothers of E. W. Pugin and sons of Augustus Pugin. They built the church in the Gothic Revival style with a capacity of 300 people. The construction was done by the contractor Charles Walker of Preston and the cost was £3,000. Developments In the 20th century, with the growing population in Morecambe, St Mary's Church was no longer large enough to accommodate the growing local Catholic congregation. So from St Mary's, new churches were built. These churches were St Patrick's Church on St John's Road in Heysham in the 1920s, the Good Shepherd Church, which moved into a former Wesleyan chapel in Torrisholme in 1962, and Holy Family Church in Westgate in 1979. Parish St Mary's Church, with St Patricks Church, the Good Shepherd Church and the Holy Family Church comprise the parish of St John Henry Newman in Morecambe. St Mary's Church has two Sunday Masses at 8:30am and 10:30am. St Patrick's Church has two Sunday Masses at 6:00pm on Saturday and at 6:30pm on Sunday in Polish. See also Diocese of Lancaster References External links Roman Catholic churches in Lancashire Buildings and structures in Morecambe Roman Catholic Diocese of Lancaster Gothic Revival church buildings in England Gothic Revival architecture in Lancashire Roman Catholic churches completed in 1895 1895 establishments in England 19th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in the United Kingdom
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Carex alba, called the small white sedge, white-flowered sedge or just white sedge (a name it shares with other members of its genus), is a species of sedge in the family Cyperaceae. It is typically found in temperate forests of Eurasia, from the Pyrenees to the Russian Far East. It is the main host plant for the woodland brown, Lopinga achine. References alba Flora of Spain Flora of France Flora of Central Europe Flora of Italy Flora of Yugoslavia Flora of Romania Flora of Ukraine Flora of the Caucasus Flora of North European Russia Flora of South European Russia Flora of East European Russia Flora of West Siberia Flora of Altai (region) Flora of Kazakhstan Flora of Kyrgyzstan Flora of Xinjiang Flora of Mongolia Flora of Khabarovsk Krai Plants described in 1771
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Sir George Wilfred Turner, KCB, KBE (22 January 1896 – 10 May 1974) was a British civil servant. Born on 22 January 1896, Turner attended Rotherham Grammar School before entering HM Civil Service as a boy clerk in the War Office in 1911; this was the lowest grade in the clerical class. He moved up to the second division in 1914; he served for a short time in the Home Office and Post Office, but was back in the War Office from the outbreak of the First World War until 1916, when he entered the army; he was twice wounded in action. After demobilisation in 1919, Turner returned to his old department. He was promoted to assistant principal in 1921 and principal in 1934. He was made civil assistant to the Director-General of Munitions Supply in 1936, which was spun out to form the Ministry of Supply in 1939 (on the outbreak of the Second World War); Turner was appointed principal assistant secretary in 1941 and second secretary the next year. He was then appointed Permanent Secretary of the War Office in 1949, serving until 1956. This period coincided with the Korean War, the Malayan Emergency and the withdrawal of troops from the Suez Canal Zone. He received several state honours in recognition of his service; in the 1944 New Year Honours, he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) and in the 1950 New Year Honours he was appointed a Knight Companion of the Order of the Bath (KCB). In retirement, Turner moved to the Cornwall (until that point he had lived in the same London house that he had occupied since the beginning of his career); he held various directorships in the private sector. He died on 10 May 1974. References 1896 births 1974 deaths British civil servants Knights Companion of the Order of the Bath Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
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Javed Iqbal is a 2022 Pakistani film, that is based on the life of the notorious Pakistani serial killer and sex offender, Javed Iqbal. The film is written and directed by Abu Aleeha and stars Yasir Hussain in the titular role.Ayesha Omar will be seen playing a police officer in this film. The film is produced by Javed Ahmed under K K films. The trailer of the film was released on 8 December 2021 with the film earlier scheduled to be released on 24 December 2021. However it was postponed until January 2022. The film was scheduled to release in the theatres on 28 January 2022 after a premiere in Karachi.. However was banned by the Punjab government and the Central Board of Film Censors before its release. Cast Ban The film was pulled out of theatres a day before its release, owing to the ban by the Punjab government and the Central Board of Film Censors. Pakistani celebrities such as Iqra Aziz, Ali Rehman Khan and Osman Khalid Butt came out in the support of the makers and protested against the ban. References External links 2022 films Pakistani films Pakistani action films Pakistani action thriller films
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Otto Borngräber (19 November 1874 – 19 October 1916) was a German writer and playwright. Life Borngräber was born in Stendal, Altmark, on 19 November 1874 to Wilhelm and Flora Borngräber. His father was a primary school teacher. After completing school in Stendal with the Abitur, he began studies of theology and philosophy at the University of Tübingen in 1896. He moved to the University of Halle in 1898, and on to the University of Marburg after a short time, returning to Halle in 1900. In 1908, he was promoted to the doctorate with a dissertation about the awakening of philosophical speculation during the Reformation ("Das Erwachen der philosophischen Spekulation der Reformationszeit"). He then worked for a short time as dramaturge for Neues Theater Berlin. He married the writer , known under her pen name Gerda von Robertus, on 10 July 1911. They were divorced two years later. His drama Die ersten Menschen (The first humans), completed in 1908 and subtitled Erotisches Mysterium (erotic mystery play), was banned in Bavaria in 1912 after its premiere in Munich. He joined the group of the Monte Verità, and became friends with the dancer Rudolf von Laban. A dance drama in three parts with text by Borngräber was performed in 1917, titled Sang an die Sonne (Song to the sun), with masks and costumes created by Marcel Janco. Bornräber joined an call to a convention "Vegetarisch-sozialer Kongress") (Vegetarian-social congress), that was held in April 1916, intended as a demonstration for peace and against capitalism, and led by the pacifist , a friend of Tolstoi. Borngräber was a member of the . When nationalist tendencies showed in the association in 1915, he reacted writing a Friedensappell an die Völker (Appeal for peace to the nations) and the Weltfriedensdrama, a drama for world peace. Borngräber died in Lugano on 19 October 1916 at age 41. Legacy Borngräbers Drama Die ersten Menschen was set as an opera, Die ersten Menschen, by Rudi Stephan, completed in 1915, premiered in 1920 by the Oper Frankfurt, and revived beginning in the 1980s. Work Stage Das neue Jahrhundert. (Giordano Bruno) Eine Tragödie. Mit einem Vorwort von Ernst Haeckel. Strauß, Bonn 1900. (Digitalisat der 2. Aufl. 1901) König Friedwahn. Germanisches Trauerspiel in fünf Aufzügen. Schwetschke, Berlin 1905. Die heiligen zehn Gebote des Freien. Der heilige Glaube des Freien. Das heilige Gebet des Freien. Moses oder die Geburt Gottes. tragedy, Verlag Neues Leben, Ron /Berlin 1907. Die ersten Menschen. Erotisches Mysterium in zwei Akten. Marquardt, Berlin 1908. Althäa und ihr Kind. Die Tragödie der Reinheit. Ein Vorspiel und vier Akte in einem Aufzuge. Borngräber, Berlin 1912. Die andere Nacht. Mysterium der Liebe. Borngräber, Berlin 1910. Weltfriedensdrama. Ein Weihespiel. Borngräber, Berlin 1916. Philosophy Gottfreies Christentum. 1903 (lost) Das Erwachen der philosophischen Spekulation der Reformationszeit in ihrem stufenweisen Fortschreiten beleuchtet an Schwenkfeld, Thamer, Sebastian Franck von Wörd. (dissertation) Gärtner, Schwarzenberg 1908. Gottfreies Menschentum. Die Fortsetzung der alten, die Vollendung einer neuen Reformation. Neues Leben, Berlin 1909. with Georg Brandes: Friedens-Appell an die Völker. Stockholm 1916. Poetry In Wald und Welle und Heide. Ebering, Berlin 1900. Neue Gedichte. 1903 (lost). Die Hymnen an die Größe und das tiefe Leid. 1915 (lost). References Sources Rudolf Steiner: "Das Neue Jahrhundert". Eine Tragödie von Otto Borngräber. In: Magazin für Literatur 1900, 69th year, Nos. 24, 28, 29 (GA 29, pp. 385–392). Further reading Karl Arthur Schmidt: Otto Borngräber. Der moderne Dichter. Neues Leben, Berlin 1913 Romain Rolland: Zwischen den Völkern. Aufzeichnungen und Dokumente aus den Jahren 1914–1919. vol. 1, DVA, Stuttgart 1954, S. 326–331 August Rameri Prehn: Otto Borngräbers König Friedwahn. Ein germanisches Trauerspiel. (lecture) Schäfer, Schkeuditz 1905. External links Otto Borngräber, monteverita.net 20th-century German dramatists and playwrights 20th-century German male writers People from Stendal 1874 births 1916 deaths
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Willughbeia angustifolia is a species of flowering plant, a woody monoecious vine in the dogbane family, that is native to Southeast Asia. Name Local vernacular names include gerit-gerit, gitaan, serapit and akar kubal madu. Description The vine grows up to 60 m in height into the canopies of forest trees. The oval leaves are smooth, 2.6–20.5 cm long by 0.9–7 cm wide. The axillary inflorescences comprise short cymes of small white flowers. The fruits are round, yellow to orange berries 3–14 cm in diameter, with a latex-filled epicarp, containing small seeds embedded in a sweet orange sarcotesta. Distribution and habitat The species occurs in the Nicobar Islands, Malay Peninsula, Singapore, Sumatra, Borneo and the Maluku Islands, where it is found in lowland and hill mixed dipterocarp forest up to an elevation of 500 m. Usage The edible fruits are valued for their flavour, reminiscent of strawberries and raspberries, and are often sold in local markets. References angustifolia Flora of the Nicobar Islands Flora of Thailand Flora of Malaya Flora of Singapore Flora of Sumatra Flora of Borneo Flora of the Maluku Islands Fruits originating in Asia Plants described in 1861 Taxa named by Friedrich Anton Wilhelm Miquel
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Maryhill Burgh Halls is a local heritage site located in the Maryhill area of Glasgow, a few miles North-West of Glasgow city centre. Maryhill Burgh Halls was initially opened in 1878 as a municipal building complex, which served as a police station and fire station until the 1970s. The complex fell into disuse and disrepair especially towards the late 20th century, and plans for its demolishment were proposed. However, as a result of local campaigning, the decision was taken to restore the complex and for it to be used as a community resource. Repairs, selective demolition, restoration, and development work took place between 2008 and 2011. The halls re-opened in April 2012. Maryhill Burgh Halls is run by the Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust. The Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust was established in 2004 and is community led. Volunteers form a major and vital component of the Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust. Volunteers carry out a variety a roles within the Trust including the day to day running of the Maryhill Burgh Halls and forming a majority part of the Board of the Trust. The Maryhill Burgh Halls provides for the community office spaces, hall spaces to facilitate the hosting of events of various kinds, and a museum and exhibition space. The museum and exhibition space hosts artefacts and exhibitions relating to local heritage, local history, and other themes of interest. Various organisations operate from the Maryhill Burgh Halls including an architecture company, an accountancy firm, a local housing association, a children’s nursery, and the constituency office of the Member of Scottish Parliament for the area. When the halls initially opened, it contained twenty stained glass windows depicting individuals carrying out various trades and occupations that could be found practiced within the local area. The windows were produced by the studio of Adam and Small and were specially commissioned for the complex. Today, the halls has eleven of the original windows on display. The remainder are stored within the collections of Glasgow Museums. Along with the eleven original panels, another ten stained glass panels are on display that were produced by artists Alec Galloway and Margo Winning around 2015. Each of the ten panels depicts a different theme of modern Maryhill. The themes depicted were chosen from suggestions given by over two hundred members of the community. History of Maryhill Burgh Halls Maryhill Burgh Halls complex was opened in 1878 in response to the growing population of the Burgh of Maryhill and ensuing lawlessness. The complex’s architect was the Glasgow based Duncan McNaughton who was born in Rutherglen. The complex was designed in a revivalist French Renaissance style. The complex consisted of a police station, a court room, a fire station, a tenement which housed the firemen, and a public hall that could seat nine hundred people. The Burgh of Maryhill being subsumed by the City of Glasgow in 1891 resulted in the civic function of the complex being lost, however it continued to be utilized for social use. A swimming baths and washhouse was added to the complex in 1898. The police station and fire station remained in use up until the 1970s, however the complex fell into disuse and disrepair over the course of the remainder of the 20th century and plans for its demolition were proposed. Pressure from the local community led to the restoration of Maryhill Burgh Halls and it being purposed once again as a community resource. The Maryhill Burgh Halls now provides for the community office spaces, a museum and exhibition space, and halls that can be used for the hosting of events of various kinds. Restoration of Maryhill Burgh Halls In 2004 the Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust was set up in order to bring the complex back into use for the local community. In 2006 the Cities Growth Fund granted the Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust £1.1 million. This funding allowed the Trust to carry out various preliminary tasks pertaining the restoration of Maryhill Burgh Halls including the necessary design and planning application work. The restoration of Maryhill Burgh Halls took place between 2008 and 2011. Stonework and masonry repairs in order to secure the stability of the structure took place in 2008. Funding for the remaining restoration and development work was secured in Autumn 2009 after five years of campaigning by the Trust. A total of £9.2 million funding for the restoration and development of the halls was secured. In November 2009 transfer of ownership of the halls, the police station, and the fire station from Glasgow City Council to the Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust took place. The main restoration and development work on the parts of the complex under the stewardship of the Maryhill Burgh Hall Trust also started in November 2009. This work was completed in November 2011, and the halls re-opened in April 2012. The main funding sources for the restoration and development of Maryhill Burgh Halls are: Scottish Government City Growth Fund Phases 1 and 2, The Heritage Lottery Fund, Big Lottery (Growing Community Assets), The European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), Glasgow City Council Better Glasgow Fund, Glasgow City Council Vacant and Derelict Land Fund, Scottish Government Town Centre Regeneration Fund, Historic Scotland, Scottish Government Wider Role Fund, and Robertson Trust. The baths remained under the ownership of Glasgow City Council. A separate project was undertaken by Glasgow City Council to convert the former baths into a modern leisure centre for the community of Maryhill. The leisure centre was opened in April 2010 and makes available a 25m swimming pool, sauna, gym, sports hall, dance studio, and other facilities for community use. Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust Maryhill Burgh Halls is owned and run by the Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust. The Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust was established in November 2004. It is a partnership between local residents, Cube and Maryhill Housing Associations, Glasgow City Council, Elected Members, and officers of local organisations. Members of the public can apply to join Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust. It currently has 180 members. Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust has a few waged members of staff and a number of volunteers who are involved in its day to day running. The Trust also sub-contracts a number of building management roles and office marketing. The Board of the Trust has fifteen members. The fifteen members include ten members of the public who are local residents or who work in the local area and have been or are active in Community Development Work in the area over a number of years. These ten members of the Board of the Trust are elected on to it by the members of Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust at the Annual General Meeting. The remainder of the Board consists of two co-opted individuals and experienced members of staff of Cube Housing Association, Maryhill Housing association, and Glasgow City Council. The Stained Glass Windows When Maryhill Burgh Halls first opened they contained twenty specially commissioned stained glass windows. These were removed from the halls in 1963 and were stored in the collection of Glasgow Museums. The panels were then restored through a process of cleaning, repairing, and reframing. Today, the Maryhill Burgh Halls has eleven of these panels on display along with ten specially commissioned glass panels that were produced around 2015. The Historic Stained Glass Windows The stained glass windows that were on display in the Maryhill Burgh Halls when it first opened were produced by the Glasgow studio Adam and Small. Adam and Small was founded by Stephen Adam, who was born in the vicinity of Edinburgh in 1847 and was of international renown in the field of stained-glass design and production. He had the author Robert Louis Stevenson as a school classmate and started as an apprentice of James Ballantine of Edinburgh. The panels depict ordinary people, dressed in their ordinary work clothing, carrying out various trades that could be found practiced in the Maryhill area during the period. This makes the panels unique, for at the time religion was the main theme depicted by stained glass artists. In other stained glass panels of the period where workers are depicted, they are usually depicted in classical, biblical, or medieval clothing, poses, and settings. The author Michael Donnelly writes that the commission for Maryhill Burgh Halls was ‘…one of the most important commissions…’ of Stephen Adam’s career. The author Ian R Mitchell describes the stained glass panels as of ‘world-historic’ importance for being ‘…one of the largest and most realistic collection of portraits of labour produced in two centuries.’ The titles of the glass panels in alphabetical order are: The Blacksmiths, The Boatbuilder, The Bricklayers, The Calico Printers, The Canal Boatman, The Chemical Workers, The Dye Press Worker, The Engineers, The Glassblower, The Iron Moulders, The Joiners, The Linen Bleachers, The Papermaker, The Railway Men, The Sawyer, The Soldiers, The Teacher, The Wheelwrights, and The Zinc Spelters. Due to a dearth of accounts or photographs of the historic glass panels as they were originally on display in the halls, it is currently unknown in what order they were initially displayed. Eleven of the historic stained glass windows are now on display in Maryhill Burgh Halls. Ten of them can be found mounted in the main hall, and The Canal Boatman is on display at the main entrance to the building. The Modern Stained Glass Windows In order to contribute to the lasting legacy of the Maryhill Burgh Halls restoration project, ten new stained glass windows were commissioned. The ten stained glass windows were produced by the Scottish artists Alec Galloway and Margo Winning. The themes for the modern stained glass windows were chosen to reflect themes of importance for the community of Maryhill today. The themes were chosen from suggestions gathered from over two hundred of members of the community. The suggestion were taken over a period of several months at a series of workshops, visits, and talks. The final themes chosen were: culture, diversity, education, heavy trades, regeneration, social heritage, space age, sport and leisure, workers, and youth. After approval of the final designs, each panel was built at Alec Galloway’s workshop in Greenock. The titles of the panels are: Art-Beat, Down Maryhill Road, Playing the Game, Global Village, Knowledge, Going Out, Burning Spirit, Made in Maryhill, Touching the Stars, and Yesterday and Today. It is claimed that due to the inclusion of an active QR code on the ‘Touching the Stars’ panel, this makes it the world’s first ‘interactive stained glass panel’. The Courtyard Entrance Gates The entrance to the Maryhill Leisure Centre and Maryhill Burgh Halls share a common courtyard. This courtyard used to be the site of the fire station. The fire station included a three storey tenement above four stone archways. The archways remain today and form the entrance to the courtyard. In order to connect its current use to what was there in the past, the well known Scottish sculptor Andy Scott (The Kelpies in Falkirk are amongst Andy Scott’s other creations) was commissioned to produce four metal gates to fill in the archways. The metal gates feature firemen in period uniforms along with period equipment and engines. Maryhill Museum Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust is committed to collecting and making accessible the history of the Burgh Halls and Maryhill area. For this purpose a permanent museum has been created inside the Halls. The museum is a place to share the Halls’ local history collection and offers opportunities for community displays. Locals are encouraged to share their memories of Maryhill as well as learn about the history of the area. Through this, the Burgh Halls hopes to advance local access to arts, heritage and culture, and engage with the local and wider community to safeguard and celebrate a shared history. Recent Exhibitions Fred’s War 2018 exhibition Fred’s War told the story of the 1st Cameronians who achieved notoriety for selling the Great War’s earliest front line photographs. Leaving from Maryhill Barracks, Fred Davidson, their 25-year-old medical officer (one of the first doctors to win the Military Cross) smuggled his camera to the front line in his medical bag. On display at the Burgh Halls was a WW I metal helmet, some medals, a nurse’s cap, field glasses, various maps, a wide selection of Fred’s photographs and a camera similar to that used by Fred. For this exhibition, some examples of the types of cameras which would have been used at the time were sourced. One of these was an Ansco 'Buster Brown' No.2 Box Camera which had a very old spool of medium format, 120 film inside waiting to be developed. The roll was partially developed and found to contain old pictures of Lincoln and nearby Boston in the USA. Some of the pictures were destroyed by light leakage. Partick Thistle Football Club: Then and Now Between 6th March 2019 and 27th September 2019 the museum hosted an exhibition pertaining to the history of Partick Thistle Football Club. Partick Thistle Football club was founded in 1876 and has been based in Maryhill since 1908. Their nickname is ‘The Jags’, and they are based in Firhill Stadium in Maryhill. A Flag for Maryhill A competition was launched on 31st August 2020 that involved inviting individuals, local community groups and local schools to create proposals for a community flag. Amongst the reasons for setting up this competition, named ‘A Flag for Maryhill’, was to bring the community together to reflect on Maryhill’s history and look to the future, and to create a symbol which would represent Maryhill’s pride as being a part of Glasgow with its own unique sense of character. The entries were submitted to an assessment panel which included representatives from the Flag Institute, the Lyon Court (a court of law that regulates heraldry in Scotland) and a special celebrity guest judge, Scottish actress, Jane McCarry. The panel narrowed the selection down to 5 top designs. From these 5 entries the public voted for their favourite design either by social media or in-person at the Burgh Halls. Voting opened on 5th July 2021 and closed 17th August 2021. The top designs were revealed on 4th July 2021 across the Burgh Halls’ social media accounts. The winning flag was revealed at a community event street party on 2nd October 2021 at 1pm. Children and parents could participate in various activities during the event including face painting, art & crafts, balloon sculpture, and card-making. The Way We Were Between the 1st of September 2020 and 18th of September 2020 the museum hosted an exhibition consisting of black and white photographs by the Glaswegian photographer Morton Gillespie. This exhibition depicted the social history of 1960’s Glasgow. Glasgow Photo Journey 1978 Between 12th of July 2021 and 26th of December 2021 the museum hosted an exhibition of black and white photographs by the Manchester based photographer Jos Treen. The exhibition consisted of a selection of photographs taken around the streets of Glasgow in 1978 by Jos Treen during the year in which he was living there. The collection of hundreds of photographs lay forgotten for forty years before they were rediscovered. A selection of the photographs were posted on his social media feeds previous to Jos’ exhibition in Maryhill Burgh Halls. Loving Earth Textile Panels Between 18th September 2021 and 15th November 2021 the museum hosted an exhibition consisting of a selection of textile panels produced by members of the public for The Loving Earth Project. The Loving Earth Project invited members of the public to submit 30 cm x 30 cm textile panels that depict themes pertaining to the effects of environmental degradation, contribution of one's own lifestyle to the degradation, and measures that can be taken to address it. The exhibition was timed to coincide with the weeks leading up to and including the COP26 climate conference that took place on Glasgow between 31st October 2021 and 13th November 2021. Jo Sunshine Art A selection of drawings by the visually impaired Glasgow based artist Jo Sunshine have been on display in the museum since Autumn 2021. Jo was left completely blind in her left eye and with a misty blur in her right eye since being involved in a car accident. Subsequently, she draws everything large and in bold colours. Glasgow Orchestral Society Since the 29th of November 2021, the museum has hosted an exhibition consisting of artefacts pertaining to the history of the Glasgow Orchestral Society. The Glasgow Orchestral Society was formed on the 29th of December 1870 (it was initially called the Glasgow Amateur Orchestral Society). They have used Maryhill Burgh Halls as a venue for their weekly rehearsals since October 2011. Maryhill Burgh Halls Café When the Maryhill Burgh Halls re-opened in 2012 it also opened a café on the premises. The café provided a number of seated tables and made available to its visitors various hot and cold food and drink for purchase. The café did not re-open when the halls were once again made open to the public after the first UK Covid-19 lockdown. There are plans to re-open the café in the spring of 2022. References Maryhill Buildings and structures in Glasgow Buildings and structures completed in 1878 Defunct fire stations 1878 establishments in Scotland French Renaissance Revival architecture Defunct police stations
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James Campbell Fraser (14 March 1840 — 23 November 1913) was a Scottish first-class cricketer and merchant. The son of William Fraser, a Scottish plantation owner, he was born at his father's sugar plantation in Demerara in March 1840. He was educated in England at Harrow School, and upon leaving he became one of the first people to enlist in the 19th Lancashire Rifle Volunteer Corps, joining as an ensign in January 1860. In 1861, he made a single appearance in first-class cricket for the Gentlemen of Marylebone Cricket Club against the Gentlemen of Kent at the Canterbury Cricket Week. Batting twice in the match, he was dismissed scores of 12 and 16 by Richard Streatfeild and Fendall Currie respectively. In the same year he began employment in Liverpool as a merchants clerk, before travelling to Yokohama in Japan in 1862. There he played for and captained Yokohama Cricket Club, playing against a Royal Navy team in 1863. He became a partner at Yokohama in the firm Ross, Barber & Co., before forming his own company, James C. Fraser & Co. in 1867, which specialised in insurance and trade; however Fraser left Japan in the same year to return to Liverpool. In 1869 while in the United States, he travelled aboard the first transcontinental train between New York and San Francisco, staying as a guest of Brigham Young in Salt Lake City during the trip. His connection with The States remained into the 1890s, when he represented New Orleans at the National Nicaragua Canal Convention, which discussed plans for the Panama Canal. Fraser died in England in November 1913, at Lynton, Devon. References External links 1840 births 1913 deaths People from Demerara-Mahaica People educated at Harrow School Scottish cricketers Gentlemen of Marylebone Cricket Club cricketers Scottish merchants Scottish expatriates in Japan Clan Fraser
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Wanasinghe Rajapakse Senanayake Senevirathna Bandara Lenawa was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Kekirawa representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He was elected to parliament from Kekirawa in the March 1960 general election and was re-elected in the July 1960 general election. He crossed over to the opposition with C. P. de Silva in December 1964. He was re-elected in the 1965 general election from the Sri Lanka Freedom Socialist Party. References Sri Lankan politicians Members of the 4th Parliament of Ceylon Members of the 5th Parliament of Ceylon Members of the 6th Parliament of Ceylon Sri Lanka Freedom Party politicians United National Party politicians
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The East Midlands Gateway is a rail freight terminal and intermodal freight centre situated to the west of the village of Kegworth in the English East Midlands. It is operated by SEGRO and officially known as the SEGRO Logistics Park East Midlands Gateway (SLPEMG). It is located within the triangle formed by the cities of Derby (), Nottingham () and Leicester (). It has rail access from the Castle Donington line, road access from junction 24 of the M1 motorway, and lies immediately to the north of East Midlands Airport. It thus unites air, road, and rail freight in a central location. The gateway comprises purpose-built rail freight terminal, access roads and a number of warehouses and distribution centres, making this distribution hub one of the UK's first inland ports. The rail terminal within the gateway is capable of handling up to 16 trains/day of up to in length, and has space to store more than 5 000 TEU of shipping containers. It is linked to the railway network by a specially built branch line, with trains linking other rail freight interchanges, the Channel Tunnel, and ports such as Southampton, Felixstowe and London Gateway. , ten of the eleven warehouse plots on the site were let, with tenants including Amazon, Arvato, DHL, Games Workshop, Kuehne + Nagel, Shop Direct and XPO Logistics. From a local government perspective, the terminal spreads across the civil parishes of Kegworth, Lockington-Hemington and Long Whatton and Diseworth, all of which are in the district of North West Leicestershire and the county of Leicestershire. History In 2011, the UK government announced a policy to encourage the development of strategic rail freight interchanges in order to support longer-term development of efficient rail freight distribution logistics. Such SRFIs would be key components in national and international networks, facilitating links between UK regions and the European Union. Plans for the development of a strategic rail freight interchange at East Midlands Gateway were first submitted in 2014, and planning hearings commenced the following year. There were local objections to the proposal leading to the formation of the "J24 Action Group". The main reason for the objections was that the site was green countryside and that other brownfield sites were available. Indeed there was support for what was seen as the positive environmental impact of moving freight from road to rail if it adopted such a site. The objections included a petition to the then Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, Rt Hon Eric Pickles MP, which attained 1,331 signatures. Permission to peoceed with the proposal was granted on 2 February 2016, with the introduction of the UK Statutory Instrument, The East Midlands Gateway Rail Freight Interchange and Highway Order 2016. Construction was largely completed in 2019, and the first freight train served the interchange on 7 January 2020. References Dry ports Logistics in the United Kingdom Railway freight terminals in the United Kingdom Warehouses in England
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Sivanath Shastri or Sibanath Sastri (31 January 1848 – 30 September 1919) was a Bengali social reformer, writer, translator, scholar, dditor philoshoper and historian. External links Sivanath Sastri Presidency University, Kolkata alumni References https://bn.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E0%A6%AC%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%B6%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%B7:%E0%A6%AC%E0%A6%87%E0%A6%AF%E0%A6%BC%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%B0_%E0%A6%89%E0%A7%8E%E0%A6%B8/978-81-7955-135-6 https://www.thebrahmosamaj.net/founders/sivnath.html https://en.banglapedia.org/index.php/Shastri,_Shibnath 1847 births 1919 deaths Writers from Kolkata
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The German Central Command for Maritime Emergencies (CCME) (in German: Havariekommando) is the authority for mutual maritime emergency management in the German EEZ of North Sea and in the Baltic Sea. The federal office provides radar and air surveillance, piloting and emergency tugs for ships that are unable to manoeuvre. Head of CCME is Frigate captain Robby Renner. History By law the German states Lower Saxony, Hanseatic City of Bremen, Hanseatic City of Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg Vorpommern are responsible for maritime emergency response in their coastal waters. Federal agencies such as the Federal Coast Guard are responsible for certain tasks. The large number of organizations and authorities led to a great need for coordination. The process of German maritime rescue and relief operations has often been criticized as dangerously bureaucratic, too slow and uncoordinated. On October 25, 1998, the Cargo ship M/V Pallas, cargo of lumber caught fire while traveling the North Sea off the west coast of Jutland. Several attempts to get the ship under tow were unsuccessful, and it ran aground four days later off the German island of Amrum, in the Schleswig-Holstein Wadden Sea National Park. 250 tons of fuel oil were lost overboard, causing the biggest oil spill in German history, killing approximately 16.000 sea birds, predominantly common eiders. The case led to political discontent over a lack of coordinated emergency tow capabilities on the German coast, and contributed to the creation CCME. The Federal Coastal States and the Federal Government authorities founded CCME. On January 1, 2003, the Central Command for Maritime Emergencies (CCME) (in German: Havariekommando) commenced operations. It was established to set up and carry out a mutual maritime emergency management in the North Sea and in the Baltic Sea. It is based in Cuxhaven (Northwest Germany) and is headed by a federal official. Operation The Maritime Emergencies Reporting and Assessment Centre is the 24/7 central point of contact for emergencies. In the event of an accident, it is usually necessary to rescue people, which is coordinated by the Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre Bremen (MRCC) of the German Sea Rescue Society (DGzRS). The havariekommando is in charge of the German ETV fleet. During daily work routine the CCME consists of about 40 employees, working in five different sections: Maritime Emergencies Reporting and Assessment Centre (MERAC) Marine Pollution Control - High Sea and Salvage Section Marine Pollution Control - Coastal Section Fire Fighting, Rescue and Medical Response Section Public Relations Section Capacity One of the main capacities of CCME is a number of Emergency tow vessels. Emergency tow vessel stations Special ability capacitys The CCME has access and is in command of units of several organisations with special ability and equipement: DGzRS for maritime rescue Fire brigades, local coastal fire brigades with special ability for maritime fire fighting German Navy, especially naval aviation German Federal Coast Guard Federal Police Federal Agency for Technical Relief (THW) for handling dangerous substances References German federal agencies Water transport in Germany 2003 establishments in Germany Cuxhaven Cuxhaven
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Henry Fitzcount (died 1222) was an English nobleman. He was the illegitimate son of Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall. Dunstanville died with no legitimate heir and his earldom reverted to the crown upon his 1175 death. Fitzcount afterwards received several grants of land in Devon and Cornwall. A loyalist during the First Barons' War of 1215–17, he was appointed Sheriff of Cornwall in 1215. Fitzcount was stripped of the post within two months as he had assumed the title of Earl without the king's permission. John and Fitzcount reconciled and he was reappointed as sheriff in 1216, being also granted farming rights across the whole of Cornwall. The grant of Cornwall was confirmed by John's successor Henry III but Fitzcount also incurred his displeasure and the county was taken into possession of the Crown in 1220. Fitzcount joined the Fifth Crusade around 1221 and died on that expedition in 1222. Biography Henry Fitzcount was the illegitimate son of Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall who was, in turn, an illegitimate son of King Henry I of England. Fitzcount's surname refers to his descent from the Earl, who administered the county of Cornwall. Dunstanville died without a legitimate heir in 1175 and his holdings in Cornwall, and the title of Earl, reverted to the Crown. Fitzcount was granted the manors of Kingskerswell and Diptford in Devon and Liskeard in Cornwall by an 1194 charter of Richard I of England. In 1206, Fitzcount provided two ships to Richard's successor John in a cancelled expedition to recover Normandy from the French. Fitzcount received the barony of Totnes in Devon from John in 1209, it may have been seized by the king from Loretta de Braose, Countess of Leicester. By 1212 he also held Totnes in Devon. Fitzcount remained loyal to John during the First Barons' War of 1215–17. He was one of a group of loyal barons that secured the south-west of England for the king. During the war Fitzcount was appointed High Sheriff of Cornwall on 17 September 1215. The king replaced him on 16 November 1215 with Robert de Cardinan as Fitzcount had assumed the title of Earl of Cornwall, without the permission of the king who planned to grant it to his son Richard. The king later reconciled with Fitzcount and in the 17th year of his rule (circa 1216), he was granted permission to farm all of Cornwall, until such time as the "Realm should be at Peace and the King is satisfied whether he ought to hold it as Part of his Inheritance, or as a Desmesne of the Crown". The grant is thought to have been made with the intention that Fitzcount would hold the land in trust for Richard. At the same time, he was awarded the holding of Launceston, Cornwall including its castle. After Henry III succeeded John, Fitzcount received a further grant of the entire county including all demesnes. He was reappointed as high sheriff on 7 February 1217 by Henry III in recognition of his loyalty to John during the First Baron's War. Fitzcount incurred the king's displeasure and he soon took the grant back, taking Cornwall into crown ownership in 1220. Fitzcount's appointment as sheriff was terminated on 10 July 1220. Henry III commanded the new sheriff of Cornwall William Lunet to oversee the returning of all lands held or given out by Fitzcount to the crown, with the exception of those which had been given to Robert de Tintagel. After he lost Cornwall, Fitzcount went on the Fifth Crusade to the Holy Lands and died either there or at Gascony, while travelling, in 1222. References 12th-century births 1222 deaths High Sheriffs of Cornwall Christians of the Fifth Crusade
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Wembley 1996 Live is a live concert video from the Canadian rocker Bryan Adams. It was first concert video and was shot at Wembley Stadium on 27 July 1996, performing to a sold-out over 70,000 people, is released by Eagle Rock Entertainment on October 14, 2016. The video album peaked at number one in its category in the UK. Track listing "The Only Thing That Looks Good on Me Is You" (Adams, Lange) "Do to You" (Adams, Lange) "Kids Wanna Rock" (Adams, Vallance) "Can't Stop This Thing We Started" (Adams, Lange) "This Time" (Adams, Vallance) "18 til I Die (Adams, Lange) "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" (Adams, Lange, Kamen) "Touch the Hand" (Adams, Lange) "Cuts Like a Knife" (Adams, Vallance) "It's Only Love (duet with Melissa Etheridge) (Adams, Vallance) "Somebody" (Adams, Vallance) "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" (Adams, Lange, Kamen) "Run to You" (Adams, Vallance) "There Will Never Be Another Tonight" (Adams, Lange, Vallance) "Seven Nights to Rock" (Henry Glover, Louis Innis, Buck Trail) "(I Wanna Be) Your Underwear" (Adams, Lange) "Wild Thing" (Chip Taylor) "It Ain't a Party... If You Can't Come 'Round" (Adams, Lange) "She's Only Happy When She's Dancin" (Adams, Vallance) "Summer of '69" (Adams, Vallance) "All for Love (Adams, Lange, Kamen) "Let's Make a Night to Remember" (Adams, Lange) "I Fought the Law" (Sonny Curtis) "Heaven" (Adams, Vallance) Charts Bryan Adams: Wembley 1996 Live A fully restored film edition of the Wembley Stadium performance was released in 2016, with CD and vinyl editions. Track listing CD Album Disc one "The Only Thing That Looks Good on Me Is You" "Do to You" "Kids Wanna Rock" "Can't Stop This Thing We Started" "This Time" "18 til I Die "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" "Touch the Hand" "Cuts Like a Knife" "It's Only Love (feat. Melissa Etheridge) "Somebody" "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" Disc two "Run to You" "There Will Never Be Another Tonight" "Seven Nights to Rock" "(I Wanna Be) Your Underwear" "Wild Thing" "It Ain't a Party... If You Can't Come 'Round" "She's Only Happy When She's Dancin" "Summer of '69" "All for Love" "Let's Make a Night to Remember" "I Fought the Law" "Heaven" Track listing Triple Vinyl Album Disc A "The Only Thing That Looks Good on Me Is You" "Do to You" "Kids Wanna Rock" "Can't Stop This Thing We Started" "This Time" "18 til I Die "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" "Touch the Hand" "Cuts Like a Knife" Disc B "It's Only Love (feat. Melissa Etheridge) "Somebody" "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" "Run to You" "There Will Never Be Another Tonight" "Seven Nights to Rock" "(I Wanna Be) Your Underwear" "Wild Thing" "It Ain't a Party... If You Can't Come 'Round" Disc C "She's Only Happy When She's Dancin" "Summer of '69" "All for Love" "Let's Make a Night to Remember" "I Fought the Law" "Heaven" Personnel Bryan Adams — vocals, guitars, harmonica, directed, photography Keith Scott — guitars, backing vocals Mickey Curry — drums, backing vocals Tommy Mandel — keyboards, piano, backing vocals Dave Taylor — bass guitars, backing vocals Danny Cummings — percussion, backing vocals Special guests Melissa Etheridge — vocals in "It's Only Love" External staff Bob Clearmountain — engineer, mixed Geoff Kempin — executive-producer Terry Shand — executive-producer Bruce Allen — producer, product manager Büro Dirk Rodolph — artwork Andrew Catlin — photography References Bryan Adams 2016 video albums 2016 live albums Live video albums Live albums recorded at Wembley Stadium
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James Clark (October 21, 1809 – September 9, 1885) was an American Catholic priest and Jesuit who led the College of the Holy Cross during the American Civil War as president from 1861 to 1867. Born in Pennsylvania, he was educated at the United States Military Academy and served as an officer in the U.S. Army for one year, before converting to Catholicism and later entering the Society of Jesus. Clark held administrative positions and taught mathematics and the sciences at Georgetown University, before being appointed president of Holy Cross. He was not well received as at Holy Cross, where there were frequent complaints that he was overly strict, which led to his removal. From 1869 to 1875, he was the president of Gonzaga College (later a high school) and oversaw its relocation to a new campus on the outskirts of Washington, D.C., which nearly destroyed the school. He spent his later years at Georgetown. Early life James Clark was born on October 21, 1809, in Meadville, Pennsylvania. Both of his parents were Protestant. He was appointed to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York as a cadet on July 1, 1825. He graduated on July 1, 1829, with honors and ranked 34th, out of a class of 46 graduates. Among his classmates was Robert E. Lee, and he attended the academy at the same time as Jefferson Davis, who graduated in 1828. Upon graduating, Clark was assigned to the 4th Infantry Regiment and stationed at Fort St. Philip in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. He was eventually promoted to the rank of brevet second lieutenant, and resigned from the U.S. Army on August 18, 1830. Early academic career After leaving the army, Clark converted to Catholicism and was baptized in 1834, becoming the second known graduate of West Point to convert to Catholicism. Clark enrolled in Mount St. Mary's University in Emmitsburg, Maryland. He then taught mathematics, chemistry, and natural philosophy at St. Mary's Seminary and University in Baltimore from 1837 to 1844. Clark entered the Society of Jesus on August 14, 1844, becoming the first graduate of West Point to do so. He eventually attained the rank of in the order, indicating that he had passed the at the end of his Jesuit formation and had professed all four vows of the Jesuit order. He was ordained a priest in 1847. From 1845 to 1849, Clark taught at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. as a professor of mathematics and chemistry. Clark became a professor of mathematics and chemistry at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts during the academic year of 1849 to 1850. He also spent time at the Jesuit novitiate in Frederick, Maryland. He then returned to Georgetown University, where he held multiple positions. He initially became first prefect, before becoming a professor of mathematics, chemistry, and natural philosophy between 1850 and 1861. Additionally, from 1854 to 1857, Clark served as treasurer of the school and from 1859 to 1861 as vice president. In 1861, he was also appointed to the board of visitors of West Point. College of the Holy Cross Clark became the president of the College of the Holy Cross on August 10, 1861, succeeding Anthony F. Ciampi. He took office just several months after the start of the American Civil War. The college's enrollment had dropped significantly, numbering just 80 by the end of 1861. The percentage of students from the South and Mid-Atlantic decreased and by the end of the war, nearly all students were from New England. In addition to his duties as president, Clark taught mathematics, physics, and French at the college during the war. In 1862, Clark oversaw the purchase of of farmland adjacent to the campus, and in 1866, he purchased five more acres. In 1865, the college applied to the Massachusetts General Court for a charter, which was granted, and Governor John Albion Andrew signed the bill chartering the College of the Holy Cross into law on March 24, 1865. Until then, Holy Cross conferred degrees under Georgetown University's charter. On April 24, 1865, Georgetown transferred ownership of the Holy Cross' land and buildings to the newly chartered college. Some people criticized Clark for people being overly strict and granting the Jesuit scholastics too few liberties. Beginning in 1863, Jesuit scholastics began making formal complaints to the provincial superior, Angelo Paresce, about Clark's leadership. By 1866, complaints about Clark had become frequent, and the Jesuit Superior General, Peter Jan Beckx, informed Clark that he would be removed as president in the middle of the academic year. Clark was succeeded as president of the school by Robert W. Brady on February 27, 1867. Clark returned to Georgetown University, where he again became the vice president and treasurer of the university, as well as a professor mathematics. Gonzaga College Clark succeeded Bernardin F. Wiget as the president of Gonzaga College (later a high school) in Washington, D.C., in August 1869. Charles H. Stonestreet served as the acting president between Wiget's leave of absence and eventual resignation and Clark's appointment as president. At the same time, Clark became the pastor of St. Aloysius Church. That year, a new Jesuit scholasticate, Woodstock College, opened, which resulted in the removal of many Jesuit teachers from various Jesuit colleges, including Gonzaga, to Woodstock. This required that Clark recruit lay teachers to fill the positions. Many parents of students at Gonzaga College were not pleased, desiring their sons to be taught by Jesuits. As a result, there was sharp decrease in the number of students enrolled in 1869, from several hundred to just 117. The number of students rose slightly over the following several years. At the 1871 graduation, Clark announced that Gonzaga College would move from F Street NW, between 9th and 10th Streets, to its present location on I Street adjacent to St. Aloysius Church. The college purchased land and a building from the Sisters of Mercy and opened at its new location in September 1871. Many people affiliated with the school disagreed with the decision to relocate from the center of Washington to what was then its outskirts, where there were few buildings and people. The school's sodalities and dramatic and literary societies ceased to exist or were greatly diminished following the move. In 1874, Gonzaga College granted the last academic degrees it would ever confer. The school's annual fundraising fair was postponed due to the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln in Ford's Theater, one-half block from Gonzaga, on April 14, 1865, and 250 Gonzaga students marched in Lincoln's funeral procession. The relocation of the school proved to be disastrous and nearly resulted in its closure. The number of students continued to decrease in the final years of Clark's term in office, and the school had incurred substantial debt from relocating and from the construction of St. Aloysius Church. Clark resigned the presidency and was succeeded by Charles K. Jenkins on February 2, 1875. Later years After leaving Gonzaga College, Clark returned to Georgetown University as a teacher and spiritual counselor. In 1879, Clark suffered a stroke and became paralyzed. He spent the last six years of his life in the Georgetown University infirmary. He suffered a second stroke and died on the evening September 9, 1885. See also List of Graduates of the United States Military Academy Class of 1829 Notes References Citations Sources 1809 births 1885 deaths People from Meadville, Pennsylvania United States Military Academy alumni Mount St. Mary's University alumni Converts to Roman Catholicism from Protestantism 19th-century American Jesuits Presidents of the College of the Holy Cross Presidents of Gonzaga College High School Pastors of St. Aloysius Church (Washington, D.C.)
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Stephen Pambiin Jalulah is a Ghanaian politician and member of parliament for the Pru West constituency in the Bono East region of Ghana. Currently, he is the Deputy Minister for Roads and Highways after he was sworn in by Nana Akufo-Addo. Early life and education He was born on 22 October 1974 and hails from Saboba in the Northern region of Ghana. He had his GCE Ordinary Level in General Science in 1992 and had his GCE Ordinary Level in Business in 1994. He also had his GCE Advance Level in Business in 1996. He further had his Degree in Finance and Banking in 2003 and also had his bachelor's degree in law in 2014. He also had his master's degree in marketing with E-Commerce in 2011. Career He was the District Chief Executive at the Ministry of Local Government for the Pru West district and also the Pru District. He was also the District Manager for the National Health Insurance Authority. Political career Stephen is a member of NPP and currently the MP for Pru West Constituency. He won the parliamentary seat with 16,606 votes making 56.7% of the total votes whilst the incumbent Masawud Mohammed had 12,671 votes making 43.3% of the total votes. Currently, he is the Deputy Minister for Roads and Highways. Committees Stephen is a member of the Members Holding Offices of Profit Committee and also a member of the Works and Housing Committee. Personal life Stephen is a Christian. References Living people 1974 births New Patriotic Party politicians Ghanaian MPs 2021–2025
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Valli Thirumanam (வள்ளி திருமணம்) is a 2022 Indian-Tamil-language Romantic comedy Family drama television series, starring Nachathira and Shyam. The show is produced by 4th Wall Media Works LLP of Karthik Jayaram and Pradeep Athinarayanan, that was premiered on 3 January 2022 and airs on Colors Tamil and is also digitally available on Voot. Cast Main Nachathira as Valli Vadivu's on and only daughter, strict and she tries all the tricks to get her money back from the lenders. Shyam as Karthik Vasundhara's younger brother, is courteous and soft-spoken. He wants his better half to have the same attributes as he does. Recurring Nalini as Vadivu – Valli's mother Gayatri Jayaraman as Vasundhara – Karthik's 1st elder sister Nanjil Vijayan as Gunduraasu Production Release The first Promo release deals with Valli, a quintessential rural girl with beauty and brains, as highlighted through a traditional puppetry art form on 12 November 2021 by Colors Tamil YouTube. The series premiered on 3 January 2022 on Monday to Saturday at 8PM time slot on Colors Tamil. Casting Actress Nachathira was selected to play Valli's character. Shyam was cast as Karthik. References Colors Tamil original programming Tamil-language television soap operas Tamil-language romance television series 2020s Tamil-language television series debuts 2022 Tamil-language television series debuts Tamil-language television shows Television shows set in Tamil Nadu
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Matěj Švancer (; born 26 March 2004) is a Czech-Austrian freestyle skier in slopestyle and big air. After great successes at junior level, including a gold medal at the Winter Youth Olympics and two junior world championship titles, he started for Austria in the 2021–22 season. Career In 2020, Švancer won Gold (Big Air) at the Winter Youth Olympics at Leysin. On 3 November 2019, Švancer made his debut in the FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup in Modena. After further starts in Deštné and Stubaital, he achieved his first top result in 2021 with sixth place in Kreischberg. After his naturalization in March 2020, the switch from the Czech Republic to Austria was approved by the FIS in June 2021 and he was accepted into the Austrian squad. On 22 October 2021, he beat Canadian Teal Harle at the big air in Chur with 99.0 points and thus celebrated his first World Cup victory. Six weeks later he also won the second and final Big Air World Cup of the season in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. References External links 2004 births Living people Sportspeople from Prague Austrian male freestyle skiers Czech male freestyle skiers Freestyle skiers at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Austria Youth Olympic gold medalists for the Czech Republic Czech emigrants to Austria
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Bratovo is a village in Northern Bulgaria. The village is located in Targovishte Municipality, Targovishte Province. Аccording to the numbers provided by the 2020 Bulgarian census, Bratovo currently has a population of 243 people with a permanent address registered in the settlement. Geography The village lies between two geographical areas - the Balkan Mountains and the Danubian Plain (Bulgaria). Bratovo village is located in Municipality Targovishte, 10 kilometers northeast away from Targovishte. The village's elevation ranges between 300 and 499 meters with an average elevation of 479 meters above sea level. The climate is continental. Infrastructure In 2019, Targovishte Municipality invested in the restoration of the village's ritual hall. Buildings There is a kindergarten in the village. There is a local community center and library “Prosveta”. It is still active. There used to be an elementary school “Sv. Sv. Kiril i Metodii” but it was closed in 1997. Ethnicity According to the Bulgarian population census in 2011. References Villages in Targovishte Province
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"She's All I Wanna Be" (stylized in all lowercase letters) is a song by Canadian singer Tate McRae, released on February 4, 2022, by RCA Records as the second single from her debut studio album, scheduled to be released early 2022. The song was produced by Greg Kurstin, and written by McRae and Kurstin. Background and release McRae launched a TIkTok campaign for the song which involved teasing it in multiple videos beginning on December 11, 2021 till its release in February. She also made duets with multiple videos of other TikTok users to the song, and showcased part of the choreography for the official music video in a TikTok which attracted over 5 million views. She announced the release date on January 28, 2022, and noted that she went through 29 different mixes for the song. Composition and lyrics She's All I Wanna Be has elements of pop-punk, synth-pop and alt-pop. The song describes feelings of jealousy towards a woman who seems to have it all, including the interest of McRae's significant other, who attempts to convince McRae that the woman poses no threat. Rachel Brodsky of Stereogum remarks that the song addresses "everyday gaslighting by a love interest who tells you their perfect-seeming female bestie is nothing to worry about". McRae has stated that the song was inspired by feelings of envy and self-loathing brought about by scrolling through social media. She also notes that song was originally written as a ballad, and was lated reworked to "give it some upbeat punk energy". Additionally, the original demo vocals recorded for the ballad version were retained in the final released track. Critical reception Writing for Uproxx Caitlin White notes the pop-punk guitar, some glittering synths, and heavy percussion elevate the song sad girl anthem into actual anthem. Carolyn Droke of Uproxx also notes that the song solidifies McRae's pop star status. Jon Caramanica of The New York Times remarks that McRae's "dry, wiry voice is well suited to the convincingly mopey and skittish punk-pop thumper about envy". Notion notes that McRae showcases her moving storytelling abilities on the track. Music Review site, Thomas Bleach describes the song as ridiculously catchy, angsty, and an anthem with an electric energy, stating that McRae captures a euphoric catharsis which radiates through the bouncy hook, and the song will have you "ready to run around in a mosh pit while passionately screaming out every word". Music video The music video for the song was released on February 11, 2022 and is inspired by the film A Chorus Line based on the 1975 stage production of the same name. The creative concept for the video was done by McRae and Michelle Dawley. The video features McRae and a group of dancers competing for a role at an audition, with McRae fixating on dancer Bailey Sok, as her main competition. The two battle throughout the audition, making it to the final cut, but ultimately lose out due to their over-competitiveness. Caitlin White of Uproxx remarks that McRae and her rival, along with a colorful ensemble of other dancers, face off on the stage, dancing their way through choreography that mimics the song’s chaotic energy. Commercial performance The song debuted in the top ten in Ireland, Singapore and Norway, entering just outside the top ten at 11 in Canada. The song also debuted in the top 40 in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Sweden, New Zealand and the UK. In the US, the song debuted at 52, becoming McRae's highest debut and fourth charting song. Live performances The song was performed live from Los Angeles on February 24 2022 for 'SetTheStage', a brand campaign with Sony featuring 360 Reality Audio, production diaries and unreleased behind-the-scenes content shot with Sony's flagship digital cinema camera — the VENICE 2 and FX9 full-frame cameras. Credits and personnel Song Tate McRae – vocals, composer, lyricist Greg Kurstin – composer, lyricist, producer, engineer Dave Kutch – mastering engineer Mark Stent – mixing engineer Joey Raya – engineer Julian Burg – engineer Matt Wolach – assistant engineer Music video Michelle Dawley – director, creative director, choreographer Tusk – director, creative director, executive producer, production Aiden Magarian – producer Cookie Walukas – associate producer Max Dean – assistant director Justin McWilliams – director of photography Bailey Sox – lead dancer Jasmine Mason – dancer China Taylor – dancer Findlay McConnell – dancer Emily Crouch – dancer Maycee Steele – dancer Jade Whitney – dancer Deirdre Barnes – choreographer Jason Parsons — choreographer actor Kathryn McCormick — judge Robert Roldan — judge Comfort Fedoke — judge Courtney Cooper – production designer Siena Montesano – Tate styling Ryan Richman – Tate McRae hair Gilbert Soliz – Tate McRae make-up Ann-Marie Hoang – dancer styling Elle Reed – dancer hair and make up Christa Philippeaux – editor Matt Osborne – color Marco Tornillo – sound Sabrina Rivera – video commissioner Charts Release history References 2022 singles 2022 songs Tate McRae songs RCA Records singles Songs written by Tate McRae Songs written by Greg Kurstin Song recordings produced by Greg Kurstin
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Viva Republica is a South Korean technology company active in lending, payment services, financial services and stock brokerage. It is the operator of the financial super-app Toss, which had over 20 million users in South Korea in 2021. With a valuation of $7.4 billion, it was one of the most valuable unicorns in South Korea. History Toss was lauched in 2014 as a peer-to-peer money transfer platform by the former dentist Lee Seung-gun after eight failed ventures. Over time, more and more new services were offered on the platform, including loans, credit scores and personal investing. Altos Ventures was the first investor in 2014. Later PayPal, Sequoia China and the Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC also invested in the start-up. In 2018, the company became a unicorn after raising $80 million in a funding round led by Kleiner Perkins and Ribbit Capital. In 2020 Toss was launched in Vietnam, its first overseas expansion. In October 2020 Toss launched Toss Bank, a neobank. In June 2021 Viva Republica raised a further $410 million in a funding. Investors included Alkeon Capital and the Korea Development Bank. In November 2021, Viva Republica announced the acquisition of a majority stake in VCNC, which operates a ride-hailing service called Tada. References Companies based in Seoul South Korean companies established in 2014
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Buynovo is a village in Northern Bulgaria. The village is located in Targovishte Municipality, Targovishte Province. Аccording to the numbers provided by the 2020 Bulgarian census, Buynovo currently has a population of 644 people with a permanent address registered in the settlement. Geography Buynovo village is located in Municipality Targovishte. There is a water dam with the same name “Yazovir Buynovo” located in the same municipality. It stems from the river banks of Beli Lom river and Rusenski Lom rivers. The elevation of the village ranges between 300 and 499 meters with an average elevation of 353 meters above sea level. The village's climate is continental. Buildings and infrastructure The local community hall and library “Razvitie” is still acting. There is a ritual hall in the village. Ethnicity According to the Bulgarian population census in 2011. References Villages in Targovishte Province
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The Siege of Bukhara took place during the Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire, in March 1220. Genghis Khan, ruler of the Mongol Empire, had launched a multi-pronged assault on the Khwarazmian Empire, ruled by Shah Muhammad II. While the Shah organised plans to defend each of his major cities individually, the Mongols laid siege to the border town of Otrar and then struck further into Khwarazmia. The city of Bukhara was a major trading and cultural centre of the Khwarazmian Empire, but was located far from the border with the Mongols, and so the Shah allocated fewer than 20,000 soldiers to defend it. However, a Mongol force, estimated to number between 30,000 and 50,000 men, managed to traverse the Kyzyl Kum desert, previously thought impassable for large armies. Bukhara was caught completely by surprise, and after a sortie was annihilated, the outer city surrendered within three days. Khwarazmian loyalists continued to garrison the citadel for less than two weeks, before it too was breached. The Mongol army killed all in the citadel, and enslaved most of the populace. The work of skilled craftsmen and artisans was appropriated by the Mongols, and some were forced to join the armies. Although fires burnt Bukhara to the ground, the devastation was relatively mild; within a fairly short space of time, the city was once again a centre of trade and learning, and profited greatly from the Pax Mongolica. Background On the eve of the Mongol invasion, Yaqut al-Hamawi's geographical survey described Bukhara as 'among the greatest cities of Central Asia'. With a population of around 300,000 and a library of 45,000 books, the city rivalled Baghdad as a centre of learning and culture. The Po-i-Kalyan mosque, which had originally been commissioned in 1121, was one of the largest in the world, and it contained the Kalyan minaret. The city was guarded by the Ark of Bukhara, a fortress established in the fifth century which served as a citadel, while the farmlands were expertly and extensively irrigated with water from the River Zeravshan. The city had been long been under the rule of the Qarakhanids, who had historically controlled many of the richest cities in the area, such as Samarkand, Tashkent and Fergana. Nominally vassals of the Qara-Khitai khanate, the Qarakhanids were allowed to operate almost autonomously, due to their large population and territory; by 1215, they had been subjugated by the Khwarazmians, also former vassals of the Qara-Khitai, who had expanded from Gurganj into the power vacuum left by the collapsing Seljuk Empire. In 1218, Khwarazmshah Muhammad II was Sultan of Hamadan, Iran and Khorasan, and had established dominion over the Ghurids and the Eldiguzids. The Khwarazmian Empire had usurped the Qara-Khitai, which had already been destabilised by refugees fleeing the conquests of Genghis Khan, who had begun to establish hegemony over the Mongol tribes. Following the defeat of their shared enemy, the Naiman prince Kuchlug, relations between the Mongols and the Khwarazmids were initially strong; however, the Shah soon grew apprehensive regarding his new eastern neigbour. The chronicler al-Nasawi attributes this change in attitude to the memory of an unintended earlier encounter with Mongol troops, whose speed and mobility frightened the Shah. In 1218, the Shah allowed Inalchuq, the governor of Otrar, to arrest an entire Mongol trade caravan, and to seize its goods; Genghis, seeking a diplomatic resolution, sent three envoys to Urgench, whom Muhammad humiliated, publicly executing one. Outraged, Genghis left his war against the Jin, leaving only a minimal force behind, and rode westwards with a great part of his army. Prelude There are conflicting reports as to the size of the total Mongol invasion force — estimates have ranged from as few as 75,000 to as many as 700,000, although anything over 200,000 is considered an exaggeration by modern historians. The uncertainty is made worse by the high flexibility and efficiency of the Mongol force's operational structure, allowing it to separate and coalesce at will. The Mongol forces arrived in Khwarazm in waves: first, a vanguard led by Jochi and Jebe crossed the treacherous Tien Shan passes, and started laying waste to the towns of the eastern Fergana Valley; then, another army led by Chagatai and Ogedai descended onto Otrar and besieged it. Genghis soon arrived with his youngest son Tolui, and he then split the invasion force into four divisions: while Chagatai and Ogedai were to remain besieging Otrar, Jochi was to head northwest in the direction of Urgench, and a minor force was sent to take Khujand, but Genghis himself took Tolui and around half the army — between 30,000 and 50,000 men — and headed westwards. The Khwarazmshah faced many problems. His empire was vast and newly formed, with a still-developing administration. In addition, his mother Terken Khatun still wielded substantial power in the realm - one historian termed the relationship between the Shah and his mother as 'an uneasy diarchy', which often acted to Muhammad's disadvantage. The Shah also distrusted most of his commanders, with the only exception being his eldest son and heir Jalal al-Din, whose military acumen had been critical at the Irgiz River the previous year. If he had sought open battle, as many of his commanders wished, he would certainly have been greatly outmatched in quantity of troops, let alone quality. The Shah thus made the decision to distribute his forces as garrison troops inside his most important towns, such as Samarkand, Merv and Nishapur. Since it was supposedly far from the theatre of war, Bukhara was allotted relatively few troops. The inhabitants, and the Shah, were thus horrified to see the Khan's army appear in front of the city, having crossed of the trackless Kyzyl Kum desert, previously thought impassable by a major force; this expedition has been lauded by some historians as one of the greatest manoeuvres in history. The Khan and his commanders, having deduced the Shah's strategy, had not only utilised both the innate speed and hardiness of their own horse archers and captive local guides to traverse a network of wells and waterholes across the desert. One historian speculates that they had also guaranteed certain surprise through the use of scouting screens over large distances. Siege The Shah was caught completely unaware — he had anticipated that Genghis would attack Samarkand first, whereupon both his field army and the garrison at Bukhara could relieve the siege. The Khan's march through the Kyzyl Kum had left his field army impotent, unable to either engage the enemy or help his people. Bukhara had to be left to its fate. The chronicler Juvaini records that the garrison at Bukhara was commanded by a certain Gür-Khan — one historian has suggested that this may have been Jamukha, an old friend-turned-enemy of Genghis. Most historians consider this unlikely, as Jamukha is commonly attested to have been executed in 1206. The major military action of the siege came on the second or third day, when the Sultan's troops, numbering between 2,000 and 20,000, sallied forth; Juvaini records that they were annihilated by the Mongols on the banks of the river: One historian notes that the sortie, which was conducted solely by the Sultan's auxiliary troops and not by the city garrison, may just have been an attempt to flee; he attributes their willingness to leave to the fact that Bukhara was a very recent Khwarazmian conquest, having been taken from the Qarakhanids less than a decade previously. On the following day the town elders surrendered the city to the Khan's army; thenceforth the only resistance came from a small band of loyalists in the citadel. The citadel of the Ark was built to the highest specifications, but the Khan had brought experts in siege warfare from China; a breach was made after ten days using incendiary and gunpowder weapons, and the citadel was taken in a fortnight. Aftermath Having entered the city, Genghis Khan is recorded to have given a speech at the Friday Mosque, which later gained fame as a theological rationalisation for Mongol destruction. The small amount of resistance in the citadel would prove detrimental to the rest of Bukhara; the Mongols set fires in an attempt to flush out the holdouts, but since most structures in the city were wooden, the soon-uncontrollable fire reduced most of the city, including the famed library, to cinders. Most of the stone structures which were left standing were razed by the Mongols, including the first Po-i-Kalyan mosque. However, the Kalyan minaret within the mosque was left standing; according to legend, Genghis Khan was struck by its beauty, and ordered it to be spared from the destruction. Although all inside the citadel were massacred, the population was not wholly exterminated, unlike other cities such as Merv and Urgench. Instead, the people were evacuated and divided up: skilled artisans and craftsmen were attached to the Mongol army; most of the women were raped and taken as concubines; and the remaining men of fighting age were conscripted into the Mongol forces. These conscripts would be used as human shields in the sieges of Samarkand and Gurganj, which would follow afterwards in 1220 and 1221. Shah Muhammad would die destitute on an island in the Caspian Sea, while the Mongols systematically besieged and took every major city in his empire; his son Jalal al-Din would put up the most resistance but was eventually crushed at the Battle of the Indus. Legacy While extremely devastating in the short-term, the siege would not be the city's end; in fact, within two decades, the city was once again serving as an important centre of trans-Asian trade. Proto-bureaucratic elements were put into place reasonably quickly, under the auspices of a new post called daruyaci; many of the institutions that were later put into place took inspiration from the Qara-Khitai, which one historian has called 'a prototype Mongol Empire'. Records of a Taoist delegation to the area in 1221 reveal that Samarkand, and presumably Bukhara also, was beginning to be repopulated with Chinese and Khitan artisan settlers; the area was still unstable, however, with a Khwarazmian bandit chief managing to assassinate a Bukharan darughachi around that time. The former cities of Khwarazm later became the main sources of income for the treasury of Ogedai, and would become the key cities of the Chagatai Khanate; Bukhara, along with Samarkand, would even later be the home cities of the great conqueror Timur. References Notes References Bukhara Bukhara 1220 in the Mongol Empire Bukhara
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The 2022 All England Open (officially known as the Yonex All England Open Badminton Championships 2022 for sponsorship reasons) is a badminton tournament which will take place at Arena Birmingham in Birmingham, England, from 16 to 20 March 2022 and has a total prize pool of $990,000. Tournament The 2022 All England Open is the fifth tournament of the 2022 BWF World Tour and is also part of the All England Open Badminton Championships, which has been held since 1899. The tournament is organized by the Badminton England with sanction from the Badminton World Federation. Venue This tournament will be held at Arena Birmingham in Birmingham, England. Point distribution Below is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF points system for the BWF World Tour Super 1000 event. Prize pool The total prize money is US$990,000 with the distribution of the prize money in accordance with BWF regulations. Men's singles Seeds Viktor Axelsen Kento Momota Anders Antonsen Chou Tien-chen Anthony Sinisuka Ginting Lee Zii Jia Jonatan Christie Ng Ka Long Finals Top half Section 1 Section 2 Bottom half Section 3 Section 4 Women's singles Seeds Tai Tzu-ying Akane Yamaguchi Chen Yufei An Se-young Nozomi Okuhara P. V. Sindhu Ratchanok Intanon He Bingjiao Finals Top half Section 1 Section 2 Bottom half Section 3 Section 4 Men's doubles Seeds Marcus Fernaldi Gideon / Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo Mohammad Ahsan / Hendra Setiawan Takuro Hoki / Yugo Kobayashi Aaron Chia / Soh Wooi Yik Satwiksairaj Rankireddy / Chirag Shetty Fajar Alfian / Muhammad Rian Ardianto Kim Astrup / Anders Skaarup Rasmussen Teo Ee Yi / Ong Yew Sin Finals Top half Section 1 Section 2 Bottom half Section 3 Section 4 Women's doubles Seeds Chen Qingchen / Jia Yifan Lee So-hee / Shin Seung-chan Kim So-yeong / Kong Hee-yong Yuki Fukushima / Sayaka Hirota Mayu Matsumoto / Wakana Nagahara Greysia Polii / Apriyani Rahayu Nami Matsuyama / Chiharu Shida Jongkolphan Kititharakul / Rawinda Prajongjai Finals Top half Section 1 Section 2 Bottom half Section 3 Section 4 Mixed doubles Seeds Dechapol Puavaranukroh / Sapsiree Taerattanachai Zheng Siwei / Huang Yaqiong Wang Yilyu / Huang Dongping Yuta Watanabe / Arisa Higashino Praveen Jordan / Melati Daeva Oktavianti Marcus Ellis / Lauren Smith Tan Kian Meng / Lai Pei Jing Thom Gicquel / Delphine Delrue Finals Top half Section 1 Section 2 Bottom half Section 3 Section 4 References External links Tournament Link All England Open Badminton Championships All England Open All England Open All England Open
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Have You Ever Seen a Flower? is a children's picture book written and illustrated by Shawn Harris. It tells the story of a kid who leaves the big city to visit a meadow, where they are challenged to use all their five senses to explore nature. The book was published by Chronicle Books on May 4, 2021, and was the recipient of a Caldecott Honor. Reception Kirkus Reviews called the work of Shawn Harris "[a] visual feast teeming with life", and highlighted the author's art style, which they say "evoke Oaxacan design". Publishers Weekly gave the book a starred review and said "[w]ith assurance and passion in his solo debut, Harris [...] connects readers to the stirrings of life in all its forms." Writing for The Horn Book, Megan Dowd Lambert praised Harris' illustrations as vibrant and rich, and noted they have a "naive style", which, combined with "playfully inquisitive text", is used to "imply a child as ostensible artist." Lambert also compares the style of the writing to those found in books by Margaret Wise Brown and Ruth Krauss. Have You Ever Seen a Flower? was the recipient of a Caldecott Honor in 2022. References 2021 children's books American picture books Caldecott Honor-winning works Chronicle Books books
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Grace Brooker (born 20 June 1999) is a New Zealand rugby union player. She made her debut for New Zealand against Australia on 17 August 2019 at Auckland. Personal life Brooker attended Christchurch Girls' High School and is currently studying for a Bachelor of Sport Coaching in Physical Education at the University of Canterbury. Career Brooker scored two tries for the NZ Development XV at the 2019 Oceania Rugby Women's Championship in Fiji. She signed with Matatū for the inaugural season of Super Rugby Aupiki for 2022. In 2021, she was named in the Black Ferns touring squad to England and France. Brooker earned her first start in the second test match against England. She sustained a knee injury in the 24th minute and was replaced by Patricia Maliepo. She was ruled out of the tour after undergoing knee surgery. References External links Black Ferns Profile 1999 births Living people New Zealand female rugby union players
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The 2021–22 Ranji Trophy, is scheduled to be the 87th season of the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament in India. It will be contested by 38 teams, divided into eight groups, with four teams in Group F. All the Group F league matches will take place in Delhi. The tournament was announced by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on 3 July 2021. Points table Fixtures Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 References Ranji Trophy seasons
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The 2021–22 Ranji Trophy, is scheduled to be the 87th season of the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament in India. It will be contested by 38 teams, divided into eight groups, with four teams in Group G. All the Group G league matches will take place in Haryana. The tournament was announced by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on 3 July 2021. Points table Fixtures Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 References Ranji Trophy seasons
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Joachim von Düben (1708 – 27 January 1786) was a Swedish statesman and riksråd. Joachim von Düben was the son of hofmarschall and kapellmeister Anders von Düben the Younger and Ulrica Friedenreich. Von Düben was elected as President of Privy Council Chancellery of Sweden in 1772, and was fired following the Coup of Gustav III. In 1738, von Düben married Catharina Eleonora Temminck, daughter of Governor-General of the Dutch colony of Surinam, Hendrik Temminck. References External links Joachim von Düben – Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (in Swedish) Swedish nobility 1708 births 1786 deaths 18th-century Swedish politicians Joachim Swedish people of German descent Swedish people of Dutch descent Gustavian era people Age of Liberty people Barons of Sweden
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The 2021–22 Ranji Trophy, is scheduled to be the 87th season of the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament in India. It will be contested by 38 teams, divided into eight groups, with four teams in Group H. All the Group H league matches will take place in Guwahati. The tournament was announced by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on 3 July 2021. Points table Fixtures Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 References Ranji Trophy seasons
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Overpass is a studio album by the jazz acoustic bassist Marc Johnson. ECM released the album on 27 August 2021. Background This is his first album in some 10 years. Overpass is a rare bass-only album; it contains eight compositions recorded in Säo Paulo, Brazil during 2018. Five tracks are originals; three tracks are covers, which Johnson selected with great care: Miles Davis’ "Nardis" and Alex North’s "Love Theme from Spartacus" were staples of the Bill Evans’ repertoire. Johnson and his wife Eliane Elias produced the record. Johnson said that several things led him to record this album, commenting, " I’ve been experimenting with different ways of playing alone with the bass to make music and came up with a couple of different meditative-type, pattern-oriented concepts. That started the idea of doing a whole record like that some time. I’ve been experimenting with that and throwing them on different album projects for different people, like with John Abercrombie. There are some moments in a track here or there, where I dive into something like that, but I had never tried to do a whole piece from start to finish with just that being the impetus of thing." Reception Jeff Tamarkin writing for the JazzTimes stated, "Each bassist who’s taken the solo plunge has approached it with a different methodology, but one guiding principle behind most of their creations is the need to coax the listener’s brain into filling in the considerable spaces left by the absence of others, to give the illusion of fullness. Most of us simply aren’t accustomed to hearing an unaccompanied upright acoustic bass for a long stretch of time. Johnson is well aware of that, and he takes care to maintain continually involving conversations with himself throughout these eight pieces." Nigel Jarrett of the Jazz Journal wrote, "Overpass is so called to describe a mini-survey of charts with which Johnson has been associated in one way or another. It’s his first solo album, and it presents a jazz master on peak form and home alone." Karl Ackermann of All About Jazz added, "The virtuoso bassist Marc Johnson has kept a relatively low profile as a leader. Overpass marks Johnson's return to Manfred Eicher's label after ten years, and is his first solo album... The music of Marc Johnson, original and repurposed, mingles traditional jazz, vivid structures, and improvisation, and an intuitively unique style develops. It's quite a feat to generate so much appealing sound from a single, double bass, but Johnson is talented enough to make that kind of magic happen." Track listing Personnel Marc Johnson – bass References 2021 albums Marc Johnson (musician) albums ECM Records albums
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Vathy () or Vathi is the largest settlement on the Greek Ionian island of Ithaca and the seat of the Ithaca regional unit. It is located in the southern part of the island, in a deep natural harbour. According to the 2011 census, it has a population of 1,920. In the Middle Ages, Ionian islands were subject to frequent pirate raids, which forced inhabitants to build settlements inland. Vathy was only formed in the 16th century, during the late Venetian rule, when the families living uphill in the settlement of Palaiochora ('old town'), began moving down to Vathi. In 1807, French built a fortress on the Loutsa hill at the port entrance. The dockyard at the port operated throughout the 19th century, and over 200 ships were built during the period. Wealth from shipbuilding, trade and fishing caused expansion of population and house construction. During the British rule in the 19th century, the population rose to about 5,000. However, in the 1920s naval activity dwindled, and economy of Vathy stagnated. Vathy was devastated by the 1953 Ionian earthquake which left only a few buildings standing. Gradually, the buildings were rebuilt in the original Venetian style. A law was passed in 1978 protecting the architectural heritage of the town, mandating that style and colour of all repairs and new constructions must be preserved. Islet of Lazareto at the entrance to the Bay of Vathy hosts the chapel dedicated to the Transfiguration of the Savior, built in 1668. Since 1560, the islet served as a 40-day quarantine station for ships entering the harbour. References Ithaca
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The White Paper on District Administration in Hong Kong (《地方行政白皮書》)was a white paper published by the Hong Kong Government in January 1981 on introducing elected bodies to local administration in Hong Kong and widening the electoral franchise of the Urban Council. Green Paper The Green Paper: A Pattern of District Administration in Hong Kong was published on 6 June 1980 for public consultations on reforming local administration in Hong Kong. The Green Paper recommended that: On the local tier of administration: District Management Committees be established in each district; District Boards (區議會) be established in each district; and some members of District Boards would be returned by elections On the mid-tier Urban Council: the number of appointed members in the Urban Council be increased to 15 to maintain the pre-existing ratio between appointed and elected members; 8 constituencies be created for the Urban Council, with 7 multi-member constituencies and 1 single-member constituency; and 1-2 constituencies in each district; each constituency represents 250,000 White Paper Upon the conclusion of public consultations, the White Paper: District Administration in Hong Kong in Hong Kong was published in January 1981, stating that the government would: Maintain the pre-existing administrative division comprising 18 districts; Establish District Management Committees in each district by 1981, to be formed by government officials across departments; Establish District Boards in each district by March 1982 (Boards in New Territories to be established by reconstituting existing District Consultation Committees); and Expand Suffrage for the Urban Council Implementation Proposals in the White Paper were implemented between 1982 and 1983, during which elections to the District Boards and Urban Council were held. Expansion of Electoral Franchise Before 1981, Hong Kong residents were eligible to vote in Urban Council elections only if they: had reached 21 years of age; had ordinary resided in Hong Kong for the 3 years immediately preceding the nomination; and were qualified in at least one of 23 categories, which included educational qualifications (School Certificate Examination or equivalent), be a juror, salaried taxpayer, or a member of certain professional organisations The electoral franchise were expanded to around 568,000 voters upon implementation of the White Paper, which marked an increase by 17 times: minimum voting age to remain at 21; minimum period of ordinary residence in Hong Kong increased from 3 to 7 years; all residents were eligible for suffrage regardless of nationalities; and the 23 criteria for registering as voters in Urban Council elections abolished. District Board Bill 1981 The Bill provided for the formation of District Boards: to be composed of elected members, appointed or elected members of the Urban Council or chairmen of Rural Committees, appointed unofficial members and main official members of corresponding District Management Committees; to be formed by around 25-30 members, with an unofficial majority; to be initially chaired by officials, but chairmen to be elected among members as soon as possible; and with 1-2 members per constituency, elected through first-past-the-post voting or single non-transferable vote. Upon enactment of the District Board Ordinance (Cap. 366) on 17 July 1981, elections for District Boards on Hong Kong Island and in Kowloon were held on 4 March 1982, while elections for District Boards in the New Territories were held on 23 September 1982. Urban Council (Amendment) Bill 1981 The Bill provided for the expansion of electoral franchise and creation of constituencies to the Urban Council election on 8 March 1983: number of elected and appointed UC members increased from 12 to 15 members each; 15 single-member constituencies created (each of 250,000 population), elected through first-past-the-post voting; and the term of UC members elected in 1981 shortened to 2 years to accommodate Urban Council elections under the reformed electoral methods in 1983. See also District Councils of Hong Kong Urban Council 1982 Hong Kong local elections 1983 Hong Kong municipal election References Politics of Hong Kong 1980 in Hong Kong 1981 in Hong Kong Electoral reform in Hong Kong History of Hong Kong 1980 in politics 1981 in politics Hong Kong legislation
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Henry Rowe (1812–1870) was an Irish architect who practiced in nineteenth-century Massachusetts, New York and Maine. One of his most noted designs is The Gothic House (also known as the John J. Brown House), in the Spring Street Historic District of Portland, Maine, which was built in 1845. It is believed to be Rowe's first commission in the state, and is described in city promotional materials as the finest example of Gothic Revival architecture in Maine. Although it is virtually unaltered, the house was moved west along Spring Street to its current location in 1971 to avoid demolition. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. Today's 49 Main Street in Yarmouth, Maine, was built the same year as The Gothic House.. Rowe has sometimes been confused in literature with Henry Rowe, of Henry Rowe and Sons, who was based in Worcester, England. Early life After studying under George Richard Pain in Cork, Ireland, Rowe emigrated to the United States around 1840. Career Rowe began working in Boston, before moving to New York and, finally, Maine. Notable works The Gothic House, Portland, Maine The Sparrow House, Portland, Maine 49 Main Street, Yarmouth, Maine S. L. Carleton House, Portland, Maine (demolished in 1914) Death Rowe died on 22 July 1870, aged 57 or 58. He is interred in Portland's Evergreen Cemetery. References 1812 births 1870 deaths People from Kinsale 19th-century Irish architects Burials at Evergreen Cemetery (Portland, Maine) Irish emigrants to the United States (before 1923)
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Marpissa (, until 1926 Tsipidos, ) is a village in Paros, Greece. It is built on a hill at the east side of the island. It is located 19 kilometers away from Parikia, the capital of the island, and near the villages of Marmara and Prodromos. According to the 2011 census, it has 582 inhabitants. Marpissa has been characterised as a traditional settlement. History On the west slopes of mount Profitis Ilias, near Marpissa, lies the cave of the Demons or Kalampaki. In the cave evidence of use from the late Neolithic and early Cycladic period, which correspond to fiifth to third millennium BC, as well as findings dating from the late Cycladic and Mycenaean period. The findings include ceramics, like conical cups, seashells, animal bones and remains of fire. An ancient town known as Marpessa is mentioned in Paros, but its location remains unspesified. Near Marpissa lies the hill of Kephalos, on top of which the Venetians built a castle, the third in the island after those in Parikia and Naousa. The construction of the castle, according to archaeological evidence, started in late 13th century. The castle was ready in the start of the 15th century, when it was mentioned by Cristoforo Buondelmonti (1415-1420). Furthemore, the inoggurational inscription at the church of Evaggelismos mentions 1410 as year of construction. The castle was expanded in circa 1500 by Niccolo Sommaripa, who moved the capital of the island from Parikia to Kephalos. Hayreddin Barbarossa sieged and conquered the castle in 1537. Marpissa may have started developping during the second half of the 16th century, with the creation of a fortress-like settlement. Possibly, Marpissa, Marmara and Prodromos were created by the inhabitants of Kephalos castle and nearby hamlets. Marpissa and Marmara are mentioned in the Ottoman sources of late 17th century. Places of interest Marpissa has been characterised as a traditional settlement, with many houses dating from the 17th and 18th century. In the central square of the village lie four windmills. The village is home of Perantinos Sculpture Museum and a Folklore Museum. On top Kastellos hill, at the location of the ruined castle, lies the monastery of Saint Antonios. Traditions During the Holy Week in Marpissa takes place a reenactment of the Passion of Jesus. References Paros Villages in Greece
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Zihni Jusuf Buzo (1912-2006) was an Albanian Australian civil engineer. Biography Zihni Jusuf Buzo was born (1912) in the neighbourhood of Murat Çelepia in Berat, Albania. In Albania, Buzo attended primary school in Berat. In his youth, Buzo was a member of the Albanian boy scouts. He attended the Harry Fultz school in Tirana and achieved good results earning Buzo a scholarship to study at the American Robert College in Istanbul, Turkey. Buzo graduated with honours and gained a scholarship from the Rockefeller Foundation to study at Harvard University in the US. He graduated university with good grades and as a result of social connections made at Harvard, Buzo was employed by an Anglo-American company as a civil engineer in Albania. Water supply projects were the area where Buzo worked on in Greece and Albania, in particular to combat malaria and he had a keen interest in environmental impacts. He worked in Albania (1935-1939) until the World War II occupation of the country by Axis forces and company employees including Buzo left the country. Buzo migrated to Australia and worked as a civil engineer, often involved in projects within the New England region of New South Wales. He got a position at New England University in Armidale, NSW. In northern NSW, Buzo joined the Oaky River Hydro Electric Scheme. Although the project experienced some environmental and fiscal challenges, Buzo developed a design and implemented the dam's construction on the Oaky River during the 1950s. The completed dam provided thousands of people in Armidale with electricity. Buzo filmed the dam construction from beginning to end. After Buzo's death in 2006, the footage was acquired by the Australian National Film and Sound Archive and made into a film about the dam and his life in 2015. From the 1960s onward, Buzo was employed at the World Health Organization for fourteen years and worked on public health projects spanning more than forty countries in Africa, Asia and South America. During the 1990s, Buzo was involved in lobbying activities and participated in Albanian community delegations where he met Australia's Foreign Minister Gareth Evans and raised the issue of Kosovo and its Albanian population multiple times. He helped numerous Albanians from Albania settle in Australia. Personal life In 1941, Buzo met Elaine Johnson, an Australian teacher of Irish descent and both married the following year. The couple had two sons, Alex Buzo (1944-2006), a writer and playwright born in Sydney, and Adrian Buzo (born 1948, Brisbane), a Korean studies scholar and former Australian diplomat. In the 1991 Australia Day Honours, Buzo's contribution toward the community was recognised in Australia and he was awarded the Order of Australia medal. Buzo was a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Engineers Australia bestowed Buzo with a Honorary Fellowship, an award he cherished above others as it was from his colleagues. Buzo died in July 2006. External sources References 1912 births 2006 deaths People from Berat People from Armidale, New South Wales 20th-century Albanian people 21st-century Albanian people 20th-century Australian people 21st-century Australian people Harvard University alumni Albanian engineers Australian civil engineers Australian people of Albanian descent Recipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia
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The 2017–18 season was Ulster's 24th season since the advent of professionalism in rugby union, and Jono Gibbes' only season as head coach. After the departure of Neil Doak, Jono Gibbes joined Ulster as head coach, with Dwayne Peel joining him as assistant coach, replacing Allen Clarke, who had left to join the coaching staff at Ospreys. Aaron Dundon joined as scrum coach, with Niall Malone remaining as skills coach. The IRFU had blocked South African scrum-half Ruan Pienaar extending his contract as part of their restrictions on foreign players, and he left for Montpellier. John Cooney was signed from Connacht to replace him. Out-half Paddy Jackson and centre Stuart Olding were charged with rape and suspended from playing pending trial (both would be acquitted, but have their contracts revoked). Australian out-half Christian Lealiifano was signed on a five-month loan to cover. Rory Best was restored to the captaincy. Other new arrivals were two South Africans, prop Schalk van der Merwe, signed from the Southern Kings, and loose forward Jean Deysel, signed from the Sharks. Back row forward Roger Wilson retired, lock Conor Joyce and centre Mark Best moved to Jersey Reds, hooker Johnny Murphy went to Rotherham Titans, and lock John Donnan, flankers Lorcan Dow and Stephen Mullholand, and prop Ricky Lutton were released. The former Pro12 was renamed the Pro14 with the addition of two South African teams. After a poor run of form, with eighteen tries conceded in four matches over the Christmas period, Director of Rugby Les Kiss left in January, with Gibbes assuming all coaching responsibility of the team for the remainder of the season. Gibbes cut short his contract at the end of the season, and Dan McFarland, then Scotland's forwards coach, was hired as his replacement. Ulster finished fourth of seven in Conference B of the Pro14, failing to qualify for the playoffs, and third of four in their European Rugby Champions Cup pool, failing to qualify for the knockout stage and having to beat Ospreys in a playoff to qualify for next season. Stars of the season were goal-kicking scrum-half John Cooney, who scored 225 points in all competitions, and academy back row forward Nick Timoney, who made 20 appearances and scored five tries for the senior team. Staff Squad Internationally capped players in bold Players qualified to play for on dual nationality or residency grounds* Irish Provinces are currently limited to four non-Irish eligible (NIE) players and one non-Irish qualified player (NIQ or "Project Player"). Academy squad Player transfers Players In John Cooney from Connacht Schalk van der Merwe from Southern Kings Jean Deysel from Sharks Christian Lealiifano from Brumbies Players Out Roger Wilson retired Conor Joyce to Jersey Reds Mark Best to Jersey Reds Jonny Murphy to Rotherham Titans Ruan Pienaar to Montpellier John Donnan released Lorcan Dow released Ricky Lutton released Stephen Mulholland released European Rugby Champions Cup Pro14 Play-off for the 7th Champions Cup place The South African teams cannot compete in the European Rugby Champions Cup. The top three eligible teams in each conference automatically qualify for following year's Champions Cup. The fourth ranked eligible team in each conference meet in a play-off match with the winner taking the seventh Champions Cup place. Ulster had home advantage against Ospreys by virtue of finishing with the greater number of points accumulated during the PRO14 regular league (62, as opposed to Ospreys’ 44). The match was played on Sunday 20 May, at the Kingspan Stadium. End of season awards John Cooney was the competition's top scorer with 175 points, and was named at scrum-half on the Pro14 Dream Team. Ulster A British and Irish Cup Pool 5 Quarter-final Ulster Rugby Awards The Heineken Ulster Rugby Awards ceremony was held at the La Mon Hotel and Country Club, Castlereagh, on 10 May 2018. Winners were: Bank of Ireland Ulster Player of the Year: John Cooney Heineken Ulster Rugby Personality of the Year: Paul Marshall BT Young Player of the Year: Nick Timoney Rugby Writers Player of the Year: John Cooney Ulster Rugby Supporters Club Player of the Year: John Cooney Abbey Insurance Academy Player of the Year: Nick Timoney CD Group Ulster A Player of the Year: Tom O'Toole Season reviews Ulster Rugby: Who did what 2017-18, The Front Row Union, 25 June 2018 References 2017-18 2017–18 in Irish rugby union 2017–18 Pro14 by team 2017–18 European Rugby Champions Cup by team
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The following is the discography of Doug E. Fresh, an American rapper. Albums Studio albums Singles As lead artist "Superstition" [1997, Hollywood] (with the Get Fresh Crew) "Left-Right" (2007, Entertaining Music) (featuring Square Off) As lead artist Singles with unknown release date Come Again/I Can Make U Dance, New York DJ Service Who Run This (featuring Busy Bee & Lovebug Starski), Self-released Guest Appearances "We Not Giving Up" (2005, The Xtatik Experience) (featuring Doug E Fresh and Machel Montano) "You'll Never Know" (2005, E-Z Rollers) (featuring Doug E. Fresh & Sharon Brown) "Rhyme & Punishment" (2005, E-Z Rollers) (featuring Doug E. Fresh) [Distorted Minds Remix] "Rhyme & Punishment" (2005, E-Z Rollers) (featuring Doug E. Fresh) "Virgo" (2005) (with Ludacris and Nas) "Ready" (2017) (with Bell Biv DeVoe) References Notes Citations Discographies of American artists Hip hop discographies
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Schindleria is a genus of flowering plants in the family Petiveriaceae. It is native to Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay in South America. Description They have a semi-shrubby nature, with erect racemes with a single floral bract and 2 minute bracteoles (a small bracts). They have bisexual (bearing both male and female reproductive organs), actinomorphic flowers (regular or radially symmetrical). The flowers have four petals, with usually 3 parallel veins. They many stamens (between 12 and 25), and the ovary is cylindric or ovoid (in shape), and one-carpellate (consisting of carpels). The style is absent and the stigma is penicillate (tufted like an artist's brush). It has utricle type of fruit (like a small bladder). The pollen grains are similar in form to those of members of the Chenopodioideae family (including Amaranthus and Celosia). They are about 27 μms in diameter. Known species In 1906, when published there were 4 known species, (S. glabra, S. racemosa, S. rivinoides and S. Rosea) then 3 other species were added later up to 1952. S. mollis in 1909, S. weberbaueri in 1923 and S. densiflora (which was transferred from Rivina densiflora) in 1952. Then in 1962, American botanist Joan Nowicke re-ordered the genus and only accepted just 2 known species, Schindleria densiflora and Schindleria racemosa. Then in 2006, Jon M. Ricketson added Schindleria tomentosa. There are 3 accepted species, according to Plants of the World Online, Schindleria densiflora (Kuntze) Monach. – Bolivia, Peru Schindleria racemosa (Britton ex Rusby) H.Walter – Bolivia, Paraguay and Peru Schindleria tomentosa Ricketson – Peru The type species was never named. Taxonomy The genus name of Schindleria is in honour of Anton Karl Schindler (1879–1964), a German dentist and botanist. It was first described and published in Beibl. Bot. Jahrb. Syst. Vol.85 on page 24 in 1906. It was once thought to be part of the Phytolaccaceae family, before moving to the Petiveriaceae family, in 1985. The genus is recognized by the United States Department of Agriculture and the Agricultural Research Service, but they do not list any known species. References Other sources Field Columbian Museum, 1936, Fieldiana: Botany, Volume 13, Part 2, Flora of Peru Hernández-Ledesma, P., Berendsohn, W. G., Borsch, T., Mering, S. v., Akhani, H., Arias, S., Castañeda-Noa, I., Eggli, U., Eriksson, R., Flores-Olvera, H., Fuentes-Bazán, S., Kadereit, G., Klak, C., Korotkova, N., Nyffeler R., Ocampo G., Ochoterena, H., Oxelman, B., Rabeler, R. K., Sanchez, A., Schlumpberger, B. O. & Uotila, P. 2015. A taxonomic backbone for the global synthesis of species diversity in the angiosperm order Caryophyllales. Willdenowia 45(3): 281–383 External links . Petiveriaceae Caryophyllales genera Plants described in 1906 Flora of Bolivia Flora of Peru Flora of Paraguay
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The Postal-, Courier- and Parcel-Services in Germany is marked by number of companies provide services for private and business custommers. After the automotive industry and trade, the logistics sector is the third largest private sector in Germany. In the Post- and Parcel Service branch alone are working around 570,000 people in 2019. The conditions for workes in the Postal-, Courier- and Parcel-Services business haven been widely criticized. Development Since 2002, the industry has hired 70,000 additional people, but that is hardly enough to cope with the exorbitantly grown online trade. With the CoVID pandemic online trade and parcel-delivery had an enormes growth. German Post and DHL said in 2021, world trade could recover from the economic slump caused by the pandemic, while at the same time the number of parcel shipments is likely to remain high. Labour rights and working conditions Researche from University of Bamberg said in 2022, the companys would invest almost exclusively in technology. "Rather, smartphones, tablets, handheld scanners, onboard computers as well as control and assistance systems are used to further simplify workflows, to transmit the specifications from the headquarters in a smaller-mesh manner, to offer multilingual translations of work instructions and to enforce more precise and tightly timed instructions for low-skilled and semi-skilled workers." Investments are made almost exclusively in technology. Companies DHL Deutscher Paket Dienst DPDgroup GLS Hermes Logistik References Express mail Logistics companies of Germany
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Sir Robert Bagod (died after 1329) was a judge, Crown servant and military commander in fourteenth-century Ireland. He was the eldest son of the judge and landowner Sir Robert Bagod, of a family which had been settled in Dublin since the twelfth century. The Bagods, later called Baggot or Bagot, gave their name to present day Baggot Street. At this site they built Baggotrath Castle, the strongest fortress in Dublin, of which no trace survives. At first he resolved on a clerical career, and advanced as far as canon of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, but then decided to follow his father into the service of the English Crown. His career followed his father's closely: he served as High Sheriff of County Limerick 1302–3, was knighted around 1308 and became a justice of the Court of Common Pleas (Ireland) in 1307.In 1306 he was appointed one of the collectors of the one-fifteenth i.e. one-fifteenth of the value of movable goods. He was summoned for military service in Scotland by King Edward I in 1302 but apparently did not serve. On the other hand, he rendered good service to the Crown during the Bruce campaign in Ireland in 1315, fighting mainly in Leinster. Some years later he sat on an important inquisition into claims by the citizens of Dublin to have been impoverished during the Scots invasion. He was Bailiff of Dublin in 1308 and was Chief Serjeant of Limerick in 1317. He either resigned from the Bench or was forcibly retired in 1324, possibly in connection with a "clean sweep" of the Irish judiciary. He died after 1329. He married Avicia and they had at least four sons, Robert, Sylvester, Hervey and Thomas. The last two, like their father and grandfather, were High Court judges. Sources Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 London John Murray 1926 Mackay, Ronan "Bagot (Bagod), Robert" Cambridge Dictionary of National Biography Notes People from Dublin Justices of the Irish Common Pleas High Sheriffs of County Limerick 14th-century Irish judges
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Zuckerberg may refer to: Zuckerberg (surname) Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder and CEO of Facebook and Meta Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (or Zuckerberg Initiative) ie. Zuckerberg Foundation Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center (Zuckerberg Hospital), San Francisco, California, USA Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research (Zuckerberg Institute), Israel Zuckerberg Island, an island in British Columbia, Canada See also Zucker (disambiguation) Berg (disambiguation)
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Ramgopal Ghosh (January 15, 1815 - 25 January 1868) was a leader of the Young Bengal Group, a successful businessman, orator and social reformer. He is called the 'Demosthenes of India'. Ghosh was one of the personalities who helped John Elliot Drinkwater Bethune establish a girls' school in Calcutta. References External links 1815 births 1868 deaths People from Kolkata Presidency University, Kolkata alumni
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Amy Rule (born 15 July 2000) is a New Zealand rugby union player. She made her international debut for New Zealand on their Northern Tour, against England on 7 November 2021 at Northampton. Early career Rule only took up rugby in her final year at Aparima College; although her school did not have a rugby team, she was allowed to play for Central Southland College or any team that needed another player. After High School, she moved to Christchurch in 2019 for University. She played for Canterbury in the Farah Palmer Cup. She played for the New Zealand Barbarians against the Black Ferns in 2020. She signed with Matatū for the inaugural Super Rugby Aupiki. International career In 2019, she was selected in the New Zealand Development XV's team that competed at the Oceania Rugby Women's Championship. She was selected for the Black Ferns Autumn International Tour in 2021 where she eventually made her debut. References External links Black Ferns Profile 2000 births Living people New Zealand female rugby union players People from Lumsden, New Zealand
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Telewebion is an Iranian software program that is the streaming broadcaster video on demand for the Iranian IRIB organization state Television and Radio Corporation. It is ready for use on iOS, Android and the Telewebion website and offers 60 channels live and archived. References Iranian websites
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Local elections was held in Antipolo City on May 14, 2007, within the Philippine general election. The voters elected candidates for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, the two district congressmen, two provincial board members of Rizal, one for each district, and the sixteen councilors, eight in each of the city's districts. Background Incumbent Mayor Angelito "Lito" Gatlabayan was on his third and final term. He ran as representative of Second District. Incumbent Second District Representative Victor Sumulong ran for his place. Incumbent Vice Mayor Danilo Leyble ran for re-election. Incumbent First District Representative Ronaldo "Ronnie" Puno was elected in 2004. In 2006, he resigned in office and appointed as Secretary of Department of the Interior and Local Government by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. His seat left vacant until election. His brother, Roberto "Robbie" Puno ran for his place. Incumbent Second District Representative Victor "Vic" Sumulong won't ran for re-election. Incumbent Mayor Angelito "Lito" Gatlabayan ran for his place instead. Results For Mayor Victor Sumulong won the election. For Vice Mayor Danilo Leyble was re-elected. For Representative First District Roberto "Robbie" Puno won the election Second District Angelito "Lito" Gatlabayan won the election. For City Councilors First District Second District Note Mayor Victor Sumulong died in office on January 6, 2009. Vice Mayor Danilo Leyble took in-charge as Acting Mayor and Second District Councilor Lorenzo Zapanta as Acting Vice Mayor. References External links Antipolo Elections Philippines
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Enrique Delgado Coppiano (8 January 1937 – 19 March 2021) was an Ecuadorian politician who served as Minister of Agriculture from 1988 to 1989 and as a member of the National Congress of Ecuador from 1984 till 1988. He died from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ecuador on 19 March 2021, aged 84. References 1937 births 2021 deaths Members of the National Congress (Ecuador) Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Ecuador Government ministers of Ecuador People from Chone, Ecuador
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Joachim von Düben the Elder (22 August 1671 – 30 November 1730) was a Swedish statesman, riksråd and hovkansler. Joachim von Düben was the son of organist and composer Gustaf Düben and Emerentia Standaert, he was a grandson of the German-born Baroque composer Andreas Düben, and brother of lady-in-waiting Emerentia von Düben and Anders von Düben the Younger. Von Düben anonymously published Uthwalde andelige sånger in 1725. Von Düben married Margareta Spegel in 1719, a daughter of Archbishop Haquin Spegel. He was in 1731, posthumously promoted, raised to comital rang. References External links Joachim von Düben – Svenskt biografiskt handlexikon (in Swedish) 18th-century Swedish politicians Joachim 1671 births 1730 deaths Swedish nobility Swedish people of German descent Swedish people of Dutch descent
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