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AFAS may refer to:
Advanced Field Artillery System, or XM2001 Crusader
AFAS Software
AFAS Stadion, a Dutch stadium | [
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John McColgan (2 January 1898–unknown) was a Scottish footballer who played in the Football League for Portsmouth.
References
1898 births
Scottish footballers
Association football defenders
English Football League players
Vale of Clyde F.C. players
Albion Rovers F.C. players
Portsmouth F.C. players
Waterford F.C. players
Year of death missing | [
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USS YF-446 was an American YF-257-class covered lighter built in 1943 for service in World War II. She was later acquired by the United States Coast Guard and renamed USCGC White Lupine (WAGL-546).
Construction and career
YF-446 was laid down by the Erie Concrete & Steel Supply Co., in Erie, Pennsylvania in 1943. She was launched in 1943. Her trials were held on Lake Erie on 26 April 1944, and she was commissioned on 31 May 1944, with a single mast and boom hoist. Assigned to Naval Station New Orleans. At the cessation of hostilities YF-446 was assigned to the 16th Fleet in Texas for decommissioning and storage.
On 17 July 1947, YF-446 was stricken from the Naval Register and transferred to the Coast Guard. She was then converted for use as a buoy tender and entered commissioned service on 5 September 1947. She was assigned to the 9th Coast Guard District and was based out of Detroit, Michigan. She was assigned to tend aids to navigation and conduct search and rescue, limited ice-breaking, and law enforcement duties when needed.
On 18 October 1951, she assisted following a collision between the M/Vs George F. Rand and Harvey H. Brown off Port Huron, Michigan. On 24 May 1952, she assisted the yacht Judy Lane, and on 20 April 1956 she assisted following a collision between the M/Vs A. M. Byers and E. M. Ford off Sans Souci, Michigan.
She transferred to Ogdensburg, New York and carried out her duties on Lake Ontario. On 28 September 1962, she assisted the tug Russel towing a barge 10 miles northeast of Rochester, New York. She transferred in November 1967, to the First Coast Guard District and was based out of Rockland, Maine, arriving there on 17 November 1967. Here she was responsible for maintaining 417 buoys along the coast of Maine from Portland to Calais at the Canadian border. She also serviced buoys on several of the major rivers in Maine including the Penobscot, Kennebec, Damariscott, New Meadows, Sheepscot, and Saint Croix. She also delivered supplies, fuel and water to families living at various lighthouses. Her last delivery to such a location was when she delivered supplies to the crew at Fog Station Manana Island in 1996 while they were solarizing the fog signal. She sustained minor damage on 16 January 1970, when she touched bottom near Whaleback Ledge, Maine. She assisted in fighting a fire aboard the F/V Rumble Fish on 5 October 1987 and then towed the F/V to safety.
She was decommissioned on 27 February 1998 and was transferred to the government of Tunisia who commissioned her Tabarka (A-804) on 10 June 1998.
Awards
American Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal
National Defense Service Medal
Coast Guard Unit Commendation Medal
Humanitarian Service Medal
References
This article contains public domain text from the United States Coats Guard Historian’s Office website.
http://www.uscg.mil/history/WEBCUTTERS/NPS_133_HAER_Report.pdf
Cutter History File. USCG Historian's Office, USCG HQ, Washington, D.C.
Robert Scheina. U.S. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft, 1946–1990. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1990.
U. S. Department of the Interior. National Park Service. U.S. Coast Guard Buoy Tenders. HAER booklet. Washington, DC: National Park Service, February, 2004. [ HAER no. DC-57; Todd Croteau, HAER Industrial Archeologist (project leader); Jet Low, HAER Photographer; Mark Porter, NCSHPO Consultant (historian), and Candace Clifford, booklet design. ]
External links
NavSource Online: White Lupine (WLM-546)
United States Coast Guard: White Lupine, 1947
TogetherWeServed: White Lupine Crew Members
White-class coastal buoy tenders
1943 ships
Ships built in Erie, Pennsylvania
World War II auxiliary ships of the United States
Ships transferred from the United States Navy to the United States Coast Guard
Ships transferred from the United States Coast Guard to other navies | [
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Allan Ronald Ross (17 April 1944 – 21 August 2018), better known as "Allan the Weasel", was a Canadian gangster best known for leading the West End Gang of Montreal.
Criminal career
Thief
Ross was born as Alan Ross, but he was usually known as Allan. Unlike most other West End Gang members who grew up in poverty, Ross was born into a well off family in the middle class district of Notre-Dame-de-Grâce in Montreal. Ross's criminal record began at the age of 18 when he was arrested three times within a period of five months for automobile theft, a home invasion and automobile theft again. Ross was first convicted of a criminal offense, namely automobile theft, on 8 May 1962. Ross joined the West End Gang in the 1960s, and rose up to become the right-hand man to the boss Frank "Dunie" Ryan. Initially only a lowly thief and a truck hijacker, Ross started to rise to prominence in 1976 when Ryan put him in charge of the drug operations.
The "King of Coke"
When Ryan was murdered on 13 November 1984, Ross took command of the West End Gang. His first action as leader was to hire the hitman Yves Trudeau of the Hells Angels' Laval chapter to hunt down and kill those responsible for the murder of Ryan. The man responsible for Ryan's murder, Paul April, was boasting that with Ryan dead that he was now roi de Montréal ("king of Montreal"). On 19 November 1984, Trudeau visited April's apartment to pay his respects to the self-proclaimed roi de Montréal on behalf of the Hells Angels. During the visit, Trudeau noticed that April did not have a functioning television, and he promised him that he would bring him one along with a VCR. On 25 November 1984, Trudeau dropped off a TV, a VCR and a video tape to the apartment where Ryan's killers, Paul April and Robert Lelièvre were hiding. After leaving the apartment, Trudeau used a remote control to set off a bomb that he had hidden inside the TV. The explosion killed both April and Lelièvre plus two other men in the apartment.
Trudeau had been promised by Ryan that he would pay him $200,000 dollars to kill April and he had been paid $25,000 dollars in advance. When Trudeau tried to collect the rest of the $200,000 after killing April and Lelièvre, Ryan told him he should go collect the money from the Halifax and Sorel chapters of the Hells Angels who owned the West End Gang drug debts, saying he would forgive those debts if those chapters paid the money to Trudeau instead. The president of the Hells Angels Halifax chapter, David "Wolf" Carroll, paid Trudeau $98,000. Carroll later learned that the Laval chapter was actually entitled to one-quarter of the money, and that Trudeau had used the extra money to support his cocaine addiction. As the Halifax chapter was much poorer than the Laval chapter, Trudeau's behavior was considered to be especially crass. Trudeau's stealing from the Halifax chapter led directly to the Lennoxville massacre of March 1985.
The third man involved in the plot to kill Ryan, Eddie Philips, was murdered in March 1985 by a West End Gang member David Singer. Singer went to Florida to hide out, but Ross had doubts whatever he could handle a police interrogation, leading him to order Singer's murder. Ross had gone into business with John Quitoni, a former New Jersey state trooper. In May 1985 during a visit to Fort Lauderdale, Ross requested that Quitoni work with Alain Strong, a West End Gang member. On 10 May 1985, Strong paged Quitoni that he needed a handgun, which Quitoni provided. Later that night, Strong together with another West End Gang member, Raymond Desfossés, murdered Singer. On 28 August 1985, Trudeau who had turned Crown's evidence after the Lenoxville massacre, testified that it was Ross who had hired him to kill April and Lelièvre in November 1984. Despite Trudeau's testimony, the Canadian authorities took no action against Ross, under the grounds that the word of a hitman was not be trusted, through that did not stop the authorities from charging Hells Angels on the basis of Trudeau's testimony. Ross lacked the charisma of Ryan and was respected rather than loved by the West End Gang. The moniker of "Allan the Weasel" reflected his weasel-like face and his ability to "weasel" out any situation.
In the late 1980s, Ross was a successful drug dealer who frequently went to Florida and Aruba to import cocaine, marijuana and hashish. Ross took charge of a drug smuggling network running from Florida to Quebec. Starting in late 1984, cars equipped with secret compartments delivered 15-kilogram packages of cocaine on a biweekly basis. By 1986, the amount of cocaine being smuggled had increased to 20–40 kilograms of cocaine. In 1987, Ross started to export cocaine to the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. Ross was greatly helped by the fact that Inspector Claude Savoie, the director of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's drug squad and assistant director of the Criminal Intelligence Service was working for him. The conduit between Ross and Savoie was a prominent Montreal lawyer, Sydney Leithman, who was Ross's lawyer. Ross paid Savoie $200,000 dollars per week for his information. The police eventually concluded that Ross knew too much about their activities, and that he must have a "mole" within their ranks. In 1989, the Drug Enforcement Administration listed Ross as one of the biggest drug dealers in the entire world.
Downfall
In 1990, Quitoni was arrested in El Paso, Texas. In exchange for a lesser sentence, Quitoni revealed to the American authorities his involvement in Singer's murder in 1985. On 13 May 1991, Leithman was murdered in Montreal. In October 1991, Ross was arrested in Fort Lauderdale. The U.S. Marshals arrested Ross on 7 October 1991 as he was arriving at the airport. After his arrest, he told Detective Chris Dale of the Broward County Sheriff's Office: "Not that I would, but it sure would be nice if I could give you $200,000 or so and you would let me go."
After a six-week trial in the spring of 1992, an American jury found Ross guilty of drug trafficking. On 15 May 1992, a jury in Gainesville found Ross guilty of charges of conspiracy to traffic in a least 10,000 kilograms of cocaine plus more than 300 tones of marijuana from 1975 to 1989. The judge sentenced him to life imprisonment with no chance of parole plus fined him $10 million U.S. dollars.
In the meantime, the media had become curious about Leithman's murder, and started to probe the links between Savoie, Leithman and Ross. The fact that the American police agencies investigating Ross refused to share information with the Canadian police forces under the grounds that they suspected that there was a police "leak" became the source of some scandal in Canada. American law enforcement complained that whatever information that was shared with the RCMP always seemed to reach Ross. The Fifth Estate television show aired a segment about the connections between the three men. On The Fifth Estate, Savoie was interviewed where he stated: "Allan Ross, for us from '86 to '91, was not one of our problems. Allan Ross – everybody says he was head of this. People were saying this. But I must say that in my work, I wouldn't be able to say that. And we were not sure, we never had him pinned". In a follow-up interview on another show of The Fifth Estate, Savoie stated: "I know with Allan Ross, there's no doubt that was word always you know that he had access to somebody and you know maybe he did... And I gather from you wanting to talk to me that you feel maybe I was one of those people on the list and that's fair game I guess... Sometimes people make mistakes. What can I tell you?" On 21 December 1992, Savoie committed suicide by shooting himself in the head in his office just minutes before he was due to be questioned about his corruption. Savoie pressed his service revolver against his temple while wrapping his gun through sleeve of his uniform to silence the blast before pulling the trigger. Savoie was buried on Christmas Eve 1992 with no honor guard of the Mounties to honor him as is usually the case with a Mountie who has died.
In 1993, Ross was convicted of another set of drug charges together with the murder of Singer. During the trial, it was revealed that Ross had offered the Hells Angels $13,000 dollars for killing Quitoni. On 29 October 1993, Ross was found guilty of first-degree murder. In the 1993 case, the judge sentenced Ross to 30 years in prison atop of his life sentence. About his conviction, Ross was quoted as saying: "They can ship my body to Florida to start the last 30 years." Ross was replaced as boss of the West End Gang by Gerald Matticks.
In May 2009, Ross asked for the fine to be waived under the grounds that he had colon cancer. In a letter, Ross stated he had not been able to work within the prison for the last twelve years because of his poor health, while his wife and mother were paying the fine. He wrote: "In the last few years it has been a hardship on my family and myself. My wife is 64 years old and due to health problems, now only works part time. My mom is 86 years old and just had a knee replacement, she lives on her old age pension... I can no longer impose upon my family in these difficult times". The judge refused his request. In February 2017, he appealed in court for an early release owning to the fact that he was dying of colon cancer, which a judge refused.. Ross died in the Federal Medical Center, Butner in North Carolina of complications from colon cancer.
Books
.
References
1944 births
2018 deaths
Canadian gangsters of Irish descent
Canadian crime bosses
Criminals from Montreal
Organized crime in Montreal
20th-century Canadian criminals
Canadian male criminals
Anglophone Quebec people
Quebec people of Irish descent
Canadian prisoners and detainees
Canadian people imprisoned abroad
Prisoners and detainees of the United States
Gangsters sentenced to life imprisonment
Canadian people who died in prison custody
Canadian drug traffickers
Canadian people convicted of drug offences
Canadian people convicted of murder
Deaths from cancer in North Carolina | [
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Lamproclasiopa is a genus of shore flies in the family Ephydridae.
Species
Lamproclasiopa aliceae Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa aracataca (Cresson, 1940)
Lamproclasiopa argentipicta Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa auritunica Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa balsamae (Cresson, 1930)
Lamproclasiopa bisetulosa (Cresson, 1939)
Lamproclasiopa brunnea Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa brunneonitens (Cresson, 1940)
Lamproclasiopa caligosa Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa curva Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa ecuadoriensis Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa fumipennis (Wirth, 1955)
Lamproclasiopa furvitibia Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa hendeli Wirth, 1968
Lamproclasiopa laevior (Cresson, 1934)
Lamproclasiopa lapaz Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa mancha Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa nadineae (Cresson, 1925)
Lamproclasiopa nitida (Cresson, 1918)
Lamproclasiopa painteri (Cresson, 1930)
Lamproclasiopa polita (Edwards, 1933)
Lamproclasiopa puella (Cresson, 1931)
Lamproclasiopa triangularis Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa turgidula (Cresson, 1940)
Lamproclasiopa univittata (Cresson, 1946)
Lamproclasiopa xanthocera Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
Lamproclasiopa zerafael Costa, Mathis & Marinoni, 2016
References
Ephydridae
Diptera of North America
Diptera of South America
Brachycera genera
Taxa named by Friedrich Georg Hendel | [
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Chau Siu-chung is a Hong Kong labour union worker and politician, currently a member of Legislative Council for the Labour constituency.
He is also the secretary-general for the pro-Beijing labour union Federation of Hong Kong and Kowloon Labour Unions, and a member of the Election Committee responsible for electing the Chief Executive.
Electoral performances
References
Living people
Hong Kong politicians
Members of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
HK LegCo Members 2020–2024
Members of the Election Committee of Hong Kong, 2021–2026 | [
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The Krasnoyarsk constituency (No.54) is a Russian legislative constituency in Krasnoyarsk Krai. Until 2007 the constituency covered area around Krasnoyarsk in central Krasnoyarsk Krai. The constituency changed significantly in 2015 as it was redistricted to eastern Krasnoyarsk Krai (southern part of Kansk constituency, including Kansk itself) and shedded its parts to Divnogorsk and Central constituencies.
Members elected
Election results
1993
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Tikhonov
|align=left|Independent
|
|20.64%
|-
|style="background-color:#0085BE"|
|align=left|Yury Grudin
|align=left|Choice of Russia
| -
|15.70%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1995
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:#3A46CE"|
|align=left|Vladimir Tetelmin
|align=left|Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats
|
|14.36%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Valery Pozdnyakov
|align=left|Our Home – Russia
|
|14.29%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Abakumov
|align=left|Independent
|
|11.29%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Ivanov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|8.54%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Igor Smirnov
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|7.71%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Pak
|align=left|Independent
|
|7.02%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Tikhonov (incumbent)
|align=left|Power to the People
|
|6.92%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Tayursky
|align=left|Independent
|
|6.87%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Shkutan
|align=left|Independent
|
|6.43%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Puzanov
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.00%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|12.87%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1999
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Valery Zubov
|align=left|Independent
|
|33.30%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Abakumov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|18.63%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Bykov
|align=left|Independent
|
|13.33%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Pokidko
|align=left|Independent
|
|7.25%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Tetelmin (incumbent)
|align=left|Independent
|
|6.04%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Svetlana Oskina
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.58%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Vidov
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.43%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Kachayev
|align=left|Russian All-People's Union
|
|1.17%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Fedorov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.84%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Andrey Kochenov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.76%
|-
|style="background-color:#020266"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Puzanov
|align=left|Russian Socialist Party
|
|0.65%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Nefedov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.44%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|13.16%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2003
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Valery Zubov (incumbent)
|align=left|Independent
|
|40.79%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Marina Dobrovolskaya
|align=left|Independent
|
|29.94%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Bedarev
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|7.86%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Artyom Chernykh
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|2.12%
|-
|style="background-color:#00A1FF"|
|align=left|Vladimir Germanovich
|align=left|Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life
|
|1.52%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yelena Martynenko
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.31%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Olga Likhtina
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.16%
|-
|style="background-color:#1042A5"|
|align=left|Sergey Zhabinsky
|align=left|Union of Right Forces
|
|0.95%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Tamara Dobryak
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.79%
|-
|style="background-color:#7C73CC"|
|align=left|Leonid Pankrats
|align=left|Great Russia – Eurasian Union
|
|0.21%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|11.83%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2016
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Yury Shvytkin
|align=left|United Russia
|
|44.21%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Titov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|11.58%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksey Slonov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|11.45%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Vladimirov
|align=left|Patriots of Russia
|
|8.07%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Andrey Zberovsky
|align=left|A Just Russia
|
|5.64%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Tatyana Osipova
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|5.62%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Aleksandr Gornostayev
|align=left|Rodina
|
|3.08%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Artyom Tarasov
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|2.96%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Shakhmatov
|align=left|The Greens
|
|1.86%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2021
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Yury Shvytkin (incumbent)
|align=left|United Russia
|
|36.96%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Natarov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|14.88%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Tokov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|13.53%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Oleg Kolesnikov
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|6.87%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Ivan Korostelev
|align=left|New People
|
|6.81%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Igor Flyagin
|align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth
|
|6.73%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Shakhmatov
|align=left|The Greens
|
|5.38%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Sergey Buchenik
|align=left|Party of Pensioners
|
|3.45%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
Notes
References
Russian legislative constituencies
Politics of Krasnoyarsk Krai | [
101,
1996,
1047,
8180,
3630,
13380,
6711,
5540,
1006,
2053,
1012,
5139,
1007,
2003,
1037,
2845,
4884,
5540,
1999,
1047,
8180,
3630,
13380,
6711,
1047,
14995,
1012,
2127,
2289,
1996,
5540,
3139,
2181,
2105,
1047,
8180,
3630,
13380,
6711,
1... | [
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1,
1,
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1,
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1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
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1,
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1,
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1,
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1,
1... |
Howard G. Bruenn (1905 – July 25, 1995) was an American doctor who served as Physician to the President and attended to President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the year before his death.
Biography
Bruenn was born in Youngstown, Ohio. He graduated from Columbia College in 1925 and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1929. He interned at Boston City Hospital and completed his residency at the Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons.
He joined the U.S. Navy in 1942 and was commissioned a Lieutenant Commander.
Bruenn was transferred to Bethesda Naval Hospital, where he became chief of cardiology. After giving President Franklin D. Roosevelt a routine health check, he was assigned to be the President's physician. He traveled with the President wherever he went, including the Yalta Conference. He was one of the only three people present in Roosevelt's personal quarters in the Little White House when he died on April 12, 1945.
After the President's death, Bruenn returned to private practice until his retirement in 1975 as consultant emeritus and retired chief of the Vanderbilt Clinic at the NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.
Bruenn, a lifelong resident of Riverdale, Bronx, died on July 29, 1995, in his summer home in Sorrento, Maine at 90 years old.
References
1905 births
1995 deaths
People from Youngstown, Ohio
Columbia College (New York) alumni
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine alumni
Physicians to the President
Franklin D. Roosevelt administration personnel
Physicians from Ohio
20th-century American physicians | [
101,
4922,
1043,
1012,
7987,
24997,
2078,
1006,
5497,
1516,
2251,
2423,
1010,
2786,
1007,
2001,
2019,
2137,
3460,
2040,
2366,
2004,
7522,
2000,
1996,
2343,
1998,
3230,
2000,
2343,
5951,
1040,
1012,
8573,
1999,
1996,
2095,
2077,
2010,
2331... | [
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1,
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1,
1,
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1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
Robert Rossow, Jr. (born 1919 in Indiana) was the Deputy of the Embassy of the United States of America in Tabriz, Iran, where he served from December 1945 to June 1946. He then headed the Political Department of the US Embassy in Tehran until January 1947.
He served as US Deputy Consul in Panama in 1943. He also served on a United States Department of State mission in Bulgaria in 1947. From 1949 to 1951, he was US Deputy Consul in Chennai, India.
During his charge in the Tabriz US Consulate, when the Azerbaijani Democratic Party ruled in this city, he observed the movements and activities of the Red Army in Tabriz and transmitted all the secret operations of the Soviet Union forces in Azerbaijan to the United States moment by moment.
The Battle of Azerbaijan
Some of his confidential reports to the US government have been published in the book "The Battle of Azerbaijan, 1946". The book is based on an article by Robert Rossow, Jr. himself published in The Middle East Journal in the winter of 1956.
See also
Julius C. Holmes
Charles C. Hart
Azerbaijan People's Government
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's letter to George W. Bush
Deportation of the Iranian students at US airports
Correspondence between Barack Obama and Ali Khamenei
References
External links
Foreign relations of the United States (375 Issues) - UW-Madison Libraries
Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS)
Strategy, Diplomacy, and the Cold War The United States, Turkey, and NATO, 1945-1952
1919 births
Year of death missing
American expatriates in Iran
Iran–United States relations | [
101,
2728,
5811,
5004,
1010,
3781,
1012,
1006,
2141,
4529,
1999,
5242,
1007,
2001,
1996,
4112,
1997,
1996,
8408,
1997,
1996,
2142,
2163,
1997,
2637,
1999,
21628,
21885,
1010,
4238,
1010,
2073,
2002,
2366,
2013,
2285,
3386,
2000,
2238,
391... | [
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
Harry Foxall (9 November 1901–1976) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Merthyr Town and Portsmouth.
References
1901 births
1976 deaths
English footballers
Association football midfielders
English Football League players
Cradley Heath F.C. players
Pontypridd F.C. players
Merthyr Town F.C. players
Portsmouth F.C. players
Stourbridge F.C. players | [
101,
4302,
4419,
8095,
1006,
1023,
2281,
5775,
1516,
3299,
1007,
2001,
2019,
2394,
4362,
2040,
2209,
1999,
1996,
2374,
2223,
2005,
21442,
16921,
2099,
2237,
1998,
10913,
1012,
7604,
5775,
18250,
3299,
6677,
2394,
27784,
2523,
2374,
8850,
... | [
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |
Club 12 de Octubre de Santo Domingo is a Paraguayan football club from the Santo Domingo barrio in Asunción. It was founded in 1922.
History
Copa Paraguay
In 2018, the club was excluded from the year's Copa Paraguay tournament. On 30 May 2019, the club was defeated 3–0 in the Copa Paraguay against 12 de Octubre de Itaguá. On 11 August 2021, the club lost 2–1 against Rubio Ñú in the 2021 tournament.
References
External links
Soccerway profile
12 De Octubre Club
12 De Octubre Club
1922 establishments in Paraguay | [
101,
2252,
2260,
2139,
13323,
12083,
2890,
2139,
11685,
15586,
2003,
1037,
13884,
2319,
2374,
2252,
2013,
1996,
11685,
15586,
25676,
1999,
2004,
4609,
10446,
1012,
2009,
2001,
2631,
1999,
4798,
1012,
2381,
10613,
13884,
1999,
2760,
1010,
19... | [
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Raize may refer to:
Toyota Raize, a rebadged A200 series Daihatsu Rocky subcompact crossover SUV
Jason Raize (1975–2004), an American actor | [
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Banat National College is one of the most prestigious high schools in Timișoara. The college buildings are part of the complex that belonged to the School Sisters of Notre Dame, which also owned the Notre Dame Church in Timișoara. Currently, this complex is part of the old Iosefin district, inscribed in the list of historical monuments with the code TM-II-s-B-06098.
History
The building of the Banat National College has housed educational institutions since its establishment. Between 1773 and 1880, Trivium Elementary School functioned here. Between 1881 and 1890, in parallel with the Elementary School, the Notre Dame Sisters' School also functioned here. Between 1890 and 1924, the old elementary school was abandoned, and the new Catholic school expanded its perimeter, adding the wing from the current General Ion Dragalina Boulevard. In 1924, the Notre Dame Sisters' School expanded its scope of activity, establishing the Queen Marie Housekeeping School. In 1931, with the establishment of high school courses, the institution became the Notre Dame Roman Catholic High School for Girls. In 1946, the Queen Marie Housekeeping School changed its name to the Urban Housekeeping School, and later, in 1947, to the Housekeeping Technical School. With the educational reform of 1948, the Housekeeping Technical School became the Pedagogical School for Educators, and the Notre Dame Roman Catholic School for Girls became the Pedagogical School for Girls. In 1948 the section with teaching in Serbian was moved here, from the C.D. Loga High School; it was split off in 1990 with the establishment of the Serbian High School. In 1961 a German section and a Hungarian section were established. The first one still functions today, and the Hungarian one broke away with the establishment of the Béla Bartók High School. It got its current name in 1999.
The building where the college functions is a historical monument. It was built in 1881 in historicist style according to the plans of architect .
Students
At the beginning of the 2019–2020 school year, at the Banat National College, a number of 2,448 students were distributed in 89 classes:
primary school – 35 classes (912 students);
middle school – 22 classes (655 students);
secondary school – 32 classes (881 students).
References
Schools in Timișoara
National Colleges in Romania
Historic monuments in Timiș County | [
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7221,
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Techem is a globally active German energy service provider for the real estate industry and private homeowners based in Eschborn.
References
External links
Service companies of Germany
Companies based in Eschborn
1952 establishments in Germany | [
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Bengaluru Torpedoes is a men's volleyball team from Bengaluru, Karnataka playing in the Prime Volleyball League in India. The team was founded in 2021 and owned by Limitless Human Performance.
Team
Current Team
Administration and support staff
References
Sports clubs in India
Volleyball in India
Men's volleyball teams
Sport in Karnataka
Sport in Bangalore | [
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The Bigg Chill is a frozen yogurt shop in Westwood, Los Angeles, established in 1990. The store has been noted for its interior design, rotation of conventional flavors, and longevity.
Store
The Bigg Chill's interior has a neon pink and aqua color theme. The store rotates from a selection of over 400 flavors daily, and only accepts cash. Many of the store's early flavors were created by Michael Mendelsohn; in 1994, he told the Los Angeles Times that chocolate, vanilla, and peanut butter were the best-selling flavors, and the toasted almond and Mounds candy bar flavors also performed well.
The store's owners reported in 2011 that they could see as many as 1,000 customers a day, and up to 1,300 on the weekends.
History
The Bigg Chill was established in 1986 in a small strip mall in Westwood, Los Angeles. In 1990, the store was bought by Cary Russell and her mother, Diane Dinow. The Los Angeles Times characterized the name as a homage to the 1983 film The Big Chill. On January 26, 1990, a fire broke out at a neighboring cleaners store in the strip mall, causing "extensive" damage.
In 2006, frozen yogurt chain Pinkberry rose to popularity, causing revenues of The Bigg Chill to drop 30 percent. Russell responded by creating a tart ice cream flavor known as "Chill Berry", marketing it heavily, which caused profits to recuperate.
In 2020, The Bigg Chill collaborated with an Instagram streetwear brand known as Fam Los Angeles to produce The Bigg Chill-themed merchandise.
In April 2021, singer-songwriter and actor Demi Lovato criticized The Bigg Chill on their Instagram story, complaining that the store had too many diet foods prominently displayed in front of the counter, which they characterized as "perpetuating a society that not only enables but praises disordered eating" and including the hashtag "#dietculturevultures". The Bigg Chill responded on its own Instagram page that it carries those products for people with celiac disease, diabetes, and vegans. They also sent Lovato a direct message on Instagram, "We are not diet vultures. We cater to all of our customers needs for the past 36 years. We are sorry you found this offensive". The back-and-forth continued, with Lovato receiving significant backlash on social media and in the news for their comments. Some users accused Lovato of using their large platform—Lovato has 102 million followers on Instagram—to unfairly criticize a small business. Conversely, The Bigg Chill received considerable social media encouragement, with one user commenting "I don't even live in LA but I want to show my support! I love Demi but I disagree with [them] on this one". The Bigg Chill told The Huffington Post that they were "really hurt by Demi's comments", reiterating their support for their variety of options.
After a few days, Lovato apologized, describing their experience in the store and how it triggered them, and stated that "I just get really passionate. Y'all know me. I'm pretty feisty, and sometimes my emotions get the best of me". Afterwards, The Bigg Chill denied circulating rumors that claimed Lovato had donated $100,000 to the store, stating that Lovato did not make that donation and that The Bigg Chill did not want them to do so. Over the course of the controversy, The Bigg Chill's following on Instagram increased from 6,000 to 42,000 followers. Russell commented that people were "shocked by how [Lovato] came at us. And so were we. It was like, wait, why is [Lovato] attacking us? What did we do?"
Reception and impact
In a 2011 profile from The New York Times, Nicole LaPorte praised the store for enduring despite emerging trends of designer frozen yogurt flavors and self-serve yogurt. While LaPorte characterized the ice cream as good, but not out of the ordinary, she also argued that the store's resistance to change provides it an authenticity and a loyal base of returning customers, which was characterized as more effective than the "unique and pleasing sensory environment" of Pinkberry. Customers compared The Bigg Chill to an "old-time ice-cream parlor" for its nostalgic feel.
In a 2016 "Discourse On Frozen Yogurt" from Los Angeles magazine, Marielle Wakim categorized The Bigg Chill as an "OG Veteran" for its longevity among Los Angeles's frozen yogurt stores. Wakim noted the store's neon turquoise and pink motif, counter service, and simple non-designer flavors such as "Vanilla Custard" and "Fresh Strawberry" rather than "Taro" or "Green Tea".
KCET also noted the store's resistance to exotic flavors, commenting that they did not "sell out to yogurt trends" when a rival store was opened nearby. They also complimented the store's yogurt pies and called the store a "UCLA institution" despite its location in West Los Angeles.
In reviewing frozen yogurt stores in Los Angeles, CBS Los Angeles complimented the store's "cool retro look" and large selection of flavors. They also commented that the store's design evoked the "Peach Pit location on Saved by the Bell".
Amy Salko Robertson told the Jewish Journal in 2013 that when she started a frozen yogurt shop in Santa Monica, she drew inspiration from The Bigg Chill to experiment with flavors.
Los Angeles magazine reported that between March and June 2020—during the initial lockdowns due to the COVID-19 pandemic—The Bigg Chill ranked as the fifth most popular restaurant to order from on Postmates in Los Angeles.
References
1990 establishments in California
Demi Lovato
Frozen yogurt businesses
Restaurants in Los Angeles | [
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David Watson (2 October 1896–1978) was a Scottish footballer who played in the Football League for Portsmouth.
References
1896 births
1978 deaths
Scottish footballers
Association football forwards
English Football League players
Falkirk F.C. players
Bo'ness F.C. players
Sunderland A.F.C. players
Portsmouth F.C. players | [
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Subrata Dutta (18 September 1945 – 29 November 1975), popularly known as Jauhar, was an Indian communist politician and militant leader. Jauhar participated in Naxalbari uprising and served as the General Secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation party between 1974 and 1975.
Subrata Dutta was killed 29 November 1975 during the Bhojpur Uprising during an encounter with CRPF and Bihar Police.
References
1945 births
1975 deaths
Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation politicians
People shot dead by law enforcement officers in India
People from Kolkata
Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) politicians | [
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Formentera is a song by Spanish singer Aitana and Argentine rapper and singer Nicki Nicole. It was released on December 3, 2021 as the second single from Aitana's upcoming third studio album by Universal Music Spain.
Background
During an interview with Los 40 in November 2021, Nicki Nicole confirmed that she had collaborated with Aitana in a track that would be released soon. Some days later, Aitana confirmed the release date of the single and confirmed that the music video would also be dropping that same day.
Reception
"The catchy melody of the song's chorus is one of the most memorable parts of the song". Soon after its release, the song was criticized by some listeners because one verse reads, "I'll fly directly to Formentera", but Formentera is an island and has no airport.
Commercial performance
The song debuted at number 76 on the Billboard Argentina Hot 100 and eventually peaked at number 57. In Spain, the song peaked at number three and was certified gold.
Track listing
Charts
Certifications
References
Spanish songs
2021 songs
Aitana (singer) songs
Nicki Nicole songs
2021 singles
Songs written by Andrés Torres (producer)
Songs written by Mauricio Rengifo
Songs written by Aitana (singer)
Song recordings produced by Andrés Torres (producer)
Songs written by Nicki Nicole | [
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1... |
USS YF-445 was an American YF-257-class covered lighter built in 1943 for service in World War II. She was later acquired by the United States Coast Guard and renamed USCGC White Heath (WAGL-545).
Construction and career
YF-445 was laid down by the Erie Concrete & Steel Supply Co., in Erie, Pennsylvania on 4 June 1943. She was launched on 21 July 1943. She was commissioned on 9 August 1944, with a single mast and boom hoist.
On 9 August 1947 she was formally commissioned as a Coast Guard cutter and was christened White Heath and given the hull designation WAGL-545. She was then sent to the Coast Guard Yard for conversion to a buoy tender. Her deck arrangement was converted to include a large derrick to handle buoys and her upper deck was extended.
She was stationed throughout her Coast Guard career at Boston. Her primary assignment was to tend aids to navigation although she was called upon to conduct other traditional Coast Guard duties, such as search and rescue, law enforcement or light icebreaking duties, as required.
From 4 to 5 October 1960, she assisted after an Eastern Air Lines Flight 375 near Boston.
She was decommissioned on 31 March 1998 and was transferred to Tunisia in 1998 who commissioned her Turgueness (A-805) on 10 June 1998.
Awards
American Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal
National Defense Service Medal
References
This article contains public domain text from the United States Coats Guard Historian’s Office website.
http://www.uscg.mil/history/WEBCUTTERS/NPS_133_HAER_Report.pdf
Cutter History File. USCG Historian's Office, USCG HQ, Washington, D.C.
Robert Scheina. U.S. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft, 1946–1990. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1990.
U. S. Department of the Interior. National Park Service. U.S. Coast Guard Buoy Tenders. HAER booklet. Washington, DC: National Park Service, February, 2004. [ HAER no. DC-57; Todd Croteau, HAER Industrial Archeologist (project leader); Jet Low, HAER Photographer; Mark Porter, NCSHPO Consultant (historian), and Candace Clifford, booklet design. ]
External links
NavSource Online: White Heath (WLM-545)
United States Coast Guard: White Heath, 1947
TogetherWeServed: White Heath Crew Members
White-class coastal buoy tenders
1943 ships
Ships built in Erie, Pennsylvania
World War II auxiliary ships of the United States
Ships transferred from the United States Navy to the United States Coast Guard
Ships transferred from the United States Coast Guard to other navies | [
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The Eastern world is a term referring to different nations depending on the context.
Eastern World may also refer to:
Eastern Bloc, countries allied with the Soviet Union during the Cold War
See also
Eastern Christianity, Christian traditions that originally developed during classical and late antiquity in Western Asia, Northeast Africa, Eastern Europe, Southeastern Europe, Asia Minor, the Malabar coast of South Asia, and parts of the Far East | [
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Bachata Nation is the fifth studio album by The Bronx born Bachata artist Toby Love released in 2016 through Top Stop Music. This album included 4 singles that reached the top of the Billboard Tropical Airplay chart. The song "El Aire Que Respiro" peaked at #8 while the songs "We Never Looking Back" featuring French Montana, "Vestida De Blanco", and "No Le Eches La Culpa" peaked at #1.
Track listing
Charts
References
Toby Love albums
2016 albums
Spanish-language albums | [
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Sara Hennessy is a British scholar. As of 2022, she is a Professor of Teacher Development and Pedagogical Innovation in the Faculty of Education at the University of Cambridge. Hennessy has worked in the field of EdTech for over three decades, focusing particularly on professional development, teacher inquiry, and interactive pedagogy, including in sub-Saharan Africa. She is a Research Director of EdTech Hub, a multi-million-pound 8-year program funded by the UK's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Biography
Hennessy graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Social Psychology from the London School of Economics and Political Science in 1981 and a Masters of Arts from the University of Cambridge. She also holds a PhD in Psychology from the University College London.
Hennessy was a Research Fellow at the Institute of Educational Technology, Open University from 1986 to 1999 before becoming a lecturer in Teacher Development and Pedagogical Innovation at the University of Cambridge in 2008 until 2011. She was a Senior Lecturer at the university from 2011 until 2015 and a Reader from 2015 until 2021 when she became a professor.
Hennessy is a member of the Faculty's STeM Academic group and a Fellow of Hughes Hall college. She also serves as a founding member and co-leader of the Cambridge Educational Dialogue Research (CEDiR) Group Professor Sara co-directs the EdTech Hub where she functions as a Research Director, overseeing the ‘Teachers’ theme and convening the Hub's Advisory Pool.
Selected publications
Hennessy S, Ruthven K, SUE Brindley.(2005). Teacher perspectives on integrating ICT into subject teaching: commitment, constraints, caution, and change. Journal of curriculum studies 37 (2), 155-192N1155
Osborne J, Hennessy S. Futurelab 480 (2003). Literature review in science education and the role of ICT: Promise, problems and future directions.
Hennessy S. Studies in Science Education (1993). 22 (1), 1-41. 452. Situated cognition and cognitive apprenticeship: Implications for classroom learning.
Haßler B, Major L. Hennessy S. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning Tablet use in schools: A critical review of the evidence for learning outcomes. 32 (2), 139-156. 391 2016
Hennessy S, Harrison D, Wamakote L.Teacher factors influencing classroom use of ICT in Sub-Saharan Africa. Itupale online journal of African studies 2 (1), 39-54. 386 2010
British Journal of Educational Technology- published by Wiley on behalf of the British Educational Research Association
References
Alumni of University College London
Alumni of the University of Cambridge
People from Cambridge
Living people | [
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Cyperus antillanus is a species of sedge that is native to western and central parts of Cuba.
See also
List of Cyperus species
References
antillanus
Plants described in 1946
Flora of Cuba | [
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The 2016–17 season was Ulster's 23rd season since the advent of professionalism in rugby union, and the third under Director of Rugby Les Kiss and head coach Neil Doak. They completed in the European Rugby Champions Cup and the final season of the Pro12 before it became the Pro14 with the addition of two teams from South Africa.
Ulster announced in August 2016 that Rory Best would vacate the captaincy of the province. The captain was replaced in his role by Andrew Trimble, the team's record try-scorer, and Rob Herring, who took on the role in Best's absence the previous season.
New arrivals were fullback Charles Piutau from Wasps, prop Rodney Ah You from Connacht, lock Kieran Treadwell from Harlequins, loose forward Marcell Coetzee from the Sharks, out-half Brett Herron from Bath, scrum-half Angus Lloyd from Trinity, and prop Anton Peikrishvili from Brive. Back row forward Nick Williams left for Cardiff Blues, centre Sammy Arnold for Munster, wing Rory Scholes for Edinburgh, and lock Dan Tuohy for Bristol. Out-half Ian Humphreys retired, and Willie Falloon, Paul Jackson, Ruaidhri Murphy, Bronson Ross, Paul Rowley, Frank Taggart and Sam Windsor were released.
Scrum-half Ruan Pienaar was going into his last season with Ulster, after the IRFU blocked him from extending his contract.
Assistant coach Joe Barakat left in December to join Western Force. In early 2017 it was revealed that head coach Neil Doak and assistant coach Allen Clarke would not have their contracts renewed at the end of the season. Doak's replacement would be Jono Gibbes, with Clarke to be succeeded by Dwayne Peel.
Ulster finished bottom of their pool in the Champions Cup, and 5th in the Pro12. Charles Piutau was named Pro12 Player's Player of the Season.
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
Charles Piutau from Wasps
Rodney Ah You from Connacht
Kieran Treadwell from Harlequins
Marcell Coetzee from Sharks
Brett Herron from Bath Rugby
Angus Lloyd from Trinity College Dublin
Anton Peikrishvili from CA Brive
Players Out
Nick Williams to Cardiff Blues
Sammy Arnold to Munster
Rory Scholes to Edinburgh Rugby
Ian Humphreys retired
Dan Tuohy to Bristol Rugby
Willie Faloon released
Paul Jackson released
Ruaidhri Murphy released
Bronson Ross released
Paul Rowley released
Frank Taggart released
Sam Windsor released
European Rugby Champions Cup
Pro12
End of season awards
Charles Piutau was named Players' Player of the Season, and the left winger on the Pro12 Dream Team.
Ulster A
British and Irish Cup
Pool 1
Quarter-finals
Ulster Rugby Awards
The Heineken Ulster Rugby Awards ceremony was held at Aquinas Diocesan Grammar School, Belfast, on 6 May 2017. Winners were:
Bank of Ireland Ulster Player of the Year: Charles Piutau
Heineken Ulster Rugby Personality of the Year: Ruan Pienaar
BT Young Player of the Year: Jacob Stockdale
Rugby Writers Player of the Year: Sean Reidy
Ulster Rugby Supporters Club Player of the Year: Ruan Pienaar
Abbey Insurance Academy Player of the Year: Ross Kane
Roger Wilson was given a special award for retiring as the province's most capped player, with 221 appearances. Honours caps were awarded for appearance milestones to Tommy Bowe (150), Chris Henry (150), Luke Marshall (100) and Rob Herring (100).
The Danske Bank Schools Player of the Year was won by Michael Lowry of RBAI, beating nominees James Hume (RBAI) and Stewart Moore (Ballymena Academy).
Season reviews
Ulster Rugby: Who did what 2016 – 2017, The Front Row Union, 17 May 2017
References
2016-17
2016–17 in Irish rugby union
2016–17 Pro12 by team
2016–17 European Rugby Champions Cup by team | [
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"Doja" is a song by American rappers Snot and ASAP Rocky. It was released on February 4, 2022 as the second single from Snot's third studio album Ethereal (2022) and was produced by Dee B. The song caused some controversy over misheard lyrics regarding singer and rapper Doja Cat.
Music video
The official music video was shot in December 2021, and released alongside the single. Directed by Hidji, it finds Snot and ASAP Rocky with their friends in various places in New York City, including a nail salon, tattoo shop and park, and stampeding through an underground subway tunnel. The video ends with a tribute to fashion designer Virgil Abloh, as Rocky looks at a mural of him painted on a brick apartment building.
Controversy
In the chorus of the song, Snot raps, "I'll fuck that bitch named Doja Cat". Many mistook the line as "I fucked that bitch named Doja Cat", including Doja Cat herself, who responded in a Tweet, "you fucked who?", which she then deleted. Snot cleared up the misunderstanding on Twitter, revealing the actual lyrics and adding, "Im talkin my recklessness with no cognizance. It’s no disrespect to Doja. she a queen fr. I made this song to get lit in a moshpit typeshit".
Charts
References
2022 singles
2022 songs
Snot (rapper) songs
ASAP Rocky songs
Songs written by ASAP Rocky
300 Entertainment singles | [
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Vision 2050 is the Rwandan national development strategy, launched in December 2020 by President Paul Kagame and the country's Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MINECOFIN).
The programme, which follows the previous Vision 2020 20-year development plan which rebuilt Rwanda after years of Civil War and Genocide, aims to transform Rwanda into an Upper-Middle Income Country by 2035, and into a High-Income Country by 2050. Introducing the strategy, Kagame announced: "Vision 2020 was about what we had to do in order to survive and regain our dignity. But Vision 2050 has to be about the future we choose, because we can, and because we deserve it."
Background
The Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) came to power in Rwanda after defeating the incumbent government in the Rwandan Civil War. The RPF's victory ended the 1994 Rwandan Genocide, known in Rwanda as the Genocide Against the Tutsi, during which 800,000-1,200,000 Rwandans lost their lives. In the late 1990s, president Paul Kagame and his government began actively planning methods to achieve national development. He launched a national consultation process and also sought the advice of experts from emerging nations including China, Singapore and Thailand. Following these consultations, and shortly after assuming the presidency, Kagame launched Vision 2020. The major purposes of the programme were to unite the Rwandan people and to transform Rwanda from a highly impoverished into a middle income country.
The Vision 2020 programme was mostly successful. A mid-term review in 2012 found that 26% of Vision 2020's original indicators had already been achieved. While also highlighting key areas for improvement, the review made several upward revisions, including revising the GDP per capita target from $900 to $1,240. No comprehensive official evaluation was made of the programme following its completion, but notable successes in healthcare, social care, education, governance, and economic growth were observed. Despite this, the strategy fell short of completing some of its ambitious targets, such as achieving Lower Middle Income status.
Overview
Vision 2050's overarching goals were set out as follows:1. Economic Growth and Prosperity
Rwanda aspires to become an upper-middle income country (UMIC) by 2035, and a highincome country (HIC) by 2050.
Specifically, this means realizing the following key economic targets:
By 2035: GDP per capita of over USD 4,036; and
By 2050: GDP per capita of over USD 12,476
2. High Quality and Standards of Life for Rwandans
The aim is to achieve high quality and standards of living.
Rwanda will build on the strong progress made in reducing poverty over the last two decades, reducing the poverty rate from 78% after 1994 to 38% in 2017, with the aim of eliminating poverty altogether.
This will be achieved through ensuring all walks of society have increased opportunities to contribute to national development, including by growing investments in human capital and ensuring universal access to amenities, safety and security.
All youth, women, men, and elderly people will contribute as actors of sustainable development, ensuring that no one is left behind in benefting from development.
Vision 2050 is informed by the aspiration of Rwandans of leaving to Rwandan children a better world to live in.
As such, growth and development will follow a sustainable path in terms of use and management of natural resources while building resilience to cope with climate change impacts.
Rwandans aspiration for high quality of life will be further appreciated through the quality of the environment, both natural and built.
These aspirations will continue to be embedded in Rwanda’s long term Green Growth and Climate Resilient Strategy (GGCRS) whose impact is intended to bring about mindset and developmental transformation in Rwandan society that is necessary to achieve the desired carbon-neutral and climate resilient economy.
Efficient use of land across sectors will be guided by the National Land Use and Development Master Plan (2020-2050).
References
External Links
"Vision 2050". Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MINECOFIN), Republic of Rwanda, December 2020. Accessed 02-04-2022.
Government of Rwanda
2020 in Rwanda
Future vision statements of countries | [
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William Alexander Clark Beedie (22 April 1894–1951) was a Scottish footballer who played in the Football League for Portsmouth.
References
1894 births
1951 deaths
Scottish footballers
Association football forwards
English Football League players
Clyde F.C. players
Blantyre Celtic F.C. players
Portsmouth F.C. players
Oldham Athletic A.F.C. players | [
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Sir Henry Campbell de la Poer Beresford-Peirse, 5th Baronet, CB, FRSE (24 April 1905 – 11 August 1972) was a British civil servant.
Born on 24 April 1905, he was the son of Sir Henry Bernard de la Poer Beresford-Peirse, 4th Baronet (1875–1949), and his wife Lady Mabel Marjorie Campbell (1876–1966). After attending Eton College, he studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, graduating in 1927 with a BA and in 1929 with a BSc in forestry. He inherited the baronetcy from his father in 1949.
Beresford-Peirse entered the Forestry Commission in 1931 as a district officer. After serving in the Second World War, he was appointed Director of Forestry for Scotland in 1947 (succeeding Arthur Gosling); he served in that office until 1953, when he succeeded W. H. Guillebaud as Deputy Director-General of the Forestry Commission (he was succeeded by A. H. H. Ross in Scotland). From 1960 to 1962, he was seconded as Deputy Director of the Forestry Division of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (with James Macdonald acting for him at the Forestry Commission in his absence). In 1962, he was appointed Director-General of the Forestry Commission, succeeding Sir Arthur Gosling. Macdonald took over his position as Deputy Director-General. In 1965, Beresford-Peirse was also appointed Deputy Chairman of the Commission, holding both offices until he retired in 1968. He died on 11 August 1972 and his baronetcy was inherited by his son, Henry. He had been appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1957 New Year Honours and received the Gold Medal of the Royal Forestry Society in 1963. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (FRSE) in 1952.
References
1905 births
1972 deaths
British civil servants
Alumni of Magdalen College, Oxford
Companions of the Order of the Bath
Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh | [
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Sasyk-Bulak () is a village in the Kemin District of Chüy Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 132 in 2021.
References
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Charles Arnold (12 January 1823 — 1 February 1873) was an English first-class cricketer.
The son of James Arnold, a coach builder, he was born at Cambridge in February 1822. Little is known about Arnold's early years, though it is possible he was a baker's apprentice. Pursuing a career as a professional cricketer, Arnold made his debut in first-class cricket for Cambridge Town Club against Cambridge University at Parker's Piece in 1843. Arnold played first-class cricket over a fifteen year period, making a total of 22 appearances; the majority of these came for Cambridge-based teams, though he also appeared for Suffolk in 1847, and in 1853 for both an All-England Eleven and the North in the North v South fixture. His professional career as a cricketer was supported by the University of Cambridge. Described by Denison as "a very fast and good bowler", he took 133 wickets in first-class cricket at an average of 9.55; he took a five wicket haul on 13 occasions and took ten wickets in a match on five occasions. Denison also described Arnold as a "capital fielder" but an "unsteady bat". He was engaged in club cricket by various sides club sides throughout England between 1842 and 1868. Arnold died at Cambridge in February 1873 and was buried at the Mill Road Cemetery. His brother, Mark, was also a first-class cricketer.
References
External links
1823 births
1873 deaths
Sportspeople from Cambridge
British bakers
English cricketers
Cambridge Town Club cricketers
Suffolk cricketers
North v South cricketers
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The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, the second largest intergovernmental organisation after the United Nations has maintained various organisations and institutions focused on various subjects, including education, social and political. Its organs include subsidiaries, specialized and affiliated institutions, Islamic universities, commercial and non-commercial agencies, and various standing committees that principally plays significant role within the framework of the OIC.
The OIC has also maintained independent commissions, policymaking and decision-making authorities in collaboration with the 57 member states. The OIC Council of Foreign Ministers is the second-highest decision-making body while the Islamic Summit of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation is the highest decision-making authority. Both are administrated by secretary general of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation who is responsible for the implementation of decisions and recommendations made by the member states.
Subsidiary organisations
The organisations created under the framework of the OIC by the decision-making and policymaking bodies are known as "subsidiary" organisations. All members states became a part of subsidiary by default. However, budget is approved by OIC Council of Foreign Ministers. OIC manages six subsidiaries since its establishment.
Specialized organisations
A specialized institution or organisation takes activities within the scope of the OIC. The council of foreign ministers are responsible for decisions, however they are implemented by the secretary general likewise subsidiary organs. When a specialized institution is adopted by the OIC, all member states required to sign memorandum than to be part of the institution automatically likewise subsidiary. Any member state has an option to become part of a specialized institution. It manages budge independently. OIC has been maintaining eight specialized institutions since it came into existence.
Affiliated organisations
Affiliated institutions membership is optional and a government, non-government, company or group within the territories of member states needs to sign memorandum to become a part of the OIC. Their budget is independent than being dependent likewise the budget of the Secretariat General, subsidiary and specialized organs. An Affiliated institutions of the OIC may obtain the status of observer granted by the Council of Foreign Ministers. They may also be voluntarily assisted by the OIC'S subsidiary as well as specialized institutions. The OIC has maintained seventeen affiliated institutions within its scope.
Standing Committees
In OIC's charter, a standing committee is a body working in the field of critical issues concerning cultural, political, social, religious and human rights issues among others. They are principally focused on human rights mechanism challenges within the member states. OIC has created four standing committees, including one sub-standing committee, Bayt Mal Al Quds Agency.
Other organs
The has also maintained the Independent Permanent Human Rights Commission, an independent commission that formulate policies on human rights issues in Jerusalem and Palestine. It plays a central role for the protection of Al-Aqsa Mosque, in addition to being observing the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and Kashmir conflict.
See also
Secretary General of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation
Parliamentary Union of the OIC Member States
Islamic Summit of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation
OIC Council of Foreign Ministers
References
Organisations
Intergovernmental organizations
Lists of organizations
International relations lists
International organizations
19th century-related lists
20th century-related lists
21st century-related lists | [
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The Battle of Villa Verde Trail (Filipino: Labanan sa Tugaygayan ng Villa Verde) was a campaign by the United States Army and Filipino guerrillas in the Philippines during World War II in 1945 to force its way across the Caraballo Mountains from the Central Luzon plain to the Cagayan Valley. Somewhat to the surprise of the Americans, the Japanese had constructed strong defenses along the narrow and winding Villa Verde Trail, in length. The campaign began on 21 February 1945 and concluded with the success of the Americans on 31 May 1945. The U.S.'s 32nd Infantry Division, called the Red Arrow Division, carried out the campaign with assistance from Filipino guerrillas.
The 32nd Division suffered heavy casualties during the campaign. U.S. casualties were 825 dead and 2,160 wounded. About 6,000 soldiers were treated for illness, disease, or combat fatigue. Japanese losses were estimated of at least 5,750 dead out of 8,750 defenders. The U.S. commander, Major General William H. Gill, would later say that cost of the battle was too high for what was achieved.
Prelude
With the Battle of Manila winding down, American units in the northern part of Luzon were freed to go on the offensive against the Japanese forces who occupied strong defensive positions in the Caraballo mountains blocking American access to the fertile Cagayan Valley. The plan was for the 25th Infantry Division to fight its way northward along Route 5 (now AH 26) toward the crossroads town of Santa Fe, Nueva Vizcaya. A second division, the 32nd would attack up the Villa Verde Trail, a difficult, primitive, winding track through the mountains, to Santa Fe. The Villa Verde Trail at its best was a dirt road 10-12 feet wide, but mostly only a footpath that climbed in elevation from at its western terminus at the hamlet of Santa Maria to near the Salacsac Pass and then dropped down in elevation to at Santa Fe.
The soldiers of the 32nd were assisted by a battalion of Filipinos, the Buena Vista guerrillas, which operated in the rear of the Japanese defenses. Captain Ray C. Hunt was the liaison between the Americans and Filipinos. The U.S. planners anticipated that the advance on the Villa Verde trail would be accomplished rapidly and that on arriving at Santa Fe the 32nd division would be in the rear of Japanese defenders at Balete Pass (now Dalton Pass) on Route 5. The planners were wrong and the Battle of Villa Verde Trail would be long and difficult.
The Battle
The 127th Infantry Regiment (already understrength with 2,650 men instead of the 3,000 called for by regulation), one of three infantry regiments in the 32nd Division, proceeded without major opposition for the first few miles of the Villa Verde Trail but ran into the Japanese defense line on March 5 at the Second Salacsac Pass. The Japanese here were dug into a mutually-interlocking defense in caves and tunnels and with machine guns and artillery covering every foot of the trail. The higher ground overlooking the Trail and occupied by the Japanese acquired the name of "Yamashita Ridge" after the Japanese commander in the Philippines.
The battle for the Villa Verde Trail became a knock-down, drag-out slug fest...the 32d Division's difficult operations in the Salacsac Pass area could hardly avoid taking on a monotonous pattern. First, there would be unsuccessful frontal attacks against hillside strongholds. Failing, the troops would wait for air and artillery support to soften up the opposition and try again. Then there would be company and battalion outflanking maneuvers, some successful, some ending in near disaster, and all, as the result of Japanese defensive dispositions, inevitably winding up as frontal assaults. Every type of action would be repeated day after dreary day, either in heat enervating to the extreme on clear days, or in cloudbursts, fog, and mud.
Efforts to assault and bypass Japanese defenses were futile, and on 23 March a badly depleted 127th regiment was relieved temporarily by the 128th Infantry Regiment. The third infantry regiment, the 126th, was brought into action to assault the Japanese positions from the north. The Americans made slow progress, but by 17 April the Japanese had mostly evacuated their defenses at the Second Salacsac Pass and retreated to the First Salacsac Pass, little more than to the east.
Two American regiments, the 126th and 127th assaulted the First Salacsac Pass. The Japanese defense was even stiffer there. The Japanese attempted several unsuccessful banzai attacks. Several efforts to flank or encircle the Japanese forces were mostly unsuccessful, although inflicting heavy casualties on the Japanese. Not until 24 May did the Americans finally capture the pass. The surviving Japanese withdrew from the area. On 28 May the village of Imugan fell to the Americans and on 29 May the 32nd Division was united with the 25th Infantry Division after the Buena Vista guerrillas captured the last Japanese strong point and made contact with elements of the 25th on Route 5 near Santa Fe. The route northward into the Cagayan Valley was open. It had taken more than three months for the army to eliminate the Japanese along the Villa Verde Trail.
The capture of the Villa Verde Trail was facilitated by the work of the 114th Engineer Battalion which widened the trail under fire to make it possible for vehicular travel. The trail acquired the nickname of the "Little Burma Road". Supply of the advancing troops was a problem with a road only partially traversable by vehicle. 150 Filipino porters trudged up and down the trail carrying ammunition and food to the soldiers. Communications in the mountains were sporadic and heavy rains, mud, and landslides inhibited travel. Casualties of the 32nd Division were heavy with 825 dead and 2,160 wounded, a casualty rate of about 27 percent. The Japanese lost at least 5,750 of the 8,750 men engaged.
Consequences
The 32nd Infantry Division logged a total of 654 days of combat during World War II, more than any other United States Army division. About 30 percent of the men in the division had been overseas for nearly three years and had participated in several combat operations. The strain on the soldiers showed up in this battle. The division was 4,000 soldiers under strength and problems with morale and mental and physical exhaustion were noted as early as April. No fresh division was available to relieve the 32nd, so the division slogged on. Six thousand soldiers were evacuated at least temporarily from the battle for illness, disease, and especially "combat fatigue and associated psychoneurotic upsets." Guerrilla leader Hunt commented that "the three F's of combat are 'fog, fatigue, and fear' and the latter two deepen visibly near the end of long campaigns or long wars."
In the words of one author, "the price for that goat path in the clouds had been too high." General Gill would later say that "the 32nd had gained too little for what it had lost."
Footnotes
References
1940s in the Philippines
World War II
Philippines
Philippines
World War II
Villa Verde Trail
Villa Verde Trail
Villa Verde Trail | [
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The Mašićka Šagovina killings refers to the murder of at least 55 Serbs on 18-19 December 1991, by the 108th and 121st Brigades of the Croatian National Guard (ZNG) in the village of Mašićka Šagovina during the Croatian War of Independence.
Events and killings
Mašićka Šagovina is a village near the municipality of Okučani, in western Slavonia, Croatia. According to the 1991 census, there were 209 inhabitants in Masicka Sagovina, of which 189 were Serbs, 16 Croats and 4 Yugoslavs.
On the night of 18 December 1991, Croatian forces prepared to launch an attack on the village, which had been held by Krajina Serb forces and was considered an important military fort. The main participants in this operation were members of the 108th and 121st Brigades of the Croatian National Guard (ZNG) but also included other special forces. It was part of the wider military operation conducted by the Croatian Army against the Yugoslav People's Army and SAO Western Slavonia Territorial Defense Forces (TO) known as Operation Hurricane-91. According to Croatian sources, the action was planned by Brigadier Josip Mikšić, the then commander of the 121st Brigade, and the attack was commanded by Colonel Ante Šolić. Part of the brigade were also led by Pero Jelančić.
Members of the 108th and 121st Brigades of the National Guard and special forces from the 363-strong "Svileni" group took over the village. According to Serbian sources, 55 people were killed, including 31 civilians. According to the testimonies of survivors, ZNG forces set fire to houses and some twenty civilians hid in a basement. Several were killed and injured when an explosive device was thrown into the basement. Members of the TO along with civilians were subsequently killed after they came out and surrendered. More local civilians were killed once the village was captured; some reportedly were tortured. By the order of the Croatian army, 28 corpses were buried in Mašićka Šagovina, most of them by name, and they were collected and buried by their relatives. Initially the remains of six people were exhumed from the graves. In 2013, the remains of 19 more victims were exhumed from the location of which 14 have been identified.
Croatian losses from the operation battle amounted to 13 with dozens injured. In Croatia, the action in Mašićka Šagovina is seen as "one of the first heroic battles in the Homeland War".
No one has been held accountable for the atrocities.
References
1991 crimes in Croatia
Croatian war crimes in the Croatian War of Independence
December 1991 events in Europe
History of the Serbs of Croatia
Massacres in 1991
Massacres in Croatia
Massacres of Serbs
Mass murder in 1991 | [
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Schlachtensee is a locality within the borough of Steglitz-Zehlendorf in Berlin. It was formed as a new administrative district in 2020, combining parts of the Nikolassee and Zehlendorf localities.
History
In the late 19th century, a small train station on the Wannsee railway line was built south of Schlachtensee lake. A private development company bought the land south of the station and incorporated it into Zehlendorf. Under the name "Landhausgemeinde Schlachtensee", small country houses, containing around 3 to 4 rooms each, were built for the (lower) middle class. Later, larger houses and mansions were built north of Spanische Allee ("Spanish Avenue"), as part of a new mansion settlement within the administrative district of Nikolassee. Around this time, many small businesses started opening up around Breisgauer Straße, today's commercial center of Schlachtensee.
Transport
Schlachtensee is connected to the Berlin S-Bahn commuter rail network by its station on the S1 line.
References
Localities of Berlin | [
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Dorozhnoye () is a village in the Kemin District of Chüy Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 220 in 2021.
References
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The Mérida-Los Rosales railway is a Spanish railway line that connects the Extremaduran city of Mérida with Zafra and Los Rosales in Andalusia, a railway junction near to Seville.
History and Traffic
The concession for the line was given in 1869, and work progressed slowly over the next few years, culminating in 1885. There are a number of different services that use the line. Services that use the full line are Media Distancia and Regional Exprés services, mostly running from Cáceres to Sevilla Santa Justa. The Cercanías Sevilla line C-3 uses the line up to Cazalla-Constantina, and services along the Zafra-Huelva line, when continuing to Mérida, use the Mérida-Zafra section. A daily Seville-Cáceres service continues to Madrid Atocha.
Gallery
References
Railway lines in Spain | [
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Vincent Sapienza is an American civil servant who is serving as the Commissioner of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection.
Biography
Sapienza graduated from Columbia University with a B.S. and an MBA from Hofstra University. He joined the New York City's Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) after graduation in 1983.
Sapienza served as Deputy Commissioner of the DEP for its Bureau of Engineering Design and Construction, overseeing the construction of the New York City Water Tunnel No. 3 and the Croton Water Filtration Plant from 2014 to 2016, as well as Deputy Commissioner for the Bureau of Wastewater Treatment, which led to the creation of a citywide resiliency plan, from 2009 to 2014.
In 2016, Sapienza was named Acting Commissioner by then Mayor Bill de Blasio. On October 3, 2017, he was named to the position in a permanent capacity. He oversaw the $1 billion repair of the Delaware Aqueduct which involves the construction of a 2.5-mile bypass from the leaking portions inside the original tunnel. In 2020, he was named one of the "Energy & Environment Power 100" by City & State. However, his role in handling the 2019 sewage leak in Queens and the 2021 Hurricane Ida crisis was also criticized by the New York City Council.
In January 2022, Mayor Eric Adams named Sapienza chief operating officer of the DEP.
References
Living people
Columbia School of Engineering and Applied Science alumni
Hofstra University alumni
Commissioners in New York City
American civil servants
American civil engineers | [
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Shershaah is the soundtrack album to the 2021 Hindi film of the same name directed by Vishnuvardhan. Based on the life of Param Vir Chakra-awardee Captain Vikram Batra, the film stars Sidharth Malhotra and Kiara Advani in leading roles. The film score is composed by John Stewart Eduri. The original songs featured in the film were composed by Tanishk Bagchi, B Praak, Jasleen Royal, Javed–Mohsin and Vikram Montrose with lyrics written by Manoj Muntashir, Rashmi Virag, Anvita Dutt, Jaani and Bagchi. The soundtrack album released by Sony Music India on 16 August 2021.
The album received positive response from audiences, with the tracks "Raataan Lambiyan" and "Ranjha" which earlier released as singles, topped the national and global charts, in all music and video platforms. It emerged as one of the biggest soundtracks of 2021, and the fastest Indian album to cross one billion audio streams worldwide.
Overview
The film featured three original tracks, which is pictured on the romantic relationship between Vikram Batra (Malhotra) and Dimple Cheema (Advani). The soundtrack album had six songs, with the three tunes and an alternate version of the track. Azeem Dayani was the music supervisor. All the songs were recorded during mid-2018. Jubin Nautiyal recorded the first track from the album "Raataan Lambiyan", with the co-singer Asees Kaur, which was written and sung by Tanishk Bagchi. Speaking about his experience on recording the track, he stated in an interview with India Today, saying "When I heard the mix close to the release, I was happy and overwhelmed because the sound was very different as I heard it after a long time. We did a lot of different songs and suddenly a different sound was coming. I knew the song is going to go places. I told the makers it was very risky to release films that year and music and all, but somehow, I was confident about that song. I knew it would work and it did, big time." A fan made Bhojpuri version of the track was released during October 2021.
"Ranjha", a song composed by Jasleen Royal, who sung the track along with B Praak and written by Anvita Dutt, was originally envisioned for Badhaai Ho (2018), but the producers rejected the track since it could not sync with the situation of the film. This track was later featured in this film, following Dayani's insistence and had changed the lyrics as per the film’s situation. "Jai Hind Ki Senaa" is composed by Vikram Montrose, who also sung the track and was written by Manoj Muntashir. Though the track was not featured in the film, it was later released as a promotional single, during the Independence Day week on 11 August 2021, a day of the film's release on Amazon Prime Video. News18 stated that: "Jai Hind Ki Senaa aptly captures the spirit of India’s freedom fighters, who dedicate their lives for the country and are willing to go to any extent to protect the nation". The track "Mann Bharryaa", composed and sung by B Praak with lyrics written by Jaani which was released in 2017, was recreated by the singer-composer himself. The recreated version of the track was titled "Mann Bharryaa 2.0" and was released as a bonus track on 15 August. The track was played during the climax of the film, where Cheema mourns Batra's death and reminisces her moments with Batra.
Track listing
Reception
Critic based at Bollywood Hungama praised the composition and song placement, as the "songs celebrate the true essence of the movie in a perfect manner". BizAsia gave 4 out of 5 stars saying that "soundtrack is definitely much better than expectations". It further wrote "Karan Johar and Vishnuvardhan have done well picking each song that is just beautiful to listen to while adding a whole lot of value to the movie. Each song fits with the story and setting of the film and thus feels perfectly adequate in itself. The brilliant part is that each of the six songs are background songs and not performed in to the camera giving further authenticity to the character of Capt. Vikram Batra and thus the movie. There is great amount of romantic songs in the album with one patriotic song which is the only negative here as there is less variety and by the end of the album one can’t help but feel a little blue, although that fits well for the movie but not as an album. Nonetheless, each song is brilliant on this soundtrack." Shreya Paul of Firstpost stated that "the album has no skippable tracks and is a no-miss endeavour". Suanshu Khurana of The Indian Express listed on "Mann Bharryaa 2.0" opining that the track "stood out as a musical beauty in the film".
Chart performance
In addition to the critical response, the songs performed well commercially across India and globally. The tracks "Raataan Lambiyan" and "Ranjha" were streamed about 8.2 million and 7.3 million times in Spotify, respectively within the week of 20–27 August 2021, and surpassed the weekly streaming records set by the BTS-single "Butter" which recorded 5.1 million streams within a week of its release. Both the tracks were streamed over 5 million times per week in the music platform. "Raataan Lambiyan" featured in the global Spotify charts at #152, becoming the first Hindi song to be featured. The tracks "Raataan Lambiyan", "Ranjha" acquired the first two positions at the Top 200 India list in Spotify, with "Mann Bharryaa 2.0" featured in #5. It was also featured in the Top 100 Charts on iTunes, with "Raataan Lambiyan" and "Ranjha" being featured in the #1 and #3 positions respectively. It became one of the most popular Hindi film music album in Spotify, besides Kabir Singh (2019).
On 1 September 2021, both the tracks were featured in the Billboard Global Excl. U.S. charts with "Raataan Lambiyan" at #28 and "Ranjha" at #73, thereby being the third and fourth Hindi track to join Billboard charts this year, the other two being "Lut Gaye" and "Param Sundari". "Raataan Lambiyan" topped the first position, at #1 spot across Sabras Radio and Sunrise Radio in UK and AXS TV in USA. According to a year-ender survey report published by Apple Music, the tracks "Raataan Lambiyan" and "Ranjha" were featured as one of the most streamed songs in the music platform. "Raataan Lambiyan" was one of the most-viewed tracks on YouTube in 2021, from India.
Commercial response
The album emerged as one of the biggest soundtracks and the fastest Indian album to cross one billion streams in music platforms. Regarding the success of the music album, the film's producer Karan Johar stated that: "It makes me immensely happy that the songs have touched 1 billion audio streams. It feels good to be on the top of the charts and have audiences groove to our tunes." Siddharth Malhotra, the film's lead actor further stated:"The kind of response 'Shershaah' has received is humbling and I am elated to see the continuous affection. Being my passion project I was deeply involved in the music selection of the film along with Vishnu, Azeem and Karan. We ensured to choose songs which are a right fit for every emotion of the film and I am very happy to see the way audiences have embraced the album. I am grateful to all the artists and singers for this magical album. We are over the moon, grateful to have reached 1 billion audio streams. All thanks to the audience for their love and support."In 2022, Ormax Media chose Shershaah as the "top Hindi soundtrack of 2021" while "Raataan Lambiyan" (at first position), "Ranjha" and "Mann Bharryaa 2.0" were listed among the "top 10 Hindi songs of 2021". Outlook India-based Samarth Goyal chose "Ranjha" and "Raataan Lambiyan" as one of "the Top 10 Hindi-Pop hits of 2021". Sukanya Verma of Rediff.com chose "Raataan Lambiyan" as one of the Best Hindi Film Song, saying "Brimming with irresistible warmth and melody, the infectious lovey-dovey fervour and playful rhythm of Tanishk Bagchi's charming Punjabi flavoured creation makes it as the most streamed song of the year".
Sankhayan Ghosh of Film Companion chose "Ranjha" as one of the best Hindi film song and stated "‘Ranjha’ works as something you might want to play in a family wedding, but its underlying sadness makes it so much more (used in the film Shershaah as a song of separation of two lovers)". On "recounting the highs and lows of Hindi Film Music in 2021", Devesh Sharma of Filmfare mentioned the album and the songs "Raataan Lambiyan" and "Mann Bharryaa 2.0" in their list. Devarsi Ghosh of Scroll.in chose "Ranjha" in their music year-ender and stated: "Voice-casting a song correctly does wonders. Romy’s rustic voice eases the transition from composer Jasleen Royal’s school-girl vocals about longing to B Praak’s baritone holding forth on the lovers’ plight in the chorus."
Accolades
References
External links
Shershaah (soundtrack) at the Internet Movie Database
2021 soundtrack albums
2020s film soundtrack albums
Hindi film soundtracks
Sony Music India soundtracks
Biographical film soundtracks
War film soundtracks | [
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Neeyamo is a privately held organization that provides Global Payroll and Employer of Records (EOR) solutions for multinational organizations and has its delivery centers in over 27+ countries across the world.
Overview
Neeyamo was founded in 2009 by Ashok Bildikar along with Rangarajan Seshadri, Vivek Khanna, Guhan Ramanan, and Samuel Isaac in Chennai, India and its principal global office in California, USA.
Richard Jones and Ram Gupta have been appointed as the organization’s independent directors since April 2021.
In 2021, Neeyamo expanded its operations to tier 2 and tier 3 level cities. In September 2021 Neeyamo launched an all-women global delivery center in Nagpur, Maharashtra, India.
References
Enterprise software
Payroll | [
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V. K. Hymavathy popularly known as Kalamandalam Hymavathy is a Mohiniyattam dancer and dance teacher from Kerala, India. She received several awards including Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, Kerala Sangeethanataka Akademi Gurupooja Award and Kerala Sangeethanataka Akademi Award.
Biography
V. K. Hymavathy was born on October 12, 1955, to Krishna Warrier of Peringode, Thrissur and Parvathy Warrier of Machad. Her father was a physician. Her family moved to Cheruthuruthi when she was one year old. At the age of five, she started learning dance under Chandrika, and Kathakali under Sankaranarayanan Asan. She performed dance in Kerala Kalamandalam at the age of 12, with her sister Rugmini. Later, she joined Kalamandalam to study dance, under Kalamandalam Satyabhama, Leelamani and Chandrika and completed her diploma course at the age of 16.
After marriage, at the age of 19 she moved to Calcutta but returned soon to Kerala when she got a job as Mohiniyattam teacher in Kalamandalam. While working at Kalamandalam, Hymavathy studied Kuchipudi under Kalamandalam Kshemavathy. After 33 years of service, she retired from Kalamandalam as Head of the Department of Mohiniyattam, and later joined Kalady Sanskrit University as a Visiting Professor.
Personallife
She and her husband Chandrasekharan have one son. They lives in their house Srikrishnasadanam in Cheruthuruthy, Thrissur district.
Notable performances
Under the guidance of Hymavathy, Daivadasakam, written by Narayana Guru was visualized in the form of Mohiniyattam by 1500 dancers.
Works on her
Mohanam and Cholkettu are two documentaries made about Hymavathy and her dance career.
Awards and honors
Sangeet Natak Akademi Award
Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Gurupooja Award 2007
Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Award 2016
Kaladarpanam Award
Lasyamohini Award from Kerala Kalamandalam
References
1955 births
Indian female classical dancers
Performers of Indian classical dance
Mohiniyattam exponents
Living people
Dancers from Kerala
Women artists from Kerala
20th-century Indian dancers
20th-century Indian women artists
People from Thrissur district | [
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Kyzyl-Oktyabr () is a village in the Kemin District of Chüy Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 1,723 in 2021.
References
Populated places in Chuy Region | [
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Kolkata Thunderbolts is a men's volleyball team from Kolkata, West Bengal playing in the Prime Volleyball League in India. The team was founded in 2021 and owned by Kolkata Sports Ventures. They are the current defending champions, having won the 2022 PVL season by defeating Ahmedabad Defenders 3-0 in the final..
Honors
Prime Volleyball League
Winners (1): 2022
Team
Current Team
Administration and support staff
References
Sports clubs in India
Volleyball in India
Men's volleyball teams
Sports clubs in Kolkata | [
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Sir Arthur Hulin Gosling, KBE, CB, FRSE, FRICS (26 July 1901 – 8 August 1982) was a British civil servant and forester.
Born on 26 July 1901, Gosling attended Bell's Grammar School in Coleford and, after serving briefly in the Air Ministry, enrolled at the Forestry Commissioners' School for Forestry; he became an instructor there in 1920. Two years later, he became forester-in-charge at Llanover Forest. He then studied at the University of Edinburgh from 1925 to 1928, earning a degree in forestry.
Gosling returned to the Forestry Commission in 1928 as a district officer and was promoted to divisional officer ten years later. In 1940, he was appointed Assistant Commissioner for Scotland. In 1946, he became Director of Forestry for Scotland, before he was appointed Deputy Director-General of the Forestry Commission in 1947 and then Director-General in 1948, serving until he retired in 1962. He then chaired the Commonwealth Forestry Association until 1972. He died on 8 August 1982 in Dorest. He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1950 New Year Honours and a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) in 1955 Birthday Honours. He was also elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1942.
References
1901 births
1982 deaths
British civil servants
Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Companions of the Order of the Bath
Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh | [
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Dunlea is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Craig Dunlea (born 1976), rugby union player
Lynn Dunlea (born 1974), camogie player
Stephanie Dunlea, camogie player
Thomas Dunlea (1894–1970), Irish-Australian Catholic priest
See also
Dunlea Centre
Dunlea v Attorney-General, 2000 New Zealand lawsuit | [
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The following species in the genus Vicia, the vetches, are accepted by Plants of the World Online. The taxonomy of this economically important genus remains unresolved, which hinders the development of underutilized crop species.
Vicia abbreviata
Vicia acutifolia
Vicia afghanica
Vicia aintabensis
Vicia aktoensis
Vicia alpestris
Vicia altissima
Vicia americana
Vicia amoena
Vicia amurensis
Vicia anatolica
Vicia andicola
Vicia andina
Vicia anguste-pinnata
Vicia aphylla
Vicia araucana
Vicia argaea
Vicia argentea
Vicia armena
Vicia articulata
Vicia assyriaca
Vicia aucheri
Vicia bakeri
Vicia balansae
Vicia basaltica
Vicia benghalensis
Vicia benthamiana
Vicia berteroana
Vicia biebersteinii
Vicia biennis
Vicia bifolia
Vicia bifoliolata
Vicia bijuga
Vicia bithynica
Vicia brulloi
Vicia bungei
Vicia caesarea
Vicia canescens
Vicia cappadocica
Vicia capreolata
Vicia caroliniana
Vicia cassia
Vicia cassubica
Vicia caucasica
Vicia cedretorum
Vicia chaetocalyx
Vicia chianschanensis
Vicia chinensis
Vicia chosenensis
Vicia ciceroidea
Vicia ciliatula
Vicia coquimbensis
Vicia costae
Vicia costata
Vicia cracca
Vicia cretica
Vicia crocea
Vicia cusnae
Vicia cuspidata
Vicia cypria
Vicia dadianorum
Vicia dalmatica
Vicia davisii
Vicia dennesiana
Vicia dichroantha
Vicia dionysiensis
Vicia disperma
Vicia dumetorum
Vicia epetiolaris
Vicia eriocarpa
Vicia eristalioides
Vicia ervilia
Vicia erzurumica
Vicia esdraelonensis
Vicia faba
Vicia fairchildiana
Vicia fauriei
Vicia fedtschenkoana
Vicia ferreirensis
Vicia filicaulis
Vicia floridana
Vicia freyniana
Vicia fulgens
Vicia galeata
Vicia galilaea
Vicia garinensis
Vicia geminiflora
Vicia giacominiana
Vicia glareosa
Vicia glauca
Vicia gracilior
Vicia graminea
Vicia grandiflora
Vicia × guyotii
Vicia hassei
Vicia hatschbachii
Vicia hirsuta
Vicia hololasia
Vicia hulensis
Vicia humilis
Vicia hyaeniscyamus
Vicia hybrida
Vicia hyrcanica
Vicia iberica
Vicia incana
Vicia inconspicua
Vicia iranica
Vicia janeae
Vicia japonica
Vicia johannis
Vicia jordanovii
Vicia kalakhensis
Vicia khokhriakovii
Vicia kioshanica
Vicia koeieana
Vicia kokanica
Vicia kotschyana
Vicia kulingana
Vicia kurdica
Vicia laeta
Vicia lanceolata
Vicia larissae
Vicia lathyroides
Vicia latibracteolata
Vicia lecomtei
Vicia lens
Vicia lenticula
Vicia lentoides
Vicia leucantha
Vicia leucomalla
Vicia leucophaea
Vicia lilacina
Vicia linearifolia
Vicia loiseleurii
Vicia lomensis
Vicia ludoviciana
Vicia lunata
Vicia lutea
Vicia macrantha
Vicia macrograminea
Vicia magellanica
Vicia megalotropis
Vicia melanops
Vicia menziesii
Vicia michauxii
Vicia micrantha
Vicia minutiflora
Vicia modesta
Vicia mollis
Vicia monantha
Vicia monardii
Vicia montbretii
Vicia montenegrina
Vicia montevidensis
Vicia mucronata
Vicia mulleriana
Vicia multicaulis
Vicia multijuga
Vicia murbeckii
Vicia nana
Vicia narbonensis
Vicia nataliae
Vicia nigricans
Vicia nipponica
Vicia noeana
Vicia nummularia
Vicia ocalensis
Vicia ochroleuca
Vicia ohwiana
Vicia olchonensis
Vicia onobrychioides
Vicia orientalis
Vicia oroboides
Vicia orobus
Vicia palaestina
Vicia pallida
Vicia pampicola
Vicia pannonica
Vicia parviflora
Vicia parvula
Vicia paucifolia
Vicia pectinata
Vicia peregrina
Vicia perelegans
Vicia peruviana
Vicia pinetorum
Vicia pisiformis
Vicia platensis
Vicia popovii
Vicia pseudocassubica
Vicia pseudo-orobus
Vicia pubescens
Vicia pulchella
Vicia pyrenaica
Vicia qatmensis
Vicia quadrijuga
Vicia ramosissima
Vicia ramuliflora
Vicia raynaudii
Vicia rigidula
Vicia sativa
Vicia scandens
Vicia semenovii
Vicia semiglabra
Vicia sepium
Vicia sericocarpa
Vicia serratifolia
Vicia sessei
Vicia sessiliflora
Vicia setifolia
Vicia sibthorpii
Vicia sicula
Vicia sinaica
Vicia singarensis
Vicia sosnowskyi
Vicia sparsiflora
Vicia splendens
Vicia stenophylla
Vicia subrotunda
Vicia subserrata
Vicia subvillosa
Vicia sylvatica
Vicia taipaica
Vicia tenera
Vicia tenoi
Vicia tenuifolia
Vicia tenuissima
Vicia tephrosioides
Vicia ternata
Vicia tetrantha
Vicia tetrasperma
Vicia tibetica
Vicia tigridis
Vicia × tikeliana
Vicia tsydenii
Vicia unijuga
Vicia uralensis
Vicia variegata
Vicia venosa
Vicia venulosa
Vicia vicina
Vicia vicioides
Vicia villosa
Vicia voggenreiteriana
Vicia vulcanorum
Vicia woroschilovii
Vicia wushanica
Vicia × zabelii
References
Vicia | [
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Bangabandhu Avenue () is an urban road situated in Gulistan, Dhaka. Its former name is Jinnah Avenue. central office of Bangladesh Awami League is situated in Bangabandhu Avenue. The Dhaka grenade attack of 2004 happened in Bangabandhu Avenue.
History
For the first time in the 1950s, a two-way road was built from this avenue to the airport. In the 1960s, Bangabandhu Avenue had many popular restaurants and eateries such as Kasbah, La Sani, Chu Chin Chow, Sweet Heaven, Salimabad Hotel, Rex etc. Bangabandhu Avenue witnessed various historical events in the politics of East Pakistan.
References
Further reading
Roads in Dhaka
Memorials to Sheikh Mujibur Rahman | [
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Arthur Mark Richards (born 1 May 1955) is a New Zealand physician, academic and medical researcher. He is a professor of cardiology and director of the Cardiovascular Research Institute at the National University of Singapore, and a professor of medicine and founder of the Christchurch Heart Institute at the University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand, where he holds the National Heart Foundation (NZ) Chair of Cardiovascular Studies.
Richards has written over 850 peer-reviewed journal articles, and has over 25 patents in the field of cardiovascular biomarkers. His research revolves around integrated cardiovascular translational research incorporating clinical applied research, molecular biology, cardiovascular peptide biochemistry, genetics and preclinical physiology, with a particular focus upon discovery and application of biomarkers in cardiovascular disease.
Richards is a fellow of the Royal Australasian College Physicians (FRACP), Royal College of Physicians (FRCP) and Royal Society of New Zealand (FRSNZ), and the Council for High Blood Pressure Research, American Heart Association.
Education
Richards completed his MB ChB at the University of Otago in 1978. He was admitted as FRACP in Internal Medicine by the Royal Australasian College of Physicians in 1984. He graduated Doctor of Medicine (MD) with distinction in 1986, PhD in medicine in 1993 and Doctor of Science (DSc), with a thesis titled The cardiac natriuretic peptides – from bench to bedside, in 2000 from the University of Otago. The Royal College of Physicians admitted him as FRCP in 2008. In 2019, he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history from Massey University, New Zealand.
Career
Richards was appointed as a clinical lecturer at Christchurch School of Medicine, University of Otago, in 1988, where he became a professor in medicine in 1995. Since 2009, he has been professor of cardiology at the National University of Singapore, and a professor (joint faculty) in the Department of Biochemistry at National University Singapore as of 2010, and has also been an associate faculty member at the Genome Institute of Singapore since then.
Richards was awarded a personal chair in medicine by the University of Otago in 1995. He was deputy head of the Department of Medicine at the University of Otago, Christchurch, in 1998, and head of department from 2002 to 2003. From 1993 to 1997, he directed the FRACP Part 1 Registrar Training Programme (Christchurch) and was an examiner for FRACP clinical examinations. He was admitted to the fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians (FRCP) in 2008.
Richards was programme director of the New Zealand Health Research Council (HRC) programme grants for serial cardiovascular HRC research programmes continuously for 24 years from 1995 to 2019. In 1997, he was appointed to the National Heart Foundation chair of cardiovascular studies. He founded and assumed chairmanship of the Christchurch Cardioendocrine Research Group, University of Otago, Christchurch, which later became the Christchurch Heart Institute in 2012.
In 2009, Richards became the inaugural director of the Cardiovascular Research Institute at the National University of Singapore whilst continuing part-time retention of his New Zealand appointments. He has been deputy director of the National University Heart Centre Singapore (NUHCS) since 2021.
Research
Richards’ main research interests centre around multi-disciplinary translational cardiovascular biomedical research programmes focused on the pathogenesis of common, lethal cardiovascular disorders including heart failure and coronary heart disease.
Biomarkers in cardiovascular disease
A key contribution has been the elucidation of the biology of the cardiac natriuretic peptides and the pioneering of their application as diagnostic, prognostic and monitoring tools in clinical heart failure. Work on the B type cardiac natriuretic peptides included the discovery and development of NT-proBNP. All authoritative international guidelines on the diagnosis and management of heart failure globally now recommend measurement of plasma B type cardiac natriuretic peptides in aid of diagnosis and risk stratification in heart failure.
Richards leads ongoing research aimed at refining the clinical applications and beneficial actions of the natriuretic peptides. He has investigated the effect of atrial fibrillation on the diagnostic and prognostic performance of NT-proBNP in suspected heart failure. In the mid-1990s, Richards pioneered human clinical studies of neprilysin inhibition, important in metabolism of the NPs. His group has studied the integrated haemodynamic, endocrine and renal effects of human ANP analogues selected for exclusive vasodilatory or diuretic activities in experimental heart failure laying the path for possible precision peptide therapy in heart failure. His group has demonstrated the beneficial integrated hemodynamic, endocrine, and renal effects of phosphodiesterase-9 inhibition (PDE9-I; which specifically impedes breakdown of the 2nd messenger, cGMP generated by the natriuretic peptides) in experimental HF. Results support PDE9's role in HF pathophysiology and implies that its inhibition could possibly be a novel anti-heart failure therapy.
Richards has contributed to clinical research work establishing measurement of plasma cardiac troponin as an essential element in the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction. He has also made numerous original contributions on the biology and biomarker potential of the urocortins and the adrenomedullins. Richards has also published influential data on the potential role of circulating microRNAs as biomarkers in heart failure.
General applied cardiology
In more general applied cardiology research, Richards recently compared the safety and efficacy of allied health care practitioner-led remote intensive management (RIM) with cardiologist-led standard care (SC) after myocardial infarction and found the former practice used with low-risk patients is feasible and should be further studied in higher-risk acute myocardial infarction cohorts. He has also used large-scale human plasma proteomics and single-cell resolution unbiased cardiac transcriptomics to prioritize candidate protein candidate markers of post-myocardial infarction adverse left ventricular remodeling heart failure. He has contributed to recruitment and investigation of clinical heart failure cohorts in both New Zealand and Singapore. Examples include research on optimal drug doses for heart failure medications. At a population level, he has contributed data towards large-scale whole-genome sequencing in Singapore with discovery of 52 million novel gene variants and improved understanding of the population structure and evolutionary history of Asians.
Awards and honours
1995 – R. T. Hall Prize for Cardiovascular Research, The Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand
2001 – Fellow, Royal Society of New Zealand
2006 – Gold medal for Research Excellence, Christchurch School of Medicine and Health Sciences
2008 – Distinguished Research Medal, University of Otago
2008 – Sir Charles Hercus Medal for Biomedical Research (Royal Society of New Zealand)
2014 – Singapore Translational Research (STaR) Award, National Medical Research Council
2015 – Faculty Research Excellence Award, National University of Singapore
2020 – Christchurch Heart Institute recognised with Research Group Award as top University of Otago research centre for 2020
2021 – Inaugural Life Time Achievement in Research Award, Canterbury Medical Research Foundation
Selected publications
Davis, M., Espiner, E. A., Yandle, T., Richards, G., Town, I., Neill, A., ... & Billings, J. (1994). Plasma brain natriuretic peptide in assessment of acute dyspnoea. The Lancet, 343(8895), 440–444.
Richards, A. M., Nicholls, M. G., Yandle, T. G., Frampton, C., Espiner, E. A., Turner, J. G., ... & Smyth, D. W. (1998). Plasma N-terminal pro–brain natriuretic peptide and adrenomedullin: new neurohormonal predictors of left ventricular function and prognosis after myocardial infarction. Circulation, 97(19), 1921–1929.
Troughton, R. W., Frampton, C. M., Yandle, T. G., Espine, E. A., Nicholls, M. G., & Richards, A. M. (2000). Treatment of heart failure guided by plasma aminoterminal brain natriuretic peptide (N-BNP) concentrations. The Lancet, 355(9210), 1126–1130.
Richards, A. M., Nicholls, M. G., Espiner, E. A., Lainchbury, J. G., Troughton, R. W., Elliott, J., ... & Yandle, T. G. (2003). B-type natriuretic peptides and ejection fraction for prognosis after myocardial infarction. Circulation, 107(22), 2786–2792.
Januzzi, J. L., van Kimmenade, R., Lainchbury, J., Bayes-Genis, A., Ordonez-Llanos, J., Santalo-Bel, M., ... & Richards, M. (2006). NT-proBNP testing for diagnosis and short-term prognosis in acute destabilized heart failure: an international pooled analysis of 1256 patients: the International Collaborative of NT-proBNP Study. European heart journal, 27(3), 330–337.
Hildebrandt, P., Collinson, P. O., Doughty, R. N., Fuat, A., Gaze, D. C., Gustafsson, F., ... & Richards, M. (2010). Age-dependent values of N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide are superior to a single cut-point for ruling out suspected systolic dysfunction in primary care. European heart journal, 31(15), 1881–1889.
Than, M., Cullen, L., Reid, C. M., Lim, S. H., Aldous, S., Ardagh, M. W., ... & Richards, A. M. (2011). A 2-h diagnostic protocol to assess patients with chest pain symptoms in the Asia-Pacific region (ASPECT): a prospective observational validation study. The Lancet, 377(9771), 1077–1084.
Lam, C. S., Teng, T. H. K., Tay, W. T., Anand, I., Zhang, S., Shimizu, W., ... & Richards, A. M. (2016). Regional and ethnic differences among patients with heart failure in Asia: the Asian sudden cardiac death in heart failure registry. European heart journal, 37(41), 3141–3153.
Lam, C. S., Gamble, G. D., Ling, L. H., Sim, D., Leong, K. T. G., Yeo, P. S. D., ... & Doughty, R. N. (2018). Mortality associated with heart failure with preserved vs. reduced ejection fraction in a prospective international multi-ethnic cohort study. European heart journal, 39(20), 1770–1780.
Chan, M. Y., Efthymios, M., Tan, S. H., Pickering, J. W., Troughton, R., Pemberton, C., ... & Richards, A. M. (2020). Prioritizing candidates of post–myocardial infarction heart failure using plasma proteomics and single-cell transcriptomics. Circulation, 142(15), 1408–1421.
References
1955 births
Living people
People from Invercargill
University of Otago alumni
University of Otago faculty
New Zealand cardiologists
National University of Singapore faculty
Fellows of the Royal Society of New Zealand
Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians
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Rohit T. "Rit" Aggarwala is an American environmental policy adviser, transportation planner, historian, and civil servant who is the Chief Climate Officer and Commissioner of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection.
Biography
Aggarwala grew up in White Plains, New York. He received his B.A. in history from Columbia University in 1993, before going on to earn his MPhil, Ph.D. in history as well as an M.B.A., all from Columbia over a span of ten years. He also earned a MA in Canadian history from Queen's University at Kingston. At Columbia, he was a reporter for Columbia Daily Spectator and president of the College Democrats. His advisors included Richard Bushman, Kenneth T. Jackson, and Elizabeth Blackmar.
Aggarwala began his career in Federal Railroad Administration and worked for McKinsey & Company, New York State Assembly, Virginia Railway Express, prior to joining public service.
Aggarwala was tapped by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg to create the Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability and served as director of the office from 2006 to 2010. He also helped author the PlaNYC blueprint, a sustainability plan for the city.
From 2010 to 2015, he worked at Bloomberg Philanthropies, heading its sustainability practice division. He was president of the board of directors of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group and was a member of the founding team of Sidewalk Labs, where he served as chief policy officer, head of urban systems, and remained a senior advisor. For his role at Sidewalk Labs, he was named one of the "Politico 50" by the eponymous magazine in 2018. He led a high-profile smart city-building project in Waterfront Toronto before it was cancelled in May 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which also led to his exit from the company.
In 2020, he was named Senior Urban Tech Fellow at Cornell Tech. He is the lead author of the Rebooting NYC report, published by Cornell Tech in 2022, which proposes urban tech solutions to New York City's biggest challenges. He is also an adjunct associate professor at the School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, where he teaches urban policy.
In January 2022, he was tapped by Mayor Eric Adams to serve as chief climate officer and commissioner of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection.
References
Columbia College (New York) alumni
Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni
Columbia Business School alumni
Queen's University at Kingston alumni
Commissioners in New York City
Cornell Tech faculty
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Nellie Yu Roung Ling (; 188916 January 1973), also spelt Nelly, was a Hanjun Plain White bannerwoman and dancer, who is considered "the first modern dancer of China". She was the younger daughter of and Louisa Pierson, the other one being Lizzie Yu Der Ling. Although not a member of the Qing imperial family, Roung Ling was given the title of while serving as a lady-in-waiting for Empress Dowager Cixi. She was also known as Yu Roon(g) Ling, especially in the works of her sister Der Ling. She was referred to as Madame Dan Pao Tchao after her marriage to the General Dan Pao Tchao (; 1887–1958), and Princess Shou Shan, a title appeared on the cover of her 1934 historical novel about the Fragrant Concubine (Hsiang Fei), which Sir Reginald Johnston claimed she never used.
Early life
Born in an upper-class family, to a Chinese father and a Chinese-American mother who was the daughter of an American naval officer. The Yu sisters, like their two brothers Charles Yu Hsingling and John Yu Shuinling, received Western education in American missionary school—then an almost unheard-of proceeding amongst high Manchu officials—and were fluent in English. The British diplomat Sir Robert Hart described them as "a noisy family of English-speaking children, were fluent also in Japanese and French". She was also well versed in poetry, especially E. B. Browning's works.
In 1895, Roung Ling's father Yu Keng was appointed minister to Japan, he later took his family there. It was in Japan she discovered her vocation for dance, where she gave an impromptu performance of a Japanese dance (crane-tortoise) she had learned from a servant, before the assembled Japanese dignitaries.
In 1899, Roung Ling left for France with her father for taking up his new post as minister to the French Third Republic. In Paris, she was placed in charge of the sisters of the Sacred Heart Convent School () located at 77 Rue de Varenne.
The Yu family quickly adopted Parisian fashion, a media coverage at the time reported that all the children of Minister Yu Keng "wear European costume and follow the fashions closely", and called Roung Ling "a charming Chinese girl who is Parisian in all but name". The New York Times wrote, "[Der Ling and Roung Ling] are adorably pretty, and they dress in the European style with a finish and skill to which something of Oriental charm is added which makes them the cynosure of all eyes when they enter a ".
The Yu siblings led a cosmopolitan life in Paris, they socialised, frequented the theatre and performed at their parents' parties. The weekly magazine reported that the four children of Minister Yu Keng "superbly performed" an English comedy in three acts at a soirée organised by their father.
In March 1901, the Yus threw a fancy dress ball at the Chinese Embassy to celebrate Chinese New Year, at which Roung Ling was costumed as Prince Charming, her siblings Der Ling, Hsingling and Shuin Ling, were dressed respectively as a doll in the fairy tale, Napoleon and Pluto. The Chicago Sunday Tribune reported that "Lord Yu is particularly proud of his Europeanised family". The Yu couple gave their daughters unheard-of freedom to enjoy European-style ballroom dancing with close body contact with foreign men. Their lifestyle caused outrage for other Manchu mission officials, the family was denounced to the throne. But the Empress Dowager liked what they were doing and waited impatiently for their return.
After attending the coronation of Edward VII and Alexandra, Prince Zaizhen and his entourage were greeted by the Yu family on their return from London. Both Sir Liang Cheng and Prince Zaizhen were quite taken with the Yu sisters. Liang reported back to the court that both girls "would quite fascinate the Empress Dowager if they go to Peking". The Yu sisters liked Prince Zaizhen too, "immensely", as Der Ling remembered, he was "very handsome, well educated, and his tastes were the same as ours in many things". She added that while she and the prince were prone to quarrel, Zaizhen paid court to her softer, prettier sister. Liang Cheng also found himself drawn to Roung Ling, the two had been engaged at least as early as January 1903, but for some unknown reason, they were never married to each other.
During her stay in Paris, apart from studying acting with Sarah Bernhardt, Roung Ling also got the opportunity to study modern dance with Isadora Duncan. For the latter she improvised a few dance steps during their first meeting, Duncan was deeply impressed by her talent and decided to teach her for free; she thus became one of the first Chinese to learn Western choreography. In 1902, she played the part of a Loie Fuller inspired butterfly girl in Rose and Butterfly, and also danced in Greek Dance, in both of which she was well received by audiences. In the same year, the Yus travelled through Spain, Germany, Italy and Russia before arriving back in China in January 1903.
Lady-in-waiting
Soon after her return to China, Roung Ling was installed as one of the court ladies to the Empress Dowager Cixi, together with her sister Der Ling. While in the court, she studied traditional Chinese dance, and integrated it with Western elements in her own way to creating a unique style. She developed from this combination a series of dance styles of Eastern aesthetic with Western technique known as "Bodhisattva Dance", "Fan Dance", "Ruyi Dance", "Sword Dance" and "Lotus Fairy Dance". She also introduced Western dance to the imperial court, she performed Greek Dance at Summer Palace in 1904, and a Spanish dance on the eve of the Dragon Boat Festival.
She had a love affair with the Guangxu Emperor, but probably in secret on account of the empress dowager's informers. The French writer Marc Chadourne called her the emperor's "Saint Helena"; years later, she told the former with melancholy, that the emperor had proposed to her to be his concubine.
Roung Ling left the palace in 1905 due to her father's illness. "It is amusing now to think of those days", she recalled more than twenty years later, in 1926, "I was so young and so little that I could not possibly wear the beautiful and elaborate Manchu head dress and without it the court costume wasn't complete; so they dressed me in boy's clothes. I was glad because they were so much more comfortable to wear but still it took more than an hour every morning to have my hair dressed. We had to get up early, always by half past six or seven o'clock to be ready to go to the empress' apartments to wish her 'good morning'. [...] I always went to audiences with the empress. It was quite a long way to go in the palace; but it was easy for me in my boy's clothes to get about. I used to stand or sit on the floor behind a screen where I could hear everything, but of course I was too young to understand much of what was said."
Later life
Shortly after the fall of the Qing Empire, in 1912, Roung Ling had married Dan Pao Tchao, a nephew of Tang Shao-yi, who studied at the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr in France, and was counsellor in the office of the Republican president with the rank of general. During the Republican era, she was appointed Mistress of Ceremonies to President Li Yuan-hung, and the couple enjoyed a prominent position in Peking high society. It was a happy marriage, however, she probably had a secret relationship with Saint-John Perse, a French poet-diplomat who served as secretary to the French embassy in Peking from 1916 to 1921. A few years later, she confided in that Perse never loved her, but she was useful to him for obtaining information from the Republic's high society.
During the 1920s, she organised numerous charity performances and participated in many other charity events. In 1921, she gave a speech in English about her life in the Manchu imperial court at the Teng Shih K'ou Congregational Church, in aid of the "School for Poor Children" charity funds.
The American writer Grace Seton-Thompson met Roung Ling while being greeted in a public audience with President Li Yuan-hung. "The event was organised by Madame Dan, mistress of ceremonies to the president. She is also Madame President's () contact with the diplomatic circles in Peking", Thompson wrote in her travelogue Chinese Lanterns, "she skillfully combines the elegance of the West and the nobility of the East, forming a charm beyond imagination. [...] But, these are not all the factors that make up her personality. The 'secret' lies in her femininity from the inside out, in a warm and loving heart. Those cumbersome rituals actually take up very little of her time. She has devoted her life to charity, which has almost become a habit."
In addition to charitable activities, Roung Ling was involved in English teaching projects and fashion design programme, for the latter she founded China's first women's clothing design research society. Her opinion on the changing women's fashion in China contradicted a 1933 Vogue article—"Sometimes the Twain Do Meet"—which held to the belief that Western influence was the source of change in China, stating, "Chinese fashions have been completely transformed by the Manchu influence which substituted the long dress for the old-fashioned tunic blouse. This dress must be long and straight and have a stiff, high collar." She brought up the New Life Movement's opposition to Chinese women in dress that seemed too Western or flamboyant to argue that Western fashions had not yet been fully accepted by then. The British writer Harold Acton acknowledged Roung Ling's pivotal cultural role in the new Republic in his book Memoirs of an Aesthete.
She expressed her desire to becoming a film actress in the middle of the 1920s, but her dream was not realised.
In 1926, the American diplomat John Van Antwerp MacMurray filmed a three-minute sequence of Roung Ling performing a "Sword Dance" in front of the Temple of Heaven.
In 1930, she published in English a historical novel about the Fragrant Concubine of the Qianlong Emperor titled Hsiang Fei: A Love Story of the Emperor Ch’ien Lung. A second edition was released in 1934. In 1936, she wrote a foreword for the Chinese translation of Der Ling's Imperial Incense, at the invitation of its translator . In 1937, she performed an American dance at the Peiping Charity Fair.
After the communist takeover of China in 1949, Roung Ling and her husband managed by various strategies to negotiate their survival during the early years of Mao's regime. After an interview in April 1957, the photojournalist Zhang Zudao () gave a description of his first impression of Roung Ling which shed some light on her later life: "She has a well-featured face, no wrinkles except for the forehead. Bright eyes, fair skin, she is of well-proportioned, medium stature, with a tidy haircut with both sides tucked neatly behind the ears. A thin coat of face powder and lipstick, close-fitting black velvet dress in Chinese style with shiny antique silver buttons, making her look elegant especially in a 'workerised, peasantised and soldierised' society where the monotonous short hair for everyman, pigtails for everywoman and bluish-grey uniform for everyone."
She penned a memoir titled (, or more idiomatically, 'Memoir of My Life at the Manchu Imperial Court'), which was published in 1957 recounting her early years in the imperial palace as a lady-in-waiting. Despite being a bestseller at its time of publication, the book was later severely criticised for its "propaganda of the Four Olds".
At the height of the sociopolitical purge movement of Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), labelled as a symbol of "feudalism, bourgeoisie and revisionism" due to her early years in France and the imperial court, and the social status she held during the Republican era, she was dragged from her apartment and, symbolically, both her legs were broken by a group of Red Guards. She had to live in a dilapidated single-storey bungalow because of the forcible occupation of her residence by residents' committee. According to the children of her longtime friends, despite a pair of broken legs and the living condition, her composure and sense of humour kept intact. Every time they visited her, she chatted about those funny stories from her youth, and the younger generation roared with laughter. She died of pulmonary infection in Peking University First Hospital, in 1973.
The Dan couple had no children of their own, but left an adopted daughter, Lydia Dan (, 1915–2002; the future Lydia na Ranong []), whose biological father was Wang Tseng Sze (, 1890–1944), the first secretary of the Chinese Legation in Paris during the 1920s. Lydia married Chok na Ranong () and became a confidante of senior royals of Bangkok. She had studied political science at Radcliffe College since 1941, then at Harvard University from 1942 to 1944.
Publications
Hsiang Fei: A Love Story of the Emperor Ch’ien Lung, Peiping: The Yu Lien Press, 1930 (second edition 1934; foreword by Hardy Jowett)
Qinggong suoji (, idiomatic translation: 'Memoir of My Life at the Manchu Imperial Court'), Beijing: Beijing Publishing House, 1957
In popular culture
The Yu sisters' life in the imperial court was dramatised in the 2006 television series Princess Der Ling, in which Roung Ling was portrayed by Sun Yifei.
See also
Eileen Chang – a Republican-era Chinese American writer
Oei Hui-lan – a Republican-era socialite and style icon
Anna May Wong – first Chinese American Hollywood actress
Paris in the Belle Époque
Women in dance
References
1889 births
1973 deaths
19th-century dancers
20th-century dancers
Chinese female dancers
Chinese choreographers
Chinese ballerinas
20th-century ballet dancers
Chinese socialites
Chinese ladies-in-waiting
Chinese fashion designers
Women fashion designers
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Marquette Castle is an 18th-century manor house in Heemskerk, Netherlands, occupying the site of the previous 13th century Heemkskerk Castle, or .
Castle Characteristics
Heemskerk, the first castle
The first version of Marquette Castle was a round water castle dating from the 13th century. The round water castle is known from many old pictures. These suggest at least one building along its wall. They also show its later use as a walled garden with a pond.
In 1802 the last remains of the water castle were demolished. All that remained were the very wide moats. In 2021 the castle terrains were investigated with ground-penetrating radar and two other non-invasive techniques. These showed the water castle, as well as its gatehouse. The outer diameter of the water castle proved to have been about 40 m. This is larger than Egmond Castle's round water castle which measures slightly less than 30 m.
Apart from the known round water castle, other parts of the first castle are unknown. It might have been that there was a predecessor on what later became the outer bailey of the round water castle.
The water castle was probably deserted in the later fourteenth century, as its defensive capabilities had become obsolete. The buildings on the outer bailey were then changed, and enlarged to become the precursor of the current castle.
Marquette, the current castle
The current castle consists of two parallel wings, and a perpendicular small gate wing. The relation to the previous castle has not been investigated very well. Separate finds have not been analyzed, and not much has been published about it.
The current castle has three vaulted basements. One of them shows a thick wall of thirteenth century brick. A chapel from about 1555 can be seen west of the bridge on the between 1741 and 1759 picture. Its entrance was later found in the second basement. During the renovation of the kitchen in 1980, a fireplace was found that might date from the fourteenth or fifteenth century.
The castle is known to have become a manor in the first quarter of the sixteenth century. At that time Daniël de Hertaing Lord of Marquette-en-Ostrevant started to change the castle, and renamed it for his lost Lordship of Marquette. All that remains from this time is the high stair tower.
In 1738-1741 Pieter Rendorp designed the stately eastern wing with its double roof, avant-corps and stone pilaster strips. The decoration of the gate also belongs to this time. The western wing dates from about 1780, when the castle got its largest extension. A northern section was built at about the same time. This, as well as some other parts where demolished again in the early nineteenth century. The terraces on the north side are the lowest part of the northern section.
The interior has a corridor with a marble floor and stucco in Louis XIV style. There is a summer dining room in Louis XV style, and a Chinese room with painted wall paper. In 1911 the early 18th century carpentry of the ballroom of nearby Assumburg Castle was placed at Marquette.
History
Van Heemskerk (c. 1250-1475)
Count William II of Holland, who ruled from 1247 to 1256 ordered the construction of roads and castles in order to subdue the West Frisians. Heemskerk Castle, then known as was one of these. It led to an unusually high concentration of castles around Heemskerk. See Oud Haerlem Castle for details of this concentration and a map.
The exact role of the count in the construction of Marquette is unknown. He might have build the round water castle, or a building on the outer bailey. In January 1300 Gerard II van Heemskerk transferred his allodial Heemskerk Castle to John II, Count of Holland, and had it granted back to him as a fief inheritable by sons, daughters and even sideways.
Gerard's son Gerard III van Heemskerk (c. 1300–1358) was a leader of the Cod Alliance during the Hook and Cod wars. He held Dirk III van Brederode prisoner at Marquette in 1354.
In October 1358 Gerard's son Wouter van Heemskerk (c. 1330 - 1380) tried to assassinate Reinoud van Brederode, bailiff of Kennemerland. Reinoud escaped, and regent Count Albert started a siege of Heemskerk Castle in November. In March 1359 the castle surrendered. Wouter and his wife were allowed to leave with some of their personal possessions. The castle itself was occupied by the count. After the siege Wouter's role in the assassination was investigated. He had to pay 7000 shield shields for reconciliation. In 1380 Wouter died without legal offspring.
Van Zevenbergen (1475-1560)
In 1475 Joost van Strijen lord of Zevenbergen (?-1476), inherited Heemskerk Castle from his grandmother Clementina van Heemskerk. In 1529 his sister Maria van Strijen van Zevenbergen transferred it to her son Corneille of Berghes (c.1500-1560). He became Prince-Bishopric of Liège in 1538. In 1544 Corneille resigned and got married. He died without legal offspring.
Van Arenberg (1560-1610)
In 1560 Jean de Ligne, Duke of Arenberg (1525-1568) inherited Heemskerk Castle as nephew of Corneille. Jean was killed in the first year of the Eighty Years' War. His family moved south when the county fell to the rebels. During the Twelve Years' Truce many fugitives on both sides took the opportunity to sell estates that they had fled. This also applied to the Arenberg's.
Marquette (1610-1717)
In 1610 Daniël de Hertaing Lord of Marquette-en-Ostrevant (?-1625) bought Heemskerk Castle. In 1612 he got permission from the States of Holland to rename Heemskerk Castle to Marquette Castle. He was governor of Oostende during the famous Siege of Ostend (1601-1604). De Hertaing had three sons: Willem an infantry captain, Hendrik, and Colonel Maximilian. In 1655 they were succeeded by Petronella, baroness of Wassenaar and Duvenvoorde.
Rendorp (1717-1909)
In 1717 the Amsterdamse brewer and mayor Joachim Rendorp bought Marquette. He had a son Pieter Rendorp (1703–1760), married to Margaretha Calkoen. Pieter was an amateur architect, and changed Marquette to his own design. Their son Joachim Rendorp (1728-1792) became an influential politician, and gave Marquette its greatest extent.
The French period greatly impoverished the Netherlands, and was followed by decades of stagnation. It was a disaster for many rich families, and led to the demolishment of many parts of Marquette Castle. Jacob van Rendorp van Marquette (1795-1879) was a volunteer in the 1813 struggle for independence, and was wounded in the 1815 Battle of Quatre Bras. He was mayor of Heemskerk and mayor of Castricum till 1867. He was married to A.C.M. van Deutz van Assendelft (?-1869).
Gevers (1855-1977)
In 1855 Jacob van Rendorp van Marquette's daughter Paulina van Rendorp van Marquette married Jan Hugo Gevers (1829-1891). Their son Hugo became mayor of Heemskerk in 1888, and lived at the castle with his wife Paulina Adriana van Lennep (1869-1947). After Hugo's death in 1921, Marquette was left uninhabited. After World War II Hugo's son Abraham Gevers (1901-1989) settled at Marquette with his wife Christine baroness de Vos van Steenwijk (1916).
Commercial use (1979)
In 1977 A.D.Th Gevers van Marquette sold the estate of 61.5 hectares to BV Onroerende Goederen Maatschappij de Omval. In 1980 Noord-Holland province bought the land of the estate, without the castle, for 2,750,000 guilders. Marquette Castle itself was renovated for 6,000,000 guilders, and taken into use as a conference- and party center in 1981. This enterprise failed, in part because it lacked a parking lot. It closed down on 31 December 1982.
In 1984 the Swiss Sodereal Group, later Swiss Tradition Hotels, became the new owner. In 1985 Marquette was reopened with a hotel building at 650 m distance. This combination with a hotel was rather successful. In 1986 the minsters for foreign affairs of the EU conferred at the hotel. Nevertheless, in 1988 the management was transferred to Mercury Hotel Group. Mercury was succeeded by NH Hotel Group, which published the booklet Château Marquette about the history and current state of the castle and its interior.
The current owner of Chateau Marquette is Erik Kuiper-van den Berg. In 2018 he financed the acquisition via crowdfunding.
Gallery
References
Notes
External links
Site of the Hotel Chateau Marquette
Marquette at Historische Kring Heemskerk
Castles in North Holland
Hook and Cod wars | [
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Samuel Bernard Hamburger (January 21, 1852 – December 28, 1926) was an American lawyer from New York.
Life
Hamburger was born on January 21, 1852 in Albany, New York, the son of Bernhard Hamburger and Ricka Strauss.
Hamburger attended the Scientific Academy in New Haven, Connecticut and graduated from Columbia Law School in 1872 with an LL.B. He studied law at different points with Robert S. Hale of Elizabethtown, New York, Churchill & Woodbury, Solomon F. Higgins, and Treman & Tyler. He was admitted to the New York bar in 1873 and began practicing law in New York City. A Republican, he was a member of the Republican County Committee and a delegate to the state conventions. His clients a number of members of the theatrical profession.
Hamburger was acting president of the Jewish Prisoners' Aid Society, chairman of the Executive Committee of the Jewish Protectory and Aid Society, a director of the Educational Alliance, an executive committee member of the New York branch of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, principal of the Congregation Ahawath Chesed Shaar Hashomayim Religious School, a trustee of the Washington Cemetery, and general counsel of the Independent Order Free Sons of Israel. In 1904, Mayor George B. McClellan Jr. appointed him a member of the New York City Board of Parole. He served on the Board for nine years. He was also one of the original directors of the Y.M.H.A., a director of the Hebrew Free School, and an organizer and incorporator of the Jewish Protectory.
Hamburger was a member of the National Museum of Art, the Geographical Society, the Manuscript Society, The Lambs, the Independent Order B'nai B'rith, the Federation of Jewish Philanthropic Societies of New York City, the University Settlement, the Actors Fund of America, and the Jewish Publication Society.
Hamburger died of apoplexy in his apartment at the Hotel Buckingham on December 28, 1926.
References
1852 births
1926 deaths
Columbia Law School alumni
19th-century American lawyers
20th-century American lawyers
Lawyers from New York City
19th-century American Jews
20th-century American Jews
Jewish American attorneys
New York (state) Republicans | [
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Jel-Aryk () or () or () is a village in the Kemin District of Chüy Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 281 in 2021.
References
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Fino Fini (9 February 1928 – 16 September 2020) was an Italian doctor.
He was known for being the doctor of Italy national football youth teams from 1958 to 1979 and the Italy national football team from 1962 to 1982, including during the two winning campaigns at UEFA Euro 1968 and 1982 FIFA World Cup.
He was also the director of Centro Tecnico Federale di Coverciano for almost thirty years from 1967 until 1995, overseeing also the coaching school and the technical sector. He was the ideator of the Museo del Calcio, a sports museum dedicated to the history of the Italy national football team.
At the international level, he was a member of UEFA's Technical Development Committee from 1976 to 1992 and FIFA's Medical Committee from 1978 to 1995.
In 2021, he was inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame.
References
1928 births
2020 deaths
20th-century Italian physicians
21st-century Italian physicians
Italian sports physicians
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"Same God" (stylized in capital letters) is a song performed by American contemporary worship band Elevation Worship which was released as a promotional single from their tenth live album, Lion (2022), on January 21, 2022. The song was written by Brandon Lake, Chris Brown, Pat Barrett, and Steven Furtick.
"Same God" peaked at No. 21 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart despite not being an official single.
Background
On January 21, 2022, Elevation Worship released "Same God" featuring Jonsal Barrientes as the first promotional single in the lead-up to the release of its parent album, Lion. Chris Brown of Elevation Worship spoke about song, saying: "I hope the song portrays His character and nature in a way that takes people on a journey and reminds people that we're a part of a great cloud of witnesses that have seen this same faithful God make good on His promises to the generations before us, and those to come after."
Composition
"Same God" is composed in the key of D♭ with a tempo of 72.5 beats per minute, and a musical time signature of .
Commercial performance
"Same God" debuted at number 21 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart dated February 5, 2022, concurrently charting at number one on the Christian Digital Song Sales chart, and at number 20 on the Christian Streaming Songs chart.
Music video
Elevation Worship released the music video for "Same God" featuring Jonsal Barrientes leading the song during an Elevation Church worship service, via YouTube on January 21, 2021.
Charts
Release history
References
External links
2022 songs
Elevation Worship songs
Songs written by Steven Furtick
Songs written by Brandon Lake | [
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Anna Glynn (born 1958) is an Australian visual artist whose diverse work spans the mediums of painting, drawing, installation, moving image, sound and sculpture. Her works have been shown in many exhibitions and are held in many major public galleries.
Early life
Anna Glynn was born in 1958.
Art practice and career
Glynn's artworks feature explorations of nature and the environment, and the human connection to landscape.
Her exhibition Promiscuous Provenance, commissioned by Shoalhaven Regional Gallery, explored Australia's colonial identity through a contemporary reinterpretation of early representations of Australian flora and fauna. It toured multiple museums and galleries across Queensland, New South Wales, ACT, Victoria and South Australia from 2018 to 2021, supported by the Australian Government's Visions of Australia touring program.
Throughout her career of more than thirty years, Glynn has been a finalist in a number of art prizes and has won awards and commissions both in Australia and internationally, including the Noosa Art Award (2016), Kedumba Drawing Award (2015), the Shoalhaven City Arts Award (2001), and the Shoalhaven Arts Board Millennium Sculpture commission (2000).
Exhibitions
Selected solo exhibitions
2018-2021 - Promiscuous Provenance, touring exhibition: Shoalhaven Regional Gallery, NSW; Margaret Whitlam Gallery, NSW; Noosa Regional Gallery, QLD; The World Theatre, QLD; Basil Sellers Exhibition Centre, NSW; Australian National Botanic Gardens, ACT; Hahndorf Academy, SA; Swan Hill Regional Gallery, VIC; Jervis Bay Maritime Museum, NSW; Hawkesbury Regional Gallery, NSW.
2013 - Wonderment, Leung Fong Oi Wan Art Gallery, Lingnan University, Hong Kong.
Recognition and awards
2021 - Finalist, FLOW, National Contemporary Watercolour Prize, Wollongong Art Gallery, NSW
2021 - Finalist, Gosford Art Prize, Gosford Regional Gallery, NSW
2021 - Finalist, Stanthorpe Photography Awards, Stanthorpe Regional Art Gallery, QLD
2020 - Finalist, Heysen Prize for Landscape, Hahndorf Academy, SA
2020 - Finalist, Elaine Bermingham National Watercolour Prize in Landscape Painting, Webb Gallery, Griffith University, QLD
2019 - Finalist, Ravenswood Australian Women's Art Prize, Ravenswood School For Girls, NSW
Collections
Her works have been acquired by numerous museums and galleries including:
the Australian Parliament House Art Collection, Canberra
the National Museum of Australia Collection, Canberra
the Shoalhaven City Council Art Collection, NSW
the Broken Hill Regional Art Gallery, NSW
the Bundanon Trust Collection, NSW
References
External links
Australian women artists
1958 births
Living people | [
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Mitic may refer to:
Mitić, Serbian surname
Mitic, Jalisco, Mexican village | [
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Azizbek Amanov (Uzbek Cyrillic: Азизбек Аскарович Амонов; born 30 October 1997) is a Uzbek footballer who plays as a midfielder for Esteghlal and Uzbekistan .
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Uzbekistani footballers
Expatriate footballers in Iran
Uzbekistani expatriate sportspeople in Iran
PFC Lokomotiv Tashkent players
Buxoro FK players
Esteghlal F.C. players
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One Cut Two Cut is a 2022 Indian Kannada-language comedy film written and directed by Vamsidhar Bhogaraju. The film stars Danish Sait, who plays the role of arts and craft teacher. Prakash Belawadi, Samyukta Hornad plays in pivotal roles. The film is produced by Ashwini Puneeth Rajkumar and Gurudath A Talwar of PRK Productions. It was released on 3 February 2022 on Amazon Prime Video.
Plot
Gopi(Danish Sait), is a mild-mannered and soft-spoken arts and crafts teacher who works at the Bytarayanapura school. Due to the nature of his work, he does not earn much and is ridiculed by his neighbor. Meanwhile, ex-radio host Pruthviraj(Prakash Belawadi), plans to organize a protest against the government to earn fame on social media and become more popular than Amitabh Bachchan, whom he envies. But, nobody turns up for the protest except for Ayan(Vineeth Beep Kumar), a struggling stand-up comedian, Neha(Roopa Rayappa), a fashion blogger, and Gurudev(Manoj Sengupta), an ex-serviceman. The four decide to take drastic steps to force the government to fulfill their demands.
Meanwhile, Gopi reaches the school and finds that the teachers are unenthusiastic about teaching the children. He also bumps into Nagaveni(Samyukta Hornad), a teacher at the school and the woman he likes. It is revealed that Gopi and his late mother once visited Nagaveni's house to ask her hand in marriage but was rejected by her father due to his educational qualifications. Gopi entertains the students by making origami but his fun session is soon interrupted by the four silly radical activists(wearing tracksuits and masks)who plan to hold the school hostage until their demands are met. Gopi becomes the translator between the activists and the CM's secretary.
The secretary thinks of it as a joke but realizes the gravity of the situation when he gets a selfie of the hijackers with a gun. The hijackers demand the resignation of the CM but later agree to give a formal list of demands (all of which are absurd). This incident is picked up by news anchor Komala (Soundarya Nagaraj), but she is forced to broadcast meaningless news by her boss instead of this. The secretary, realizing how this event can affect the upcoming elections decides to end the issue quietly by ordering a secret agent(Vamsidhar Bhogaraju) and his 'elite' team to eliminate the hijackers. The film then focuses on the three parties and how incredibly ridiculous their day is.
By nightfall, the silly hijackers realize their plan will yield no fruitful results, and decide to escape before they are arrested. However, Pruthviraj is reluctant and gets increasingly agitated. All this is captured secretly by Komala who resigns when her boss does not allow her to broadcast her footage. The 'elite' team finally ends up at the wrong school and Pruthviraj ends up shooting Gopi in the back. Finally, all the parties head home in the ambulance carrying Gopi and the silly activists formally apologize for the hijacking. Gopi informs the relieved secretary about the end of the situation and requests him to improve the conditions of the government school. Gopi even lies to the secret agent about not knowing who the hijackers were and everyone goes home happy.
The film ends by showing how all the activists have mended their ways and how Nagaveni has ended up marrying another person instead of Gopi.
Cast
Danish Sait as Gopi, art and craft teacher
Prakash Belawadi as Pruthiraj, working in All India Radio and hates Amitabh Bachhan
Samyukta Hornad as Nagaveni,,school teacher
Vineeth Beep Kumar as Ayan, struggling stand-up comedian
Roopa Rayappa as Neha, fashion blogger
Manoj Sputnique Sengupta as Gurudev, ex-serviceman
Aruna Balraj as Hindi Teacher
Sampath Maitreya as CM's Secretary
Ashwin Hasan as Murty, News Channel Owner
Vamsidhar Bhogaraju as Special Agent
Rishi as Groom who marries Nagaveni, special appearance
Soundtrack
Music composed by Nakul Abhyankar. First were released on 31 January 2022.
References
External links
Indian comedy-drama films
Amazon Prime Video original films
Indian films | [
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2028,
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Đerek () is a Croatian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Ana Đerek (born 1998), Croatian artistic gymnast
Viktor Đerek (born 2000), Croatian photographer
Croatian surnames | [
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Nazmiye Oral (born 1969) is a Dutch actress and writer. She has won a Golden Calf for Best Acting in a Television Drama.
Career
Nazmiye Oral began her career working for Dutch Muslim Broadcasting and interviewing figures such as Theo van Gogh and Pim Fortuyn. She subsequently has acted in films, television series and plays. In 2016, she won the Golden Calf for Best Acting in a Television Drama for her role playing a concerned mother in One Night Stand. Oral appeared in the third season of Undercover playing a mafia boss, in 2021. A voice coach helped her to hone the Flemish accent.
Oral is also a writer. She was a columnist for De Volkskrant from 2003 until 2012 and wrote weekly columns for De Gelderlander for a year. In 2001 released a novel entitled 'Zehra' which was nominated for the E. du Perron Prize. She wrote and performed the play Niet meer zonder jou (No longer without you). with her own mother.
Personal life
Oral was born in Hengelo in the Netherlands, in 1969. From the age of 6 until 10 she lived with her grandparents in a small village in Turkey. She then returned to the Netherlands, studying fashion in Arnhem. Her parents set up an arranged marriage which she avoided by marrying a Dutch man instead. In her first marriage she had two daughters and in 2021 became engaged a second time.
Reference
1969 births
21st-century Dutch novelists
21st-century Dutch dramatists and playwrights
21st-century Dutch women writers
21st-century Dutch actresses
20th-century Dutch actresses
People from Hengelo
Living people | [
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Derek Doneen is an American documentary film director, editor and producer. He is best known for his work on the feature documentary The Price of Free and the Netflix documentary series Heist.
Life and career
Doneen was born in Los Angeles, California. He graduated from Chapman University's Dodge College of Film and Media Arts. He started his career as an in-house filmmaker at Participant Media. In 2018, he directed the feature documentary The Price of Free, about Nobel Prize winner Kailash Satyarthi, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and won the Sundance Grand Jury Prize. He was named one of Variety's 2018 top 10 documentary filmmakers and listed in DOC NYC's "40 Under 40" list for 2018.
In 2021, Doneen co-directed the Netflix documentary series Heist, along with Nick Frew and Martin Desmond Roe, about the story of three heists.
Filmography
Awards and nominations
References
External links
Living people
American documentary film directors
American documentary film producers
People from California
Year of birth missing (living people) | [
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7256,
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Khudgarz () is a 2017 Pakistani television family drama series aired on ARY Digital from December 2017 to April 2018. It is produced by Humayun Saeed, Shahzad Nasib, Sana Shahnawaz and Samina Humayun Saeed under Six Sigma Plus and Next Level Entertainment. It stars Aamina Sheikh, Syed Jibran and Sami Khan in lead roles.
The serial released on ARY Digital.
Cast
Aamina Sheikh as Ayrea
Sami Khan as Hassan
Syed Jibran as Junaid
Mansha Pasha as Abeer
Seemi Pasha
Mehmood Akhtar as Ayrea's father
Shaheen Khan as Hassan's mother
Ghulam Mohiuddin as Hassan's father
Salman Saeed
Rayyan Ibrahim
Kiran Ashfaq
Khwaja Shadab
Parveen Soomro
Tehseen Tasneem
Azam Khan
Accoldaes
References
External Links
2017 Pakistani television series debuts
Urdu-language television shows
ARY Digital original programming | [
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The Oryol Oblast Council of People's Deputies () is the regional parliament of Oryol Oblast, a federal subject of Russia.
The council consists of 50 deputies elected for a term of 5 years.
Composition
2021
References
Politics of Oryol Oblast
Oryol Oblast | [
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The Bravest Revenge, also known as Wu lin long hu dou (), is a 1970 Hong Kong action martial arts film directed by Lung Chien, produced by L.S. Chang, and starring Polly Ling-Feng Shang-Kuan, Peng Tien and Yuan Yi.
Plot
Polly's father is murdered, and it's duty for her, her brothers and the King of Sword to revenge him.
Cast
Polly Shang-Kuan as Shi Fang Yi
Tien Peng as Cai Ying Jie
Yi Yuan as Chao Mu Tien
Ma Chi as Shi Yu Long
Wan Chung Shan as Zhu Yi Feng
Hsieh Han as Shan Fei
Kao Ming
Huang Chun
Shao Lo Hui
References
External links
1970 films
1970 martial arts films
1970s action films
1970s martial arts films
1970s Cantonese-language films
Films set in Shanghai
Films shot in Hong Kong
Hong Kong action films
Hong Kong films
Hong Kong films about revenge
Hong Kong martial arts films
Kung fu films
1970s Mandarin-language films
Films directed by Lung Chien | [
101,
1996,
13980,
2102,
7195,
1010,
2036,
2124,
2004,
8814,
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Alexandros Doumas (; born 3 February 2003) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a defender for Super League club Apollon Smyrnis. He has been playing for Apollon Smyrnis since 2022.
Club career
Doumas joined Apollon Smyrnis on 1 January 2022.
References
External links
Living people
2003 births
Greek footballers
Association football defenders
Apollon Smyrnis F.C. players | [
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Bradić may refer to:
Bradić, Serbia
Bradić (surname) | [
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The Harare South Country Club is a country club to the south of Harare. Its facilities include a golf course and a cricket ground. The cricket ground has played host to first-class and List A one-day matches. It first hosted first-class cricket in 1987, when Zimbabwe B played Pakistan B. Following Zimbabwe's elevation to Test status in 1992, matches in the Logan Cup gained first-class status, with both Mashonaland Country Districts and Mashonaland using the ground for home matches; the ground also played host to List A matches for both Mashonaland Country Districts and Zimbabwe Country Districts, in addition to hosting three matches in the 2000 ICC Emerging Nations Tournament. First-class cricket has not been played there since 1997 and List A cricket has not been played there since 2001.
Records
First-class
Highest team total: 600 for 6 declared by Sri Lankans v Mashonaland Country Districts, 1994–95
Lowest team total: 123 all out by Mashonaland Country Districts v Matabeleland, 1994–95
Highest individual innings: 202 by Aravinda de Silva for Sri Lankans v Mashonaland Country Districts, 1994–95
Best bowling in an innings: 7-75 by Paul Strang for Mashonaland Country Districts v Mashonaland Under-24s, 1994–95
Best bowling in a match: 9-141 by Bryan Strang for Mashonaland Country Districts v Mashonaland, 1995–96
List A
Highest team total: 354 for 6 by South Africa v Zimbabwe Country Districts, 1995–96
Lowest team total: 167 all out by Denmark v Netherlands, 1999–00
Highest individual innings: 235 by Brian McMillan for South Africa v Zimbabwe Country Districts, 1995–96
Best bowling in an innings: 5-26 by Dick Kramer for Netherlands v Denmark, 1999–00
See also
List of cricket grounds in Zimbabwe
References
External links
Cricket grounds in Zimbabwe
Golf clubs and courses in Zimbabwe
Harare | [
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Indira Road is the name of a road adjoining the Farmgate area of Dhaka city. Indira Road is a road very familiar to the people of Dhaka.
Many people think that Indira Road was named after Indira Gandhi, former Prime Minister of India. But no such information has been discovered for a long time. But now there is a different kind of prevailing. This opinion is more likely to be true. The area where Indira Road is now located was once home to a large number of wealthy people. One of them is Dwijdas Babu. Dwijdas Babu was the head of the Manipur firm. Most likely it was in the 1930s. His big house was on the present Indira Road. Indira, the eldest daughter of Dwijdas Babu, died prematurely. At that time Indira was buried inside the house. The road in the area became known as Indira Road after the daughter of Dwijdas Babu.
The road is under Dhaka North City Corporation and Tejgaon Thana. Tejgaon College is situated in the road. The government's Indira Road-Panthapath link road project is underway.
References
Roads in Dhaka | [
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Walter Henry Guillebaud, CBE (2 July 1890 – 1 November 1973) was a British civil servant and forester.
Born on 2 July 1890, Guillebaud was the son of the Rev. Erneste Guillebaud (1856–1907), rector of Yatesbury, and Mabel Louise Marshall (1850–1912), a sister of the economist Alfred Marshall. Walter was one of four sons; the elder, Harold, became a missionary, Walter's twin Claude William became a noted economist, and the younger brother Cyril died in 1915. Walter studied at Victoria College, Manchester, and then St John's College, Cambridge.
He was appointed an assistant inspector in the Forestry Branch of the Board of Agriculture in 1914. When the Forestry Commission was established in 1919, he became a research officer and six years later a divisional officer. He was appointed Chief Research Officer in 1928 and Director of Research and Education in 1945, serving until 1948. He was then Deputy Director-General of the Forestry Commission between 1948 and 1953.
By the late 1940s, Guillebaud had been "the leading figure in forest research since the early twenties". He served as president of the Institute of Foresters of Great Britain from 1945 to 1947 and published ten articles in its journal, Forestry. While possessing a wide range of knowledge about forestry, the forester J. A. B. Macdonald recalled him as "cadaverous in appearance [but] nevertheless gentle, retiring and timid by nature... [h]e was definitely a scholar by preference, and I doubt if there was every much that was really original either about his work or his thoughts". Nevertheless, the Commission paid tribute to him when he died, saying that "his valuable work ... plac[ed] [the Commission's] research efforts on a firm footing". He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for his service in the 1951 New Year Honours. He died on 1 November 1973.
References
1890 births
1973 deaths
British civil servants
British foresters
Alumni of the University of Manchester
Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
Commanders of the Order of the British Empire | [
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Špiro is a masculine given name found in Montenegro and Croatia.
It may refer to:
Špiro Grubišić (1904–1985), Croatian rower
(1933–2020), Croatian and Yugoslav actor
Špiro Kulišić (1908–1989), Montenegrin ethnologist
(1904–1942), Montenegrin Yugoslav Partisan
Špiro Peričić (born 1993), Croatian football player
See also
Špirić
Croatian masculine given names
Montenegrin masculine given names | [
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Hoyerswerdaer FC is an association football club from Hoyerswerda, Saxony, Germany.
The club was founded on 15 January 1956 in East Germany. Under the name BSG Aktivist Schwarze Pumpe, it reached as high as the DDR-Liga, the second tier in East Germany, where it played in the ultimate (1990–91) season of the DDR-Liga.
Following the reunification of Germany, the club changed its name to FSV Hoyerswerda and later FC Lausitz Hoyerswerda. The club colours were yellow and black. It incorporated the club Hoyerswerdaer SV 1919 in 2016, changing its name to Hoyerswerdaer FC.
References
Further reading
Hanns Leske: Enzyklopädie des DDR-Fußballs. Göttingen: Die Werkstatt, 2007, ISBN 978-3-89533-556-3, pp. 71–72.
Football clubs in Germany
Sport in Saxony
Hoyerswerda
1956 establishments in Germany
Association football clubs established in 1956 | [
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is a Japanese professional football club based in Shinjuku, Tokyo. They play in the Japan Football League.
History
The club was founded by the current chairman Kazutomo Maruyama as a leisure club under the name Criacao in 2005 to create an opportunity to play football even after completing his studies at Rikkyō University. After Maruyama's professional return to Tokyo, he first registered for the Japan Football Association in 2009.
League & cup record
Honours
Current squad
Manager History
Kit evolution
See also
Japan Football Association (JFA)
Notes
References
External links
Official website
Criacao Corporation
Football clubs in Japan
Japan Football League clubs
Works association football clubs in Japan | [
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Seckford Golf Club is a golf club in Great Bealings on Seckford Hall road. The course founded 1991 is 4.5 km long with 18 holes and a par of 66. The club has white and red tee courses as well as a restaurant.
References
Golf clubs and courses in Suffolk
1991 establishments in England
Sports venues completed in 1991
East Suffolk (district) | [
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Vicia anatolica (syn. Vicia hajastana) is a species of flowering plant in the vetch genus Vicia, family Fabaceae. It is native to Crimea, the Caucasus, Turkey, Iran, Turkmenistan, and Kyrgyzstan. As its synonym Vicia hajastana it is used in studies of cytoskeletal structures and other cellular functions since it is amenable to laboratory media culturing.
References
anatolica
Flora of the Crimean Peninsula
Flora of the Caucasus
Flora of Turkey
Flora of Iran
Flora of Turkmenistan
Flora of Kyrgyzstan
Plants described in 1927 | [
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() is an Estonian television mystery music game show that premiered on Kanal 2 on 27 February 2022. It is an adaptation of the South Korean programme of the same name.
Gameplay
Format
Presented with a group of seven "mystery singers" identified only by their occupation, a guest artist and a group of two contestants must attempt to eliminate bad singers from the group without ever hearing them sing, assisted by clues and a celebrity panel over the course of five rounds. At the end of the game, the last remaining mystery singer is revealed as either good or bad by means of a duet between them and one of the guest artists.
Rounds
Each episode presents the guest artist and contestants seven people whose identities and singing voices are kept concealed until they are eliminated to perform on the "stage of truth" or join in the final performance.
Production
Background and development
Following the announcement for the development of the series through CJ ENM and Fremantle's joint agreement in November 2020, TV3 has initially made an interest to adapt I Can See Your Voice following the success of Maskis laulja, an Estonian adaptation of the South Korean reality competition series King of Mask Singer. Later in January 2022, Duo Media Networks acquired the rights to produce a local counterpart of that said program. Produced by Ruut, the staff team is managed by executive producer Triin Luhats, producer Kaupo Karelson, and director Anna Stepanova.
Filming
Filmings for the series took place at Kanal 2 Stuudio in Tallinn. Also, tapings have been implemented health and safety protocols due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Episodes
Guest artists
Notes
References
International versions of I Can See Your Voice
2022 Estonian television series debuts
Estonian television series based on South Korean television series
Kanal 2 original programming | [
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Balbir Singh Sidhu may refer to:
Balbir Singh Sidhu (hockey player)
Balbir Singh Sidhu (politician) | [
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Reza Bigdeloo (, born 15 November 2000) is an Iranian footballer who played for Sabah in the Azerbaijan Premier League. He primarily plays as a forward.
Club career
Early years
Reza Bigdeloo began his amateur career at the academy of local clubs in Marand County, East Azerbaijan Province.
In early 2019, he transferred to the youth academy "Sabah". He scored his debut goal in the Azerbaijan First Division on February 28, 2019, in the match against Keshla II.
Sabah Baku
Reza Bigdeloo was invited to the main squad due to his successful performance in the First Division. On April 19, 2019, Reza Bigdeloo made his professional debut in the Premier League in the 83rd minute of the match against Neftchi Baku.
On May 11, 2019, Reza played a 90-minute match against Zira in the Premier League.
References
2000 births
People from Tehran
Living people
Association football forwards
Iran international footballers
Sabah FC (Azerbaijan) players
Azerbaijan Premier League players
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Fenter is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Frank Fenter (1936–1983), South African music industry executive
Gray Fenter (born 1996), American baseball pitcher
Paul Fenter, American physicist
See also
Fender (surname) | [
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Silas Nwankwo (born 12 December 2003) is a Nigerian professional footballer who plays as a Striker for Swedish club Mjällby in the Allsvenskan.
Career
Nwankwo played for Nigerian club Crown FC till July 2019 before moving to Sunshine Stars. One year later, he went on to play for Nasarawa United in the NPFL making 35 appearances and scoring 19 goals in the 2020–21 season.
Mjällby AIF
On 3 February 2022, Nwankwo signed a three years contract with Swedish club Mjällby.
Honours
• NPFL Eunisell golden boot award 2020–2021 season.
External links
References
2003 births
Living people | [
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Jared Madere (born July 11, 1986, New York City) is an American contemporary artist and curator who lives and works in Berlin, Germany.
Early life
Madere was born in New York City, New York, in 1986. He studied Painting and Sound at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and earned a BFA in 2009.
Career
Artistic practice
Madere began exhibiting his large scale installations internationally with the generational survey of monumental works DOOM: SURFACE Controle curated by Renaud Jerez at Le Magasin - Centre National d'Art Contemporain, Grenoble FR. Soon after this, Madere opened his North American solo debut at The Whitney Museum of American Art with an Untitled sculptural exhibition organized by curator Christopher Y. Lew.
Madere spent the first half of 2017 in Himachal Pradesh, India creating tapestries for the exhibition Anasthasia and Zoey staged in the hills below Gallu Devi. Later in the year, Madere was commissioned to create Unconditional Love, which would fill the atrium of the London department store Liberty for about 36 hours before it was removed due to graphic imagery of a newborn child dripping vernix caseosa.
In 2018, Madere began work on his first sculptural opera Oouolyamtelbellembem Magical Crisis In The Special V.I.P. Spot which debuted in Los Angeles in November 2018 beneath the outgoing flight path of LAX International Airport. The following year Madere expanded upon this string of Frozen Operas with Stepped Onto The Moving Stairs Before I Could Tie My Shoes in Berlin and En Route To Burn The Palace I Was Told So Much Of The Queen's Virtues That By The Time I Reached The Gate I Had Become A Guard within their installation Pavilion Du Voyageurs for Nicolas Bourriaud's 16th edition of the Istanbul Biennial, The Seventh Continent. In 2021, Madere staged their fourth Frozen Opera, The Unpopular Courage of Dutchess Orchid Drop on the artificial snowboarding slope of Copenhagen's trash burning power plant Copenhill.
Madere's work results from hyper-collaborative processes enacted during its creation involving craftsmen, technicians, tattoo artists, scientists, chefs, and children. In addition to living collaborators, Madere often works with various implementations of machine learning artificial intelligence-based processes to assist in the creation of both sound and image.
In addition to the diversity of collaborators, the physical makeup of Madere's output is equally varied, working with a wide range of materials including lipstick, raspberries, terrazzo, figure skating hairnets, flowers, scent diffusers, and vehicle wrap.
Madere continues to create and exhibit work across multiple media in the form of sculpture, image, installation, video, sound, live opera, music videos, and long-form documentation.
Madere's works have been exhibited internationally at various institutions and galleries, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, Le Magasin - Centre National d'ArtContemporain, La Panacée, Liberty (department store) London, The Istanbul Biennial, Armada Milano, David Lewis Gallery, Bortolami, and The Watermill Center.
Curatorial Practice
After moving to Brooklyn, New York, he opened the Bed-Stuy Love Affair gallery in 2013, where he exhibited the work of many of his contemporaries, including Bradley Kronz, Valerie Keane, Darja Bajagić, Rochelle Goldberg, Win McCarthy, Ben Schumacher, Sam Anderson, Veit Laurent Kurz, Joseph Geagan, Olga Balema, Jessi Reaves, and Jake Cruzen.
In 2014, the gallery became a mobile exhibition venue when it moved into a 30-foot truck complete with wrought iron gates armoring all of the vehicle windows, pink marble floors, and a flatscreen television with surround sound system, which played Tekken during exhibition openings.
In mid-2017, Madere opened the hybrid digital and traditional exhibition venue Mother Culture Los Angeles with artist Jake Cruzen and curator Milo Conroy.
Notable work
The Unpopular Courage of Dutchess Orchid Drop, Cucina X Copenhill, Copenhagen, 2021
En route to burn the palace, I was told so much of the queen's virtues that by the time I reached the gate, I had become a guard, IKSV Istanbul Biennial, 2019
STEPPED ONTO THE MOVING STAIRS BEFORE I COULD TIE MY SHOES, Mother Culture Berlin, Berlin, 2019
Oouolyamtelbellembem Magical Crisis In The Special V.I.P. Spot, A Frozen Opera (2018)
ALL HUMAN RESOURCES SHARED EQUALLY NOW, La Panacée, Montpellier, France, 2018
Unconditional Love, Liberty, London, 2017
Untitled, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, 2015
Untitled, Armada, Milan, Italy, 2015
Untitled, Le Magasin, Grenoble, France 2014
Reception
Noam Segal writes for the catalog of Nicolas Bourriaud's Crash Test, in both his artistic practice, Madere's works focus on "the annulment of any hierarchical order in the material and symbolic realm" and "the abolition of structures such as the superiority of discourse and western time perception."
Critic Clayton Press writes for Forbes, "it is difficult to capture the very real sense of ecstatic, if not romantic, intoxication that Madere conjures with his installations, environments, and visualizations."
Madere's work has been written about in international publications including Interview Magazine, ArtNews.com, Flash Art, The Times, The New York Times, Forbes, Mousse, ArtReview, and Artforum.
Permanent Collection
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
The Watermill Center, Water Mill, NY
Kaikai Kiki, Tokyo
Exhibitions
Selected solo and two person exhibitions
2015
Jared Madere, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
Jared Madere, Armada, Milan, Italy
2016
Islands in the Stream, David Lewis, New York, NY
Jake Cruzen & Jared Madere: Prince Cherrie, White Flag Projects, Saint Louis, MO
2017
Unconditional Love, curated by Victor Benady, Liberty, London
Anasthasia & Zoe, Kangra Valley, Himachal Pradesh India
2018
OOUOLYAMTELBELLEMBEM MAGICAL CRISIS IN THE SPECIAL V.I.P. SPOT, Mother Culture Los Angeles, Los Angeles
2019
En route to burn the palace I was told so much of the queen's virtues that by the time I reached the gate I had become a guard, Mother Culture Istanbul, Istanbul
STEPPED ONTO THE MOVING STAIRS BEFORE I COULD TIE MY SHOES, Mother Culture Berlin, Berlin
2020
In the back of the restaurant I made him kiss the ring | Haunted House in the Key of New Years, Galleria Federico Vavassori, Milan
Paths to G-ddess~ Tiny Dick Timmy Ricochet~ Live from the Geomancer's Clit Ring, Galleria Federico Vavassori, Milan
You say one thing n everyone acts like you don't mean the opposite of it at the same time too, Galleria Federico Vavassori, Milan
2021
The Unpopular Courage of Dutchess Orchid Drop, Cucina X Copenhill, Copenhagen
The Premonition of Dutchess Orchid Drop, Cucina, Copenhagen
Selected group exhibitions
2010
179 Canal / Anyways, White Columns, New York, NY
2011
I don't know if it makes any sense – I feel quite dizzy and a little drunk due to the blow. I will return with more info shortly…, Imo Projects, Copenhagen, Denmark
Drawings, Drawings, Photographs, Rachel Uffner Gallery, New York, NY
2012
Pinot Noir, Tomorrow Gallery, Toronto, Canada
Memoirs of a Shy Pornographer, Oslo, Norway
Ten Ten, Jason Alexander, New York, NY
2013
Turnkey of Forever After, Bed-Stuy Love Affair, New York, NY
Sallie Gardner, Michael Thibault Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
Dare 2 Love Yourself:Momentum 7, Momentum kunstall, Moss, Norway
2014
DOOM : SURFACE Contrôle, Le Magasin, Grenoble, France
From whose ground heaven and hell compare, Croy Nielsen, Berlin, Germany
BLOOMINGTON: MALL OF AMERICA, NORTH SIDE FOOD COURT, ACROSS FROM BURGER KING & THE BANK OF PAYPHONES THAT DON'T TAKE INCOMING CALLS, Bortolami, New York, NY
Roseview, Young Art, Los Angeles, CA
2015
The Story of O(OO), David Lewis, New York, NY
Jared Madere presents Bed-Stuy Love Affair, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
2017
Everything Is More Than One Thing Future Feel Good, Mother Culture Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA
From Counterculture to Cyberculture, curated by David Lewis, Altman Siegel, San Francisco, CA
Fly Into The Sun, The Watermill Center, Southampton, NY
2018
Crash Test, Curated by Nicolas Bourriaud, La Panacée, Montpellier, France
LoopStar Future Feel Good, Mother Culture Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA
2019
The Seventh Continent, curated by Nicolas Bourriaud, Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul, Turkey
2020
It could have been easy but it was still nice, Mother Culture Berlin, Berlin
Curatorial
2008-2009: Curator/founder, New York City Gallery, Chicago
2013–present: Curator/founder, Bed-Stuy Love Affair, New York
2017–present: Curator/founder, Mother Culture, Los Angeles
Selected bibliography
2010
Zak Kitnick, "not so autonomous maybe: 179 Canal at White Columns." IDIOM, November 10.
2014
"NO ENTITY CAN EVER FULLY COMPREHEND ANOTHER ENTITY." Mousse Issue 43, April – May.
2015
Andrew Russeth, "Because This Gallery Can Get Stuck in Traffic." New York Magazine, December 13.
"Frank Stella, Rachael Rose and Jared Madere at Whitney Museum, New York." Mousse, December 11.
Alexander Shulan, "Jared Madere." Kaleidoscope, October 30.
Adam Lehrer, "Artist and Bed-Stuy Love Affair Founder Jared Madere Opens Whitney Museum Installation." Forbes, October 15.
Tobi Haslett, "The Story of O(OO)"." Artforum, May 8.
Ken Johnson, "Review: The Story of O(OO) at David Lewis Gallery." New York Times, May 7. "The Story of O(OO)." Art in America, April 28.
2016
"Jake Cruzen & Jared Madere at White Flag Projects, St. Louis," ARTnews, June 30.
Emily Stokes, "The Next Generation of Artists' Studios," T Magazine, April 12.
2017
Gwen Allen, "From Counterculture to Cyberculture," Artforum, October.
Alexander, Joe, "The Watermill Center: Flying Into The Sun." Social Life, August 18.
Sanderson, David, "Artist baffled as Liberty ditches work," The Times London, July 14.
"Liberty Department Store Pull Art Installations And Performances For Being Off-Brand," Artlyst, July 12.
Greenberger, Alex, "London Department Store Removes Works by Jared Madere and Architecture Social Club, Citing 'Technical Issues'," ARTnews, July 11.
2018
Patrick Steffen, "Jake Cruzen and Jared Madere / Mother Culture", Flash Art, January 17.
Ezra Marcus, "Inside the Psychedelic Mind of Jared Madere", Interview, January 11.
2019
Ross Simonini, "a bed of lettuce w edible flowers n butterscotch n blueberries drizzled on top dotted w chunks of habanero minced garlic and shredded ginger on an alabaster plate", Mousse.
Clayton Press, "Oouolyamtelbellembem Magical Crisis In The Special V.I.P. Spot, A Frozen Opera By Jared Madere", Forbes.
2020
Milo Conroy, "Jared Madere 'Paths to G-ddess~ Tiny Dick Timmy Ricochet~ Live from the Geomancer’s Clit Ring' Federico Vavassori / Milan”, Flash Art.
2021
Jared Madere, "Kalpavriksha for Little Richard: Recent Developments in Artificial Intelligence as they Pertain to Social Imagination”, Flash Art.
References
Living people
1986 births
American contemporary artists
Artists from New York City | [
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Misi Mókus kalandjai is a Hungarian stop motion animated series, an adaptation of books by Józsi Jenő Tersánszky. The TV series was produced by The Pannonia Film Studio and broadcast on Magyar Televízió. In 1984, a film was produced based on the television series.
Plot Summary
The series follow the adventures of Sam the squirrel who hates studying.
Episode list
References
External links
1982 Hungarian television series debuts
1982 Hungarian television series endings
Stop-motion animated television series
Television shows based on children's books
Hungarian animated films
Hungarian-language television shows
Adventure television series | [
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Elis Svärd (8 July 1996 – 28 January 2022) was a Swedish professional golfer.
Early life and amateur career
Svärd was born in Södertälje in 1996 and represented Salem Golf Club. He had success as a junior golfer, and won a handfull of titles on the Skandia Tour.
After he graduated from the Riksidrottsgymnasiet Golf Program at Celsius High School in Uppsala in 2016, Svärd played college golf at California State University, Monterey Bay between 2016 and 2020. He won four tournaments and was California Collegiate Athletic Association Rookie of the Year in 2017 and Golfer of the Year in 2018 and 2019. He graduated in May 2020 with a degree in Business Administration and a minor in Accounting.
Svärd arguably was the greatest golfer in CSUMB history, earning All-American honors his sophomore through senior seasons while finishing his Otter career with the most NCAA Division II tournament wins (4) and lowest stroke average (71.19) in school history. He finished No. 9 overall in Golfstat individual rankings for 2019–20.
Between 2020 and 2021 Svärd was a graduate student at Ohio State University, earning both his MBA and OSU Scholar-Athlete honors. In joining the Ohio State Buckeyes men's golf team, he followed in the footsteps of Tom Nieporte, Robert Jones and Jack Nicklaus. Svärd was a first team All-American and one of five finalists for the GCAA DII Jack Nicklaus Award.
Professional career
Svärd turned professional in the summer of 2021 and joined the Nordic Golf League, where he won the 2021 Thisted Forsikring Championship in Ålborg, Denmark. Svärd was four strokes behind Peter Launer Bæk at the turn, but was able to win due to a strong finish. The title race came down to the very last hole where Svärd made an 8-meter putt for birdie and Bæk a bogey after visiting a hazard.
Following the win Svärd rose to 860th in the Official World Golf Ranking.
Death
Svärd died on 28 January 2022, with his death being announced by the Swedish Golf Federation. He was 25, and died from a sudden and unexpected case of illness.
Amateur wins
2011 Skandia Tour Regional #5 – Stockholm
2012 Skandia Tour Regional #3 – Stockholm Södra
2014 Gräppås Junior Open
2015 Drottningholms 36:an
2016 Salem PING Junior Open, Skandia Tour Elit #2
2017 CSUSM Fujikura Invitational
2018 CSUSM Fujikura Invitational, CCAA Championship
2019 Dennis Rose Invitational
2020 Stockholm Golf Club Amateur Open, HNS Amateur Open
Sources:
Professional wins (1)
Nordic Golf League wins (1)
Source:
References
External links
Swedish male golfers
Cal State Monterey Bay Otters men's golfers
Ohio State Buckeyes men's golfers
People from Södertälje
Sportspeople from Uppsala
1996 births
2022 deaths | [
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Khwaja Darwish Muhammad (Urdu خواجہ درویش محمد ) (846-971 AH) famous Sufi of Naqshbandī Sufi order . He was the nephew of Khwaja Muhammad Zahid Wakhshi.Khwaja Darwish Muhammad died on 1562 AD in Kitab, Uzbekistan, 100 km from Samarkand in the Shakhrisabz region of Uzbekistan.He passed his spiritual order to his son, Khwaja Muhammad Amkanagi. His shrine is in Kitab, Uzbekistan.
See also
Ahmad Sirhindi
References
Naqshbandi order
Sunni Sufis
Islamic philosophers
Hanafi fiqh scholars
Hanafis
Maturidis
Mujaddid
Hashemite people
Muslim saints
970 deaths | [
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Giannis Rizos (; born 19 March 2002) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Super League club PAS Giannina.
Club career
Rizos promoted to PAS Giannina from U-19 on 17 August 2021.
References
External links
2002 births
Living people
Greek footballers
Association football fullbacks
Super League Greece players
PAS Giannina F.C. players | [
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National Videogame Museum may refer to:
National Videogame Museum (United States)
National Videogame Museum (United Kingdom)
National Videogame Museum (The Netherlands)
See also
List of video game museums
Disambiguation pages | [
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Abhijit Mazumdar (born 12 Aug 1964), popularly known as Comrade Abhi, is the son of Naxal leader Charu Majumdar. Abhijit is a central committee member of the CPIML Liberation politburo. He was only six years old when his father Charu Majumdar died in police custody in Lalbazar.
Abhijit Mazumdar is the present state secretary of CPIML Liberation West Bengal . In August 2021, Abhijit Mazumdar succeeded as the secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation in the state of West Bengal.
Political beliefs
Abhijit Mazumdar does not support the Maoist path to make India a socialist country. He follows Marxism-Leninism and Mao's Thought.
References
1964 births
Living people
Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation politicians
People from West Bengal
People from Siliguri | [
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Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission is an autonomous, statutory and constitutional institution formed as a quasi judicial body in Chandigarh under Section 24-B of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986 to protect the rights of consumers. It is a system of alternate dispute resolution between conflicting parties during the process of trade. The president of the States Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission is appointed by the state government in consultation with the Chief Justice of state high court.
History and Objective
Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission was formed to promote and protect the rights of consumers as per the Consumer Protection Act 1986.
Composition
Following shall be the composition of Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission:
1. President and
2. Not less than two members and not more than that presribed in State Act.
President will be appointed by state Government in consultation with the Chief Justice of state High Court. The eligibility for president is that he should be serving or served as Judge in any High Court. Members should be of 1. Not less than 35 years of age and 2. recognised university bachelor degree 3. With good ability,integrity and standing and with proficient experience of 10 years and expertise knowledge in subjects of accountancy,law,commerce,economics,industry,administration and public affairs and problem solving ability in same.
Also not more than fifty percent of members of committee should be from judicial background.
Justice Raj Shekhar Attri is the President of Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission.
Levels and Jurisdiction
Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission was formed for promoting and protecting the rights of consumers through three levels with the below mentioned jurisdiction:
District Commission (earlier referred to as District Forum) can accept complaints from consumer if the value of goods or services is up to ₹1 crore (Earlier limit was ₹20 lakh).
State Commission can accept complaints from consumer if the value of goods or services is more than ₹1 crore but less than ₹10 crores ( earlier limit was between ₹20 lakh and ₹1 crore).
National Commission can accept complaints from consumer if the value of goods or services is more than 10 crores.
Procedure to file Complaints
Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission laid down below process of filing and resolving complaints:
Complaints can be filed electronically and examination of disputing parties is done through video-conferencing which includes hearing and/or examination through any other mode.
Complaints to be resolved as early as possible. Time period for resolving dispute in case the complaint does not require analysis and testing of product quality is 3 months from the date of receipt of notice by the opposite party. However if the complaint requires analysis or testing of product quality the time limit for resolving dispute is within 5 months.
Complaints can be filed using E-Daakhil Portal which is hassle free, speedy and economical facility and made for convenient of consumers to approach the respective consumer forum. It also avoid the need of consumers to travel and be available physically in the commission.
E-Daakhil Portal had been incorporated features like sending e-notice, downloading case document link, providing link for Video call hearing, filing of response in writing by opposite party, rejoinder filing by the person complaining and sending sms and e-mail alerts.
Currently 43,000 users have registered on the E-Daakhil Portal with around 10,000 cases being filed.
Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission had started hearing complaints through video-conferencing.
Penalties and Imprisonment
Manufacturers and Service providers are made punishable as a criminal offence for giving misleading information or for wrong advertisement of product.
Punishment may include fine of Rs 10 lakhs or imprisonment for 2 years or both.
Investigative Agency
Violation of consumer rights or unfair trade practices is investigated by the Investigation wing headed by Director-General level position in Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA).
Important Terms
Following are the important terms in Chandigarh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission:
As per the act "Goods" means anything purchased by consumers either in retail or wholesale from retailers or wholesalers. They can either be produced or manufactured.
As per the act "services" means those which are in the form of "transport,telephone,electricity,housing,banking,insurance,medical treatment etc".
As per the act consumer means " any person who buys any goods or hires or avails any services for a consideration which has already been paid or promised or partly paid and partly promised or under any system of deferred payment".
Person includes anyone buying goods, either through online system or direct or offline, by way of teleshopping, or through mode of electronic includes direct selling or in a multi-level marketing.
Consumer does not include person buying or availing goods or services for resale or for any other commercial purpose.
For the purpose of commission the terms are referred in Consumer Protection Act'2019.
Challenges
The district, state and national level commissions face challenges of understaffing or non fulfillment of vacancies in time.
The report prepared by senior advocate on the directions of Supreme Court of India found out many shortcomings in the offices of district and state consumer redressal bodies in many states of India. These include absence of storage rooms for case files, lack of member chambers for convenience of members hearing complaints, non availability of court rooms and washrooms in selective cases.
Related Articles
National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission
Odisha State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commision
Rajasthan State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commision
References
External links
Official Website
Quasi-judicial bodies of India
Legal organisations based in India
Consumer organisations in India
Indian commissions and inquiries | [
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Sandy Yates (born 17 January 1979) is a former New Zealand rugby union player. She made her debut, and only appearance, for New Zealand on 16 June 2001 against England at Albany, New Zealand.
Yates played club rugby for Manurewa and briefly for Ponsonby. She played provincially for Counties Manukau.
References
1979 births
Living people
New Zealand female rugby union players
Rugby union players from Auckland | [
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Jason Oakes may refer to:
Jason Oakes (cricketer) (born 1995), South African cricketer
Jason Oakes (rugby union) (born 1977), English rugby player | [
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Mambu is a German software company headquartered in Berlin. Mambu provides infrastructure for banks and financial service providers according to the software as a service (SaaS) model. In December 2021, Mambu reached a company valuation of $5.3 billion, making it one of the unicorns of Germany.
Mambu traces its origins to a platform for microloans and serves neobanks such as Solarisbank and N26, as well as established credit institutions such as Banco Santander and companies such as Check24. The company generates most of its revenue outside of Germany. As of early 2021, the company had nearly 170 business customers in 50 countries.
History
Mambu was founded in 2011 by Frederik Pfisterer and Eugene Danilkis, who had developed technical infrastructure for microfinanciers in Latin America and Africa. The company's first clients were mainly from emerging markets. Early backers included Commerzbank and Berlin-based venture capitalist Point Nine.
In 2016, the German neobank N26 became a Mambu customer. Solarisbank also relies to a significant extent on Mambu's software.
In June 2021, Mambu raised nearly €200 million in a financing round led by EQT Partners.
According to Handelsblatt, contracted annual recurring revenue is estimated at $165 million for 2022.
References
German companies established in 2011
Companies based in Berlin
Software companies established in 2011
Software companies of Germany | [
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The Novosibirsk bus system () is part of the public transport network of Novosibirsk, Russia. The system was launched in 1923.
History
The first route was launched in the summer of 1923: the buses ran between the railway station, city center and Zakamenka district (the area where now the State Public Scientific & Technological Library is located).
In 1937, Novosibirsk bus system comprised 30 buses and 4 routes.
In 1985 the bus fleet had more than 1600 buses.
Since the 1990s, alongside the municipal operator, a private carriers serve bus routes in Novosibirsk.
Current status
System consists of 52 routes served by buses over 10 metres long (№№ 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 18к, 20, 21, 23, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 41, 42, 44, 45, 46, 50, 51, 53, 54, 55, 57, 59, 60, 61, 64, 65, 68, 69, 73, 77, 79, 88, 91, 95, 96, 97, 98) and 17 routes served by smaller buses (№№ 1, 9, 10, 15, 19, 24, 27, 40, 43, 48, 49, 52, 52к, 58, 67, 72, 74).
The bus fleet is represented by such models as Russian PAZ-3205, LiAZ-5256, LiAZ-5293, and NefAZ-5299, Belarusian MAZ-103, MAZ-104, MAZ-206, and MAZ-226 with an internal combustion engines. Local authorities planned that at least 50% of buses will be natural gas vehicles by 2020. In 2012, special battery electric bus based on NefAZ-5299 was tested.
Gallery
References
External links
The register of the routes of Novosibirsk city public transport (in Russian)
Transport in Novosibirsk
1923 establishments in the Soviet Union
Bus transport in Russia | [
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Germaine Schneider (17 March 1903 - 12 November 1945) was Belgian communist and Communist International (Comintern) agent. During the latter half of the 1920's, Schneider worked predominantly for the
Communist Party of Belgium. During World War II, Schneider was a core member of the Soviet espionage group, the Red Orchestra in Belgium, working as a courier for the group's that were associated with the Comintern agent, Henry Robinson in the late 1930's and later the Soviet GRU officer, Konstantin Jeffremov, in the early 1940's. Schneider used the aliases Clais, Pauline, Odette, Papillon and Butterfly (Schmetterling) to disguise her identity.
Life
Arrest
On November 1942, Schneider was arrested while she was working for the Springer group in Lyon. She was betrayed by Jeffremov.
Death
In October 1945, Schneider moved to Zurich in Switzerland, where her husband joined her. She died on 12 November 1945 of cancer.
Bibliography
References
Sources
External links
British intelligence file on Germaine Franz SCHNEIDER at the National Archives
1903 births
1945 deaths
People from Anderlecht
Red Orchestra (espionage)
Women by occupation | [
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The Niklashausen Journey (German: Niklashauser Fart) is a 1970 German television film directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Michael Fengler. The film was Fassbinder's first television production, financed by Westdeutscher Rundfunk.
Cast
Michael König as Hans Böhm
Hanna Schygulla as Johanna
Michael Gordon as Antonio
Rainer Werner Fassbinder as Zwarte monnik
Margit Carstensen as Margarete
Günther Kaufmann as Boerenleider
Kurt Raab as Bisschop
Franz Maron as Man van Margarete
Walter Sedlmayr as Pastoor
Karl Scheydt as Burger van Niklashausen
Günther Rupp as Raadgever van de bisschop
Ingrid Caven as Schreeuwend meisje
Elga Sorbas as Hulpeloos meisje
Carla Egerer as Epileptisch meisje
Magdalena Montezuma as Penthesilea
Sigi Graue as Boer
Reception
The film holds a critics approval rating of 67% on Rotten Tomatoes.
References
External links
Films directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Films directed by Michael Fengler
German television films
1970 television films | [
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The National Videogame Museum (Dutch: Nationaal Videogame Museum) is a museum in Zoetermeer, The Netherlands.
The museum planned to use their systems for educational usage. It was not the first of its kind in The Netherlands, earlier a game museum opened in Zwolle, as well as Awesome Space in Utrecht. It opened in a building where Vroom & Dreesmann was the former owner, in Zoetermeer. The museum was founded by Hasan Tasdemir in 2017.
See also
HomeComputerMuseum
References
External links
Video game museums
Zoetermeer
2017 establishments in the Netherlands | [
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The 1986–87 Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team represented Kansas State University as a member of the Big 8 Conference during the 1986-87 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was Lon Kruger who was in his first of four years at the helm of his alma mater. The team played its home games in Ahearn Field House in Manhattan, Kansas. The Wildcats finished 4th in the Big 8 regular season standings and fell to conference champion Missouri in the semifinal round of the Big 8 Tournament. K-State received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 9 seed in the West region. After an opening round win over Georgia in overtime, the Wildcats were beaten by eventual Final Four participant and No. 1 ranked UNLV in the round of 32.
Roster
Schedule
|-
!colspan=6 style=| Regular Season
|-
!colspan=6 style=| Big 8 Tournament
|-
!colspan=6 style=| NCAA Tournament
Source
Rankings
References
Kansas State
Kansas State
Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball seasons
1986 in sports in Kansas
1987 in sports in Kansas | [
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West Bengal Municipal Election 2022
Municipal elections are scheduled to be held in West Bengal on 27 February 2022 to elect members of all 108 municipalities in the state.
Schedule
List of Municipality
Parties and Alliances
Following is a list of political parties and alliances which contested in this election:
References
Elections in West Bengal
2022 elections in India | [
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Kuluva is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Michael Kuluva (born 1983), American fashion designer and founder of the New York fashion week label Tumbler and Tipsy
Will Kuluva (1917–1990), American stage, film and TV actor | [
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Motreb (, meaning The Singer) is a 2019 Iranian comedy film directed, written, and produced by Mostafa Kiaie and starring Parviz Parastui, Elnaz Shakerdoost, Mehran Ahmadi, Ayşegül Coşkun, and Mohsen Kiaie. The film is about an Iranian nightclub singer, Ebrahim, who is forced to say goodbye to his lifelong dream of holding a concert in Iran because of the 1979 Islamic revolution. Pretending to be a folk vocalist, he is sent to Turkey to represent Iran in a musical festival, but Iranian officials discover that he is a prerevolution nightclub singer and prevent him from performing. He ultimately accomplishes to perform a concert in consort with his daughter-in-law, Nazan, who is a famous singer in Turkey.
Selling IRR 385,464,540,000, it is the highest-grossing Iranian movie as of 2021. The film screening was delayed because of the alleged similarities between the protagonist of the film and Ebi, an Iranian dissident singer.
References
External links
2019 comedy films
Iranian comedy-drama films
Turkish-language films
Films about singers
Persian-language films
Films shot in Turkey
Films set in Istanbul | [
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Haguenauer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Jean-Louis Haguenauer (born 1954), French classical pianist
Michel Haguenauer (1916–2000), French international table tennis player
Romain Haguenauer (born 1976), French ice dancing coach, choreographer, and former competitor
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