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Whatamangō Bay is a large bay in Queen Charlotte Sound / Tōtaranui, New Zealand, near Waitohi / Picton. It is accessible by road, with the back of the bay containing a campsite and a number of properties. The bay meets Waikawa Bay at Te Rae o Karaka / Karaka Point, and is home to the exit of the Graham River.
Naming
Whatamangō is made up of 2 Te Reo Māori words, whata, meaning "elevated stage" or "storage place", and mangō, a name for dogfish and sharks. Together they mean "an elevated stage for storing dogfish/sharks". Peter Fannin's chart from James Cook's second expedition gives the name Beautifull Bay to either Whatamangō Bay or Waikawa Bay.
Ahuriri Bay
Ahuriri Bay sits at the back of Whatamangō Bay.
Ahuriri is a Te Reo Māori word meaning "trench" or "dyke", or a "low fence in a cultivation or pā entrance". The name can also be split into the syllables ahu, meaning "to tend/foster/nurture" or "to heap up", and riri, meaning "to be angry", or "fight/battle". The name could therefore mean "to heap up anger", "to foster battle", or "to foster anger".
Te Rae o Karaka / Karaka Point
Te Rae o Karaka / Karaka Point sits between Whatamangō Bay and Waikawa Bay.
Karaka is the Te Reo Māori name for the Corynocarpus laevigatus, and a Te Reo Māori word for the colour orange, karaka, is derived from it. The point could be named for its orange hue, or the presence of karaka trees. Te Rae o Karaka translates to "the headland/promontory of karaka"
A substantial pā was built along Te Rae o Karaka by early Kāti Māmoe residents, and succeeding iwi took possession peacefully or otherwise. Eventually iwi from Te Ika a Māui began movements and raids on Te Waipounamu. In the summer of 1829–30, Te Ātiawa swept into Tōtaranui / Queen Charlotte Sound, attacking those in East Bay and Endeavour Inlet. Large numbers of Rangitāne and some Ngāti Apa retreated to the Te Rae o Karaka pā, thinking it impregnable due to its shear cliff-face. Tuiti Makitānara described insults being thrown between the attackers and defenders, whilst a group landed and took up offensive positions in the mānuka behind the pā. Once positioned, the rest of the attackers drew in and began picking off defending chiefs and warriors using their muskets. These deaths caused panic amongst the defenders, and a large group attempted to escape the pā through its back gate, but were ambushed and annihilated by the group in the mānuka. For some years after the fact, the deserted headland was cleared and used for farming. In the 20th century, the land was gifted to the nation and became a scenic and historic reserve in August 1953. Today, Rangitāne has erected a beautiful pou on the site representing the story of Kupe's battle with the giant wheke, and interpretive boards can be found describing the visible landscape features. Today a pathway leads up the once impregnable cliff-face.
Tuna Point
Tuna Point is located on the eastern coast of Whatamangō Bay, near its centre.
Tuna is a Te Reo Māori word meaning "eel".
Motueka Bay
Motueka Bay is a bay just outside of Whatamangō Bay. Motueka is a contraction of motu, meaning "land", "clump of trees", or anything separated or isolated, and weka, a native bird also known as the Gallirallus australis. The Western Weka or Gallirallus australis Australias, is found throughout the Marlborough Sounds. The name of the bay can therefore be taken to mean the "grove of the weka" or the "land of the weka". Motueka is also the name of a town in the Tasman District / Te Tai o Aorere.
References
Bays of the Marlborough Region
Marlborough Sounds | [
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The 2022 East Carolina Pirates football team will represent East Carolina University during the 2022 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Pirates will play their home games at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium in Greenville, North Carolina, and compete as members of the American Athletic Conference. They will be led by head coach Mike Houston, in his fourth season.
Schedule
The Pirates will host the three of their non-conference opponents, NC State from the ACC, Old Dominion from Conference USA and Campbell from Division I FCS. They will visit BYU from the FBS Independents
Schedule Source:
References
BYU
East Carolina Pirates football seasons
East Carolina Pirates football | [
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Jordan Kerr and Sebastián Prieto won the title by defeating Travis Parrott and Rogier Wassen 6–4, 6–3 in the final.
Seeds
Draw
Draw
References
External links
ITF tournament profile
Main draw (ATP)
Qualifying draw (ATP)
2005 Men's Doubles | [
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The 2020–21 season was the 124th season in the history of Royale Union Saint-Gilloise and the club's sixth consecutive season in the second division of Belgian football.
Players
First-team squad
(on loan from Brighton)
Transfers
Im
Out
Pre-season and friendlies
Competitions
Overall record
Belgian First Division B
League table
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
Belgian Cup
References
Royale Union Saint-Gilloise seasons
Union SG | [
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Savannah's Candy Kitchen is a chain of candy manufacturers established in Savannah, Georgia. It was founded in 1973, as River Street Sweets, by Stan and Pam Strickland. Today, it has twelve stores around the United States, but its flagship store is at 225 East River Street in Savannah. A second Savannah store was opened in the Abraham Minis Building in Franklin Square in City Market. It also has two stores at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta (Concourse B in 2005; Concourse C in 2012).
The company is the largest producer of praline in the United States.
History
Stan and Pam founded River Street Sweets in 1973, having fallen in love with ornaments at Christmas markets in Germany. They soon realized that selling candy year-round was a mistake, however. Rent was $50 a month, and they had trouble making it. To help make ends meet, Pam became a teacher, then a librarian, and Stan a wine salesman. In the meantime, they tried to sell the store but could not. They bought some pralines while in Charleston, South Carolina, and customers bought them from their store. They went to a gift show in Atlanta a short time later, in 1978. Their son, Tim, found a fudge-making machine, which his parents bought.
The Stricklands looked for recipes to make praline. Stan would man the stove, and make some in a saucepan. One night, they made three pieces of candy, put it on wax paper, "and boy, it was good," said Stan. They then found out they could make pralines in the fudge-making machine, despite recommendations from the manufacturer against doing so, warning that it could kill somebody.
Stan purchased a slab of marble, weighing about , from a local stonemason on which to let the hot pralines cool. After making a batch, some customers walked in and could smell the candy being made.
In 1991, the Stricklands got divorced and split the company and the family. Pam got the original name and two stores; Stan got two stores (Atlanta and Orlando) and later opened a rival company, Savannah's Candy Kitchen, also on River Street. Their children, Jennifer and Tim, worked exclusively for Pam, and the family did not speak for about twenty years.
In 1996, the company expanded and moved part of their production into a factory outside of town to handle its mail orders. It now uses one in Savannah, in a facility.
The business expanded outside of Savannah for the first time in 2003, when it opened an outlet in Charleston.
Around 2008, Jennifer and Tim broke the silence and began communicating with their father. Seven years later, Savannah's Candy Kitchen and River Sweet Sweets merged brand names. The first franchise location opened at the Tanger Outlet Mall in Pooler, Georgia. As of 2016, sales of the combined entities were $35 million. They make of pralines a day (the most in the United States), and between and of candy per day in total. Some products were not a success, including chocolate-covered bananas.
As of 2019, the business has been in the Strickland family for three generations, and is now the largest candy store in the South.
Above the River Street entrance to the Candy Kitchen hangs a copper kettle. Inside the store there is a salt water taffy machine that dates to 1914.
Current locations
Savannah's Candy Kitchen
Georgia
River Street, Savannah
West Julian Street, Savannah
Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, Atlanta (two locations)
South Carolina
Market Street, Charleston
Tennessee
Broadway, Nashville
Maryland
American Way, Oxon Hill
River Street Sweets • Savannah's Candy Kitchen
Georgia
Tanger Outlet Boulevard, Pooler
Florida
Duval Street, Key West
Pennsylvania
Stanley K. Tanger Drive, Lancaster
South Carolina
Main Street, Greenville
Texas
East Commerce Street, San Antonio
References
External links
Companies based in Savannah, Georgia
Confectionery companies of the United States
Food and drink companies based in Georgia (U.S. state)
Tourist attractions in Savannah, Georgia
American companies established in 1990 | [
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Tatyana Vladimirovna Russiyan-Gubanova was a Soviet athlete who was a world record holder in helicopter sports. She was an international-class Master of Sports of the USSR and was appointed as a judge in the all-Union category later in her career.
Biography
Early life
Tatyana was born 27 August 1930 in Moscow. Her father was Vladimir Pavlovich Russiyan and her mother was Vera Pavlovna Polyakova. She had one brother named Arkady.
Aviation career
She became a student at the Moscow Aviation Institute, becoming a glider pilot at the school's flying club, where she made her first glider flight and parachute jump. She graduated from the institute in 1954.
In 1956, Tatyana was appointed assistant to the lead engineer for flight tests of an experimental design bureau, now called the Mil Moscow Helicopter Plant. There, she received an experimenter's certificate which gave her the authorization to participate in official flights and work at the test station. That same year, she started to study in the helicopter department of the V.P. Chkalov Central Aeroclub and was certified as a helicopter pilot-athlete.
Up until 1985, both as an employee of the Mil Moscow Plant and later the Gromov Flight Research Institute, Tatyana participated in helicopter competitions. In total, Tatyana set eleven world records in helicopter sports during the period of 1960 to 1967 in the Mi-1, Mi-2, Mi-4, and Mi-8 helicopters. Her records include:
1959: climbing to in a Mi-1 helicopter without oxygen equipment
12 January 1965: altitude record
2 August 1965: range record
23 August 1967: base airspeed record
In 1963, she entered the graduate school program of the Moscow Aviation Institute in the Department of Helicopter Design. During that time she worked on her dissertation titled "Vortex theory of the main rotor in steep gliding."
Tatyana married Yuri Nikolaevich Gubanov, an associate professor at the Moscow State Technical University in 1972. In 1973, their son Nikolai was born.
After retirement
Tatyana retired in 1985, but she did not part with aviation. She maintained socially involved in the aviation sector, helped Soviet pilot-athletes master the new Ka-32 helicopter, and worked as a referee at helicopter sports competitions. In 1991, she was awarded the title of judge of the all-Soviet Union category of helicopter sports. In 1992, along with twelve other prominent Soviet aviators, she helped to found the Aviatrix club. From 1992 to 2002 she served as vice president of the club.
She died on 3 October 2012 in Moscow and was buried in the Mitinskoe cemetery. She had been awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor and other medals.
References
Helicopter pilots
1930 births
2012 deaths
People from Moscow
Moscow Aviation Institute alumni | [
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Alexandre Nachi is a Canadian actor from Quebec. He is most noted for his supporting role as Arturo in Ricardo Trogi's film 1991, for which he was a Prix Iris nominee for Best Supporting Actor at the 21st Quebec Cinema Awards in 2019.
Nachi began his career as a child actor, appearing in television series such as Sam Chicotte, Ramdam and Virginie. He has also appeared in films including Emotional Arithmetic, Stonewall, Allure, Fabulous (Fabuleuses) and Death of a Ladies' Man.
References
External links
21st-century Canadian male actors
Canadian male film actors
Canadian male television actors
Canadian male child actors
Male actors from Quebec
Living people | [
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The Ugljare mass grave is a burial site in the village of Ugljare in the Kosovo municipality of Gjilan. Those buried include Kosovo Serbs and possibly Kosovo Albanians sometime around July 1999. At the time, it was the only case which involved in the Kosovo war crimes tribunal the investigation of a crime against civilians which was possibly committed by Albanians against Serbs. No perpetrators have been found.
Massacre
On 24 July 1999, U.S soldiers as part of KFOR discovered the bodies after local villagers reported the existence of a mass grave. According to one local villager, the mass grave was very shallow with one victim being that of a child, in addition to the site being littered with spent cartridges. The site was reported to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia with investigations conducted between 8 and 11 August 1999. The bodies were exhumed and later taken to a nearby chapel.
Aftermath
The burial sited was widely reported a month after it was discovered, prompting the Yugoslav government to accuse U.S. KFOR forces of trying to cover-up the massacre. In a letter to the President of the United Nations Security Council, the Yugoslav government claimed that the victims were all Serbs. The Yugoslav government claimed that three of them had been kidnapped "by the terrorists from the ranks of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)".
A NATO spokesperson initially confirmed that four of the bodies were identified as Serbs, however the statement was later retracted. In a later statement NATO reported that they could not confirm if any of the bodies included Serbs or Albanians. The public affairs office of the American troops in the region issued a statement which designated the victims buried in the site as Serbs who were killed after the war and Albanians who were killed before the war. The spokesman of Hague war crimes tribunal reported that two of the bodies might belong to Kosovo Serbs who were kidnapped after war.
An OSCE investigation shortly after the massacre reported that six of the bodies were identified as Serbs, kidnapped from nearby Livoci i Poshtem and Ranilug. Ugljare reportedly housed a KLA detention facility and further investigations by KFOR led to the arrest of a KLA member who denied any involvement in the killings.
In August 2018, a UN team scanned the site and nearby fields during a research mission for potential mass grave sites in Kosovo.
See also
Batajnica mass graves
Rudnica mass grave
References
1990s murders in Serbia
1999 murders in Europe
1999 crimes in Serbia
Anti-Serbian sentiment
Massacres in the Kosovo War
Massacres of Serbs
Ethnic cleansing in the Yugoslav Wars
Mass graves
Mass murder in 1999
Massacres in Kosovo | [
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Dan Kotter is an American paralympic archer. He participated at the 1964 Summer Paralympics.
Biography
Kotter was the son of Glenn Kotter. He graduated at a high school in 1960, in which Kotter attended at the University of Illinois. He served as a team manager at the Mount Vernon Senior High School. Kotter lived in Mount Vernon, Indiana during the Paralympic Games, being 21 years old. He also contracted polio, when Kotter was at least one year old. He participated at the 1964 Summer Paralympics, with participating in the archery competition at the Paralympic Games. Kotter was awarded the gold medal in the Columbia round open event. He scored 586 points. Kotter also participated in the Columbia round team open event alongside with archers, Bob Hawkes and George Pasipanki, being awarded the gold medal. His team scored 1706 points.
References
External links
Possibly living people
Place of birth missing (living people)
Year of birth missing (living people)
People with polio
American male archers
Archers at the 1964 Summer Paralympics
Medalists at the 1964 Summer Paralympics
Paralympic medalists in archery
Paralympic archers of the United States
Paralympic gold medalists for the United States
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign alumni | [
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Social Burgerjoint is a Finnish hamburger restaurant chain, part of the Kotipizza Group. In 2021 the chain had nine restaurants in Finland. The interior of the restaurants is decorated to look like a North American hamburger restaurant. The menu includes many vegetarian and vegan options. The food is prepared on a charcoal grill.
History
In January 2017 Herkko Volanen and 2012 MasterChef Suomi winner Mika Tuomonen founded a hamburger restaurant called Social Food Street Burgerjoint in Sörnäinen, Helsinki. According to an interview by Suomen Kuvalehti the owners, their hamburgers and most of all the Mibrasa charcoal grill used at the restaurant impressed Kotipizza Group CEO Tommi Tervanen. The founders stayed in the chain as minority shareholders and restaurateurs.
In autumn 2018 the chain had three restaurants in Helsinki and a fourth restaurant in Kerava.
The chain opened a new restaurant in Hamina in April 2019 and another one in Porvoo in May in the same year. The chain opened its seventh restaurant in Oulu in December 2019.
In 2021 the chain had nine restaurants in Finland.
Awards
The Social Burgerjoin "Korean Kimchi Burger" won the best hamburger award at the European Street Food contest in September 2018. It reached joint first place along with the Swedish Matsas Mat. The contest was held in Berlin, Germany and had participants from 16 countries.
In spring 2019 Social Burgerjoint reached 28th place at the "Big seven travel - world's best burger" list.
In 2019 the Social Burgerjoint "Brookdale" hamburger won the best hamburger award at the European Street Food contest.
References
Restaurant chains in Finland | [
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Caleb Chakravarthi (born January 2, 1999) is an American tennis player.
Chakravarthi made his ATP main draw debut at the 2022 Dallas Open after entering into the singles main draw as a wildcard.
Chakravathi played college tennis at Illinois before transferring to SMU.
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
American male tennis players
Sportspeople from Irvine, California
SMU Mustangs men's tennis players
Illinois Fighting Illini men's tennis players
Tennis people from California | [
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Albert Katzenellenbogen (born January 15, 1863, in Krotoschin; died after August 1942, murdered near Minsk) was an important German legal advisor in banking and industry who was murdered in the Holocaust because of his Jewish heritage.
Life
Katzenellenbogen came from a family whose origins are traced by an American genealogist as far back as the 15th century and named after their German place of origin. He was married to Cornelia Josephine (Nelly) née Doctor. Since 1912 the couple lived in Königstein im Taunus in the "Oelmühlweg", where Albert Ullmann and Oskar Kohnstamm also lived as neighbors under the same address.
A lawyer by training, he was admitted to the bar in Frankfurt am Main in October 1891, and in July 1912 he was appointed a judicial councilor.
Katzenellenbogen served on the executive boards of banks, textile companies and chemical corporations in various German cities. As chairman of the board, he guided the fortunes of Mitteldeutsche Creditbank (Commerz- und Privat-Bank in Frankfurt), among others. In 1895 he became the bank's general counsel, in 1897 a member of the board of directors, and in 1903 a member of the board of management. After Commerzbank was founded, Katzenellenbogen was a member of its Board of Managing Directors from 1929 to 1930 and then of its supervisory board until 1937.
Nazi persecution
When the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, Katzenellenbogen persecuted due to his Jewish heritage.He was obliged to renounce his admission to the bar in October 1935.
The property of the Katzenellenbogen family was Aryanized, that is transferred to non-Jews, in 1940.
His wife died on April 19 as a result of a stroke. Katzenellenbogen was deported from Frankfurt am Main to the Theresienstadt ghetto on August 18, 1942, and perished in the Maly Trostinez extermination camp on August 25, 1942, on transport "Bc-942.
Katzenellenbogen's children were Grete Helene, Marta Sofie (1897-1984) and the art historian Adolf Katzenellenbogen (1901-1964). Their daughter Grete Helene (1893-1944), daughter-in-law of Otto Berndt, died as a forced laborer in Frankfurt am Main on March 22, 1944. The family grave is located in the main cemetery in Frankfurt.
Literature
Heinz Sturm-Godramstein: Juden in Königstein. Leben-Bedeutung-Schicksale. Königstein im Taunus, 1983.
Hierin Anmerkung Nr. 25: Mitteilung von Herrn Dieter Berndt; ROSENSTEIN N.: The unbroken chain. New York 1976.
References
External links
Stolpersteine in Frankfurt am Main (Städtische Seite) abgerufen am 22. Feb. 2020
People who died in Maly Trostenets extermination camp
1863 births
Theresienstadt Ghetto prisoners
German Jews who died in the Holocaust
German lawyers
German people who died in Nazi concentration camps
1942 deaths | [
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Archaeovaranus (meaning "ancient Varanus") is genus of varanid lizard from the early Eocene (Ypresian) Yuhuangding Formation of Hubei Province, China. The genus contains a single species, Archaeovaranus lii, known from a nearly complete skeleton. The holotype, which includes an intact skull, is associated but disarticulated. Archaeovaranus fills a gap in the varanid fossil record, as it represents a stem-varanid from the early Eocene of East Asia, closely related to Varanus.
Discovery and naming
The holotype specimen of Archaeovaranus, IVPP V 22770, was discovered at the Dajian locality of the Yuhuangding Formation near Danjiangkou, Hubei Province, China.
The generic name, "Archaeovaranus," combines the Greek "archaīos," meaning "ancient," with a reference to the closely related Varanus. "Varanus" is derived from the Arabic "waral," meaning "lizard beast." The specific name, "lii," honors the paleontologist Chuankui Li, whose research included studies of the Archaeovaranus type locality.
Description
The holotype specimen represents an adult individual, around 16 years old at the time of death. However, a lack of fusion at the distal ends of the humerus and femur suggest that the individual was still growing. Archaeovaranus was closely related to Saniwa, the most completely known and widely accepted stem-varanid, from the early Eocene Green River Formation of Wyoming, United States.
Paleoecology
The mammals Rhombomylus, Advenimus, Asiocoryphodon and Danjiangia are also known from layers of the Yuhuangding Formation.
References
Fossil taxa described in 2022
Eocene lizards
Fossils of China
Eocene Asia
Monitor lizards
Eocene reptiles of Asia
Prehistoric lizard genera | [
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Henri Picard, sometimes credited as Henri Richer-Picard, is a Canadian actor from Quebec. He is most noted for his supporting role as Marc in the film For Those Who Don't Read Me (À tous ceux qui ne me lisent pas), for which he was a Prix Iris nominee for Best Supporting Actor at the 21st Quebec Cinema Awards in 2019.
The son of actors Luc Picard and Isabel Richer, he has also appeared in the television series Trauma, Jenny, Cerebrum, District 31, Chaos and Toute la vie, and the films Audition (L'Audition), Ésimésac, Cross My Heart (Les Rois mongols), My Boy (Mon Boy), Mafia Inc. and Maria Chapdelaine.
References
External links
21st-century Canadian male actors
Canadian male film actors
Canadian male television actors
Canadian male child actors
Male actors from Quebec
Living people
French Quebecers | [
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The 1978 Indiana State Sycamores football team was an American football team that represented Indiana State University as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference during the 1978 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their first year under head coach Dick Jamieson, the team compiled a 3–8 record (2–3 in the MVC).
Schedule
References
Indiana State
Indiana State Sycamores football seasons
Indiana State Sycamores football | [
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Olli Penttala (born 10 April 1995) is a Finnish freestyle skier. He competed in the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Career
Penttala began skiing at the age of seven. He won a bronze medal at the 2011 Junior World Championships in the moguls event. He placed eighth in moguls in the 2021 World Championships. He finished 9th out of 30 competitors in the first qualifying round in the men's moguls event at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He then finished 19th out of 20 competitors in the first final round, eliminating him from medal contention.
Personal life
Penttala's older brother Jussi is also a freestyle skier and competed at the 2014 and 2018 Winter Olympics.
References
1995 births
Living people
Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Finnish male freestyle skiers
Olympic freestyle skiers of Finland
Sportspeople from Helsinki
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Stacey Hobgood-Wilkes (born August 9, 1968) is an American politician serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 108th district. Elected in November 2016, she assumed office in January 2017.
Education
After graduating from Picayune Memorial High School, Hobgood-Wilkes attended Pearl River Community College and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in American studies and business administration from the University of Southern Mississippi.
Career
Prior to entering politics, Hobgood-Wilkes worked as a public relations consultant and insurance agent. She was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2016 and assumed office in January 2017. During the 2019–2020 legislative session, she served as vice chair of the Marine Resources Committee. During the 2020–2021 legislative session, she served as vice chair of the House Constitution Committee.
References
Living people
Mississippi Republicans
Members of the Mississippi House of Representatives
Women state legislators in Mississippi
1968 births
People from Pearl River County, Mississippi
People from Picayune, Mississippi
University of Southern Mississippi alumni | [
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Evergreen Laurel Hotel Keelung (Chinese:長榮桂冠酒店(基隆)) is a tall five star hotel located on Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District, Keelung, Taiwan, which opened in 1998.
Facilities
The hotel has 140 guest rooms, and 19 floors. The hotel is operated by Evergreen International Hotels. and offers free wifi, a swimming pool as well as free parking.
Restaurants & Bars
The Peng's Agora Garden: Chinese restaurant featuring traditional Hunan cuisine, located on the fifth floor.
Café Laurel: Café located on the 18th and 19th floor with views of the Pacific Ocean as well as Port of Keelung.
Gourmet Shop: Bakery offering fresh pastries, located on the first floor.
References
External links
Official website
1998 establishments in Taiwan
Hotels in Taiwan
Hotels established in 1998
Hotel buildings completed in 1998
Hotels in Keelung | [
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Kevin W. Felsher (born October 10, 1975) is an American politician serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 117th district. Elected in November 2019, he assumed office on January 7, 2020.
Early life and education
Felsher was born in Biloxi, Mississippi in 1975. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in sports coaching and administration from the University of Southern Mississippi.
Career
Since 2006, Felsher has worked as a commercial real estate broker with Coldwell Banker. He is also a principal at the Strategic Alliance Group of Mississippi. Felsher was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020. In January 2022, Felsher proposed HB 997, which would legalize online betting on sports games in Mississippi.
References
Living people
1975 births
People from Biloxi, Mississippi
University of Southern Mississippi alumni
Mississippi Republicans
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Oram () is a village and townland in County Monaghan, Ireland. The village is on the R182 road, about north-east of Castleblayney. The village population was 186 at the 2016 census.
Oram's Catholic church, St Patrick's, was built in the 1820s and 1830s. The local Gaelic games club is Oram Sarsfields. The musician Big Tom McBride was from Oram.
References
Towns and villages in County Monaghan
Townlands of County Monaghan | [
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Anabasis aphylla is a species of flowering plant in the family Amaranthaceae, native to the region surrounding the Caspian Sea, Central Asia, and Xinjiang and western Gansu provinces of China. A many-branched shrub usually found growing in alluvial fans and dune swales, it is sometimes planted to catch blowing soil and stabilize sand dunes. The alkaloid anabasine was named for this toxic species, from which it was first isolated by Orechoff and Menschikoff in the year 1931. Anabasine was widely used as an insecticide in the former Soviet Union until 1970.
References
Amaranthaceae
Flora of South European Russia
Flora of the Caucasus
Flora of Iran
Flora of Central Asia
Flora of Xinjiang
Flora of Gansu
Plants described in 1753
Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus | [
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Nikita Novitskii (born 24 August 2000) is a Russian freestyle skier. He competed in the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Career
Novitskii won a gold medal at the 2019 Junior World Championships in the moguls event. He placed fourth in moguls in the 2021 World Championships. He finished 13th out of 30 competitors in the first qualifying round in the men's moguls event at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He then finished 13th out of 20 competitors in the first final round, eliminating him from medal contention.
References
2000 births
Living people
Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Russian male freestyle skiers
Olympic freestyle skiers of Russia | [
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Dick Metz is an American former professional tennis player.
Metz, a native of California, played his junior and senior collegiate seasons at the UCLA Bruins, where he was a member of the 1979 NCAA championship team. A doubles silver medalist at the World University Games, Metz earned All-American honors for the Bruins in 1980. His time at UCLA included a win over future ATP top 10 player Tim Mayotte.
In 1982 he featured in the singles main draw of the Benson and Hedges Open in Auckland and made the final singles qualifying round of the Wimbledon Championships.
Metz was later the tour coach of WTA Tour player Patty Fendick.
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
American male tennis players
UCLA Bruins men's tennis players
Medalists at the 1979 Summer Universiade
Universiade silver medalists for the United States
Universiade medalists in tennis
Tennis people from California
American tennis coaches | [
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Bek Nelson (March 8, 1927 – March 28, 2015) was an American model and showgirl who turned to acting at age twenty-nine, making seven films and two dozen television shows in her first three years.
Early life
She was born Doris Dee Stiner in Goin, Tennessee. Her parents were Ralph Stiner and Mae Cole Stiner. She had four younger brothers and a younger sister.
The family moved from Tennessee to Canton, Ohio when Stiner was eighteen months old. Her father worked as a metal sander and then later as an inspector for Timken Roller Bearing Company. At age ten Stiner won a "Cutest Child" contest. She attended Lincoln High School from 1941 thru 1945. While in high school, she was active in dramatics, chorus, student government, and had roles in the junior and senior class plays.
New York
After graduation, Stiner and a girl friend moved to New York City, where Stiner found work as a Powers model. Her specialty was modeling swimsuits, for which she became well-known thru newspaper photos and ads. She first lived in Manhattan then moved to Newark, New Jersey as her swim suit career built up. She won a number of small local beauty contests, which again brought her newspaper publicity. She also served as a model for publicizing events and trade shows.
By 1951 however she decided to take on a regular performing gig as a dancer with the Copacabana chorus line. Her first night was a disaster, as the presence of the audience rattled her. She credited the nightclub's manager for her recovery:
I went completely to pieces when I saw the audience, but Mr. Entratter, an understanding man, told me to sit at a table and watch the show. The next night I went on and performed like a pro, otherwise my career would have ended before it began.
Stiner did well enough to hold her job for two years. While at the Copacabana, comic strip artist Milton Caniff picked her out to be his model for the character "Miss Mizzou" in Steve Canyon. Years later, the Knoxville Journal ran an old photo of her posing for Caniff, with a large sketch of the character and the artist's hands and distinctive signature visible in the foreground.
In 1953, new owners took over the Copacabana, and Entratter left to be general manager of the Sands Hotel. Stiner and four other Copacabana dancers were let go, and all five decided to follow Entratter to Las Vegas to be showgirls. Entratter billed them as the "CopaGirls", using them for publicity that encouraged other young women to try out for a contest to become a CopaGirl at $150 a week.
Columbia contract
Stiner was at the Sands for at least three years. According to her later recounting with interviewers, she was performing there when Cinerama filmed the floor show. A talent scout for Columbia Pictures saw the film, noticed her, and signed her to a contract with that studio. However, her first work with Columbia, filming Pal Joey, didn't start until April 1957, while newspaper photos from one year earlier show her doing a modeling assignment in Los Angeles as "Bek Nelson". This is the earliest verifiable use of her stage name. Columnist Lowell E. Redelings said "there's quite a story to how she got that unusual first name" but didn't see fit to share it with his readers.
Bek Nelson appeared on camera for an episode of a ZIV produced television program, Science Fiction Theatre, which was first broadcast in August 1956. She had no lines and the two minute part was uncredited, but it clearly establishes her screen debut came prior to her contract with Columbia. She also did TV commercials prior to being signed by Columbia.
While filming Pal Joey during April and May 1957, Bek was used for an uncredited bit as a nurse in Operation Mad Ball, which was also in production on the Columbia lot. She then co-starred in a Columbia comedy short Tricky Chicks with Muriel Landers, playing nightclub hostesses suspected of being foreign agents. According to columnist Hedda Hopper, Columbia head Harry Cohn was "giving Bek Nelson a big, big build-up."
Cohn had Columbia cast her in four more films made in 1957, to be released in 1958. She had a small uncredited part as a dance hall girl in Cowboy, then a feature role as a stewardess in the disaster film Crash Landing. Bek told the Knoxville Journal that the ocean rescue scene was filmed at the studio lake, with the director requesting "Please don't anyone stand up in the water... we don't want anyone to know our ocean is only three feet deep." Next came another comedy short, with The Three Stooges in Flying Saucer Daffy. Finally, it was back to an uncredited dance hall girl bit in Gunman's Walk
Bek's next film for Columbia, Bell, Book and Candle, was made and released in 1958. It was also her last film; Harry Cohn died of a heart attack at the end of February that year. His successors let her contract finish up in 1958 with loaning her out for television shows.
Television 1957-1966
When she was not making films, Columbia loaned Bek out to television production companies, including the associated Screen Gems. As 1957 was top-heavy with film work she did only two TV programs that year, but 1958 saw her doing fifteen episodes, a large number for anyone not playing a series regular. Included among these were nine episodes of the ABC series Lawman, where she had a recurring role as a widowed restaurant owner. Columnist Jack Gaver mused "It is difficult to decide which name is odder -- Bek Nelson or Dru Lemp. The former plays the latter ..." An unknown TV Key Mailbag editor found the name confusing. A letter writer asked who played the mean guy, "tall, with strange eyes, and an unusual face" on "The Deputy" episode of Lawman. The editor replied that "the villain on that show was an actor named Bek Nelson".
By 1959 Bek Nelson was an independent actress, represented by the Harold L. Gefesky Agency, with whom she remained throughout her show business career. Once again she appeared on fifteen episodes of shows, including another small recurring bit on four episodes of The Third Man. Guest star, feature player, and bit part were all represented in her resume of parts that year, and for years to come. She had no professional vanity about her billing status, but like other television actresses of the time found doing westerns limiting.
A girl in a television horse opera can be typed as a dance hall hostess, a rancher's wife, a rancher's daughter, a gambling hall queen, or a gal from the East visiting the rugged West. And the last choice is that of the frontier town's restaurant owner which I currently fill.
For 1960 and 1961 the number of television roles she would accept were reduced to half or less of previous years. She was married now, her husband had a successful acting career, and they were hoping to start a family. Subsequent years saw her sometimes do only two shows a year. Her career did pick up some in 1964 and 1965; she had a small part in her husband's award-winning indie film The Lollipop Cover and a brief recurring role on Peyton Place, for most episodes of which she was shown just talking on the phone, without directly interacting with the other actors. Her final acting job was a pro bono bit in 1966 for Insight, a syndicated show usually shown on Sundays.
Personal life
According to an article in TV Guide, Bek was married shortly after moving to New York in 1945, with the marriage being annulled.
Reporting the aftermath of a fire in Laurel Canyon during July 1959, the Los Angeles Times cited a Mrs. Bek Nelson Gordon as saying several houses near hers on Willow Glen Road had been lost. However, actor Don Gordon and Bek Nelson didn't take out a marriage license until much later. They were married under her birthname on December 31, 1959, in Los Angeles. At that period of time, a cohabitating single actress could suffer a serious career setback if the situation became widely known.
This was Gordon's third marriage and Bek's second. Gordon told an interviewer in October 1960 that "she doesn't want to be an actress, and I'm glad. I think women should stay home, keep house, and have babies." Bek evidently agreed, for she stopped acting after the couple adopted a daughter in 1966. The couple remained married for twenty years, divorcing in 1979.
Bek Nelson Gordon's life after leaving show business cannot be documented. She is reported by Find a Grave to have died in Watsonville, California on March 28, 2015.
Filmography
Notes
References
1927 births
2015 deaths
Female models from Tennessee
Actresses from Tennessee | [
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Rade Opačić (born June 17, 1997) is a Serbian kickboxer. He currently competes in the Heavyweight division of ONE Championship.
As of February 8, 2022, he is ranked #10 in the Combat Press heavyweight rankings.
Biography and Career
Opačić is the son of Serbian refugees from Croatia. He was born and grew up in Zemun district, Belgrade. He started Taekwondo at 10 years old and transitioned to Kickboxing at 14 as he was temporarily living in Canada. Due to his size he was already facing adults at 15 years old in exhibition fights.
Back in Serbia he joined the KBKS Gym and competed as an amateur until the age of 18. He won several titles including the 2015 WAKO European Junior Championship.
On October 27, 2016, Opačić took part in his first major professional event when he engaged in the K-1 World GP 2016 –95 kg Championship Tournament in his hometown of Belgrade, Serbia. He won his quarterfinal by decision against Emmanuel Payet from France before losing by unanimous decision in the semifinals against Fabio Kwasi.
On March 24, 2018, Opačić faced Tomáš Hron at the Night of Warriors 2018 event. He was defeated by decision.
On February 24, 2019, Opačić took part in an 8-man one night tournament at the Kunlun Fight 80 event. He won his quarter finals against Liu Wei by body shot knockout in the first round before losing by second-round TKO to top ranked heavyweight Roman Kryklia in the semifinals where he was knocked down five times.
Opačić was scheduled in a 4-man Heavyweight Tournament at the Enfusion 86 Road to Abu Dhabi event on June 28, 2019. Opačić won both his semi final against Daniel Galabarov and the final against Nidal Bchiri by first-round knockouts.
The tournament win qualified him for the year end Enfusion tournament in Abu Dhabi. On December 6, he was outpointed by Slovakia's Martin Pacas in his semifinal bout.
ONE Championship
Opačić was unable to fight in the first half of 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. During this time it was announced he signed with the ONE Championship organization. On December 4, 2020, he faced veteran Errol Zimmerman for his promotional debut at ONE Championship: Big Bang 2 in Singapore. Opačić won the fight by spinning heel kick knockout in the second round.
On January 28, 2022, Opačić faced Francesko Xhaja ONE Championship: Only the Brave. He won by second-round knockout, earning him a performance of the night bonus and tied the record for most knockouts in ONE Super Series.
Titles and accomplishments
Professional
ONE Championship
Performance of the Night (
Enfusion
2019 Enfusion 4-man Heavyweight Qualifying Tournament Winner
Amateur
World Association of Kickboxing Organizations
2015 WAKO European Junior Championships K-1 +91 kg
2015 WAKO World Cup in Hungary K-1 +91 kg Winner
K-1
2015 K-1 Open World Amateur Championships in Italy Heavyweight Winner
Fight record
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2022-01-28 || Win || align="left" | Francesko Xhaja || ONE Championship: Only the Brave || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (3 knockdown rule)|| 2|| 2:00
|- bgcolor="#CCFFCC"
| 2021-10-15 || Win || align="left" | Patrick Schmid || ONE Championship: First Strike || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (knees) || 2 || 1:19
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2021-01-22|| Win ||align=left| Bruno Susano || ONE Championship: Unbreakable || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (punches) || 2 || 1:11
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2020-12-04 || Win ||align=left| Errol Zimmerman || ONE Championship: Big Bang 2 || Kallang, Singapore || KO (spinning heel kick) || 2|| 1:35
|- style="background:#fbb;"
| 2019-12-06 || Loss ||align=left| Martin Pacas || Enfusion 92, Heavyweight Tournament, Semifinals || Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates || Decision (unanimous) || 3 || 3:00
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2019-06-28|| Win ||align=left| Nidal Bchiri || Enfusion 86 Road to Abu Dhabi, Final || Belgrade, Serbia || KO (punches) || 1|| 1:38
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2019-06-28|| Win ||align=left| Daniel Galabarov || Enfusion 86 Road to Abu Dhabi, Semifinals || Belgrade, Serbia || KO (punches) || 1||
|- bgcolor="#fbb"
| 2019-04-27 || Loss ||align=left| Martin Pacas || Enfusion 83 || Zilina, Slovakia || Decision (unanimous) || 3 || 3:00
|- style="text-align:center; background:#fbb;"
| 2019-02-24||Loss ||align=left| Roman Kryklia || Kunlun Fight 80 - Heavyweight Tournament, Semifinals || Shanghai, China || TKO (referee stoppage/5 knockdowns) || 2 ||
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2019-02-24|| Win ||align=left| Liu Wei || Kunlun Fight 80 - Heavyweight Tournament, Quarterfinals || Shanghai, China || KO (body punch) ||1 || 0:43
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2018-12-01 || Win ||align=left| Mathieu Kongolo || Collision Fighting League 4 || Lazarevac, Serbia || KO (left hook to the body) || 1 || 0:40
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2018-04-12 || Win ||align=left| Pascal Touré || Collision Fighting League 2 || Serbia || TKO || 3 || 2:55
|- style="background:#fbb;"
| 2018-03-24 || Loss ||align=left| Tomáš Hron || Night of Warriors 2018 || Liberec, Czech Republic || Decision || 3 || 3:00
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2017-09-30 || Win ||align=left| Dimitris Vakakis || Collision Fighting League || Serbia || Decision || 3 ||3:00
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2017-04-29 || Win ||align=left| Ondřej Hutník || Simply the Best 14 Prague || Prague, Czech Republic || KO (high kick) || 1 ||
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2017-02-26 || Win ||align=left| Martin Sabo || Warrior Destiny || Weiz, Austria || KO || 2 ||
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2017-01-29 || Win ||align=left| Ionuț Iancu || Roat To W5 || Novi Sad, Serbia || TKO (low kick) || 2 ||
|- bgcolor="#fbb"
| 2016-10-27 || Loss ||align=left| Fabio Kwasi || K-1 World GP 2016 -95kg Championship Tournament || Belgrade, Serbia || Decision (unanimous)||3 ||3:00
|-
|- bgcolor="#CCFFCC"
| 2016-10-27 || Win ||align=left| Emmanuel Payet || K-1 World GP 2016 -95kg Championship Tournament || Belgrade, Serbia || Decision (unanimous)||3 ||3:00
|- bgcolor="#cfc"
| 2016-02-28 || Win ||align=left| Aleksandar Brkić || BPN Vol. XVII || Novi Sad, Serbia || KO (high kick) || 2 ||
|-
|- bgcolor="#CCFFCC"
| 2015-08-29 || Win || align="left" | Hrvoje Ujević || 2015 WAKO European Junior Championships, Final || San Sebastian, Spain || KO (Knee) || ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|-
See also
List of male kickboxers
ONE Championship Profile
References
1997 births
Living people
Serbian male kickboxers
Heavyweight kickboxers
Sportspeople from Belgrade
Serbian expatriates in Canada | [
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"" () is a song by Italian record producer Mace, with vocals by Blanco and Salmo. It was released by Island Records on 8 January 2021 as the second single from Mace's first album Obe.
The song peaked at number 1 on the FIMI single chart for seven weeks and ranked fifth in the 2021 year-end single chart. "" was certified quintuple platinum in Italy.
Music video
The music video for "", directed by YouNuts!, was released on 11 January 2022 via Mace's YouTube channel. , the video has over 40 million views on YouTube.
Personnel
Credits adapted from Tidal.
Mace – producer, composer, drum machine
Venerus – composer
Blanco – associated performer, author, vocals
Salmo – associated performer, author, vocals
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Certifications
References
2021 songs
2021 singles
Blanco (singer) songs
Songs written by Blanco (singer) | [
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Bonine is a surname. Notable people with the name include:
Eddie Bonine (born 1981), American baseball player
Elias Bonine (1843–1916), American photographer
Fred Bonine (1863–1941), American athlete and eye doctor
See also
Bonini (surname) | [
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Mary Eleanora McCoy (1846 – 1923) was a philanthropist, organizer, and clubwoman. She is known for organizing the Michigan State Association of Colored Women.
Biography
McCoy née Delaney was born in 1846 in Lawrenceburg, Indiana. Sources differ on her exact birth date; January 26, 1846 or perhaps January 7, 1846. She was born in an Underground Railroad station, with one source naming her parents as "Jacob C. and Eliza Ann (Montgomery) Delaney, perhaps escaped slaves". She married twice, first to Henry Brownlow then to Elijah McCoy. Elijah McCoy was an inventor and the subject of the phrase the real McCoy.
The McCoy's settled in Detroit in the early 1880s. Mary McCoy was an active clubwoman. She was a member of the Twentieth Century Club of Detroit, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Lydian Association of Detroit, and the Willing Workers. With Lucy Thurman she organized the Michigan State Association of Colored Women (a chapter of the National Association of Colored Women (NACW)). Her philanthropy included participation in the establishment of the Sojourner Truth Memorial Association of Michigan which provided University of Michigan scholarships to children of former slaves. She served as vice president. She also funded the McCoy Home for Colored Children, as well as establishing the Phyllis Wheatley Home for Aged Colored Women in Detroit, serving as president.
By the early 1900s McCoy was working for women's suffrage. She was a member of the Independent Women Voters, and advocated for suffrage through her ongoing association with the NACW. She marched in the 1913 Woman Suffrage Parade in Washington D.C. In 1920 she attended the National American Woman Suffrage Association's Victory Convention in Chicago.
McCoy died on November 17, 1923, in Detroit. In 2012 she was inducted into the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame and in 2016 the Mary E. McCoy Post Office Building was dedicated in Detroit.
References
1846 births
1923 deaths
People from Indiana
19th-century African-American women | [
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Arnaldo Horacio Arocha Vargas (10 September 1936 – 8 February 2022) was a Venezuelan politician. A member of Copei, he served as Governor of Miranda from 1971 to 1974 and again from 1990 to 1995. He also served in the Venezuelan Chamber of Deputies from 1969 to 1974 and again from 1984 to 1989. He died on 8 February 2022, at the age of 85.
References
1936 births
2022 deaths
Copei politicians
Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Venezuela)
Governors of Miranda (state)
20th-century Venezuelan politicians
People from Miranda (state)
People from Caracas | [
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Fergus Garrett is an English plantsman, horticultural educationalist and Chief Executive of the Great Dixter Charitable Trust. He is described as one of the most influential living garden designers and horticultural educators in Britain today.
Life and work
Fergus Garrett was born in Brighton. His mother was born in Istanbul and his father was English. His mother left the marriage when Garrett was six months old and returned to Istanbul with the children, where he spent his formative childhood years. She wished for her two boys to study in England so they returned to live with their grandmother in England. When his mother retired, she came back to England and the two boys moved to live with her. At school in Hove, Garrett's geography teacher encouraged him to pursue land-based studies so he applied to study agriculture at Wye College in Kent. He intensely disliked the principles of modern agriculture and so swapped to study horticulture under lecturer Tom Wright, who had been a student of Christopher Lloyd in the 1950s. Garrett worked for Brighton Parks Department, gaining practical experience, and then completed a BSc back at Wye College.
During this period, in 1988, he visited Great Dixter and was invited back, striking up a friendship with owner Christopher Lloyd. On the advice of Lloyd, Garrett worked for Beth Chatto for eight months. He also was based at Rosemary Alexander of the English Gardening School in Stoneacre, Kent and for two years in private gardens in France, keeping in touch with Lloyd throughout. The two travelled together through Turkey by car, with Garrett acting as guide and interpreter. Garrett began dating Amanda Ferguson, later to become his wife.
At the age of 27 Garrett joined the Great Dixter team and worked closely with owner Christopher Lloyd (1921-2006) from 1992 until his death. Garrett became like a son and heir to the old man. The Dixter gardens had lost a sense of clear direction and Garrett helped bring drive and energy to the planning and planting design. After Lloyd's death he went on to become Chief Executive of the Great Dixter Charitable Trust, Lloyd not wishing the house and gardens to "stagnate" under English Heritage or National Trust ownership.
Shortly before his death, Lloyd wrote of Garrett: "Fergus is an amazing proselytiser. He believes in what we are doing and spreads the word... The number of visitors bears witness to his success. He can grip an audience right from the start, but he is totally unselfish. As long as he is at the helm, I have no fears for Dixter. He is an incredibly hard worker." The New York Times noted "Garrett has proven himself a visionary in his own right, with a style more effusive than Lloyd's, but with the same exacting attention to each combination, seeking new sensations of color and texture and -- this is key -- a graceful progression through the seasons."
Garrett doesn't favour the use of synthetic chemical interventions in land or plant management. He supports building biodiversity and ecological education.
Personal life and honours
Garrett and his wife Amanda, a zoologist, have two daughters and live in Hastings Old Town. He is described as a "world famous plantman" and "the Lionel Messi of horticulture", one of the Britain's most influental garden designers.
Garrett has received the Royal Horticultural Society Associate of Honour (2008), the Veitch Memorial Medal for outstanding contribution to the practice of horticulture (2015) and the Victoria Medal of Honour (2019). He is a patron of the Beth Chatto Education Charity, and the President of the Northiam Horticultural Charity; he is on the garden advisory boards for RHS Wisley, the Landcraft Gardening Foundation and Prospect Cottage and has held the role of judge at the Chelsea Flower Show. He is also a reviewer for the BBC's Gardeners' World Magazine.
He is a loves cooking and Turkish culture and practices green woodcraft.
Works
Great Dixter: Then & Now (2021)
References
External links
"Fergus Garrett on wildlife at Great Dixter", Gardeners' World, BBC 9 November 2021
Great Dixter
English gardeners
English horticulturists
Living people
Royal Horticultural Society
People from Hastings
People from Brighton
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Boris Aleksandrovich Furmanov (; 17 December 1936 – 8 February 2022) was a Russian politician.
He served as Minister of Architecture, Construction, and Housing from 1991 to 1992. He died on 8 February 2022, at the age of 85.
References
1936 births
2022 deaths
Soviet politicians
Russian politicians
Russian people of Ukrainian descent
Communist Party of the Soviet Union members
Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour
Recipients of the Order of Friendship of Peoples
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Claudine Sauvé is a Canadian cinematographer. She is most noted for her work on the films The Wild Hunt, for which she was a Genie Award nominee for Best Cinematography at the 31st Genie Awards, and Silence Lies (Tromper le silence), for which she was a Jutra Award nominee for Best Cinematography at the 11th Jutra Awards.
Her other credits have included the films Ice Cream, Chocolate and Other Consolations (Crème glacée, chocolat et autres consolations), Posers, The High Cost of Living, The Year Dolly Parton Was My Mom, Liverpool, Miraculum, What Are We Doing Here? (Qu’est-ce qu’on fait ici ?), 1:54, 9, Happy Face and Best Sellers.
References
External links
Canadian cinematographers
Canadian women cinematographers
French Quebecers
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Kafra () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Kafra had a population of 909 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church and a Greek Catholic Church
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
Christian communities in Syria | [
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Yvett Merino is a film producer for Encanto. For this film, she is nominated for an Academy Award in the category "Best Animated Feature Film", with Jared Bush, Byron Howard, and Clark Spencer.
Personal life
Merino's grandparents are from Mexico. Her father was a machinist, and her mother was an office manager. She grew up in Norwalk, California, and studied sociology at University of California Santa Barbara. Working as a social worker for a year, she began taking temp placements outside of that role, including at Disney.
Career
Merino began with Disney Animation in the 1990s, expecting to stay for five years.
Merino was a software engineer and technology administration manager for Chicken Little (2005), and promotional support for Meet the Robinsons (2007).
Having worked up through the technology department to the role of administrative manager, Tangled (2010) producer Roy Conli asked her to manage the editing department, which made her a production manager.
She re-enrolled in school, receiving an MBA. She was a production assistant for Wreck-It Ralph (2012). Merino was a production manager and departmental leadership for Big Hero 6 (2014), departmental leadership for Zootopia (2016), production manager for Moana (2016), and studio and creative leadership for Raya and the Last Dragon (2021). Merino joined Encanto two years into development, as it started to transition to production.
Merino created an employee resource group at Disney called Voces (Voices). Separately, Encanto had a Familia Group, which would meet monthly for lunch to discuss the concept of family.
References
External links
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
American animated film producers
American film producers
Walt Disney Animation Studios people
University of California, Santa Barbara alumni | [
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Kirk Duncan Matthew Humphrey (born St. Michael South, Barbados) is a Barbadian politician and government minister of Barbados. He is the Minister of People Empowerment and Elder Affairs as appointed by President Dame Sandra Mason.
Early life and career
Humphrey was born in Saint Michael, Barbados. Kirk Humphrey has two master's degrees from London School of Economics in Social Policy and Planning for Developing Countries. He obtained his second degree from Harvard Kennedy School with a focus on "Public Policy and Leadership" and "Leadership and Human Rights".
In the 2018 Barbadian general election he was elected member of parliament representing Saint Michael South under the Barbados Labour Party defeating Prime Minister Freundel Stuart. He was subsequently appointed Minister of Maritime Affairs and the Blue Economy, in the Mia Mottley Administration.
On February 3, 2022, he was appointed Minister of People Empowerment and Elder Affairs by President Dame Sandra Mason.
References
Living people
Barbadian politicians
Barbados Labour Party politicians
Alumni of the London School of Economics
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Guo Ping (; 1 January 1933 – 5 February 2022) was a Chinese politician.
He served in the 6th National People's Congress, which lasted from June 1983 to March 1988. He died on 5 February 2022, at the age of 89.
References
1933 births
2022 deaths
Members of the National People's Congress
Delegates to the 6th National People's Congress
Members of the 7th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
Members of the 8th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
20th-century Chinese politicians
Waseda University alumni
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Gaston Pierre Da Costa (15 December 1850 – 11 December 1909) was a French teacher, left-wing militant and communard.
Biography
Da Costa was born in Paris, the son of Eugène François Da Costa (1818–1888), teacher of mathematics, and his wife Adèle-Pauline (née Varenne). A follower of Auguste Blanqui while a student, in 1871, at the age of 20, Da Costa embraced the cause of the Paris Commune. He was deputy of the prosecutor Raoul Rigault, who was in charge of the police, and took part in the events in the capital until the fall of the insurgents.
It was Da Costa, accompanied by Eugène Protot, who implemented the decision of the 1871 Committee of Public Safety to destroy the house of Adolphe Thiers. In the face of the hostility of the crowd and the reluctance of the workmen commandeered to undertake the demolition, he struck the first blows of the pickaxe on the building's chimneys, while Protot broke the windows on the veranda. It required the arrival of a company of the communard Garde Nationale unit the "Vengeurs de Flourens" to disperse the hostile demonstration and to induce the workmen to start work.
Da Costa was arrested at La Varenne-Saint-Hilaire in June 1871 and was tried in July 1872 on charges of "attempt with the aim of changing the form of government, complicity in assassination, illegal arrests with threats of death". The council of war sentenced him to death. After an appeal for review which confirmed the initial judgement, and a further appeal to the Commission for Pardons, the sentence was commuted in January 1873 to forced labour for life in the penal colony of New Caledonia, where he was sent without delay.
After the amnesty of 1880 he was repatriated on board the Loire, which reached Brest on 7 June 1881, after which he occupied himself with pedagogical matters. In 1889 he published the Nouvelle méthode d'enseignement de la grammaire française, which was approved by the municipal council of Paris. This work was followed by several handbooks for the use of pupils in primary schools, of which the last appeared in 1906. He was close to the left-wing of the Boulangistes in 1889. He also shared the convictions of Ernest Granger, Ernest Roche and Henri Rochefort and joined the Comité central socialiste révolutionnaire (CCSR).
In 1904 he published his memoirs of the events in which he had taken part, while enlarging the viewpoint to the scale of historical analysis. The three volumes of La Commune vécue, 30 years after the facts, provoked many reactions not only from his opponents but also from former communards.
He died on 11 December 1909 at Bois-le-Roi.
Works
Nouvelle méthode d'enseignement de la grammaire française, revised and corrected by Jeannin, Paris, 1894
Mémoires d'un communard: 18 Mars–28 Mai 1871, La Commune vécue (vol. 1 online; vol. 2 online; vol.3 online).
Mémoires d'un communard: 18 mars–28 mai 1871, La Commune vécue, Larousse, 2009, 383 pp. — condensed into one volume.
References
Bibliography
La Commune, Éditions Sociales, 1970
External links
Maitron.fr: notice DA COSTA Gaston, Pierre, put online 26 July 2009, latest modification 14 December 2021
1850 births
1909 deaths
Communards
Educators from Paris
19th-century French educators
20th-century French educators
French historians | [
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The 2018 Lucas Oil 150 was the 22nd stock car race of the 2018 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, the third and final race of the Round of 6, and the 24th iteration of the event. The race was held on Friday, November 9, 2018, in Avondale, Arizona, at ISM Raceway, a 1-mile (1.6 km) permanent low-banked tri-oval race track. The race took the scheduled 150 laps to complete. At race's end, Hattori Racing Enterprises driver Brett Moffitt would win a dramatic race, passing eventual second-place Kyle Busch Motorsports driver Noah Gragson and eventual fourth-place ThorSport Racing finisher Grant Enfinger with just three to go to steal a victory and a berth in the Championship 4. The win was Moffitt's sixth career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series win and his fifth of the season. To fill out the podium, Harrison Burton of Kyle Busch Motorsports would finish third.
Background
ISM Raceway – also known as PIR – is a one-mile, low-banked tri-oval race track located in Avondale, Arizona. It is named after the nearby metropolitan area of Phoenix. The motorsport track opened in 1964 and currently hosts two NASCAR race weekends annually. PIR has also hosted the IndyCar Series, CART, USAC and the Rolex Sports Car Series. The raceway is currently owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation.
The raceway was originally constructed with a 2.5 mi (4.0 km) road course that ran both inside and outside of the main tri-oval. In 1991 the track was reconfigured with the current 1.51 mi (2.43 km) interior layout. PIR has an estimated grandstand seating capacity of around 67,000. Lights were installed around the track in 2004 following the addition of a second annual NASCAR race weekend.
ISM Raceway is home to two annual NASCAR race weekends, one of 13 facilities on the NASCAR schedule to host more than one race weekend a year. The track is both the first and last stop in the western United States, as well as the fourth and penultimate track on the schedule.
Entry list
Practice
First practice
The first practice session was held on Friday, November 9, at 8:30 AM MST, and would last for 50 minutes. Harrison Burton of Kyle Busch Motorsports would set the fastest time in the session, with a time of 26.583 and an average speed of .
Second and final practice
The second and final practice session, sometimes referred to as Happy Hour, was held on Friday, November 9, at 10:05 AM MST, and would last for 50 minutes. Harrison Burton of Kyle Busch Motorsports would set the fastest time in the session, with a time of 26.447 and an average speed of .
Qualifying
Qualifying was held on Friday, November 9, at 3:35 AM MST. Since ISM Raceway is under , the qualifying system was a multi-car system that included three rounds. The first round was 15 minutes, where every driver would be able to set a lap within the 15 minutes. Then, the second round would consist of the fastest 24 cars in Round 1, and drivers would have 10 minutes to set a lap. Round 3 consisted of the fastest 12 drivers from Round 2, and the drivers would have 5 minutes to set a time. Whoever was fastest in Round 3 would win the pole.
Noah Gragson of Kyle Busch Motorsports would set the fastest time in Round 3 and win the pole with a 26.456 and an average speed of .
No drivers would fail to qualify.
Full qualifying results
Race results
Stage 1 Laps: 45
Stage 2 Laps: 45
Stage 3 Laps: 60
References
2018 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
NASCAR races at Phoenix International Raceway
November 2018 sports events in the United States
2018 in sports in Arizona | [
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Dale Goodin (born October 13, 1958) is an American politician serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 105th district. Elected in November 2019, he assumed office on January 7, 2020.
Early life and education
Goodin was born in New Orleans and attended New Augusta High School in New Augusta, Mississippi. He earned an Associate of Applied Science in business administration from Mercer County Community College, a Bachelor of Arts from Western Illinois University, and a Master of Science in educational leadership from the University of Southern Mississippi.
Career
Goodin served in the United States Navy for 40 years. After retiring from active duty, he served in the United States Army Reserve and Mississippi Army National Guard. Goodin later worked as an administrator in the Perry County School District and was director of the Perry County Vocational Technical Center. He was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020.
References
Living people
1958 births
People from New Orleans
People from Perry County, Mississippi
Educators from Mississippi
Mississippi Republicans
Members of the Mississippi House of Representatives
Mercer County Community College alumni
Western Illinois University alumni
University of Southern Mississippi alumni | [
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Daghlah () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Daghlah had a population of 410 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
Christian communities in Syria | [
101,
4830,
5603,
14431,
1006,
1007,
2003,
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1999,
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Zou Peng (Chinese:邹鹏; born September 30, 1982, in Dalian) is a former Chinese football player.
Club career
Zou Peng began his professional career at Dalian Shide in 2000. He scored his first professional goal in the 2002 season against Sichuan Dahe. He suffered tore ligament in 2003, and was excluded from main squad.
In 2005, he was loaned to Sichuan First City.
In 2006, he returned to Dalian Shide, but did not have much appearances. By the end of the season, he sought for transfer to Wuhan Optics Valley, but the trade was unsuccessful.
In 2007, he was loaned to Jiangsu Sainty.
In 2008, he left Dalian and trasnferred to Chengdu Blades.
In 2012, Zou joined Shenzhen Mingbo. The team was dissolved before the season was finished.
In 2013, he moved to Qinghai Senke.
In 2014, Zou returned to Dalian and joined Dalian Transcendence in the China League Two.
Managerial career
Zou retired after the 2014 season, and started to work as assistant coach for the team until 2018, when the team got dissolved.
In 2020, Zou Peng joined Dalian Pro as youth training coach.
Honours
Club
Dalian Shide
Chinese Jia-A League/Chinese Super League: 2000, 2001, 2002
Chinese FA Cup: 2001
References
External links
Player profile at Sina.com
1982 births
Living people
Chinese footballers
Footballers from Dalian
Dalian Shide F.C. players
Chinese Super League players
China League One players
China League Two players
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Marco Tadé (born 3 December 1995) is a Swiss freestyle skier. He competed in the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Career
Tadé began skiing in 2000. He won a bronze medal at the 2014 Junior World Championships in the dual moguls event. He also won a bronze medal in dual moguls at the 2017 World Championships. His career high World Cup placement is second, which he achieved in moguls in Ruka in the 2020–21 season and in dual moguls in Thaiwoo in the 2016–17 season. He was selected to represent Switzerland at the 2018 Winter Olympics but was forced to withdraw due to injury.
He failed to qualify in the first qualifying round but was the final qualifier into the finals of the men's moguls event at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He then finished 18th out of 20 competitors in the first final round, eliminating him from medal contention.
References
1995 births
Living people
Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Swiss male freestyle skiers
Olympic freestyle skiers of Switzerland
People from Locarno | [
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Candido Tria Tirona (August 29, 1863 – November 10, 1896) was a Filipino revolutionary leader who participated in the Battle of Binakayan-Dalahican during the Philippine Revolution. He was a secretary of war in Magdalo chapter of the Katipunan and a close friend of Emilio Aguinaldo.
Tirona was born to Don Estanislao Tirona and Juana Mata. His father was a capitan municipal of Cavite Viejo. His brother Daniel Tirona also became a general in the revolution.
References
1863 births
1896 deaths | [
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Bahzina () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Bahzina had a population of 586 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church and a Greek Catholic Church.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
Christian communities in Syria | [
101,
8670,
2232,
17168,
2050,
1006,
1007,
2003,
1037,
2352,
1999,
2642,
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The 2018–19 season was the 115th in the history of Royal Charleroi Sporting Club and the club's seventh consecutive season in the top flight of Belgian football.
Players
First-team squad
Updated 31 January 2019.
On loan
Pre-season and friendlies
Competitions
Overall record
First Division A
League table
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
Europa League play-offs
Matches
Semi-final
Final
Belgian Cup
References
R. Charleroi S.C. seasons
Charleroi | [
101,
1996,
2760,
1516,
2539,
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Cho Soon-seung (; 22 March 1929 – 5 February 2022) was a South Korean politician.
A member of the Peace Democratic Party, the Democratic Party, and the National Congress for New Politics, he served in the National Assembly from 1988 to 2000. He died on 5 February 2022, at the age of 92.
References
1929 births
2022 deaths
20th-century South Korean politicians
Peace Democratic Party politicians
Seoul National University alumni
University of Michigan alumni
Yonsei University faculty
Korea University faculty
People from South Jeolla Province | [
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Eric Lohr is the chair of the department of history at American University.
Works
References
Living people
American University faculty and staff
Historians of Russia | [
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The 2022 Abierto Zapopan, also known as Abierto Akron Zapopan was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 3rd edition of the tournament and part of the 2022 WTA Tour.
It took place in Guadalajara, Mexico from 21 to 27 February 2022 and it is a part of the WTA 250 tournaments.
Champions
Singles
Sloane Stephens def. Marie Bouzková 7–5, 1–6, 6–2
Doubles
Kaitlyn Christian / Lidziya Marozava def. Wang Xinyu / Zhu Lin, 7–5, 6–3
Point distribution and prize money
Point distribution
Singles main draw entrants
Seeds
¹ Rankings are as of 14 February 2022.
Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
Caty McNally
Katie Volynets
Renata Zarazúa
The following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:
Daria Saville
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
Hailey Baptiste
Lucia Bronzetti
Caroline Dolehide
Brenda Fruhvirtová
Viktória Kužmová
Rebeka Masarova
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Rebecca Peterson → replaced by Viktoriya Tomova
Zheng Saisai → replaced by Zhu Lin
Retirements
Emma Raducanu (left leg injury)
Lesia Tsurenko
Anna Kalinskaya (back injury)
Doubles main draw entrants
Seeds
¹ Rankings are as of 14 February 2022.
Other entrants
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
Lucia Bronzetti / Sara Errani
Laura Pigossi / Renata Zarazúa
The following pair received entry as alternates:
Wang Xinyu / Zhu Lin
Withdrawals
Before the tournament
Hailey Baptiste / Caty McNally → replaced by Wang Xinyu / Zhu Lin
Rebecca Peterson / Anastasia Potapova → replaced by Misaki Doi / Miyu Kato
References
External links
Official website
2022 WTA Tour
Abierto Zapopan
2022 in Mexican tennis
February 2022 sports events in Mexico | [
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Robert L. Sanders (December 20, 1961) is an American politician serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 29th district. He assumed office on November 3, 2021.
Early life and education
Sanders was born in Shaw, Mississippi in 1961. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in physical education from Mississippi Valley State University.
Career
Sanders served as chief of police of the Mississippi Valley State University Police Department and was an officer in the Shaw Police Department. He was also an internal affairs investigator with the Mississippi Department of Corrections. He later served as sergeant-at-arms for the Mississippi State Senate from 2000 to 2004. He was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in a November 2021 special election, succeeding Abe M. Hudson Jr.
References
Living people
1961 births
Mississippi Valley State University alumni
People from Cleveland, Mississippi
Members of the Mississippi House of Representatives
Mississippi Democrats
African-American state legislators in Mississippi | [
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Ain al-Raheb () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Ain al-Raheb had a population of 349 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church and a Greek Catholic Church.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
Christian communities in Syria | [
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A piece of farming equipment used by farmers to reduce labor when fertilizing a large number of crops. They accomplish this by combining water-soluble fertilizer and water in a tank and then expelled by the injectors onto waiting crops. To avoid overfertilization of plants that would result in the plant's death, the precise ratio of fertilizer to water must stay consistent. The concentrated fertilizer solution is stored and mixed in a stock tank and then uniformly distributed throughout the irrigation system.
Types of injectors
Venturi-type
Positive displacement Injector
Dosatron Injectors
Anderson Injector
Smith Injector
Gewa Injector
References
Tool stubs
Biotechnology stubs
Agricultural machinery
Soil improvers | [
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Qurb Ali () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Qurb Ali had a population of 623 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Alawites.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
Alawite communities in Syria | [
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23183,
2497,
4862,
1006,
1007,
2003,
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Park Jong-geun (; 5 February 1937 – ) is a South Korean politician. A member of the United Liberal Democrats, the Saenuri Party, and later the Future Hope Alliance, he served in the National Assembly from 1996 to 2012.
References
1937 births
Living people
20th-century South Korean politicians
21st-century South Korean politicians
United Liberal Democrats politicians
Liberty Korea Party politicians
Members of the National Assembly (South Korea)
Kyeongbuk High School alumni
Seoul National University alumni
Washington State University alumni
People from Sangju | [
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Michael Davis (born 21 January 2002) is a Belgian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Belgian First Division B club Waasland-Beveren.
References
2002 births
Living people
Belgian footballers
Black Belgian sportspeople
Association football central defenders
RWDM47 players
K.V. Mechelen players
Waasland-Beveren players
Belgian First Division B players
Belgium youth international footballers | [
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Coordinates: 50°14′31″N 64°00′10″V / 50.24204°N 64.00286°V / 50.24204; -64.00286
Île à Bouleaux de Terre (English:Inner Birch Island) () is an island in Canada. It is located in the province of Québec, in the east, 1,000 km northeast of the capital city, Ottawa. The area is 1.9 square kilometers. The island lies in the Mingan Archipelago National Park.
The terrain on Île à Bouleaux is flat. The island's highest point is 46 meters above sea-level. It extends 1.6 kilometers from north to south, and 2.0 kilometers from east to west.
The region has a continental climate. The Annual average temperature in the region is 0 °C. The warmest month is August, with an average temperature of 12 °C, and the coldest is February, with −14 °C.
References
Islands of Quebec | [
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Omorgus acinus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus Afromorgus.
References
acinus
Beetles described in 1980 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
9353,
13429,
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1997,
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Omorgus amitinus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus Afromorgus.
References
acinus
Beetles described in 1904 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
26445,
7629,
2271,
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1037,
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Omorgus asperulatus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus Afromorgus.
References
asperulatus
Beetles described in 1872 | [
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21759,
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Sérgio Cerqueira Barcelos (4 October 1943 – 8 February 2022) was a Brazilian politician. A member of the Democrats, he served in the Chamber of Deputies from 1991 to 2003. He died in João Pessoa on 8 February 2022, at the age of 78.
References
1943 births
2022 deaths
Democrats (Brazil) politicians
Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Brazil)
Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Brazil) from Amapá
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro alumni
20th-century Brazilian politicians
Politicians from Rio de Janeiro (city) | [
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Nika Godun (born 4 March 1997) is a Russian competitive swimmer. She is a Russian record holden in the short course 4×50 metre medley relay and the 4×100 metre medley relay. She competed at the 2019 and 2021 European Short Course Swimming Championships, medaling in the 4×50 metre medley relay and 50 metre breaststroke. At the 2021 World Short Course Championships she placed fifth in the 50 metre breaststroke and the 4×100 metre medley relay, and sixth in the 100 metre breaststroke and the 4×50 metre medley relay.
Background
Godun was born 4 March 1997 in Moscow, Russia.
Career
2012–2016
At the 2012 European Junior Swimming Championships, held in Antwerp, Belgium in July 2012, Godun won a gold medal as part of the 4×100 metre medley relay for her efforts swimming the breaststroke leg of the relay in the prelims heats.
In September 2016, at the 2016 Swimming World Cup stop in Moscow, Godun started competition on the first of two days with the prelims heats of the 100 metre breaststroke, where she placed 11th overall with a time of 1:11.05. Later the same morning, she placed 11th in the 50 metre backstroke with a time of 28.99 seconds in the prelims heats. In the evening, Godun swam the butterfly leg of the 4×50 metre medley relay to help achieve a fifth-place finish in 1:45.77, splitting a 27.62. The following day, she swam a 32.27 in the prelims heats of the 50 metre breaststroke to place 11th overall.
2019
For the 2019 World University Games in Naples, Italy at Piscina Felice Scandone in July, Godun placed 13th in the 100 metre breaststroke with a time of 1:08.90 in the semifinals. She also placed tenth with a time of 31.60 seconds in the semifinals of the 50 metre breaststroke.
2019 European Short Course Championships
On the first day of competition at the 2019 European Short Course Swimming Championships in Glasgow, Scotland in December 2019, Godun tied Mona McSharry of Ireland for ninth rank in the prelims heats of the 50 metre breaststroke with a time of 30.51 seconds. For the semifinals in the afternoon of the same day, Godun swam a 30.57 and tied Tatiana Chișca of Moldova for 12th-place overall. Day three of competition, Godun ranked fourth in the prelims heats of the 100 metre breaststroke with a 1:05.41 and qualified for the semifinals later in the day. In the semifinals, she qualified for the final with a time of 1:05.20 that ranked her fifth overall in the semifinals. The following day, Godun placed seventh in the final of the 100 metre breaststroke with a time of 1:05.40. On the fifth and final day of competition, Godun helped advance the 4×50 metre medley relay to the final ranking first in the prelims heats with a 1:45.81, splitting a 30.26 for the breaststroke leg of the relay. In the evening final, she split a 30.11 for the breaststroke leg and contributed to the final relay time of 1:44.96 to win the bronze medal and set a new Russian record in the event.
2021
2021 Swimming World Cup
At the second stop of the 2021 Swimming World Cup, held at Danube Arena in Budapest, Hungary in October, Godun won a bronze medal in the 100 metre individual medley with a personal best time of 59.71 seconds on the first day of competition, which was less than one-tenth of a second slower than silver medalist Michelle Coleman of Sweden. The second day of competition, Godun won the gold medal in the 100 metre breaststroke with a 1:04.71 and finished over six-tenths of a second ahead of the silver medalist in the event, Lydia Jacoby of the United States. On the third and final day of competition at the Budapest stop, she won the gold medal in the 50 metre breaststroke in 29.81 seconds, this time finishing 0.16 seconds ahead of second-place finisher Lydia Jacoby. Godun returned to the World Cup circuit at the fourth and final stop, held at the Palace of Water Sports in Kazan, where she competed in the 50 metre breaststroke and won the gold medal with a time of 29.64 seconds to finish 0.01 seconds ahead of the silver medalist and fellow Russian Yuliya Yefimova.
2021 European Short Course Championships
In November 2021, at the 2021 European Short Course Swimming Championships in Kazan, Godun placed fourth in her first event, the 100 metre breaststroke, with a time of 1:04.67 that was less than half a second slower than bronze medalist in the event, Eneli Jefimova of Estonia. For her second event of the Championships, the 200 metre breaststroke, Godun placed tenth in the prelims heats with a 2:23.17 and did not advance to the semifinals stage of competition as she was not one of the two fastest Russians in the event. The same day as the 200 metre breaststroke, Godun split a 29.47 for the breaststroke leg of the 4×50 metre medley relay, contributing to the final time of 1:44.19, which won the relay team the gold medal and set a new Russian record. In her final event of the Championships, the 50 metre breaststroke, she won the bronze medal with a time of 29.80 seconds, finishing less than two-tenths of a second behind the gold and silver medalists in the event, Arianna Castiglioni and Benedetta Pilato, both of Italy.
2021 World Short Course Championships
Leading up to the 2021 World Short Course Championships, Godun swam a personal best time of 1:03.77 in the 100 metre breaststroke at the 2021 Russian Short Course Championships and became the second-fastest female Russian swimmer in the event behind Yuliya Yefimova. At the World Championships, held at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates in December, Godun ranked first in the semifinals of the 50 metre breaststroke, following the disqualification of Alia Atkinson of Jamaica, with a personal best time of 29.42 seconds. In the final the following day, Godun placed fifth with a time of 29.79 seconds. Earlier in the same finals session, she helped the 4×50 metre medley relay place sixth in 1:44.51, splitting a 29.56 for the breaststroke leg of the relay. In the final of the 100 metre breaststroke three days later, Godun placed sixth in 1:04.43. For her final event of the Championships, the 4×100 metre medley relay, she split a 1:04.53 for the breaststroke leg of the finals relay, which was the third-fastest breaststroke leg in the final only behind Sophie Hansson of Sweden and Qianting Tang of China, and helped achieve a new Russian record time of 3:49.94 and a fifth-place finish.
International championships
Godun swam only in the prelims heats.
Personal best times
Short course metres (25 m pool)
Short course metres (25 m pool)
Legend: sf – semifinal
National records
Short course metres (25 m pool)
See also
List of European Short Course Swimming Championships medalists (women)
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Swimmers from Moscow
Russian female breaststroke swimmers
Russian female medley swimmers
Competitors at the 2019 Summer Universiade | [
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Xingshan railway station is a railway station under construction, located in Beidouping village, Gufu town, Xingshan County, Yichang, Hubei Province, China. It was named Yichang North railway station during project development. The station is at the intersection of the Shanghai–Wuhan–Chengdu high-speed railway and the Hohhot–Nanning corridor of the National High-Speed Rail Grid.
History
The station is expected to open with the Zhengzhou–Wanzhou high-speed railway in 2022.
The following lines are also expected to serve this station:
Xingshan–Yichang East high-speed railway (under construction, due to open in 2025)
Wuhan–Yichang high speed railway (under construction, due to open in 2025)
Yichang–Fuling high-speed railway (under development, due to open in 2028)
Yichang–Changde high speed railway (project development suspended).
References
Railway stations in Hubei
Railway stations under construction in China | [
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Mitsuki Ono (born 5 March 2004) is a Japanese snowboarder. She represented Japan at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Career
Junior World Championships
Ono made her international debut at the 2018 FIS Snowboarding Junior World Championships where she won gold in the halfpipe event. She competed at the 2019 FIS Snowboarding Junior World Championships where she again won gold in the halfpipe event.
Winter Youth Olympics
Ono represented Japan at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics where she won a gold medal in the girl's halfpipe event with a score of 95.33.
Winter Olympics
Ono represented Japan at the 2022 Winter Olympics in the women's halfpipe event.
References
2004 births
Living people
Japanese female snowboarders
Snowboarders at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics
Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic snowboarders of Japan
Youth Olympic gold medalists for Japan | [
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Omorgus baccatus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus Afromorgus.
References
baccatus
Beetles described in 1867 | [
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Angiolo Bandinelli (21 March 1927 – 6 February 2022) was an Italian politician, journalist and writer.
Life and career
A co-founder and longtime member of the Radical Party, Bandinelli was one of the closer collaborators of Marco Pannella.
He served as a municipal councillor in Rome, and as a national deputy from 1986 to 1987.
Beyond his political activity, Bandinelli was a columnist for various publications including Il Mondo and Il Foglio, a translator, a poet and a essayist.
He died on 6 February 2022, at the age of 94.
References
External links
Angiolo Bandinelli at Chamber of Deputies
1927 births
2022 deaths
20th-century Italian politicians
Radical Party (Italy) politicians
Action Party (Italy) politicians
Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Italy)
Deputies of Legislature IX of Italy
People from the Province of Siena | [
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Mirza Nikolajev is a Bosnian luger who competes internationally.
He represented his country at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
References
Living people
2001 births
Lugers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic lugers of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnia and Herzegovina male lugers
Sportspeople from Sarajevo | [
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The 1998 UCLA vs. Miami football game, played December 5, 1998, was an NCAA college football game held between the UCLA Bruins and the Miami Hurricanes at the Orange Bowl, the home stadium of Miami. The game had large implications as UCLA was assured a spot in the Fiesta Bowl with a victory; that season, the Fiesta Bowl served as the site for the BCS National Championship. After trailing 38-21 after three quarters, Miami stormed back to stun the Bruins 49–45.
The game remains infamous among UCLA fans, as the Bruins' loss denied them their best shot to date at their first national championship since 1954.
The Bruins were coached by Bob Toledo. They came into the game with a 10–0 record and riding a 20-game winning streak dating back to the previous season, having already clinched the Pac-10 championship with an 8–0 record in conference play. The Hurricanes, coached by Butch Davis, went into the game with a 7–3 record including a 5–2 mark in Big East play.
Leading up to the game
The Bruins were undefeated heading into the game, only needing a win to secure a spot in the National Championship game.
Miami was just coming off of a blowout loss the previous week to the Syracuse Orangemen, 66–13. The loss denied them their first ever Big East conference championship.
The game had previously been scheduled for September 26; however, the threat of Hurricane Georges prompted administrators from both schools to postpone the game.
A players’ plan by the Bruins to wear black wristbands against the Hurricanes to protest falling minority enrollment at UC-system schools was the subject of a series of emotional team meetings the week leading up to the game. The wristband issue dominated the team's normal pre-game Friday night meeting. Reflecting on the saga, OT Kris Farris stated “This team had tremendous focus right before games, and when the topic was switched to something that wasn’t about the game, I just felt ‘Wow, this team is not focused.’ Even that that thought entered my mind told me ‘Oh, wow, I’m not sure how focused we are.'” QB Cade McNown also recalled having concerns, stating “It was disappointing to be thinking about anything other than beating Miami. There’s a time and place to make statements that are political or social. A few guys saw that as the time and place.”
Aftermath and impact
Miami led 21-17 going into halftime. UCLA took over in the 3rd quarter, scoring 3 straight touchdowns to take a 38–21 advantage late in the 3rd quarter. After a late rally by Miami to tighten the score to 45–42, UCLA began driving with hopes of running out the clock, leading to the most pivotal play of the game.
With 3:34 remaining in the 4th quarter, UCLA had a 3rd and 8 at their own 44-yard line, UCLA quartedback Cade McNown completed a pass over the middle to WR Brad Melsby, who was eventually tackled at Miami's 26-yard line. As he was tackled, he fumbled the ball and Miami recovered. Replays showed that Melsby was down before the ball came loose, but as instant replay didn't exist in college football back then, nothing could be done to reverse the ruling. Miami made the most of their opportunity, driving for a touchdown to take the lead 49–45 with 50 seconds remaining. Miami's defense would hold UCLA's ensuing drive, securing the victory. Ricky Williams rushed for a Miami and Big East record 299 yards.
After the game
As UCLA exited the field, Miami fans taunted them with “Rose Bowl! Rose Bowl!” chants. UCLA still earned a trip to the Rose Bowl; however, given that it was the first year of the BCS and the Rose Bowl wasn't that year's designated national championship game, it was seen as a disappointment. They would go on to lose the Rose Bowl to Wisconsin 38–31; they haven't played in the Rose Bowl (or any other major bowl) since.
Also hurt by the game were the Arizona Wildcats. Expecting a UCLA victory, the Wildcats were anticipating their first trip to the Rose Bowl in program history; instead, they played in the Holiday Bowl where they defeated Nebraska 23–20.
The biggest beneficiary of the outcome was Florida State, ironic given that they are perceived as one of Miami's fiercest rivals. Thanks to the upset, along with Texas A&M upsetting #3 Kansas State later in the day, propelled Florida State into the #2 ranking in the BCS, earning them a spot in the Fiesta Bowl against Tennessee. They would lose 23–16.
Some Miami fans have viewed the 1998 triumph over UCLA as a key moment that kickstarted Miami's rise back to the top tier of the college football landscape which culminated in a dominant 2001 campaign.
References
College football games
UCLA Bruins football games
Miami Hurricanes football games
December 1998 sports events in the United States
1998 in sports in Florida
1998 Pacific-10 Conference football season
1998 Big East Conference football season | [
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Richard Gallien is an American college tennis coach and former professional player.
Raised in Sunland, Los Angeles, Gallien won a City section singles title while a senior at Verdugo Hills High School.
Gallien played collegiate tennis for Pepperdine University, where he twice earned All-American honors. He was a member of the team which finished as runners-up in the 1982 NCAA championships. In 1983 represented the U.S. at the World University Games and won the singles final against Dan Goldie to become the first American tennis singles gold medalist in games history (along with Cecilia Fernandez who won the women's event).
Competing briefly in professional tennis, Gallien had a best singles world ranking of 433. He featured in the main draw of the 1983 Pacific Southwest Open and had a win over Ben Testerman, before falling to world number six Gene Mayer.
Gallien was head coach of the USC Trojans women's team for 22-years, from 1995 to 2017, during which time he was named Pac-12 Coach of the Year on five occasions. He is a former men's co-head coach of Pepperdine (with Allen Fox from 1988 to 1990) and is now the women's head coach of Cal State LA.
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
American male tennis players
Pepperdine Waves men's tennis players
Pepperdine Waves men's tennis coaches
USC Trojans women's tennis coaches
California State University, Los Angeles faculty
American tennis coaches
Medalists at the 1983 Summer Universiade
Universiade gold medalists for the United States
Universiade medalists in tennis
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Emanuel Hurwitz (21 February 1935 – 5 February 2022) was a Swiss psychoanalyst and politician.
A member of the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland, he served in the Cantonal Council of Zürich from 1979 to 1984. He died on 5 February 2022, at the age of 86.
References
1935 births
2022 deaths
Swiss psychoanalysts
Social Democratic Party of Switzerland politicians
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The following is a list of charter schools in Georgia (including networks of such schools) grouped by county.
Statewide Locations
Coastal Plains Education Center High School (17 schools)
Bibb County
Academy for Classical Education
Cirrus Academy Charter School
Bulloch County
Statesboro STEAM College, Careers, Art & Technology Academy
Calhoun County
Pataula Charter Academy
Cherokee County
Cherokee Charter Academy
Clarke County
Foothills Education Charter High School
Clayton County
DuBois Integrity Academy
Utopian Academy for the Arts
Cobb County
International Academy of Smyrna
Miles Ahead Charter School
Northwest Classical Academy
Columbia County
SAIL - School for Arts Infused Learning
Coweta County
Coweta Charter Academy
Odyssey School
Decatur County
Spring Creek Charter Academy
DeKalb County
The Community Academy for Architecture and Design (TCAAD)
Dekalb Brilliance Academy
Georgia Fugees Academy Charter School
PEACE Academy Charter School
Spring Creek Charter Academy
Douglas County
Delta STEAM Academy
DREAM Academy Charter School
Zest Preparatory Academy Charter School
Fayette County
Liberty Tech Charter School
Fulton County
Amana Academy
Atlanta Heights Charter School
Atlanta SMART Academy
Atlanta Unbound Academy
Destination Career Academy of Georgia
Ethos Classical School
Fulton Leadership Academy
Genesis Academy (Boys, Girls)
Georgia Cyber Academy
International Charter School of Atlanta
Ivy Preparatory Academy
Liberation Academy
Resurgence Hall Charter School
Savannah Exploratory Academy
SLAM Academy of Atlanta
Gwinnett County
Brookhaven Innovation Academy
Georgia Connections Academy
International Charter Academy of Georgia
Yi Hwang Academy of Language Excellence
Lowndes County
Scintilla Charter Academy
Mitchell County
Baconton Community Charter School
Randolph County
Southwest Georgia STEM Charter Academy
Richmond County
Georgia School for Innovation & the Classics
Sumter County
Furlow Charter School
White County
Mountain Education Charter High School
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Burnin' Rubber is a series of vehicular combat racing video games developed by Xform and published by various companies. The series has appeared on AirConsole, Android, Browser, IOS, and Microsoft Windows.
The gameplay mainly focuses on the player having to beat a set of challenges ranging from races, boss battles, and time trials. Players can gain various pickups and collectables placed throughout tracks to aid them in the event and unlock new content. The series previous used Adobe Director and Adobe Shockwave Player for its games and has since migrated to Unity. Burnin' Rubber 3 was the first game in the series to introduce the addition of weapons in which the player can add to their vehicles which would become one of the game's main element moving forward. Excluding Burnin' Rubber (2007), the vehicles can receive damage or explode once critical damage levels has been surpassed. The series takes some inspiration from the Burnout series.
Series games
Main series
Burnin' Rubber (2007)
Burnin' Rubber is the first main game in the series and was released on 4 December 2007. It features head-to-head racing on 3 different locations with a reverse variant that becomes available one the player completes the forward variant. It is one of two games in the series that do not feature weapons.
Burnin' Rubber 2 (2008)
Burnin' Rubber 2 is the second main game in the series and was released on 7 October 2008. gameplay being similar to the first game. The game also comes with the addition of new vehicles and locations. The vehicle damage system was also added as a new element to the game and what would used in later games. It is one of two games in the series that do not feature weapons. Hidden packages were also introduced for the first time in what would be used in other Xform games.
Burnin' Rubber 3 (2009)
Burnin' Rubber 3 is the third main game in the series and was released on 7 July 2009. New elements were added to the game which would also be used in later games. A new "World Dominaton" mode was introduced in which the player competes to various events in America, Asia, Africa, Europe, Australia. This was the first game to introduce weapons to the series ranging from caltrop layer, grenade launchers, machine guns, miniguns, rocket launchers, and more. With the addition of weapons, new modes such as Battle Race, Rival Battle, Survivor Customization ranging from body kits, paint, rims, and spoilers were made available for the vehicles. Some custom parts could be unlocked through the daily challenges mode. Burnin' Rubber 3 was nominated for Best Online Game in the 2010 Dutch Game Awards.
Burnin' Rubber 4 (2010)
Burnin' Rubber 4 is the fourth main game in the series and was released on 10 August 2010. Players collect tickets which gives entry to compete in specific events. This was the first game to introduce an open world map consisting of 4 major areas (The city, Big Rock, Snow Peak, and The Jungle). A new selection of vehicles were added with some only obtainable after completing special missions. It is also the first game to introduce boats and a flyable helicopter in an optional side mission. The game won "Shockwave.com Online Game Of The Year" award in 2010.
Burnin' Rubber 4: Game Of The Year Edition (2011)
After Burnin' Rubber 4 received the "Shockwave.com Online Game Of The Year" award, Xform released Burnin' Rubber 4: Game Of The Year Edition on 12 April 2011. This version was an update to the original game adding new features and fixes. The handling system which was the same as used in Burnin' Rubber 3 was reworked. A new area called The Docks which was an industrial zone was added along with the other 4 major areas. Machine gun and surface-to-air turrets added and placed around the map which fires at the player when the player gets within range. Armored trucks and police cars with mounted guns were added and fire at the player if the player fires their weapon within range of the vehicles. The city's time period has also changed to night.
Burnin' Rubber 5 (2013)
Burnin' Rubber 5 is the fifth main game in the series and was released on 23 April 2013. The game is also one of the last two games in the series to use Adobe Director for its engine. The game includes different challenges for the player to complete including team race and boss battles. New weapons such as the flak roof turret, railgun, striker launcer, nuclear bomb, and more were added. It is the only game in the series to include an experience point system which rewards players new weapons as they level up. Players could also unlock duplicates of a vehicle upon beating its boss race or daily challenge. The game received an award nomination in the 2013 Dutch Game Awards.
Burnin' Rubber 5 HD (2018)
Burnin' Rubber 5 HD was released on Steam on 14 February 2018. This was a remastered version of Burnin' Rubber 5 which used Unity instead of Adobe Director like the original version for its engine. Textures were improved and several new cars were added to the game
Burnin' Rubber 6 (TBA)
Burnin' Rubber 6 is an upcoming game in the series. The game is set to be the first in the series to be available for major consoles.
Spin-off games
Burnin' Rubber: Crash n' Burn (2013)
Burnin' Rubber: Crash n' Burn is the first spin-off game in the series and was released on 4 October 2013. The game serves as a tribute to Burnin' Rubber 4. The gameplay focuses on destruction requiring the player to destroy certain objects and vehicles each mission to advance to the next. The map is set in The city from Burnin' Rubber 4 with Big Rock, Snow Peak, and The Jungle not appearing in the game.
Burnin' Rubber Shift (2013)
Burnin' Rubber Shift is the second spin-off game in the series and was released on 8 December 2013. The game is also one of the last two games in the series to use Adobe Director for its engine. Unlike the previous games, the player competed in head-to-head races that were located on a stretch of highway. Police chases were also an aspect of the game. Weapons were not included in the game.
Burnin' Rubber: Cartapult (2018)
Burnin' Rubber: Cartapult is the third spin-off game in the series and was released on 17 August 2018. The game does not feature any missions or free roam. The gameplay focuses on destruction with the player having to launch a vehicle and destroy traffic to unlock vehicles and abilities.
Burnin' Rubber Multiplayer (TBA)
Burnin' Rubber Multiplayer is an upcoming online game in the series. It will be the first game in the series to feature a multiplayer system.
Other games
Burnin' Rubber HTML5 (2014)
Burnin' Rubber HTML5 was released in 2014. It is the only game in the series to run on HTML5.
Burnin' Rubber 3 Standalone (2018)
Burnin' Rubber 3 Standalone was released on 19 March 2018 in response to modern browsers no longer supporting NPAPI plugins.
Burnin' Rubber 4 Standalone (2018)
Burnin' Rubber 4 Standalone was released on 17 May 2018 in response to modern browsers no longer supporting NPAPI plugins.
Burnin' Rubber (2007) Standalone (2020)
Burnin' Rubber (2007) Standalone was released on 17 May 2018 in response to modern browsers no longer supporting NPAPI plugins.
Burnin' Rubber 5 Air (2020)
Burnin' Rubber 5 Air was released on 9 April 2020 for Airconsole. It is a lite version of Burnin' Rubber 5.
Burnin' Rubber 5 XS (2020)
Burnin' Rubber 4 Standalone was released on 15 October 2020 and is also a lite version of Burnin' Rubber 5 for browser.
Removal
Several Burnin' Rubber games along with many other games using Adobe Director and Adobe Shockwave Player were removed from Shockwave.com in March 2017 due to modern browsers no longer supporting NPAPI plugins. This prompted the release of standalone versions of various games of the series on Itch.io.
References
Android (operating system) games
Browser games
IOS games
Racing video games
Vehicular combat games
Video game franchises
Video game franchises introduced in 2007
Video games developed in the Netherlands
Windows games | [
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Angèle Coutu (born February 6, 1946) is a Canadian actress from Quebec. She is most noted for her performance in the film Borderline, for which she won the Jutra Award for Best Supporting Actress at the 11th Jutra Awards in 2009, and her long-running television role in the series Two's a Crowd (Jamais deux sans toi).
The daughter of actor Jean Coutu, she graduated from the Conservatoire d'art dramatique de Montréal in 1966.
Her other credits have included the films Sex in the Snow, Françoise Durocher, Waitress, O.K. ... Laliberté, In the Shadow of the Wind (Les Fous de Bassan), Deaf to the City (Le Sourd dans la ville), In the Belly of the Dragon (Dans le ventre du dragon), The Party, Family History (Histoire de famille), The Legacy (La Donation), Wetlands (Marécages), A Place to Live (Pour vivre ici), Saint-Narcisse and The Sticky Side of Baklava (La Face cachée du baklava).
References
External links
1946 births
Living people
20th-century Canadian actresses
21st-century Canadian actresses
Canadian film actresses
Canadian television actresses
Actresses from Quebec
French Quebecers | [
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Maschidat Gadschijewna Gairbekowa (born 12/29/1927) in Karata was an Avar poet and author. She graduated from the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute, and was first published in 1948. She authored several compilations of poetry- like "The Word of a Goryanka" and "On the Way to the Top"- that sketched life in rural Dagestan.
References
Avar people
Poets of Dagestan | [
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Malcolm Besley is an ARIA nominated, platinum selling, Australian record producer, songwriter and mix engineer. He is best known for his work with Northeast Party House, Slowly Slowly, Client Liaison and Shouse.
Career
Malcolm learned piano from a young age and briefly sang for the Australian Boys Choir before quitting music all together, until his late teens where frustrated with the high school orchestral system he formed various punk and metal bands with school friends. After finishing High School Malcolm went on to study for cinema and media in an arts degree at La Trobe University, he dropped out mid second year and went on to earn an advanced diploma of Music Production at Box Hill TAFE. Malcolm began working as the in-house assistant at The Base Studios South Melbourne under the producer Forrester Savell
Discography
References
General references
https://www.abc.net.au/triplejunearthed/artist/commoner/
https://cityhubsydney.com.au/tag/malcolm-besley/
https://www.thegov.com.au/index.php/gig_guide/gig/e64515
https://themusic.com.au/streams/single-premiere-viera-motel-take-heart/aEhwen18f34/03-07-19/
Living people
Date of birth missing (living people)
Australian record producers
Australian songwriters
Australian audio engineers | [
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Leonardo Donaggio (born 23 September 2003) is an Italian freestyle skier.
He competed in the big air at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
Italian male freestyle skiers
Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic freestyle skiers of Italy | [
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Oddfellows Playhouse is a non-profit youth theater in Middletown, Connecticut. The playhouse provides programing to students of all ages, ranging from classic plays to circus skills. The organization serves over 1,200 young people annually and is Connecticut's largest and most active year-round youth theater.
History
Oddfellows Playhouse was founded in 1975 by four Wesleyan University students with a commitment to serve students of all backgrounds. The name Oddfellows comes from the initial building the playhouse occupied, which was owned by the Independent Order of Odd Fellows.
In 1996, the playhouse bought and renovated a 10,000 square foot building on Washington Street in Middletown, with extensive help from the City of Middletown.
In 2017, ownership of the building the playhouse occupies was transferred to the City of Middletown, who granted Oddfellows Playhouse a 25-year lease at a rate of $1 per year. This was intended to stabilize the playhouse's financial problems as well as expand programing for city youth.
Programing
Each year, the playhouse puts on two stage plays for each of their two age brackets: Junior Repertory Company (ages 12–14) and Teen Repertory Company (ages 14–20). Past shows have included Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and Washington Irving's Gold in the Bones.
In addition to the stage shows, the playhouse also conducts a children's circus camp each summer. The camp lasts five weeks and culminates in a live show with over 120 performers and a live band.
Awards
Over the course of its 47-year history, Oddfellows Playhouse has been given numerous accolades. They were named "Community Champion" for youth services by Citizens Bank in 2003. CPTV featured the playhouse on a special called "art.culture.life". They were given an "Award of Excellence" in 1998 from The New England Theatre Conference. The NAACP gave the playhouse a "Community Service Award" in 1999. And in 2012, the playhouse was given an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Oddfellows has also been named as one of "Connecticut’s Best Children’s Theaters" by Connecticut Magazine from 2013 to 2019.
References
Theatres in Connecticut
1975 establishments in Connecticut | [
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The Tympylykan (, ) is a river in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia. It is a left tributary of the Lena. Its length is and the area of its basin is .
The basin of the Tympylykan falls fully within the Central Yakutian Lowland. It flows across the Kobyaysky and Vilyuysky districts. The banks of the river are uninhabited.
Geography
The Tympylykan originates in an area of swamps and small lakes of the Central Yakutian Lowland. It flows first in a SSE direction and then roughly southeastwards to the south of the Linde within a wide floodplain. Towards the last stretch of its course it bends and flows northeastwards, meandering among marshes and lakes. Finally it meets the left bank of the Lena upstream of its mouth in the Laptev Sea. The Lyapiske has its mouth roughly on the opposite side of the Lena.
The main tributaries of the Tympylykan are the long Achchygyi-Tympylykan and long Konkyus-Mande from the left, as well as the long Yogdyonyu from the right.
See also
List of rivers of Russia
References
External links
Fishing & Tourism in Yakutia
Rivers of the Sakha Republic
Central Yakutian Lowland | [
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Polina Knoroz () (born 20 July 1999 in Saint Petersburg, Russia) is a Russian pole vaulter and athlete. She started her career in 2014, when she was at school.
Biography
Polina Knoroz was born on 20 July 1999 in Saint Petersburg, Russia. By profession, she is a Russian pole vaulter and athlete who competes internationally for Russia. In 2020 she participated at the Russian Indoor Athletic Championship and won the silver medal with a vault of 4.65m. Her best vault of 2021 was 4.65 in Znamenskikh stadium, Moscow.
Progression
Pole vault outdoor
References
Russian female pole vaulters
1999 births
Living people | [
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Tormod Frostad (born 29 August 2002) is a Norwegian freestyle skier.
He competed in the big air at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
References
External links
2002 births
Living people
Norwegian male freestyle skiers
Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic freestyle skiers of Norway
Freestyle skiers at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics | [
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Ain al-Ghara () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Ain al-Ghara had a population of 780 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
Christian communities in Syria | [
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Erdmann Copernicus (born in the 1520s in Gransee, Margraviate of Brandenburg; † 25 August 1573 in Frankfurt (Oder)) was a German poet, composer and jurist mainly active in the Margraviate or Electorate of Brandenburg, a precursor to Prussia.
Similar to the unrelated astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543), his name is documented in several partially Latinized variants: Erdmann/Erdmannus/Ertmannus/Erdmanus Kopernikus/Copernicus.
Life
He on 4 Mai 1545 joined University of Wittenberg in Saxony as Ertmannus Copernicus Granselensis, and graduated on 25 February 1546 as Magister of philosophy. For winter semester 1546-47 he returned to Brandenburg to continue his studies at the state university in Frankfurt (Oder), named Alma Mater Viadrina after the river Oder. Moved upstream in 1811 and merged with the university in Breslau where WW2 put an end to it in 1945, it was in 1991 re-established in Frankfurt/Oder as European University Viadrina.
After being a school principal in the New Town district of Brandenburg an der Havel, Copernicus in 1556 continued law studies at University of Wittenberg until he was appointed professor in Frankfurt/Oder upon the recommendation of Philipp Melanchthon. Being popular among students, they petitioned Joachim II Hector, Elector of Brandenburg (1505-1571) with verses in Latin for a raise of Copernicus' salary.
On 21 April 1573, after having been the university's vice rector during the winter semester, he was promoted to Doctor of Law, and also to head of university for the summer semester of 1573, during which he died. His hymns were published posthumously in 1575.
Work
Hymni Ambrosii, Sedulii, Propertii et aliorum, quator vocum.
Poems: Gedichte. In: Petrus Albinus, 1535–1598. Meißnische Land vnd Berg-Chronica. Dresden. 1589 (Commend. poems 448) by Erdmannus Copernicus microformguides.gale.com (PDF; 1,1 MB).
Johannes Schosser: Elegia Viadri ad albim continens gratulationem … Eichorn, 1560.
Ludolph Schrader: Gamēlion Erdmani Copernici scriptum, … Eichorn, 1560.
Oratio de prima ivris origine progressionibus & incrementis …, Eichorn, 1561.
Michael Haslobius, Henricus Iagow: In honorem clarissimi viri … Eichorn, 1563.
Literature
Heinz Scheible (ed.): Melanchthons Briefwechsel. Kritische und kommentierte Gesamtausgabe. Band 11: Personen. Teil: A–E. Frommann-Holzboog, Stuttgart u. a. 2003, ISBN 3-7728-2257-6, S. 301.
Johann Heinrich Zedler: Grosses vollständiges Universal-Lexicon at wikisource
Robert Eitner: Biographisch-bibliographisches Quellen-Lexikon der Musiker und Musikgelehrten Christlicher Zeitrechnung bis Mitte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. 1900. Akademische Druck- u. Verlaganstalt, Graz 1959 ().
François-Joseph Fétis: Biographie universelle des musiciens: et bibliographie generale de la musique. Firmin-Didot, Paris 1875–1883, Band II, S. 355 (gallica.bnf.fr).
Ernst Ludwig Gerber: Neues historisch-biographisches Lexikon der Tonkünstler, welches Nachrichten von dem Leben und den Werken musikalischer Schriftsteller, berühmter Komponisten, Sänger, Meister auf Instrumenten, kunstvoller Dilettanten, Musikverleger, auch Orgel- und Instrumentenmacher älterer und neuerer Zeit aus allen Nationen enthält. Erster Theil A–D, M. Kühnel, Leipzig 1812, Sp. 777 books.google.de
Christian Gottlieb Jöcher: Allgemeines Gelehrten-Lexicon ("General Dictionary of the Learned") in four volumes, published 1733–1751, archive
External links
TheMusicSack: Copernicus, Erdmannus.
1500s births
1573 deaths
16th-century German writers
16th-century jurists
German musicians
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USS Steadfast (AFDM-14) (former YFD-71) is a AFDM-14-class floating dry dock built in 1945 and operated by the United States Navy.
Construction and career
YFD-71 was built by the Pollock Shipbuilding Co., in Stockton, California in 1945. She would be commissioned later in 1945 after her delivery to the Navy on 1 July.
In 1981, the dry dock was re-designated as AFDM-14. She would be given the name Steadfast later in 1984. On 1 April 1986, USS Tuscaloosa (LST-1187) was seen dry docked inside Steadfast at National Steel and Shipbuilding Company. In February 1987, USS Bagley (FF-1069) traveled to Concord Naval Weapons Station where she unloaded ammunition before beginning a restricted availability at San Diego on the 16th. The repair period lasted until early summer and included a seven-week drydocking in Steadfast that occupied most of April and all of May.
In January 1992, USS Kinkaid (DD-965) was dry docked inside Steadfast. On 15 March 1994, USS Chandler (DDG-996) began a six-month selected restricted availability at Continental Maritime in San Diego, which lasted from 15 March until 19 May in the floating dry dock Steadfast. On 8 January 1996, Steadfast was dry docked at Long Beach Naval Shipyard. Steadfast was decommissioned in 1998 and sold to BAE Systems Ship Repair San Francisco, renamed Eureka. Struck from the Naval Register on 7 February 1999.
In 2009, SS Jeremiah O'Brien was dry docked inside Eureka at Pier 70.
On 2 January 2017, the shipyard was sold to Puglia Engineering, Inc..
Awards
American Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal
National Defense Service Medal
References
External links
NavSource: AFDM-14
Naval Vessel Register: Steadfast (AFDM-14)
Cold War auxiliary ships of the United States
World War II auxiliary ships of the United States
Floating drydocks of the United States Navy
1945 ships
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Ain al-Ajouz (), formerly known as Besawme, is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Ain al-Ajouz had a population of 436 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
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The Oratorio del Carminello is a Baroque chapel or prayer room located on Via Porta San Agata in the quarter of the Albergaria, within the historic centre of Palermo, region of Sicily, Italy.
History
The oratory was founded in 1605 and decorated over the next two centuries with a rich stucco decoration, including statues of saints and beatified members of the Carmelite order. The order was affiliated with a number of churches in Palermo, including the Carmine Maggiore a few blocks away.
The exterior of the oratory, as is common, is sober and simple marked by a single portal. The interior has the elaborate stucco work was done mainly by Procopio Serpota. The main altar has coat of arms of the Carmelites, held up by putti above the tympanum, and is flanked by allegorical statues depicting Chastity and Divine Love. The crypt below was used to desiccate cadavers.
References
Carminello
Baroque architecture in Palermo
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Juwaniyat () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Juwaniyat had a population of 366 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
Christian communities in Syria | [
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Tallah () is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Tallah had a population of 947 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. Its inhabitants are predominantly Greek Orthodox Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Talkalakh District
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Draganovets is a village in Northern Bulgaria. The village is located in Targovishte Municipality, Targovishte Province. Аccording to the numbers provided by the 2020 Bulgarian census, Draganovets currently has a population of 501 people with a permanent address registered in the settlement.
Geography
Draganovets village is located in Municipality Targovishte, 25 kilometers South away from Targovishte.
The continental climate makes the area perfect for the main occupation of the local population which is tobacco harvest and animal husbandry.
The elevation of the village ranges between 200 and 299 meters with an average elevation of 219 meters above sea level.
History
The remains of a Neolithic village and fortress were found 2 kilometers south from Draganovets. Moreover, in the same area, Thracian remains were archeologically excavated. They date back to the 2nd - 4th centuries.
In the same area, around the 5th century, a Christian temple had been elevated. According to the archeologists and historians who worked on the site, the temple they found is the only five-nave church in Bulgaria.
Buildings and infrastructure
The roads leading toward Draganovets village are in poor condition. But there is a functioning school in the village and daily public transport toward Omurtag.
Elementary school “Sv.sv Kiril i Metodii” was founded in 1888.
An active kindergarten “Number 5, The red riding hood”
The local community center and library “Hristo Botev” was founded in 1927.
Ethnicity
According to the Bulgarian population census in 2011.
References
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"Don't Wanna Cry" (Korean: 울고 싶지 않아) is a song released by South Korean boy band Seventeen on May 22, 2017, as the lead single from their EP Al1.
Lyrics and composition
"Don't Wanna Cry" is a major departure from the group's previous singles, which consisted mainly of lighthearted, upbeat love songs. The lyrics describe post-breakup feelings of heartbreak and loneliness. Additionally, it incorporated elements of EDM and electropop and was less influenced by hip hop than their previous work.
Reception and plagiarism controversy
"Don't Wanna Cry" was praised by critics as a transition to a more mature sound for the group. It won Best Dance Performance for a male group at the 2017 Mnet Asian Music Awards and reached number one on the Korea Hot music chart. Due to plagiarism concerns and criticism about the song's similarity to "Something Just Like This", Seventeen gave Coldplay and the Chainsmokers copyright credit, although Pledis Entertainment, Seventeen's record label, maintains the song was "independently created" and the move was to protect the artists from potential legal issues.
References
2017 songs
2017 singles
K-pop songs
South Korean songs
Songs involved in plagiarism controversies | [
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At the beginning of January 2022, a dispute pertaining to school uniforms erupted in the Indian state of Karnataka, when some Muslim students of a junior college who wanted to wear hijab to classes were denied entry on the grounds that it was a violation of the college's uniform policy. Over the following weeks, the dispute spread to other schools and colleges across the state, with groups of Hindu students staging counter-protests by demading to wear saffron scarves. On 5 February, the Karnataka government issued an order stating that uniforms must be worn compulsorily where policies exist and no exception can be made for the wearing of the hijab. Several educational institutions cited this order and denied entry to Muslim girls wearing the hijab.
Petitions were filed in the Karnataka High Court on behalf of the aggrieved students. On 8 February, the government closed high schools and colleges for three days due to protests and disputes over the wearing of the hijab. On 10 February, the High Court issued an interim order restraining all students from wearing any form of religious attire. When the schools reopened on 14 February, the high court's interim order was implemented in all schools and colleges across Karnataka, with students, and in some cases teachers, being asked to remove hijabs and burqas outside the school gates. On 25 February, after a hearing of about 23 hours spread over 11 days, the hearings from the petitioners, the state and the colleges were concluded and the judgement was reserved.
The hijab ban in high schools and colleges was criticized inside India and abroad by officials in the United States and Pakistan, by Human Rights Watch, and by figures like Malala Yousafzai and Noam Chomsky. The ban was defended by politicians such as Arif Mohammad Khan, Aaditya Thackeray and Vishva Hindu Parishad and figures like Taslima Nasrin and Masih Alinejad.
Background
The education system of Karnataka involves 10 years of school and two years of pre-university college ("PU college"). Using powers conferred under the 'Karnataka Education Act, 1983', Sec. 145(1), the Government of Karnataka empowered recognised educational institutions to decide on uniforms for their students. For school students, uniforms are mandated by the state government and schools can choose the colours. For PU colleges, uniforms were not mandated by the government, but, over time, most college development committees (CDCs) adopted them, according to a PU department official. In 2017, the department issued a direction to all PU colleges saying that PU students should not be asked to wear uniforms. College managements that already had uniforms questioned the direction saying that the students and parents were happy with them. The direction was still found on the PU Education Department website in February 2022, but it does not appear to have been enforced.
Muslims constitute 13 per cent of the population of the state of Karnataka. Muslim women in the state are accessing public education in ever-increasing numbers. Data shows that the Gross Attendance Ratio of Muslim women in higher education rose from about 1 per cent in 2007-08 to a high of about 16 per cent in 2017-18. Many Muslim women consider hijab to be a part of the Islamic faith. In India, the public display of religious symbols is common, including the wearing of hijab and burqa. PEW reports that in Karnataka 71% of Muslim women and 42% of Hindu women cover their heads outside the home (in India, 89% of Muslim women and 59% of Hindu women cover their heads outside the home). Several colleges in Karnataka reported that a small number of Muslim students have "always" worn the hijab in classroom. M Raghupathy, who was Karnataka's education minister in a Janata Party government in the 1980s, said that the government's uniform mandates had allowed both the hijab and the Christian nun's habit. He said that the Bharatiya Janata Party had not objected to the hijab back then.
According to the BBC, the coastal belt of Karnataka has seen protests over hijab in the past but such issues were often quickly resolved. Not all cases were easy, however. A second-year PU student at Moodabidri was disallowed from attending classes for an entire year in 2011–12 due to her insistence on wearing a hijab. There have also been instances of Hindu students protesting with saffron scarves to oppose Muslim students being allowed with hijab or burqa in classes. The Muslim women were said to have been anxious that their parents would not allow them to go to college without their religious clothing.
The coastal districts of Dakshina Kannada and Udupi have seen sectarian polarisation over the decades with the rise of Hindu nationalism, represented by organisations like Bajrang Dal, Hindu Jagarana Vedike, Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Akhila Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), and a parallel mobilisation of the Muslim community by the Popular Front of India (PFI) and its affiliates Campus Front of India (CFI) and the Social Democratic Party of India.
Since 2019, Karnataka has been governed by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). It has adopted popular Hindu nationalist policies such as banning cow slaughter and passing an "anti-conversion bill" which prohibits conversion from one religion to another by misrepresentation, force, fraud, allurement or marriage. Because the bill prohibits conversion for the sake of marriage, critics fear that the bill makes it difficult for interfaith couples to marry or for individuals to convert to Christianity or Islam.
Events
Udupi dispute
In early January 2022, a dispute over the wearing of the hijab was reported at a government-run Pre-University College for Girls at Udupi that had disallowed the wearing of hijab as being in violation of its uniform policy. Six Muslim female students insisted on wearing hijab to classes on top of their college uniform, arguing that hijab was part of their faith, and their constitutional right. The college said its uniform policy did not allow for the hijab. The girls offered to use the existing uniform's dupatta to cover their head, arguing they didn't need to wear a separate hijab of a different colour or material, but the college refused. The college allowed them to wear the hijab on campus, but did not allow them into classes. They were found sitting in corridors and working with their notebooks.
The case was brought to the attention of the media by Ansar Ahmed, the district president of Karnataka Rakshana Vedike, a voluntary organisation. Campus Front of India (CFI), the student wing of the radical Islamic organisation Popular Front of India (PFI), threatened a protest, prompting the college to arrange a police presence. The political wing of the PFI, the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI), is also said to have threatened protests. The college authorities met and talked with the parents but remained firm in their resolution not to allow religious attire.
What caused the students' change of mind on the hijab issue is uncertain. They admit to having attended the first year of class as per the college's no-hijab policy. They went to campus in burqas and removed them in a "ladies' room" before going to classes. One of the students also said that the parents were told about this when they joined the college in 2020. Others were doubtful. When the classes moved to online due to Covid, the issue died down. With the on-campus classes resuming in September 2021, some of the students asked for permission to wear the hijab, which was denied on the grounds that everyone must wear a "common uniform". In October 2021, two of them took part in an anti-rape protest and a photograph of the event was circulated. This brought their situation into focus to their parents as well as the CFI. An investigation by the Udupi Police reported that CFI had approached the parents and offered help to challenge the college management. According to one of the students, the agreement "mentioned a compulsory uniform and said nothing about a hijab". So, the six students and their parents decided to insist upon hijab.
According to the federated Muslim organisation Muslim Okkoota that is active in the district, PFI and its allied organisations used the students "for their benefit".
The students' hijab protest seemed to be a ploy for the political wing (SDPI) to strengthen its support base. Some of the protesting parents and relatives are active members of SDPI and other PFI affiliates. The SDPI had just won six seats in the local body elections, which was termed a major triumph. Muslim Okkoota claims to have tried to resolve the dispute locally by talking to the college authorities, the parents and the CFI, but the CFI chose to publicise the issue by circulating photographs of students stranded outside classes, provoking the college and the BJP leaders to harden their stand. By the end of December, "nobody was in the mood for a compromise".
The college development committee, which is responsible for setting the uniform policy, was headed by K. Raghupati Bhat, an MLA belonging to the ruling BJP. Its 21 members did not include any Muslims. After the dispute erupted, Bhat held a meeting with parents of all students on 1 January and declared that the college would continue with its uniform code, which does not allow for hijab. The CFI and SDPI took the position that, since uniforms were not mandated by the government, they could not violate the students' religious rights. Bhat wrote to the Pre-University Education Department of the state government to clarify the matter. Thus, the matter was escalated to the state government level.
Saffron protests
Soon after the Udupi episode became public, groups of Hindu students started coming to their colleges wearing saffron scarves to protest against Muslim students being allowed with hijabs. A leader of the Hindu Jagarana Vedike, an affiliate of the Sangh Parivar, declared, "if girls are allowed to wear hijab then other students will come with saffron shawls to institutions across Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts."
A co-educational first-grade college in Koppa tehsil in the Chikmagalur district, was the first to witness this development when some students wore saffron scarves and demanded that the dress code be enforced. The college asked the Muslim students to remove hijab in classrooms to deflect the crisis. The matter was resolved a few days later at a parent-teacher meeting where it was decided to allow Muslim girls to wear the hijab as long as they didn’t pin the headcover or tie them around their head. The parents of the Hindu students did not support their wards' demand to don saffron scarves. On 6 January, Hindu students at Pompei College in Mangalore wore saffron shawls to protest against the hijab, and were supported by the Hindu nationalist organizations ABVP, VHP and Bajrang Dal.
The saffron protests gained momentum in February, being seen at the Governrment PU college in Kundapura (2 February),
Bhandarkars' Arts & Science College in the same town (3 February), and Dr BB Hegde College near Udupi (3 February). At the last location, the saffron protesters successfully blocked the hijab-wearing Muslim students from entering the college.
Government reaction
The ministers of Bharatiya Janata Party-led Karnataka government reacted to the incidents with apparent distaste. The education minister B. C. Nagesh termed it as an "act of indiscipline". The students could not practise their "religion" in public educational institutions, in his view. The uniform had been present for over three decades and there had been no problem with it till this point, he said. He blamed "political leaders", an apparent reference to the PFI, for provoking the students, who were allegedly "playing politics". Home Minister Araga Jnanendra said that there must be a universal feeling in schools and colleges that "we are all Indians", which required that the uniform code set by colleges be followed.
On 27 January, the government announced the setting up of an expert committee to study the issue. Until its decision was made, the government urged the students to maintain the "status quo". For the Udupi PU College students, the "status quo" apparently meant that they should "adhere to the uniform rule". The government issued an order to this effect. The CDC chairman Raghupati Bhat called a meeting with parents and told them that the students should remove the hijab in the classroom.
On either 3 February or 4 February, the government issued an order stating that the uniforms mandated by the state government, the school managements or college development committees must be worn compulsorily. Students following religious tenents adversely impacted "equality and unity" in colleges, according to the order. The preamble stated that a ban on hijab was not illegal, and cited three court orders from Kerala, Bombay and Madras High Courts.
For those colleges where the college development committees did not mandate a uniform, the students must still wear attire that maintains "equality and unity and doesn't hamper public order".
The education minister B. C. Nagesh made a statment declaring, "those who want to defy the government's school uniform regulations cannot enter their schools and attend classes".
Fallout
The impact of the government order was instaneous. Even before the order became public, the knowledge about it reached the coastal districts by 3 February and started getting implemented. Even colleges that had customarily allowed hijab in classes now felt compelled to disallow them. In many cases, Hindu students forced the issue by wearing saffron scarves and insisting that, if hijab was allowed in classes, they should be allowed too.
In Kundapura, 28 students wearing hijab were barred from entering the Government PU College premises on 3 February. Hindu students had apparently come in saffron scarves the previous day, and the minister B. C. Nagesh informed the college that students could come to classes in only uniforms and neither hijab nor saffron scarves would be allowed.
The students were very anxious because their public exams were just two months away. The Telegraph commented that their "tearful pleas fell on deaf ears".
At Bhandarkars' Arts & Science College, a private college in Kundapura, 40 students were barred from entering the premises the following day. The students pointed to the college rulebook, which permitted the wearing of the hijab.
Some of the students said their college's treatment was "humiliating".
At the Dr BB Hegde College, where the hijab-wearing students were blocked by saffron protesters the previous day, the college administration banned the hijab on 4 February, citing the government order. The students had apparently been wearing hijab for three years at the school without issue.
On 8 February, Mahatma Gandhi Memorial College prevented students in hijab from entering, even though multiple students said the college had not objected to her hijab in the past.
The dispute then began to spread to other institutions across Karnataka, between Muslim students who wanted to wear hijab and the administrations barring them. The controversy intensified in early February 2022. Between 4 and 7 February, counter-protests led by students who were against allowing students wearing the hijab to enter the college. These students marched to the college wearing saffron shawls. However, authorities stopped them from entering the premises and asked the students to remove the shawls. The students were allowed in only after they complied with the request. On 7 February, some students wore blue shawls and chanted Jai Bhim at a college in Chikmagalur in support of Muslim girls in hijab (as opposed to the saffron shawls that were against the wearing of hijab).
On 10 February, a lone Muslim woman, named Muskan Khan, clad in a burqa was heckled on her college grounds in Mandya by a crowd of male Hindu students wearing saffron shawls and chanting "Jai Shri Ram". She responded back shouting "Allahu Akbar", while the college staff controlled the crowd and escorted her into the building. A video of the incident went viral. The treatment of Muskan Khan was condemned by many notable figures, including by actors John Cusack, Pooja Bhatt, Fakhre Alam, and footballer Paul Pogba.
On 8 February, the Government of Karnataka announced the closure of high schools and colleges for three days, after the controversy over the wearing of hijab by Muslim students intensified. The Bangalore Police prohibited protests and agitations from 9 February until 22 February within the vicinity of any educational institution. Two Muslim men were arrested when they were found carrying lethal weapons during a protest. Three others managed to flee.
Petitions in the High Court
Several students from the Udupi PU college filed a writ petition in the Karnataka High Court on 31 January. The petition sought the wearing of hijab to be recognised as a fundamental right under Article 14 and Article 25 of the Indian constitution as it is an essential Islamic practice. The Campus Front of India said it provided them legal advice. The petition also argued that singling out the petitioner solely on the basis of wearing hijab is against "constitutional moality". The petition was argued by senior advocate Ravivarma Kumar and other lawyers.
A second petition was filed by a student from Kundapura (referred to as "Smt Rasham") around 4 February, seeking a directive to permit Muslim students to wear hijab to classes. The petitioner was represented by senior advocate Davadatt Kamat. Two students from the Bhandarkar's arts and science college in Kundapura also filed a petition, who were represented by senior advocate Yusuf Muchhala.
Hearings began on 8 February, with Justice Krishna S. Dixit presiding. After hearing the initial arguments, the judge concluded that the chief issue was whether wearing hijab is an essential religious practice, and, if it is so, why the state should interfere in the matter. The judge decided that, given its public importance, the case should be heard by a "full bench" (consisting of three judges). A full bench consisting of the Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi, Justice Dixit and Justice Khazi Jaibunnisa Mohiuddin was constituted the next day. By this stage, there were said to be five petitions representing 18 students in front of the court. Hearings resumed on 10 February.
The three-judge bench passed an interim order on 11 February. It requested the State to re-open the educational institutions and restrained students from wearing any sort of religious clothes in classrooms until the court decided the matter.
Religious rights
During the hearings on 14–15 February (Days 3 and 4), the students' lawyer, Senior Advocate Devadatt Kamat argued that the Muslim women's right to wear the hijab is protected by the Article 25(1) of the Indian Constitution, which guarantees freedom of conscience and the right to practise one's religion. He asserted that wearing the hijab is an 'essential religious practice' as per Islamic scriptures including the Quran. These rights are subject only to concerns regarding public order, morality and health. He argued that for a practice to violate public order, it must be 'abhorrent by itself' and must cause 'disturbance to society'. Wearing the hijab is neither of such and so does not violate public order. When the bench questioned whether every verse of Quran should be treated as an Essential Religious Practice, Adv. Kamat replied that this isn't the matter in front of the court and hence should not appear for consideration before the court. Senior advocate Ravivarma Kumar also claimed that, by choosing to ban the hijab, the government was selectively targeting Muslim students. This amounted to religious discrimination as per Article 15(1) of the Indian constitution. He argued that the goal of education was to promote plurality, not uniformity, and the classroom should be a reflection of the diversity in society.
The Advocate General (AG) of the state, Prabhuling Navadgi, on 21–22 February (Days 8 and 9), challenged the petitioners by stating that only 'essential religious practices' are protected by Article 25. He claimed that the petitioners failed to prove that wearing of hijab is an essential practice. Further, by claiming it to be an essential practice, they were trying to bind every Muslim woman to the dress code consisting of hijab. Citing the Supreme Court decision in the Ismail Farooqui case, the AG asserted that an essential religious practice must be obligatory. Optional practices do not fall under the ambit of essential religious practices and do not merit constitutional protection. The AG asserted that the petitioners' claim to protection under Article 19(1) of the Indian constitution (right to freedom of expression) and the claim under Article 25(1) are "mutually destructive" (contradictory). The AG and other lawyers representing the state, CDC, MLA, teachers etc, backed these assertions by stating that the right to freedom of expression is 'forum internum' and applied to inner convictions and inner thoughts, while the right to practice religion is 'forum externum' and applies to the outwardly expression/manifestation of one's faith or practice. They also stated that these rights are subject to reasonable restrictions.
Government order
Devadatt Kamat assailed the Government Order of February 2022 during the Day 3 hearing. He stated that the order relied on three former High Court judgements to argue in favour of dress codes, but none of them applied to the present case. Senior Advocate Yusuf Mucchala, appearing on behalf of a Muslim student, stated that the Government Order was "manifestly arbitrary". It violated the Article 14 of the Indian constitution as well as the principle of fairness since the Muslim students were not allowed to be heard. Barring students from wearing hijab due to objections from other students was blatantly partisan.
The Advocate General of the state defended the Government Order by stating that it did not in fact ban hijab, it was merely a "suggestion". After the resistance from the Muslim students at the Udupi PU College, its college development committee referred the issue to the states PU Department. The government formed a "high-level committee" to study the issue and issued the order, giving autonomy to college development committees to prescribe uniforms. The order itself did not prescribe uniforms and was, therefore "innocuous". It neither prescribed nor proscribed the hijab. Upon query from the Chief Justice as to why the order mentioned hijab at all, the AG responded that it was merely an "indication" to the college authorities. The CJ probed further by asking the AG whether the government would have any objections to the hijab being worn in classrooms if they are permitted by the college. The AG replied that the state would be okay with it and that it would only intervene if grievances were raised under section 131 of the Karnataka Education Act.
In his rejoinder, Devadatt Kamat alleged that the AG had given up ninety per cent of the Government Order in his arguments, thus effectively rendering the order inoperative, and that consequently, there was no need for further discussion on whether the wearing of the hijab was an essential religious practice.
College development committees
During the hearing on 16 February (Day 5), the senior advocate of the petitioners, Ravivarma Kumar, challenged the legality of the college development committees, which are said to have been empowered to decide on uniforms. He claimed that the CDCs were not recognised by either the Karnataka Education Act or the Rules issued under it. He also questioned the propriety of the CDCs being chaired by MLAs, who are subject to a political party and ideology. He contended that MLAs (legislators) could not be given executive functions.
The Advocate General of the state responded to the criticisms during the hearing on 18 February (Day 7). He said that CDC consisted of the local MLA as the President, a person appointed by them as the Vice-President, and representatives of parents and students as well as the college principal and the lecturers' representatives. He said that the CDCs were constituted under directions given by the state government per section 133(2) of the Karnataka Education Act. He also contended that MLAs could perform executive functions under the Westminster form of governance.
Udupi college and other institutions
The Advocate General of the state stated in the Day 7 hearing that the Udupi PU College had a dress code prescribed in 2013, and uniform had been the norm at the institution since its founding in 1985.
Senior Advocate S. Naganand, arguing for the PU college, asserted that the college had decided in 2004 to make uniforms compulsory. The government had left it to the colleges to decide uniforms and there was no problem with them for 20 years. Naganand claimed that the wearing of the hijab was a "cultural" practice, not a religious practice. He stressed that educational institutions had the power to impose dress codes to maintain discipline and that they were exercising "parental powers" in doing so. He said that a parent delegates their parental responsibility to the teacher or the institution when they send their child there (In loco parentis).
The advocate for the teachers of the Government PU College, R. Venkataramani, argued that the practice of wearing hijab violates 'public order' under Article 25(1), and when a religious practice violates the restrictions under Article 25(1) (public order, morality and health), checking if a practice is essential is not necessary, since the question of essentiality applies only when interpreting Article 25(2). Senior Advocate Sajan Poovayya, appearing on behalf of educational institutions, cited the Article 28 of the Indian constitution to assert that education was a secular activity and no religious instruction was to be provided in schools. Even if the wearing of the hijab was an essential religious practice, authorities must ensure that no religious symbols be allowed into schools.
Violence
Parallel to the protests, there have been several instances of violence. Allegedly, these were a result of the victims' social media posts against allowing the hijab in colleges. Dilip, a shopkeeper in Davanagere, was attacked by a mob who dragged him out of his shop where he was attacked and stabbed. A man Naveen and his mother Sarojamma were also attacked in the village of Nallur, by an angry mob of around 300 masked people bearing deadly weapons. Both were alleged by the victims families to be a result of posting an anti hijab status on Whatsapp.
On 21 February, a Bajrang Dal member who took part in the anti-hijab protests of Hindu students was found murdered in the Shivamogga district. According to the police, the incident may have been a result of his prior involvement in at least five assault cases and attempt to murder that had religious overtones. Investigations are ongoing. The Home Minister said that no connection had yet been found between the protests and the murder. A fatwa was issued against him earlier in 2015 by a Facebook group named ‘Mangalore Muslims’. Stones were pelted at his funeral procession, which injured 3 people. Some vehicles were also set on fire. 3 arrests were made out of the suspected 5 involved in the murder.
Hazra Shifa, one of the petitioners in the Karnataka High Court, alleged that her brother Saif was beaten up by a group of intoxicated people, who opposed the statements made by their father to a local news channel in support of the hijab. In her social media post, she claimed that the attackers were "Sangh Parivar goons".
Reactions
Domestic
Apoorvanand, a professor of Hindi at the University of Delhi, called the controversy a part of a larger project in which "Muslim identity markers are being declared as sectarian and undesirable in public spaces", noting that "it is telling Muslims and non-Hindus that the state will dictate their appearance and their practices".
Opposition leader and former CM of Karnataka, Siddaramaiah said, "No one has a problem if students apply ‘sindhoor,’ nor is anyone affected if students wear hijab. These are traditions that are being followed for years". "Following ancient culture and belief does not create problem to anyone. While people had been wearing hijab for a long time, people were not wearing saffron shawl. It shows the narrow mentality of people who are wearing saffron shawl just to oppose hijab."
Rahul Gandhi, the leader of the opposition Indian National Congress party, criticized the government and said "By letting students' hijab come in the way of their education, we are robbing the future of the daughters of India. Prohibiting hijab-wearing students from entering school is a violation of fundamental rights."
Aaditya Thackeray, state minister of Maharashtra, told journalists that if there was a uniform at schools, there should not be a place for any other dress other than that, saying, "Schools and colleges are the Centres of education, only education should be imparted there".
Muslim Rashtriya Manch (MRM), the Muslim wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS):
In a statement, Anil Singh, the Prant Sanchalak (Awadh) of the MRM backed the burqa-clad student who was heckled by youth shouting 'Jai Shri Ram' slogans at a Karnataka college, saying ‘purdah’ is part of Indian culture.
The MRM distanced itself from Singh's statement and said that it does not support such "fanaticism and religious frenzy" and supported the enforcement of dress code in educational institutions in Karnataka.
Vishva Hindu Parishad - Dr Surendra Jain, joint secretary of Vishwa Hindu Parishad termed the hijab row "a conspiracy to propagate jihadi terrorism" and said that Muslim students were attempting "hijab jihad" on college campuses.
Madhya Pradesh Education Minister Inder Singh Parmar (BJP) said "Hijab is not a part of uniform and, therefore, I feel it should be banned". The Madhya Pradesh government clarified that no proposal to ban the hijab was under consideration.
Education ministers in BJP ruled Himachal Pradesh and Tripura said their governments currently had no plans for a uniform dress code.
Education ministers of Maharashtra and West Bengal, both states ruled by opposition parties, accused the BJP of "politicising" the school uniform. West Bengal education minister promised his state would "never" implement a hijab ban. Maharashtra education minister maintained the Indian Constitution gave freedom of religion. Rajasthan Education Minister Bulaki Das Kalla said his state doesn't restrict the hijab and accused the BJP of "mak[ing] issues out of non-issues".
Sonam Kapoor – She shared an Instagram picture of a man in a turban and a woman in a hijab, and it questions why can a turban be a choice but a hijab can't.
Sadhvi Pragya, an MP from the BJP, said that there is "no need to wear hijab anywhere" and that only those who are "not safe in their houses need to wear Hijab". She also said that there is no need to were a hijab when in the company of the Hindu community, especially at educational institutions.
Arif Mohammad Khan, a BJP leader and governor of the state of Kerala, stated that Islam has only five essential practices of Islam, and that hijab wasn't one of them and thus Article 25 of the Indian constitution didn't apply to the hijab as the article covers only essential, intrinsic and integral practices. He also added that following the ban on triple talaq, Muslim women are "having a sense of freedom" and are "pursuing education" and "joining great career" and that the ongoing row is "not a controversy but a conspiracy" and a "sinister design" to push back Muslim women, especially young girls.
Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan condemned the hijab row in Karnataka, stating "This shows how dangerous communalism is for our country. Educational institutions should be places to nurture secularism. Instead, efforts are made to inject communal venom in young children." He tweeted a picture of schoolgirls in Kerala wearing hijabs.
Kamal Haasan stated, "What's happening in Karnataka shouldn't be allowed in Tamil Nadu."
Citizen group Bahutva Karnataka alleged that the violence related to the Hijab controversy was perpetrated by members of Hindutva organisations associated with the RSS and that these organisations coaxed, exhorted and threatened youth. They also claimed that the statewide incidents of anti-hijab protests in colleges appeared to be coordinated. They stated that they came to these conclusions after visiting the spots where religious violence had occurred.
International
The United States Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Rashad Hussain described the hijab ban was a violation of freedom of religion.
The National Assembly of Bahrain condemned the hijab ban, calling for an end to discrimination against Muslims in India.
Kuwaiti MPs joined international criticism of hijab row; demanding for Kuwait to ban BJP leaders from entering the country.
Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi accused India of denying Muslim girls their right to education.
Taliban spokesman Inamullah Samangani praised the college girls for wearing hijab and defending their religious values.
Human Rights Watch criticized the ban as a violation of the right to education without discrimination.
Malala Yousafzai tweeted that it is terrible to prevent girls wearing hijab from entering school. She said that there were still objections against women in the matter of dressing more or less and demanded that Indian leaders should stop the process of separating Muslim women from the mainstream.
Paul Pogba slammed Hindu mob for harassing Muslim girls in hijab by sharing an Instagram story.
Noam Chomsky said that Islamophobia has taken a "most lethal form" in India, turning some 250 million Indian Muslims into a "persecuted minority".
Taslima Nasrin supported the implementation of a secular dress code in schools and colleges, and added that "hijab or niqab or burqa are symbols of oppression".
Rezaul Karim, president of Islami Andolan Bangladesh, said that It is the violation of religious and civil rights.
The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation voiced 'deep concern' over the hijab ban.
Ministry of External Affairs (MEA)
Reacting to comments by some countries, including the United States, on the controversy, the MEA's spokesperson said that the matter "is under judicial examination" and that the issue will be resolved according to "constitutional framework and mechanisms" and "democratic ethos and polity". He stated that "motivated comments" on India's internal issues "are not welcome".
Reacting to the statement by the General Secretariat of the OIC, the MEA's spokesperson termed the statement "motivated and misleading" and the OIC Secretariat's mindset "communal". He also said that the "OIC continues to be hijacked by vested interests to further their nefarious propaganda against India. As a result, it has only harmed its own reputation."
See also
Controversies with School Uniforms
Backlash against Dress Codes
Notes
References
Bibliography
External links
Karnataka Education Act, 1983 at righttoeducation.in (indiacode.nic.in), dpal.kar.nic.in
Karnataka Government Order on Dress Code for Students (Translated to English), Supreme Court Observer (scobserver.in), 14 February 2022.
2022 in Islam
2022 hijab row
Clothing controversies
Controversies in India
February 2022 events in India
Hijab
2022 hijab row
Islam-related controversies in Asia
January 2022 events in India
2022 hijab row
Islamic female clothing | [
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Jill Quertier (born 1936) is an English set decorator. She won an Academy Award and was nominated for one more in the category Best Production Design for the films Shakespeare in Love and Quills.
Selected filmography
Shakespeare in Love (1998; co-won with Martin Childs)
Quills (2000; co-nominated with Martin Childs)
References
External links
1936 births
Living people
People from Bromley
English set decorators
Best Art Direction Academy Award winners
Academy Awards winners and nominees | [
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Icon of the Seas is a cruise ship under construction for Royal Caribbean International, and will be the lead ship of the. She is scheduled to enter service in 2023.
History
On 10 October 2016, Royal Caribbean and Meyer Turku announced an order to build two ships under the project name "Icon". The ships are expected to be delivered in the third quarter of 2023 and 2025. The ships will be classified by DNV GL.
Royal Caribbean applied to register a trademark for "Icon of the Seas" in 2016, which was at the time suggested as an indication of the name of the first ship.
On 14 June 2021, Royal Caribbean announced the start of construction for Icon of the Seas.
Design
Icon of the Seas will employ fuel cell technology, to be supplied by ABB Group, and be powered by liquefied natural gas, with a gross tonnage of 200,000 GT. She will contain other alternative energy features, like the use of fuel cells to produce electricity and fresh water. It will have a capacity of 5,600 berths.
References
2020s ships
Cruise ship classes
Proposed ships
Royal Caribbean International | [
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Fiorina Cecchin (3 April 1877 – 13 November 1925) – in religious Maria Carola – was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious in the Sisters of Saint Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo. Ill health prevented an initial entrance into the religious life when she was eighteen before she was accepted into the Cottolengo Sisters in Treviso; it was upon her religious profession that she worked as a cook for her colleagues before she was given permission to join the missions in Africa where she arrived in 1905. Cecchin became a popular figure in the missions due to her care and attentiveness towards the poor and the sick with whom she spent a great deal of time with. She was noted for her zealous activism and the manner in which she educated children in catechism.
The beatification process commenced in Turin in 2014 and she became titled as a Servant of God. Cecchin is scheduled to be beatified sometime in 2022 in Turin after a miracle attributed to her from 2013 received papal approval.
Life
Fiorina Cecchin was born on 3 April 1877 in Cittadella in the Padua province as the fifth of eight children born to Francesco Cecchin and Antonia Geremia. Her eldest two siblings both died as infants.
Cecchin attempted to join the Suore di Santa Dorotea in Vicenza but was rejected on the basis of her fragile health. However, her parish priest and spiritual director provided her with assistance and secured her a place in the Sisters of Saint Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo at their house in Bigolino in Treviso when she was nineteen. On 27 August 1896, Cecchin began her period as a postulant at the Little House of Divine Providence in Turin (she was the 139th postulant that year) and then commenced her novitiate period on 2 October 1897 (taking the habit on 3 October and the religious name "Maria Carola") before she made her solemn religious profession on 6 January 1899. Following her profession, she was appointed as a cook first at the boarding school that the order managed at Giaveno and then at the motherhouse in Turin, however, she longed to join the missions in Africa as it was a longstanding ambition that she held, indeed, submitting a formal request to her superiors to enter the missions on 19 March 1904.
In 1905, she received her wish when was dispatched to Kenya alongside four of her colleagues and two nuns from the Consolata Missionaries, departing on 28 January 1905 (the third expedition of nuns to the African continent) from Trieste, receiving the missionary cross before her departure from the Cardinal Archbishop of Turin Agostino Richelmy. Upon their arrival in Mombasa after a two-week journey, the sisters were asked to manage the mission stations and were told that it was important to understand how to best teach catechism and practice medicine, while availing themselves to teach reading and writing to children. Despite the series of difficulties that she would face in this period, amongst them the differences in climate, standard of living, culture and language, Cecchin and her colleagues were able to collaborate with the Consolata Missionaries and learn together alongside them. Soon enough, Cecchin was able to study the Kikuyu language and could eventually communicate far more fluently than when she first arrived. First stationed in Limuru and then at Tuthu, she was also sent to Iciagaki, Mugoiri, Wambogo, and then finally to Tigania in Meru. Each time she relocated to another place, she established a small house for those nuns that would arrive after her, and she sought to make it habitable by creating a vegetable garden and creating a small courtyard. Known for her zeal in promoting the Gospel, she worked tirelessly to teach catechism, not just to children, but to the older population. The majority of her time was spent tending to the poor and the ill. However, World War I also had repercussions that spread to Africa, with Cecchin tending to soldiers at military hospitals, and later tending to those who suffered from the Spanish flu after the war ended. Cecchin was later appointed as the regional superior and she fell seriously ill at her last community placement in Tigania, diagnosed as sanguine enterocolitis, which caused her great pain until her death. However, her trials were only further exacerbated after the fruitful collaboration with the Consolata Missionaries noticeably soured from 1923 due to differences in the style of evangelization amongst others. Following several unsuccessful attempts by the order's superiors, Pope Benedict XV decided to end the situation by formally ordering the repatriation of the Cottolengo sisters in Kenya, ensuring that the Vicar Apostolic of Kenya Filippo Perlo carry out the request and inform the sisters. Cecchin oversaw their departure, being the last of the 44 sisters (she left with just one other colleague) to leave on 25 October 1925, despite her seriously ill state.
Cecchin died on board the steamship Porto Alessandretta on 13 November 1925 in the Red Sea between Massawa and Suez. Her remains were never interred because, due to hygiene regulations at that time, her remains were wrapped in a simple white sheet and buried at sea after a hasty funeral could be organized.
Beatification
The beatification process launched on 28 February 2013 after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued the official "nihil obstat" (no objections) decree that permitted the Turin archdiocese to launch the diocesan investigation into her life and holiness once it transferred the beatification forum from the Meru diocese to the Turin archdiocese. The diocesan investigation opened on 24 April 2014 in a Mass that Archbishop Cesare Nosiglia celebrated before the same archbishop presided over the conclusion of the process just a few months later on 7 October. The C.C.S. in Rome issued a decree on 28 May 2015 that validated the process that affirmed that all evidence had been presented to them and that the Turin archdiocese had carried out the process per the regulations that the C.C.S. set.
The postulation (the officials that manage the cause) lodged the official "Positio" dossier with the C.C.S. in 2017 to be assessed hence the commencement of the "Roman Phase". Historians assessed and approved the cause on 10 October 2017 before nine theologians likewise issued their approval on 4 February 2020. The cardinal and bishop members of the C.C.S. issued their final approval on 10 November 2020. Pope Francis declared Cecchin to be Venerable on 23 November 2020 after he determined that she had led a model life of heroic virtue according to the cardinal and theological virtues. Francis later approved a 2013 miracle attributed to her intercession in a decree on 13 December 2021 that would enable for Cecchin to be beatified in Turin sometime in 2022.
The current postulator for this cause is Sr. Antonietta Bosetti S.S.G.B.C.
References
External links
Hagiography Circle
Congregation for the Causes of Saints
1877 births
1925 deaths
19th-century Italian people
19th-century Italian women
19th-century venerated Christians
20th-century Italian educators
20th-century Italian people
20th-century Italian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
20th-century Italian women
20th-century venerated Christians
Beatifications by Pope Francis
Italian beatified people
Italian educators
Italian expatriates in Kenya
Italian Roman Catholic missionaries
Italian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
People from Cittadella
Religious leaders from Padua
Roman Catholic medical missionaries
Roman Catholic missionaries in Kenya
Venerated Catholics by Pope Francis
Women nurses | [
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Javier Lliso (born 18 August 1997) is a Spanish freestyle skier.
He competed in the men's big air and slopestyle competitions at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Spanish male freestyle skiers
Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic freestyle skiers of Spain
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Bobby Banck (born May 16, 1964) is an American tennis coach and former professional player.
Banck, who grew up in Buffalo, New York, was a national 14-and-under hard court champion. Another Buffalo product Jimmy Arias was in his age group and the pair combined to win a national doubles championship.
Trained at the Nick Bollitieri academy in Florida from 1980, Banck received a scholarship to the University of Arkansas and played there for two years. In 1986 he turned professional. He appeared in the main draw of the 1987 WCT Tournament of Champions and was beaten in the second round by Slobodan Živojinović.
Banck starting his coaching career with Jimmy Arias and later coached Aaron Krickstein. On the women's tour he has coached Mary Joe Fernández, Mary Pierce and Monica Seles.
In 2006 he was inducted into the Greater Buffalo Sports Hall of Fame.
References
External links
1964 births
Living people
American male tennis players
American tennis coaches
Arkansas Razorbacks men's tennis players
Tennis people from New York (state)
Sportspeople from Buffalo, New York | [
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Jacques Helft (February 26, 1891 - January 9, 1980) was a French art and antiques dealer.
Early years
Born Sem Jacques Helft in 1891 in Paris. His father, Léon Helft, was an antique dealer whose store A la vieille Bretagne was well known. His mother was Hortense Keller.
With his father, Léon, and brother, Yvon, Helft opened a gallery with his brother in a private mansion at 4 rue de Ponthieu (Paris 8e).
Rosenberg and Helft
The art dealer Paul Rosenberg was his brother-in-law. They went into partnership to create a Rosenberg and Helft Gallery in London.
The Paris gallery was seized during the Second World War (with the complicity of the antique dealer Bonnefoy), after Jacques Helft and his family left for New York in September 1940. He escaped France along with his family thanks to the intervention of the Portuguese consul Aristides de Sousa Mendes.
From 1942 to 1948, he had his gallery on 57th Street. Later, from 1948, he moved to Argentina for several years. He returned to France in 1956 and became Honorary President of the Syndicat des Antiquaires.
He was soon led to take an interest in French silverware of the Ancien Régime, a subject that was still very little studied at the time. As little was known about the hallmarks of silverware, pieces of old French silverware were often referred to indiscriminately as objects bearing the hallmarks of the "fermiers généraux". When Jacques Helft became an expert in silverware auctions, he wrote very precise catalogs reproducing the hallmarks, a rare thing at the time. He played a major role in the organization of one of the first major exhibitions devoted to silverware, which took place in 1936 at the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris. He later wrote several books and prefaces on this theme.
Part of his collection was dispersed in 1989 and 1996 in two auctions: La collection privée d'argenterie de Jacques et Marianne Helft, Monaco, Christies, December 3, 1989, and Objets d'art et de très bel ameublement: provenant des collections de Monsieur Jacques Helft, des collections de Madame Elisabeth S. et appartenant à divers amateurs, Paris, Hôtel George V, Jacques Tajan, April 3, 1996. Some of the most prestigious objects, which he sold to great collectors such as David David-Weill, are today in the Louvre or the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris, to which these collectors gave them. He himself gave several works to national museums.
He had three sons from his marriage to Marianne Loevi in 1920, including the lawyer and modern art collector Georges or Jorge Helft, who settled in Argentina and Paris, and the expert Leon Helft, who died in the 1980s.
Bibliography
Jacques Helft, Exhibition of old French gold and silver plate (XVIth to XVIIIth century) in aid of French hospital, New York City, December 1933.
Collectif, Orfèvrerie française civile de province du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle. Mars-avril 1936. Musée des arts décoratifs. Palais du Louvre. Pavillon de Marsan., 1936 (Avant-propos de Jacques Helft)
Jacques Helft, Vive la chine! Mémoires d'un antiquaire, Éditions du Rocher, 1955 (trad. en anglais : Treasure hunt. Memoirs of an antique dealer, Faber, 1957)
Pour s’y connaitre mieux en tasses à vin, in Connaissance des arts, n°124 de juin 1962, p. 60 à 65
Claude Frégnac, Les grands orfèvres de Louis XIII à Charles X, Hachette, 1965 (préface de Jacques Helft)
Jacques Helft, Le Poinçon des provinces françaises, F. de Nobele, 1968
Jacques Helft, Nouveaux poinçons : suivis de recherches techniques et historiques sur l'orfèvrerie sous l'Ancien régime, Berger-Levrault, 1980
References
Antiques experts
French art historians
1891 births
1980 deaths | [
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This is a list of members of the 19th and current Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin, the state parliament of Berlin. The 19th Bundestag was elected in the 26 September 2021 state election, and was constituted in its first session on 4 November 2021.
The 19th Abgeordnetenhaus has 147 members, 17 seats larger than its minimum size of 130. Originally, it comprised 36 members of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), 32 members of Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE), 30 members of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), 24 members of The Left (LINKE), 13 members of the Alternative for Germany (AfD), and 12 members of the Free Democratic Party (FDP).
The President of the Abgeordnetenhaus is Dennis Buchner (SPD). The Vice Presidents are Bahar Haghanipour (GRÜNE) and Cornelia Seibeld (CDU).
Presidium
Parliamentary groups
List of current members
List of former members
References
Government of Berlin
Politics of Germany
State legislatures of Germany
Members of the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin | [
101,
2023,
2003,
1037,
2862,
1997,
2372,
1997,
1996,
3708,
1998,
2783,
11113,
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ʿAbd al-Raḥīm ibn ʿAbd al-Razzāq ibn Jaʿfar ibn Bashrūn, called al-Ṣiqillī (the Sicilian), was an Arabic poet from Mahdia who spent much of his life in Sicily. He was a court poet of King Roger II (1130–1154) and compiled an anthology of verse, Al-Mukhtār fī al-naẓm wa-l-nathr li-afāḍil ahl al-ʿaṣr (Selected Prose and Verse from the Noblest People of the Age).
The anthology of ʿImād al-Dīn al-Iṣfahānī contains a single qaṣīda from a longer poem by Ibn Bashrūn. In his standard fashion, ʿImād al-Dīn cut it short because it was a panegyric for an infidel. It refers to Roger as "king of the Caesars" or "king of imperial kings" (malik al-mulūk al-qayṣarīya). The passage selected by ʿImād al-Dīn describes a palace, gardens and a menagerie as indicators of Roger's power:
Oh, what a garden of victory,
that overflows with radiant beauty
And its castle, handsome in construction,
with its [imposing] appearance and its lofty galleries,
With its wild animals and its waters
like the finest fountains of paradise
Already its gardens have burst into bloom,
from amongst them emerge radiant robes
Notes
Bibliography
People from Mahdia
12th-century Arabic poets
12th-century Sicilian people | [
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New Kung Fu Cult Master 1 is a 2022 Hong Kong-Chinese wuxia film directed by Wong Jing and Venus Keung adapted adapted from Louis Cha's novel The Heaven Sword and Dragon Saber. The film stars Louis Koo, Donnie Yen, Raymond Lam, Janice Man, Yun Qianqian and Sabrina Qiu.
The film was theatrically released on 28 January 2022 in Singapore, while it was released on streaming platforms on 31 January 2022 in China. A direct sequel to the film, New Kung Fu Cult Master 2, was released on streaming platforms on 3 February 2022 in China.
Cast
Louis Koo as Cheung Chui-san
Donnie Yen as Cheung Sam-fung (special appearance)
Raymond Lam as Cheung Mo-kei
Chaney Lin as 15-year-old Cheung Mo-kei
Janice Man as Chiu Man
Yun Qianqian as Siu-chiu
Sabrina Qiu as Chow Chi-yeuk
Elvis Tsui as Tse Shun
Alex Fong as Yeung Chiu
Raymond Wong Ho-yin as Wai Yat-siu
Jade Leung as Abbess Mit-juet
Rebecca Zhu as Yan So-so
Lam Chi-chung as Wah Shan Elder
Zhang Xuan as Ting Man-kwan
Derek Kok as Fan Yiu
Tin Kai-man as Wah Shan Elder
Yu Kang as Hok Pat-yung
Mars as Hung Man
Wilfred Lau as Sung Ching-shu
Felix Lok as Yan Tin-ching
Parkman Wong as Sung Yuen-kiu
Asano Nagahide as Yue Lin-chau
Dominic Ho as Yan Lei-hang
Edward Chui as Cheung Chung-kai
Ken Hung as Mok Sing-kuk
Jason Wong as Yu Toi-ngam
Chang Yuci as Elder sister Seung
Lu Yan as Elder sister Luk
Ding Yusen as Luk Cheung-hak
Xing Yu as Sing Kwan
Louis Fan as Dog
Hung Yan-yan as Cat
Wiyona Yeung as Chow Chi-yeuk's mother
Production
On 21 December 2019, Wong Jing posted a teaser poster of the film on his Sina Weibo account and stating that Zhang Wuji will finally meet with Zhao Min in Dadu, hinting he will be making a follow-up to his 1993, Kung Fu Cult Master which ended in a cliffhanger. Principal photography began for the film began in January 2020 at the Hengdian World Studios. However, production was halted two weeks later due to the COVID-19 pandemic and was resumed in mid-April of the same year. On 7 May 2020, director Wong released stills of the cast in their characters on his Sina Weibo account.
On 2 January 2022, Wong announced on his Sina Weibo account that the film has been split into two parts, New Kung Fu Cult Master 1 and New Kung Fu Cult Master 2, both of which will be released during the Chinese New Year period of the year. This later led to speculations that the cast will have disagreements with the production over salary disputes, but cast member Donnie Yen later responded to the issue stating he knew it was going to be a duology from the start.
Release
New Kung Fu Cult Master 1 premiered with theatrical release in Singapore on 28 January 2022 while in China, the film was released on 31 January 2022 in China on streaming platforms with a fee of RMB¥5 to stream the film.
References
External links
Hong Kong films
Chinese films
2022 films
2022 action films
2022 martial arts films
Hong Kong action films
Hong Kong martial arts films
Chinese action films
Chinese martial arts films
Wuxia films
Tai chi films
Shaw Brothers Studio films
2020s Cantonese-language films
2020s Mandarin-language films
Films based on works by Jin Yong
Works based on The Heaven Sword and Dragon Saber
Films set in the Yuan dynasty
Films about rebels
Films directed by Wong Jing | [
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2047,
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The Mwani people (Kimwani/Kiswahili: Wamwani; Portuguese: Muane) are a Bantu ethnic group primarily inhabiting the coastline of the Cabo Delagado Province of Mozambique. The Mwani people speak the Kimwani language, also known as the Ibo language, is a Bantu language belonging to the Niger-Congo language family. They are often considered part of the Swahili cultural world as they have important connections with the East African coast (especially coastal Tanzania and Zanzibar)
Ethnonym
The ethnonym Mwani is commonly translated as "people of the coast" or "(at) the coast," referring to the coastal environment the Mwani live in. This ethnonym appears to be a loan translation of the term Swahili, which has a similar meaning. In Kiswahili, Mwani means seaweed.
The ethnonym Mwani can also be written as Muane or Mwane.
Demography & Distribution
In modern times, the Mwani number around 120,000-200,000 people and live mainly in Cabo Delagado Province. They make up 5.2%-8.6% of Cabo Delagado's total population of 2.3 million. In Cabo Delagado, the Mwani mainly live in the coastal districts (Mocímboa da Praia District, Quirimbas Islands, Vamizi Island, Ibo District, Pemba District, etc.). In Cabo Delagado's Mocímboa da Praia town, around 70% of the 40,000 inhabitants is Mwani. Ibo Island is considered by the Mwani to be an important cultural center, however the Mwani do not form a majority of the population there. Instead, the population is diverse and includes ethnic groups like the Makwe, Portuguese, Indian, Makua, Omani, and Mwani. The Mwani form a significant minority of the population of Pemba, which is majority Makonde. Palma, a Mozambican beach town, has a majority Mwani population. A small number of Mwani also live in Tanzania.
Some coastal Mwani villages claim to be of Shirazi lineage. However, it is difficult to ascertain these claims due to intermarriage with other predominantly Muslim groups. Hence, it is possible that these Mwani villages are of Shirazi descent, but they could also have Comorian origins.
References
Demographics of Mozambique
Bantu peoples | [
101,
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12464,
7088,
2111,
1006,
5035,
29092,
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The 2022 season of the astronomy TV show Star Gazers starring Trace Dominguez started on January 3, 2022. Episodes of the television series are released on the show's website at the start of the month, up to a month prior to any episode's broadcast date.
The Star Gazers website lists both Trace Dominguez and Ata Sarajedini as hosts. However, Trace Dominguez is the only one of the two who has actually appeared on screen in the Star Gazers episodes.
2021 season
References
External links
Star Gazer official website
Lists of Jack Horkheimer: Star Gazer episodes
2022 American television seasons | [
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1996,
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Kardea Brown is an American chef and caterer known for being the host of the television show Delicious Miss Brown on the Food Network. The show has reached 3.5 million viewers since its 2019 premiere, averaging over 1 million viewers per episode, and began its sixth season in 2022.
Brown was born in Charleston, South Carolina and is of Gullah descent; her grandmother is from Wadmalaw Island. She is a contemporary Southern cook. She had been working in social services and auditioned for a pilot on the Food Network but was told to work on her cooking skills. She started the New Gullah Supper Club in 2015, a pop-up traveling supper club featuring traditional Gullah dishes "with a contemporary twist" at events often featuring Gullah singers or storytellers. She was invited by Food network to be on Beat Bobby Flay and to host Cupcake Championship before being offered her own show. Brown signed an exclusive contract with Food Network in 2021 which included her being the host of The Great Soul Food Cook-Off.
Delicious Miss Brown is set at a home on Edisto Island and focuses on "fresh, seasonal, and very seafood heavy" cooking. Brown's great-great-great grandmother was the last person to own Hutchinson House on Edisto Island; Brown hosted an episode with a fish-fry fundraiser to raise money for the house's restoration in 2021. During that show she discussed the history of slavery and the formerly enslaved people who built Hutchinson House, despite the network's past concerns about discussing similar topics on the network, according to food historian Dan Kohler.
References
External links
Official website
Living people
Gullah
American chefs
21st-century African-American women | [
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