text
stringlengths 1
461k
|
---|
Mithya is an Indian Hindi-language, psychological thriller drama web series streaming on OTT platform ZEE5. It is directed by Rohan Sippy and produced by Applause Entertainment and Rose Audio Visual Production. This six-episode web series was released on 18 February 2022. It stars with Huma Qureshi, Avantika Dassani, Parambrata Chatterjee, Rajit Kapur and Samir Soni in pivotal roles. The series is adapted from the British television show Cheat!. Avantika Dassani made her acting debut with this series.
Plot Summary
Set against the picturesque backdrop of Darjeeling, is a dark and twisted tale of truth and deception laced with numerous secrets and lies. It all starts when Juhi Adhikar(Huma Qureshi), a righteous Hindi Literature professor, accuses her student, Rhea Rajguru(Avantika Dassani) of plagiarism in her Literature essay.
Rhea, who is the daughter of one of the top college benefactors doesn’t take this well and sets out on a journey of vengeance and violence, destroying everything in her path. What happens when an obsessed and impulsive Rhea turns Juhi’s world upside down is what follows the rest of the story.
Cast
Huma Qureshi as Juhi Adhikari; Hindi professor
Avantika Dassani as Rhea Rajguru; student
Parambrata Chatterjee as Neil Adhikari; Juhi's husband
Rajit Kapur as Anand Tyagi; father of Juhi
Avantika Akerkar as Sudha; mother of Juhi
Samir Soni as Rajguru, father of Rhea
Indraneil Sengupta as Vishal
Naina Sareen as Sharmistha
Episodes list
Release
ZEE5 announced the launch of a trailer on 8 February 2021 and the series was released on 18 February 2022.
Reception
Critical reviews
Archika Khurana of The Times of India has given 3/5 stars stating that Huma Qureshi and Avantika Dassani's intense performances make this psychodrama an addictive thriller. All the actors made justice with their characters in terms of performance. The Darjeeling's picturesque grandeur, with overcast rains, weather, and the greenery of the Himalayan foothills, added beauty to the screenplay. The background score is effective.
Devarsi Ghosh of Hindustan Times stated that the web series should have been a tight little naughty 90-minute murder mystery. Instead of a stretched 180-minute which is the nearly same length as the British series Cheat. Series direction was in a state of nervous excitement, and anything with emotional gravity will drag Sippy down. It is watchable because of the actors' performances.
Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express stated that Huma Qureshi and Avantika Dassani thriller locks in long-term guilt, and a burning desire for revenge makes it great companions for a story like this one. The tale of fatal attractions leaves us poised on an uneasy cliff-hanger and interested for another season.
References
External Links
Mithya at ZEE5 |
Khasry (Urdu:) also spell as Khasra is a small village in Wazirabad Tehsil, Gujranwala District, Punjab, Pakistan.
Demography
Khasry has a population of over 400 and is located about 5 kilometres northwest of Wazirabad city. The population is over 100% Muslim. Most people in the Village speak Punjabi, though almost all of them can also speak the national language of Pakistan, Urdu. English is spoken by the educated elite.
Education
The Government Girls Primary School (GGPS) Khasry was established in 1991.
Communication
The only way to get to Khasry is by road. Besides driving your own car (which takes about 10 minutes from Wazirabad), one can also catch a bus or van from Gujranwala or Wazirabad to get there. Khasry is connected with Wazirabad via Wazirabad-Rasul Nagar Highway (Rd/E-3).
Wazirabad-Faisalabad rail link is the only nearby railway line.
See also
Gujranwala
Wazirabad
References
Cities and towns in Gujranwala District
Populated places in Wazirabad Tehsil |
Breeana "Bree" Walker (born 28 August 1992) is an Australian bobsledder. She started out as a hurdler and switched to bobsledding in 2016. In 2018–19 she made her debut in the Bobsleigh World Cup. She won several monobob competitions.
Career
Beginnings in athletics and switch to bobsleigh (until 2018)
Walker comes from the Melbourne suburb of Mount Evelyn. She began her sporting career as an athlete. She specialized in the running disciplines and in particular the 400-meter hurdles. After graduating high school, she trained at Doncaster Athletic Club and became Victoria's champion in the 400m hurdles in 2013. Her personal best was 1:00.7 minutes. In the mid-2010s, Walker received an athletics scholarship to the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, where she did not match the times she ran in Australia; the focus in US training was on building muscle mass, and the weight gain threw Walker into her benefits back. Upon her return to Australia, she was coached by Peter Fortune, Cathy Freeman's longtime coach.
In 2016, Walker decided to switch to bobsledding because she had set herself the goal of participating in the Olympics and had doubts about qualifying as a track and field athlete. As role models, she named two Australian hurdlers Jana Pittman and Kim Brennan, who had also changed sports; Pittman represented Australia as a bobsleigh pilot at the 2014 Winter Olympics, Brennan was the 2016 Olympic champion in rowing. Sliding Sports Australia (SSA) took Walker to the national team after attending a talent camp. In October 2016, she completed a self-financed training course to become a bobsleigh pilot at the Whistler Sliding Center in Canada.
In the 2017–18 season, Walker competed with brakewomen Mikayla Dunn and Ashleigh Werner in the 2nd division series of the North American and European Cups in order to meet the criteria for an Olympic nomination, finishing five events on three different tracks. The SSA did not nominate Walker and her team for the Australian squad for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang despite the sporting qualification. SSA director Ted Polglaze explained the non-consideration among other things with the concern for the safety of the inexperienced athletes. Although the Australian Olympic Committee supported the women riders, the Australian women's entry in the Olympic bobsleigh competitions remained vacant, which Walker found discouraging and a sign of a lack of confidence.
Successes in monobob and debut in the World Cup (since 2018)
In the summer of 2018, the International Olympic Committee decided to include monobob in the Olympic program from 2022 as the second discipline in women's bobsleigh. Walker later described the appearance of the monobob as a "great opportunity", the use of uniform material also gave smaller nations the opportunity to compete at the front. She won the first non-racing women's monobob race in Lillehammer on 4 and 5 November 2018, defeating Margot Boch and Karlien Sleper. Two months later, she scored two third-place finishes with Jamie Scroop as a two-woman bobsleigh brake in the European Cup. The duo made their World Cup debut in mid-January 2019 and finished 13th on the track in Igls. In the winter of 2019–20, Walker won three more monobob events on the Königssee and La Plagne tracks. She also competed in other World Cup competitions with her new teammates Sarah Blizzard and Stefanie Preiksa; with Preiksa, she finished 14th out of 16 in the two-woman event at the World Championships in Altenberg.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Australia's strict quarantine regulations, Walker stayed in Germany after the 2020 World Cup. She moved to Frankfurt with her partner, German bobsledder Christian Hammers. She trained at the Landesstützpunkt Wiesbaden, where she had worked regularly with Tim Restle since the summer of 2018 during her stays in Europe. On 12 December 2020, she won the second race of the women's Monobob World Series 2020–21 ahead of Laura Nolte in Innsbruck-Igls. The competition was the first monobob race to take place at the same location as the World Cup event in two-woman bobsleigh, in which the Walker/Blizzard duo finished eighth and thus achieved a top ten result for the first time. At the end of January 2021, Walker won a second monobob race in Igls. In the overall standings, she finished second behind American Nicole Vogt at the end of the season. After more top ten results, she placed eighth in the two-woman bobsleigh World Cup rankings.
At the Beijing Olympic Winter Games 2022 she placed 5th in the Women's Monobob Event on February 14th. She and Kiara Reddingius were placed 16th in the two person bobsleigh.
References
External links
1992 births
Living people
Australian female bobsledders
Olympic bobsledders of Australia
Bobsledders at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Sportspeople from Melbourne |
Mike Harrington is an American former professional tennis player.
Harrington is the second eldest of four children born to stage and television actor Pat Harrington Jr., who played Dwayne Schneider on the sitcom One Day at a Time.
A member of the U.S. Junior Davis Cup team, Harrington's best period on the circuit came over the course of a fortnight in 1979 when he scored upset wins over world number 25 Brian Teacher at the Louisville Open and Australian Davis Cup player Colin Dibley at the South Orange Open.
At collegiate level he played for the UCLA Bruins and was team captain for two years, as well as an All-American in 1979.
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
American male tennis players
UCLA Bruins men's tennis players |
Keely Cashman (born April 4, 1999) is an American World Cup alpine ski racer. She represented the United States at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Career
Cashman made her World Cup debut in January 2017. She competed at the 2020 World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships where she won a bronze medal in the combined discipline.
Cashman qualified for the 2021 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships, however, she missed the competition due to injury. During training for the 2020–21 season, she crashed and was unconscious and suffered brain damage. She was hospitalized for eight days following her crash, as she sustained a minor MCL strain, hematoma in both hips, and a temporary loss of feeling in her foot from bruising. As a result, this ended her season early.
2022 Beijing Winter Olympics
Cashman represented the United States at the 2022 Winter Olympics, where she finished 27th in the super-G and 17th in the downhill, the top American finisher.
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
American female alpine skiers
People from Sonora, California
Alpine skiers at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics
Alpine skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic alpine skiers of the United States
Sportspeople from California |
BODR (an abbreviation for Bacc On Death Row) is the nineteenth studio album by American rapper Snoop Dogg. It was released on February 11, 2022, through Death Row Records, making it his third studio album released on the label following a 26-year lapse. The album was distributed by Create Music Group. It features guest appearances by Nas, T.I., Sleepy Brown, Nate Dogg, The Game, DaBaby, Uncle Murda, Wiz Khalifa and Lil Duval and production by Battlecat, Bing!, DJ Green Lantern and Hit-Boy, among others.
Background
On August 23, 2019, American toy company Hasbro announced a $4 billion purchase of eOne, making them the owners of Death Row Records. In April 2021, Hasbro and Entertainment One announced it would sell-off eOne Music to The Blackstone Group. The acquisition was completed in June 2021.
On February 9, 2022, ahead of the release of BODR, Snoop Dogg announced that he would acquire the rights to the Death Row Records trademark from MNRK Music Group (the renamed eOne Music). The sale did not immediately include rights to the label's catalog, but it was reported that he was nearing a deal with MNRK to acquire the catalogs, which includes previous work from himself and other artists such as Dr. Dre, Tha Dogg Pound and 2Pac.
Promotion
Two days after the album release, Snoop performed during the Super Bowl LVI halftime show alongside Dr. Dre, Mary J. Blige, Eminem and Kendrick Lamar.
Commercial performance
BODR debuted at number 104 on the US Billboard 200, becoming his 27th entry on the Billboard 200.
Track listing
Charts
References
2022 albums
Snoop Dogg albums
Death Row Records albums
Albums produced by Soopafly
Albums produced by DJ Green Lantern
Gangsta rap albums by American artists
G-funk albums |
"Bussin" is a song by Trinidadian-born rapper Nicki Minaj and American rapper Lil Baby. It is their second collaboration, being released on February 11, 2022, one week after "Do We Have a Problem?"
Background
On February 4, 2022, Minaj and Lil Baby released their first collaboration titled "Do We Have a Problem?". The music video of the song ends with a preview of "Bussin", which garnered positive reactions from fans. Minaj announced the song on her Twitter, saying "Next week we pushin B for Bussin btch WTF IS GOOD". The artwork was then revealed on February 7. The song is intended to appear on Minaj's upcoming album. The song is also part of a weekly surprise treat for the fans, referred to by Minaj as "Pink Friday".
Composition
The song sees Minaj and Baby trading verses over a "staccato, foreboding production", with the former "laying down a quick rap flow".
Commercial performance
In the United States, "Bussin" debuted at number 20 on the Billboard Hot 100 for the week ending February 26, 2022. It additionally charted on the Digital Song Sales chart at number five.
Charts
Release history
References
2022 singles
2022 songs
Lil Baby songs
Nicki Minaj songs
Republic Records singles
Songs written by Lil Baby
Songs written by Nicki Minaj |
Omega II or Omega 2 (), is a residential locality in south-western Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India, primarily known for serving the NRI City. Bordered by Omega I to the south, PSI-I to the west and Knowledge Park I to the north, it is also shares close proximity with the Yamuna Expressway. It is named after the Greek letter Omega.
References
Geography of Uttar Pradesh |
The Bruneian nationality law governs the issues of citizenship and nationality of Brunei. The law regulates the nationality and citizenship status of all people who live in Brunei as well as all people who are of Bruneian descent. It allows the children of expatriates, foreigners as well as residents in Brunei to examine their citizenship status and if necessary, apply for and obtain citizenship of Brunei.
The primary law relating to Bruneian citizenship is the Nationality Act, 1962 drafted while Brunei was a British protectorate. The act was later amended in 1984 and 2002.
Citizenship
Nationality law of 1962
Brunei while still under a British protectorate, granted citizenship to a subject of the Sultan of Brunei the status of a national of Brunei, only if they were a member of an indigenous group of the Malay race, namely Belait, Bisayah, Brunei, Dayak, Dusun, Layan, Kelabit, Kedayan, Kenyah, Murut or Tutong. The law excluded ethnic Chinese in Brunei whom the majority of, as of 2008, do not hold Bruneian citizenship.
Jus sanguinis
According to the amended nationality law of 1984, one method of acquiring Bruneian nationality is via jus sanguinis (Citizenship by right of blood). This means one may acquire citizenship regardless of whether they were born on Bruneian sovereign territory or not, under certain conditions. Citizenship is automatically conferred if the minor is a member of the aforementioned indigenous groups or, born overseas to a Bruneian father who registers the minors birth within 6 months at a Bruneian diplomatic mission. The father has to be in the service of the government of Brunei or employed by any company registered in Brunei to be eligible.
Naturalization
A valid resident who has resided in Brunei for 25 years can apply for naturalization, provided they are:
Of good character.
Not likely to become a charge on the state.
Proficient in the Malay language.
Intending to settle permanently in Brunei.
Registration
A resident born on Bruneian sovereign territory who is not a member of the aforementioned Malay groups, can apply for citizenship by registration, provided they are:
Over the age of 18.
Resided in Brunei for 15 years immediately preceding the date of their application.
Proficient in the Malay language.
Of good character.
Dual Citizenship
Brunei does not recognize dual citizenship and any citizen who obtains foreign citizenship loses their Bruneian citizenship.
References
Bruneian law
Nationality law |
Colonel Theodore Bruback (March 7, 1851 – February 18, 1904) was a wealthy and well-known figure in Utah's mining and railroad industries.
Life
Theodore Bruback was born in Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, on March 7, 1851, and spent his early life in Pennsylvania. His family were originally natives of Alsace–Lorraine. His father, David, came to American as a young man, from Bruback, a small town in his native province, named after the family. He engaged in the iron business in Pittsburgh and amassed considerable wealth. Theodore Bruback's mother, Anna Kunigunda Dietrich, was also of German descent, her parents being among the first settlers of Pennsylvania. Theodore Bruback was educated in the common schools and high schools of Allegheny County and later attended the Iron City College, graduating in 1866.
Upon the completion of his education, Bruback assisted in developing the oil fields of Pennsylvania in the vicinity of Pittsburgh. He was a member of the firm of Reed & Co., and engaged in the oil business in Pennsylvania until 1877. During his business career in Pennsylvania he acquired interests in many enterprises. In some of these he was interested as a capitalist and in some as their organizer and promoter.
Bruback traveled west in 1877 and engaged in the mining and stock business in Wyoming Territory, where he was one of the pioneers for eight years, interested in all the industries of the state. While there he located and developed the "Sun Rise" and "Blue Jay" mines, which he successfully operated for a number of years. He settled at Salt Lake City in 1886, becoming interested in the mining possibilities of Utah, and in addition to his mining properties secured large holdings in railroads. During that year he was married in Westfield, New York, to Jessie White McLane, daughter of Colonel John W. McClane, who died in the American Civil War, and after whom the Grand Army of the Republic Post at Erie, Pennsylvania, was named. Bruback had two children, Theodore McClane and Jessie Elizabeth. His family was prominent in the social circles of Salt Lake City.
From the time of Bruback's arrival in Utah he was one of the state's busiest men, probably engaged in promoting as many diversified interests as any other resident of Utah. He developed not only gold and silver mines, but coal mines, stone quarries and water companies, as well as building railroads.
The Sanpete Valley Railway was constructed in 1882. Bruback became its president and general manager in 1887, when it was a poorly constructed, badly equipped, narrow-gauge "streak of rust," which had been unprofitable from its construction until that time. Bruback took over this property (only in length), broadened the gauge, reconstructed it entirely and extended it, until by 1904 it had become a standard-gauge, well constructed and finely equipped railway, some in length, doing a profitable business, with prospects of future growth. The Sanpete Valley Railway was among the first companies to undertake the development of southern Utah, and Bruback's administration of the company's affairs and development of the territory tributary to its route made him one of the most successful businessmen in the state.
Bruback developed a coal mine at Morrison, the terminus of the Sanpete Valley Railway, after almost insurmountable difficulties, and made a profitable enterprise out of it. He developed the Nebo Brown Stone Quarry, of which he was the chief owner, building a branch of the Sanpete Valley Railway to the quarry, and placed upon the market the finest brown stone found west of the Rocky Mountains; a fact attested by what he termed his monument—the Deseret News building, in its time considered one of the finest buildings west of the Mississippi River.
Bruback also created the Gold Belt Water Company, which supplied the mines, mills and town of Mercur, Utah (now a ghost town), with water, making it possible to live there and operate mines in an economical manner. The great difficulty that confronted the mines and mills of Mercur was the want of water, and although it was necessary to raise it over an altitude of , through miles of pipe, in order to get it into Mercur, and notwithstanding the difficulty was pronounced insurmountable by engineers and mining men, Bruback accomplished the task. The Gold Belt Water Company enabled Mercur to produce millions of gold annually. In addition to this, Bruback developed and was chief owner of many mines in Utah and Idaho. He had large real estate interests in Salt Lake City and other parts of the state.
In politics Bruback believed in the principles of the Republican Party. He was appointed aide-de-camp on the staff of Governor Heber Manning Wells, with the rank of lieutenant colonel, by which appointment he received his title. He was a member of the Masonic fraternity. On December 29, 1889, he was elected to Salt Lake City's Alta Club. At the beginning of 1904 he was 52 years old, in excellent health, and seemed certain to be engaged for many years to come in furthering the establishment of large enterprises in Utah. But it was not to be. On February 18, 1904, while inspecting the Daly-West mine in Park City, Utah, Bruback lost his grip while climbing a ladder and fell , breaking his neck.
References
External links
Attribution
This article incorporates text from publications now in the public domain:
1851 births
1904 deaths
Accidental deaths from falls
Accidental deaths in Utah
American Freemasons
American people of German descent
Businesspeople from Pittsburgh
Businesspeople from Salt Lake City
Utah Republicans |
The 2022 BYU Cougars softball team represents Brigham Young University in the 2022 NCAA Division I softball season. Gordon Eakin enters the year as head coach of the Cougars for a 20th consecutive season. 2022 is the ninth season for the Cougars as members of the WCC in softball. The Cougars enter 2022 having won their last 12 conference championships and having been picked as the favorites to win the 2022 WCC title.
2022 Roster
Schedule
|-
! style=""| UNLV Rebel Classic
|-
|- align="center" bgcolor="ffbbb"
| February 10 || at UNLV || – || Eller Media Stadium || YouTube || 3–5 || Jenny Bressler (1–0) || Autumn Moffat-Korth (0–1) || Jasmine Martin (1) || N/A || 0–1 || –
|- bgcolor="#ccffcc"
| February 11 || vs. Cal State Bakersfield || – || Eller Media Stadium || YouTube || 13–4(5) || Carley Brown (1–0) || Kirsten Martinez (0–1) || None || N/A || 1–1 || –
|- align="center" bgcolor="ccffcc"
| February 11 || vs. Hawai'i || – || Eller Media Stadium || YouTube || 2–1 || Chloe Temples (1–0) || Chloe Borges (0–1) || None || N/A || 2–1 || –
|- bgcolor="#ccffcc"
| February 12 || vs. Cal State Bakersfield || – || Eller Media Stadium || YouTube || 11–2(5) || Carley Brown (2–0) || Kaycie Kennedy (0–1) || None || 112 || 3–1 || –
|- align="center" bgcolor="ccffcc"
| February 12 || vs. Hawai'i || – || Eller Media Stadium || YouTube || 4–1 || Autumn Moffat-Korth (1–1) || Brianna Lopez (1–2) || None|| 251 || 4–1 || –
|-
! style=""| Stanford Classic
|-
|- align="center" bgcolor="ccffccc"
| February 17 || at Stanford || – || Boyd & Jill Smith Family Stadium || P12+ STAN || 4–3 || Autumn Moffat-Korth (2–1) || Alana Vawter (2–2) || None || 311 || 5–1 || –
|- align="center" bgcolor="ccffcc"
| February 17 || vs. San Jose State || – || Boyd & Jill Smith Family Stadium || P12+ STAN || 8–5 || Carley Brown (3–0) || Lacie Ham (1–2) || Autumn Moffat-Korth (1) || 152 || 6–1 || –
|- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
| February 18 || vs. UIC || – || Boyd & Jill Smith Family Stadium || P12+ STAN || 6–1 || Autumn Moffat-Korth (3–1) || Carlee Jo-Clark (1–2) || None || 150 || 7–1 || –
|- align="center" bgcolor="ccffccc"
| February 19 || vs. Seattle U || – || Boyd & Jill Smith Family Stadium || P12+ STAN || 5–2 || Autumn Moffat-Korth (4–1) || Carley Nance (0–1) || None || 110 || 8–1 || –
|-
|-
! style=""| Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic
|-
|- align="center" bgcolor="ccffccc"
| February 24 || vs. Bethune-Cookman || – || Big League Dreams Complex || FloSoftball || 7–0 || Chloe Temples (2–0) || Halyne Gonzales (2–1) || None || N/A || 9–1 || –
|- align="center" bgcolor="ffbbb"
| February 24 || vs. #17 Tennessee || – || Big League Dreams Complex || FloSoftball || 3–10 || Ashley Rogers (3–0) || Autumn Moffat-Korth (4–2) || None || N/A || 9–2 || –
|- align="center" bgcolor="ffbbb"
| February 25 || vs. California Baptist || – || Big League Dreams Complex || FloSoftball || 3–6 || Alyssa Argomaniz (3–2) || Autumn Moffat-Korth (4–3) || Jordan Schuring (1) || N/A || 9–3 || –
|- align="center"
| February 26 || vs. Long Beach State || – || Big League Dreams Complex || FloSoftball || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|-
|-
! style=""| San Diego Classic
|-
|- align="center"
| March 3 || at San Diego State || – || SDSU Softball Stadium || MW Net || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 4 || vs. Yale || – || Triton Stadium || || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 4 || at UC San Diego || – || Triton Stadium || ESPN+ || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 5 || vs. Cal || – || USD Softball Complex || || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|-
|-
! style=""| Arizona State/Grand Canyon Invitational
|-
|- align="center"
| March 10 || at Arizona State || – || Alberta B. Farrington Softball Stadium || P12+ AZ || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 11 || vs. Rutgers || – || GCU Softball Stadium || || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 11 || at Grand Canyon || – || GCU Softball Stadium || ESPN+ || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 12 || vs. Ball State || – || GCU Softball Stadium || || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 12 || vs. Kansas City || – || GCU Softball Stadium || || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|-
|-
! style=""| Regular Season
|-
|- align="center"
| March 15 || Maine || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 17 || Idaho State || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 19 || Southern Utah || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 19 || Southern Utah || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 21 || Oregon || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 25 || Iowa State || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 25 ||Iowa State || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 26 || Iowa State || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 31 || New Mexico || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| March 31 || New Mexico || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|-
|- align="center"
| April 1 || New Mexico || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 5 || at Utah || – || Dumke Family Softball Field || P12 || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 8 || Loyola Marymount* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 8 || Loyola Marymount* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 9 || Loyola Marymount* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 12 || Dixie State || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 14 || at Idaho State || – || Miller Ranch Stadium || ESPN+ || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 20 || Utah Valley || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 22 || at San Diego* || – || USD Softball Complex || WCC Net || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 23 || at San Diego* || – || USD Softball Complex || WCC Net || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 23 || at San Diego* || – || USD Softball Complex || WCC Net || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 26 || at Dixie State || – || Karl Brooks Field || WAC DN || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 27 || at Southern Utah || – || Kathryn Berg Field || WAC DN || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 29 || Santa Clara* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 29 || Santa Clara* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| April 30 || Santa Clara* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|-
|- align="center"
| May 4 || at Utah Valley || – || Wolverine Field || ESPN+ || 4–3 || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| May 6 || at Pacific* || – || Bill Simoni Field || WCC Net || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| May 6 || at Pacific* || – || Bill Simoni Field || WCC Net || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| May 7 || at Pacific* || – || Bill Simoni Field || WCC Net || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| May 10 || Utah State || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| May 13 || Saint Mary's* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
| May 13 || Saint Mary's* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|- align="center"
|May 14 || Saint Mary's* || – || Gail Miller Field || BYUtv || – || – || – || – || – || – || –
|-
| style="font-size:88%" | Rankings from NFCA. Parenthesis indicate tournament seedings.*West Coast Conference games
TV and Streaming Broadcast Information
UNLV: Wyatt Tomcheck
Cal State Bakersfield: No commentary
Hawai'i: No commentary
Cal State Bakersfield: No commentary
Hawai'i: No commentary
Stanford: Joaquin Wallace & Jenna Becerra
San Jose State: Jenna Becerra
UC Irvine: Joaquin Wallace
Seattle U: Joaquin Wallace & Jenna Becerra
Bethune-Cookman: Gavin Schall
Tennessee: Gavin Schall
California Baptist:
Long Beach State:
San Diego State:
Arizona State:
Grand Canyon:
Maine:
Idaho State:
Southern Utah DH:
Oregon:
Iowa State DH:
Iowa State:
New Mexico DH:
New Mexico:
Utah:
Loyola Marymount DH:
Loyola Marymount:
Dixie State:
Idaho State:
Utah Valley:
San Diego:
San Diego DH:
Dixie State:
Southern Utah:
Santa Clara DH:
Santa Clara:
Utah Valley:
Pacific DH:
Pacific:
Utah State:
Saint Mary's DH:
Saint Mary's:
See also
2021 BYU Cougars football team
2021–22 BYU Cougars men's basketball team
2021–22 BYU Cougars women's basketball team
2021 BYU Cougars women's soccer team
2021 BYU Cougars women's volleyball team
2022 BYU Cougars men's volleyball team
2022 BYU Cougars baseball team
External links
BYU Softball at byucougars.com
References
2022 team
2022 in sports in Utah |
DXIM (93.5 FM) Hope Radio is a radio station owned and operated by Adventist Media. The station's studio and transmitter are located at KM 3, Ba-an Hi-way, Butuan. It was formerly broadcast on 1323 kHz AM from 2012 until 2016, when it moved to the FM band.
References
Radio stations in Butuan
Radio stations established in 2012 |
Federal Government Girls' College Onitsha is a Federal Government owned secondary school, run by the Federal Ministry of Education. It is an all girls' secondary school situated in Onitsha, Anambra State, Nigeria.
History
Federal Government Girls' College Onitsha was founded in 1977.
References
Secondary schools in Nigeria
Government schools in Nigeria |
Federal Science And Technical College, Uromi is a Federal Government owned secondary school, run by the Federal Ministry of Education. It is a mixed secondary school situated in Uromi, Edo State, Nigeria.
History
Federal Science And Technical College, Uromi was founded in 1999.
References
Secondary schools in Nigeria
Government schools in Nigeria |
The Goethe-Institut Award is a biennial literary prize presented by the Society of Authors and the Goethe Institut, London, for the best translation of a text from German to English. Past winners include Kay McBurney, Katy Derbyshire, and Imogen Taylor.
About
The Goethe-Institut Award was established by the Society of Authors in partnership with the Geothe Institut's London branch. The Society of Authors is a British trade union of writers, illustrators, and translators, which, among other activities, awards a number of literary prizes for writing and translation, including the Betty Trask Prize, TA First Translation Prize, Banipal Prize, and others. The Goethe Institut is a non-profit German cultural association, aimed at promoting the German language outside Germany.
The Goethe-Institut Award was established in 2010, and replaced the German Embassy Award for Translators, which was presented by the German Embassy in London. It is presented to British translators, and is awarded for translations from German to English. The prize consists a cash award of €1,000, and includes attendance at the Leipzig Book Fair and the International Translators' Colloquium in Berlin. It is awarded once every two years. It is focused on early-career translators, and has been described as a "top award for new translators" by the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, University of Oxford.
Recipients
References
Society of Authors awards
Translation awards
Awards established in 2010
German literary awards
English literary awards |
Federal Government Girls College, Yola is a Federal Government owned secondary school, run by the Federal Ministry of Education. It is an all girls' secondary school situated in Yola, Adamawa State, Nigeria.
History
Federal Science And Technical College, Uromi was founded in 1979.
References
Secondary schools in Nigeria
Government schools in Nigeria |
Miles Stephen Walker (born 1961) is an American former professional tennis player.
Walker played varsity tennis for Chapman College and won the 1988 NCAA Division II singles title. He had returned to Chapman after leaving tennis in 1980 and playing little competitive tennis for the next six years.
On the professional tour he featured mostly in satellite events, with his biggest tournament appearance the 1989 Canadian Open, where he was a main draw qualifier. He was beaten in the first round by Grant Connell.
References
External links
1961 births
Living people
American male tennis players
Tennis players from San Francisco
College men's tennis players in the United States
Chapman University alumni |
Federal Government College, Ohafia is a Federal Government owned secondary school, run by the Federal Ministry of Education. It is a mixed' secondary school situated in Ohafia, Abia State, Nigeria.
History
Federal Science And Technical College, Ohafia was founded in 1999.
References
Secondary schools in Nigeria
Government schools in Nigeria |
Federal Government Girls College, Zaria is a Federal Government owned secondary school, run by the Federal Ministry of Education. It is an all girls' secondary school situated in Zaria, Kaduna State, Nigeria.
References
Secondary schools in Nigeria
Government schools in Nigeria |
Rodrigo Agustin Saravia Salvia (born 17 August 2000) is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Peñarol.
Career
Saravia is a youth academy graduate of Peñarol. In August 2021, he joined Racing Montevideo on loan until the end of the season. He made his professional debut on 16 September 2021 in a 2–1 league win against Uruguay Montevideo.
Career statistics
Honours
Peñarol
Supercopa Uruguaya: 2022
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Footballers from Montevideo
Association football midfielders
Uruguayan footballers
Uruguayan Primera División players
Uruguayan Segunda División players
Peñarol players
Racing Club de Montevideo players |
Federal Government College, Ugwolawo is a Federal Government owned secondary school, run by the Federal Ministry of Education. It is a mixed secondary school situated in Ugwolawo, Kogi State, Nigeria.
References
Secondary schools in Nigeria
Government schools in Nigeria |
General Tan Sri Ackbal bin Abdul Samad is a Malaysian General who served as Chief of Royal Malaysian Air Force.
Honours
Member of the Order of the Defender of the Realm (A.M.N.) (1997)
Companion of the Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia (J.S.M.) (2009)
Commander of the Order of Meritorious Service (P.J.N.) - Datuk (2013)
Commander of the Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia (P.S.M.) - Tan Sri (2020)
Malaysian Armed Forces
Officer of The Most Gallant Order of Military Service (K.A.T.)
Warrior of The Most Gallant Order of Military Service (P.A.T.)
Loyal Commander of The Most Gallant Order of Military Service (P.S.A.T.)
Knight Companion of the Order of the Crown of Pahang (D.I.M.P.) - Dato' (2006)
Knight Companion of the Order of Sultan Ahmad Shah of Pahang (D.S.A.P.) - Dato' (2009)
Grand Knight of the Order of the Crown of Pahang (S.I.M.P.) - Dato' Indera (2010)
Grand Knight of the Order of Sultan Ahmad Shah of Pahang (S.S.A.P.) - Dato' Sri (2011)
Knight Commander of the Order of the Defender of State (D.P.P.N.) - Dato' Seri (2020)
References
Members of the Order of the Defender of the Realm
Companions of the Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia
Commanders of the Order of Meritorious Service
Commanders of the Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia
People from Johor
Royal Malaysian Air Force personnel
Living people |
La Verite (24 May 2017 – 9 February 2022) was a Swedish-bred American standardbred sired by Swedish champion Readly Express.
Background
La Verite was a bay gelding sired by Readly Express and his grandsire was French champion trotter Ready Cash. La Verite's dam, Bardot Boko was sired by Dream Vacation. He was bred and owned in Sweden by Kontio Stable AB, and was sent to training with Katja Melkko.
Racing career
2021: four-year-old season
La Verite made his racing debut as a four-year-old on on Färjestadstravet, in which he came fifth. He took his first victory in his second start, on on Romme travbana, after he went off stride. During his four-year-old season he raced 10 times with a record of 5-2-0.
2022: five-year-old season
As a five-year-old he took two victories in a row. In his third start on at Solvalla he went off as a post-favorite. In the race, driver Jorma Kontio felt that something was wrong with La Verite, that went down in the middle of the race. La Verite later died at the track, at the age of 4.
Pedigree
References
2017 racehorse births
2022 racehorse deaths
Swedish standardbred racehorses |
"Baby You Can Cry" is a song recorded by Japanese-American singer-songwriter Ai, released September 27, 2019, by EMI Records. The song samples Namie Amuro's song, "Baby Don't Cry" and served as the lead single for Ai's greatest hits album, Kansha!!!!! - Thank You for 20 Years New and Best.
Background and release
Celebrating her twenty-year anniversary in the music industry, Ai traveled to Los Angeles, California to record new content for an album. In September 2019, "Baby You Can Cry" was announced for release later that month along with a greatest hits album in November. A gospel choir tour was also announced to take place in Japan in support of the album.
The song was released digitally on September 27.
Live performances
Ai performed "Baby You Can Cry" and other songs during her 20th anniversary premium live gospel choir tour that took place in November 2019. Further performances were scheduled in 2020 but were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The tour was rescheduled to May 2021 and was postponed due to rising cases of COVID-19 in Japan as of May 10, 2021.
Music video
A music video was released the same day the song was released. The video was recorded at a recording studio in Tokyo.
Track listing
Digital download and streaming
"Baby You Can Cry" — 3:13
Release history
References
2019 singles
2019 songs
Ai (singer) songs
Song recordings produced by Ai (singer)
Songs written by Ai (singer)
EMI Records singles
Universal Music Group singles
Universal Music Japan singles
Songs about crying |
Bhamakalapam is a 2022 Indian Telugu-language crime comedy thriller film written and directed by Abhimanyu. Produced by Bapineedu and Sudheer through SVCC Digital , the film stars Priyamani alongside John Vijay, Shanthi Rao and Sharanya Pradeep. The film's soundtrack and score is composed by Justin Prabhakaran and Mark K. Robin respectively.
The title and the central theme of the film is inspired from Bhamakalapam, a traditional dance form of Andhra Pradesh which refers to the story of a headstrong, proud Satyabhama. Bhamakalapam was premiered on 11 February 2022 on Aha.
Plot
Plot starts with a young kid listening to a preacher at a spiritual gathering talking about the story of a special egg. According to the story, there was an egg that Mary brings to people after Jesus was crucified to indicate the return of Jesus in 3 days. Jesus was known to return after 3 days.
In the current time, an Egg is stolen from a Museum in Kolkata which is worth crores. It is one of the few precious Easter eggs made by a Russian jewellery maker Faberge which used to be owned by kings of old times. With the stolen egg, Mani and his associate, on their way to the ring leader Nayar meet with an accident on a bridge. The Egg falls off from the bridge and lands on a poultry truck among the edible eggs. Nayar kills the associate and orders Mani to find the Egg or meet the same fate.
Anupama is a nosy neighbour in an apartment complex who lives there with her husband Mohan and son Varun. She does cooking videos on YouTube. She is too interested in other people's affairs, always observing others through the window and gathering information from Shilpa, who works as a maid in the apartments. Feroz, a poultry shop owner finds the Egg, decides to steal it and hides it in his home. He lives in the same society as Anupama. Mani knows that Feroz has the Egg through his assistant. Feroz and his wife have an argument one night and the following day his wife isn't seen home. Anupama who observed the argument through the window suspects something and decides to know what happened. With the help of Shilpa, Anupama manages to get a fake key and stumbles upon the dead body of Feroz inside. Mani, who is there to collect the Egg attacks Anupama. In a scuffle, Anupama stabs Mani with a fork which makes him unconscious. She drags Mani's body into her house and hides it in the kitchen.
Police arrive at the apartment next day to investigate Feroz's murder, team led by officer Pallavi. They suspect Mani of killing Feroz and fleeing away. On the other hand, Nayar's men steal apartment's CC footage where they see Anupama carrying Mani's body. Nayar blackmails Anupama to find the Egg and bring it to him. She couldn't find the Egg in Feroz's house nor in Mani's pockets. Anupama in an attempt to smuggle the dead body out with the help of an associate gets caught by a corrupt constable. After they throw the body in a river packed in a suitcase, the constable demands money stopping their vehicle on way home. Nayar gets him killed and orders Anupama to bring the Egg and kidnaps her son, Varun.
It is revealed that Feroz's wife is the one who took the Egg. She is a disciple of Daniel Babu, a religious leader. He believes that it is the Egg which was spoken about in the story of Mary/Jesus and he awaits the descent of God to Earth. He is the one who actually killed Feroz and now also kills another woman in the apartment who finds out the truth. Anupama recollects that she saw a locket in Feroz's house while searching for the Egg which actually belongs to Daniel. With the help of Shilpa, Anupama hands over Daniel to Nayar and goes to his house in the search of the Egg.
Police discover Mani's body in the river along with a knife. Pallavi figures out that it is the same knife Anupama uses in her cooking videos. As Anupama finds the Egg and comes out of Daniel's house, Pallavi catcher her and suspects her of the murders. Meanwhile, Daniel escapes Nayar by killing all of Nayar's men and reaches his house. He kills Pallavi and starts firing at Anupama. She manages to survive after taking a bullet. Meanwhile, Mohan arrives with Police and they take Daniel into custody. Film ends with a message : "Not to await the God and believe in human power"
Cast
Priyamani as Anupama Mohan, an ambitious homemaker who runs cookery channel on YouTube
John Vijay as Nayar
Shanthi Rao as Pallavi, an investigation officer
Sharanya Pradeep as Shilpa
Pandiyan
Kishore as Daniel
Pradeep Rudra as Mohan, Anupama's husband
Pammi Sai as Chinna Roa
Netturi Neeraja
Ravinder Bommakanti
Sameera
Balaji
MS Raja
Sai Mukhesh
Production
Bhama Kalapam marks Priyamani's first web film. The film was primarily shot indoors owing to the restrictions due to COVID-19 pandemic. Filming took place predominantly at a gated community in Hyderabad and was shot in 25 days.
Reception
The Times of India gave a critical rating of 3 out of 5, writing "The film had all the ingredients of a great thriller comedy, but its ambitions were let down by the overarching runtime and lack of brevity" and further praised Priyamani's performance stating: "Priyamani as Anupama proves to be a saving grace and breezes through effortlessly. The audience would continue watching the film to root for her character". Sangeetha Devi Dundoo of The Hindu felt that "In the first few minutes, as the film finds its feet, it is hard not to be reminded of the 2018 Hindi film Andhadhun, even if faintly. A lamb crosses the path and a car meets with an accident that changes the course of things. The plot bears no resemblance to Andhadhun but this film exists in a zone that is similar to that widely appreciated macabre crime comedy". On a final note, she wrote that "Bhamakalapam is an interesting departure from mainstream Telugu film tropes".
In their review,123Telugu stated–"On the whole, the film is a murder mystery with an interesting premise. Priyamani’s performance and twists are good. But the lack of proper drama and tension in the second half makes this thriller half-baked". Asianet praised Abhimanyu's writing of screenplay and story, Priyamani's performance and the background score.
References
External links
Bhamakalapam on Aha
2020s Telugu-language films
2022 comedy films
2022 crime thriller films
2022 direct-to-video films
2022 films
Aha (streaming service) original films
Films set in Hyderabad, India
Films shot in Hyderabad, India
Indian comedy thriller films
Indian crime comedy films
Indian crime thriller films
Indian direct-to-video films |
The 2009–10 season was the 85th season in the history of Fussball-Club Luzern and the club's fourth consecutive season in the top flight of Swiss football.
Players
First-team squad
Transfers
Pre-season and friendlies
Competitions
Overall record
Swiss Super League
League table
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
Swiss Cup
References
FC Luzern seasons
Luzern |
Brother in Every Inch () is an upcoming Russian aviation coming-of-age drama film written and directed by Alexander Zolotukhin, starring Nikolay Zhuravlyov and Sergey Zhuravlyov as twin brothers who dream of becoming military pilots, but their attachment to each other prevents them. They have to make a difficult choice for the sake of their dreams.
The film was included in the Encounters program of the 72nd Berlin International Film Festival, and it will be released in wide distribution in Russia on March 3, 2022.
Plot
The story of the painful separation and the growing up of two twin brothers Mitya and Andrey Berezin, who study the difficult and dangerous profession of Russian military pilots. Since childhood, they have been inseparable. They rejoice and grieve together, overcome difficulties and adversities. But now the brothers understand that with their great love, care and affection they prevent each other from achieving a common dream – to conquer the sky. As a result, each of them is faced with a difficult choice, on which their fates depend.
Cast
References
External links
2022 films
Russian-language films
2020s coming-of-age drama films
Russian films
Russian aviation films
Russian coming-of-age drama films |
Bhama Kalapam may refert to
Bhamakalapam, a traditional dance drama of Kuchipudi
Bhama Kalapam, a 1988 Indian Telugu-language film by written and directed by Relangi Narasimha Rao
Bhamakalapam (2022 film), a 2022 Indian Telugu-language film |
The 2022 Japanese Super Cup (known as Fujifilm Super Cup 2022 for sponsorship reasons) was the 29th Japanese Super Cup since its reestablishment, and the 37th overall. It was held on 12 February 2022 between the 2021 J1 League champions Kawasaki Frontale, whom also the Super Cup holders, and the 2021 Emperor's Cup winners Urawa Red Diamonds at the Nissan Stadium, Yokohama, Kanagawa.
This was Frontale's fourth Super Cup appearance overall, all in the previous five years; they only failed to qualify in 2020 and won twice in 2019 and 2021. At the other hand, this was Urawa's tenth Super Cup appearance and their first since 2019; they previously had won four times (in 1979, 1980, 1983, and 2006).
Ataru Esaka scored in each half to won Urawa their fifth Super Cup ever, second as Urawa Red Diamonds, and the first in 16 years. Frontale lost the Super Cup match for the first time since their maiden appearance in 2018.
Match details
References
Japanese Super Cup
Super
Kawasaki Frontale matches
Urawa Red Diamonds matches |
Al Fajr Al Jadid (Arabic; لفجر الجديد; The New Dawn) was an Arabic leftist magazine which was published in the period 1945–1946. Although the magazine was published for a short time, it is one of the sources that laid the basis of the regime change in Egypt in 1952.
History and profile
The first issue of Al Fajr Al Jadid appeared on 16 May 1945. The founders and contributors of the magazine were called the Al Fajr Al Jadid group and included Ahmad Sadiq Saad, Raymond Duwayk, Yusuf Darwish and Ahmad Rushdi Salih who was the editor-in-chief of the magazine. They were Marxist political and artistic figures. The magazine was started to produce a version of the leftist views and practices specific to Egypt. It was started as a biweekly publication, but the frequency was switched to weekly from 1 November 1945. The frequent topics featured in the magazine were social issues such as poverty, underdevelopment and agrarian reform. It also covered literary and cultural writings and advocated the committed literary approach. These articles were published in standard Arabic not in colloquial Arabic.
The magazine was distributed to nearly all Arab countries and enjoyed support and financial assistance of the Marxist organizations based in Palestine, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq. It was also financed by the Soviet Union.
Al Fajr Al Jadid openly attacked significant cultural figures of the period, including Tawfiq Al Hakim, Abbas Al Aqqad, Ibrahim Al Mazini and Taha Husayn for living in their ivory towers and having close connections with capitalists and colonizers. In this regard the magazine shared a common feature with Al Adab, a literary magazine which would be launched in Beirut in 1953. Initially Al Fajr Al Jadid was not critical towards the Egyptian government, but became much more ardent opponent of the government soon which led to its closure in July 1946 by the government led by Prime Minister Ismail Sidky.
References
1945 establishments in Egypt
1946 disestablishments in Egypt
Arabic-language magazines
Biweekly magazines published in Egypt
Censorship in Egypt
Defunct political magazines published in Egypt
Marxist magazines
Magazines established in 1945
Magazines disestablished in 1946
Weekly magazines published in Egypt |
SS John M. Clayton was an American Liberty ship built in 1942 for service in World War II. She was later acquired by the United States Navy and renamed USS Harcourt (IX-225). Her namesake was John M. Clayton, an American senator from 1853 to 1856.
Description
The ship was long overall ( between perpendiculars, waterline), with a beam of . She had a depth of and a draught of . She was assessed at , , .
She was powered by a triple expansion steam engine, which had cylinders of , and diameter by stroke. The engine was built by the Worthington Pump & Machinery Corporation, Harrison, New Jersey. It drove a single screw propeller, which could propel the ship at .
Construction and career
John M. Clayton was laid down on 23 November 1942 at Los Angeles, California, by the California Shipbuilding Corp., under a Maritime Commission contract (M.C.E. Hull 687). She was launched on 27 December 1942 and sponsored by Mrs. Barbara Bechtel. the ship was completed on 8 January 1943.
Sailing for the American-Hawaiian Steamship Co., she carried war cargoes in both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans until hit by a Japanese bomb on 2 January 1945 during the Mindoro landings in the Philippines. Based on Edwin Stauffacher's service on board the ship, he was awarded the Mariner's Medal, Combat Bar, Pacific War Zone Bar, Philippine Liberation Medal, Victory Medal and the Presidential Testimonial Letter. Her crew beached the ship before she went down; she was subsequently raised and taken to Pearl Harbor where the yard force working with customary efficiency and speed repaired the gaping hole in her port side. Acquired by the Navy on a bareboat basis, the ship commissioned as Harcourt (IX-225) on 22 June 1945, Lcdr. H. T. Shelly in command.
Ready for service on 10 July 1945, Harcourt sailed for Eniwetok with fleet supplies. She then sailed for Tokyo, arriving on 17 September with a load of freight for the 3rd Fleet, and remained there to assist in the occupation until 31 March 1946, when she sailed for San Francisco. Harcourt arrived San Francisco on 22 April, decommissioned 17 May, and was delivered to the War Shipping Administration at Suisun Bay, California. She remained in the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet in a damaged condition and later stricken rom the Naval Register on 5 June 1946, sold for scrap to Zidell Exploration Co., in 1962.
Awards
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal
American Campaign Medal
Navy Occupation Service Medal (with Asia clasp)
References
Liberty ships
Ships built in Los Angeles
1942 ships
Maritime incidents in 1945 |
Essential Media Communications (EMC), also known as EMC Media Communications or Essential Media, Essential Research, or simply Essential, is an Australian public relations and market research company known for its opinion polls, which are often referred to as Essential polls.
History
Essential Media Communications was founded in 1997, with the Australian Education Union as its first client. In 2004 it launched the inaugural Essential Report, the result of public polling on social issues in Australia.
Essential ran a PR campaign called "Your Rights at Work" for the Labor Party ahead of its win at the 2007 federal election, and ran the Australian Greens' campaign for the 2010 federal election. After working with the people behind Every Australian Counts, a grassroots campaign to create and improve the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), since 2008 Essential launched the EAC campaign in 2011, which helped to secure bipartisan support for NDIS.
Its other social justice advocacy campaigns have included several environmental campaigns, Adam Goodes' anti-racism campaign entitled "Racism, It Stops With Me"; Rosie Batty's campaigns to prevent family violence, and the "Everybody's Home" campaign to strive for better housing options for everyone.
Essential used to publish its polls on Crikey!, but subsequently established a relationship with Guardian Australia, whereby their polls are published for free by The Guardian.
Description
The company creates public relations (PR) strategies across a number of industries, and conducts opinion polls and other market research for a variety of media companies and other interest groups.
Guardian Australia regularly publishes Essential's polls of voting intentions numbers, which are widely reported in other sources, along with the other major polls such as Newspoll and Roy Morgan Research.
During the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, Essential's polling has included questions about the government's handling of the pandemic, COVID-19 vaccinations and related matters. As the 2022 Australian election draws closer, in early February The Guardian started publishing poll results fortnightly instead of quarterly, as it had been doing.
Governance
The company is co-owned by Peter Lewis and Tony Douglas, who have worked in public relations for many years; however, as of April 2019 the shares were not beneficially held, and ownership (a trust) is not known.
Lewis is also a regular columnist for Guardian' Australia'.
Names
the company is registered as Essential Media Communications Pty Ltd in the state of Victoria, while its national business name is Essential Research. Their website, called simply "Essential", refers to EMC and EMC Media Communications on its privacy declaration.
The Essential Report
The results of the Essential polling are published in The Guardian either quarterly, or, closer to elections, fortnightly, while the full reports, including the wording of each question and breakdowns of demographic groups, are published online by Essential Media. However, the questions are not published in other publications such as The Sydney Morning Herald or Australian Financial Review''.
Essential Media also publishes its methodology and compliance with Australian Polling Council Quality Mark standards. All of its polling is done online. While it asks the "voting intention" question of its respondents twice in order to eliminate the "Don't Knows", it eliminates the remaining Don't Knows in its reporting.
See also
Newspoll
Roy Morgan Research
YouGov
References
External links
Market research companies of Australia
Companies established in 1997
1997 establishments in Australia
Opinion polling in Australia |
Omega I or Omega 1 () is a residential locality in south-western Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India, mostly known for serving the Greenwoods gated society. Bordered by Omega II to the north and Phi I, Phi II and Chi III to the south, it also serves the head office of Yamuna Expressway Industrial Development Authority (YEIDA). It is named after the Greek letter Omega.
External links
OneMap Greater Noida
References
Geography of Uttar Pradesh |
is a weekend supplementary Japanese school, based in the Columbus, Ohio metropolitan area.
The classes are held in Creekview Intermediate School, of the Marysville Exempted Village Schools District (MEVSD) in Marysville. The school office is located in Worthington.
History
It was established in 1979 in a private house. A basement was used as the first classroom. Area Japanese parents formally opened the school, then only having elementary level classes, in April 1980, and the school started with three teachers and fourteen students.
By 1989 the student count was 400.
It began renting from Worthington Estates Elementary School and Worthingway Middle School, both in Worthington, for elementary and secondary level classes, respectively, in April 1999. It began renting from Grandby Elementary School and McCord Middle School for elementary and secondary classes, respectively, in April 2003; both schools are in the city limits of Columbus. Prior to the Marysville agreement, the Japanese school had done learning over the internet. By 2006, the school had parents as teachers.
As of 2013, the school had 37 employees and 555 students. The Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) sent two of the employees to the school. As of 2014 there were about 550 students.
In March 2019, the hoshuko stopped the Worthington school rents due to the state of the contracts. From March 2020 the Japanese school was to rent space in Glacier Ridge Elementary School, in Dublin, of Dublin City Schools. From September 2021 the hoshuko began using a Marysville facility. Prior to the Marysville agreement, the Japanese school had done learning over the internet.
Operations
The school holds its classes on Saturdays. 17 board members manage the school.
See also
Japanese community of Columbus, Ohio
References
Further reading
- Profile at CiNii. Profile at Google Books
External links
Columbus Japanese Language School
Asian-American culture in Ohio
Japanese-American culture
Schools in Columbus, Ohio
Education in Union County, Ohio
Columbus
1980 establishments in Ohio
Educational institutions established in 1980
Worthington, Ohio
Education in Franklin County, Ohio |
A Siege Diary () is a 2020 Russian drama film directed by Andrey Zaytsev. The film is the winner of the Moscow International Film Festival.
Plot
The film takes place at the beginning of the Great Patriotic War in snow-covered Leningrad. A young woman named Olga buried her husband, she thinks that she too did not have long to live and she went to her father to say goodbye to him.
Cast
References
External links
2020 films
2020 drama films
2020s Russian-language films
Russian films |
Imogen Taylor is a British literary translator. She translates works from German to English, and has previously won the Goethe-Institut Prize for her work. Her notable translations include Sasha Marianna Salzmann's novel, Beside Myself, Melanie Raabe's The Trap, as well as Florian Huber's Promise Me You’ll Shoot Yourself: The Downfall of Ordinary Germans, 1945; and Sascha Arango's novel, The Truth and Other Lies. Her work has been shortlisted for the Schlegel-Tieck Prize and Helen and Kurt Wolff's Translator Prize.
Biography
Taylor completed her undergraduate education at New College, Oxford where she studied French and German. She completed her doctorate at the Humboldt University, in Berlin, where she studied bilingual couples in 18th century French novels. She has lived in Berlin since 2001.
Career
In 2015, Taylor published a translation of Sascha Arango's novel, The Truth and Other Lies (Die Wahrheit und andere Lügen). Her translation was listed as The New York Times''' 100 Notable Books of 2015. In 2016, Taylor won the Goethe-Institut award for an excerpt of her translation Momente der Klarheit by Jackie Thomae (Hanser Berlin). In the same year, the Seattle Times's critic Adam Woog listed her translation of Melanie Raabe's The Trap as one of the 10 best mysteries of the year.
In 2018, The Guardian praised her "sure-footed" translation of Fear by Dirk Kurbjuweit (Orion) and listed it as one of the best books of 2018. The translation also earned praise from the Irish Times and Toronto Star.
In 2019, she published an English translation of German author and historian Florian Huber's best-selling account of mass suicides in Germany towards the end of World War II, titled Promise Me You’ll Shoot Yourself: The Downfall of Ordinary Germans, 1945. Taylor earned praise from the Financial Times, with reviewer Ruta Sepetys praising her "vivid translation", as well as from the Telegraph, which reviewed her "fine translation.".
In 2021, Taylor translated Sasha Marianna Salzmann's novel, Beside Myself, from German to English. The translation was received well, and was shortlisted for two major German-English translation awards: the Schlegel-Tieck Prize and the Helen and Kurt Wolff's Translator Prize.
Awards
2016: Winner, Goethe-Institut Award for a translation of an extract from Momente der Klarheit by Jackie Thomae (Hanser Berlin)
2020: Shortlisted, Schlegel-Tieck Prize for a translation of Sasha Marianna Salzmann's Beside Myself 2021: Shortlisted, Helen and Kurt Wolff's Translator Prize for a translation of Sasha Marianna Salzmann's Beside Myself 2021: Longlisted, Dublin Literary Award 2020, for a translation of Sasha Marianna Salzmann's Beside Myself Bibliography
Translations from German to English:
(2015) Sascha Arango, The truth and other lies (Melbourne : Text Publishing Company ; Scoresby : Penguin Group Australia)
(2016) Anja Reich-Osang, The Scholl case : the deadly end of a marriage (Melbourne, Vic. : Text Publishing)
(2017) Dirk Kurbjuweit, Fear (Harper, New York)
(2017) Melanie Raabe, The Trap (Melbourne, Victoria : Text Publishing Company)
(2019) Melanie Raabe, The Shadow (Melbourne, Vic. : Text Publishing)
(2019) Sasha Marianna Salzmann, Beside Myself (New York : Other Press)
(2020) Florian Huber, Promise Me You’ll Shoot Yourself: The Downfall of Ordinary Germans, 1945 (Little, Brown Spark, New York)
(2021) Dirk Kurbjuweit, The missing'' (Melbourne, Victoria : The Text Publishing Company)
References
21st-century British translators
21st-century British women writers
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people) |
The National Delivery Industrial Union (NDIU) is a trade union of food courier workers in Taiwan. The union organises workers of Foodpanda, Uber Eats, Lalamove and GOGOX.
History
Drivers organised the union in April 2021 in response to pay reductions at Foodpanda and Uber Eats. According to the new method, pay was based on delivery distance instead of the number of orders, which the union organisers said decreased their pay by as much as 30 percent on both platforms. The organisers also called for accident insurance coverage to be increased. Foodpanda said it supported the union but would also make sure all drivers understood the company's policy terms. The Ministry of Labor also said it supported the new union.
NDIU participated in that year's Labour Day celebrations in Taiwan together with the Taiwan Confederation of Trade Unions.
References
Trade unions in Taiwan
Tech sector trade unions |
Fabio Schneider (born 31 July 2002) is a German footballer who plays as a midfielder for KuPS, on loan from Union Berlin.
Career
Schneider started his career with German Bundesliga side Union Berlin. Before the 2022 season, he was sent on loan to KuPS in Finland. On 29 January 2022, Schneider debuted for KuPS during a 3-1 win over VPS.
References
External links
Kuopion Palloseura players
German footballers
Expatriate footballers in Finland
German expatriate sportspeople in Finland
Living people
2002 births
Association football midfielders
German expatriate footballers |
Deshabrati is an Indian Bengali weekly newspaper published from Kolkata, West Bengal, India. The paper founded in 1969. The paper works as organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation West Bengal State Committee.
See also
Ganadabi
Ganashakti
References
External links
official website
news paper website
Newspapers published in Kolkata
Bengali-language newspapers published in India
Bengali-language newspapers
Communist newspapers
Publications established in 1969
Communist periodicals published in India
1969 establishments in West Bengal |
Jefferson Peak is a 5,720-foot-elevation (1,743 meter) mountain summit located in the Olympic Mountains in Mason County of Washington state. It is situated in the Mount Skokomish Wilderness, on land managed by Olympic National Forest. The mountain's name honors Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), the third president of the United States. The nearest higher neighbor is line parent Mount Pershing, to the southwest. Precipitation runoff drains into Jefferson Creen and the Hamma Hamma River. Topographic relief is significant as the north aspect rises over 4,100 feet (1,250 m) above the Hamma Hamma valley in approximately one mile.
Climbing
The first ascent of the summit was made in 1958 by Don Anderson, Bob Oram, Keith Spencer, and Robert Petersen. There are three established scrambling routes to the summit: from Goober Pond, the North Couloir, and via the East Peak. Jefferson Peak has a 250-foot-high () subpeak called "Tran Spire" (4,943 ft) which was first climbed in 1958 by Don Anderson and Robert Petersen .
Climate
Jefferson Peak is located in the marine west coast climate zone of western North America. Most weather fronts originate in the Pacific Ocean, and travel northeast toward the Olympic Mountains. As fronts approach, they are forced upward by the peaks of the Olympic Range, causing them to drop their moisture in the form of rain or snowfall (Orographic lift). As a result, the Olympics experience high precipitation, especially during the winter months. During winter months, weather is usually cloudy, but due to high pressure systems over the Pacific Ocean that intensify during summer months, there is often little or no cloud cover during the summer. Because of maritime influence, snow tends to be wet and heavy, resulting in avalanche danger. The months April through August offer the most favorable weather for viewing or climbing this mountain.
Geology
The Olympic Mountains are composed of obducted clastic wedge material and oceanic crust, primarily Eocene sandstone, turbidite, and basaltic oceanic crust. The mountains were sculpted during the Pleistocene era by erosion and glaciers advancing and retreating multiple times.
Gallery
See also
Olympic Mountains
Geology of the Pacific Northwest
References
External links
Weather forecast: Jefferson Peak
Mount Skokomish Wilderness U.S. Forest Service
Olympic Mountains
Landforms of Mason County, Washington
Mountains of Washington (state)
North American 1000 m summits
Olympic National Forest |
Jānis Gailītis (born 23 April 1985) is a Latvian former professional basketball player and professional basketball coach, who is currently a head coach for VEF Rīga, and an assistant for Luca Banchi in Latvian National Team.
Career
From 2002 till 2011 Gailītis was a professional basketball player. He played for such teams as Skonto, ASK Rīga and VEF Rīga. Since 2007, he was player-manager for VEF Rīga but at the 2010–2011 season was promoted to assistant coach. On December 17, 2015, Gailītis took over the head coaching duties, after Carlos Frade was fired. With Gailītis at the helm, VEF has won four Latvian championships and reached VTB United League quarterfinals twice.
National teams
In 2011 and 2013, he was the assistant coach for Latvian U16 team. In 2014, Gailītis was the head coach for Latvian U16 team, which won a silver medal at the FIBA Europe U16 Championship. In 2015, he was the head coach for Latvian U18 team. Since 2021, Gailītis is an assistant coach for Luca Banchi in the Men's National Team.
Honors and awards
Club career
BK VEF Rīga
Latvian Basketball League Gold: (2017, 2019, 2020, 2021)
Latvian-Estonian Basketball League Silver: (2019, 2021)
National Team
FIBA Europe U-16 Championship Runner Up: (2014)
References
1985 births
Living people
Latvian basketball coaches
Latvian men's basketball players
Basketball players from Riga |
Leroy St Aubin Lugg (born 5 August 1996) is a Jamaican first-class cricketer.
Lugg was born at Kingston in August 1996. He played for the West Indies under-19 cricket team in 2013, making six Youth One Day International appearances during the series. In the opening match, Lugg scored 69 runs, but was disappointed with his performance, considering himself to have not been timing the ball well during his innings. In 2022, he was one of three debutants included in the Jamaica squad for their first two 2021–22 West Indies Championship matches, with Lugg making his debut in first-class cricket against Trinidad and Tobago.
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Cricketers from Kingston, Jamaica
Jamaican cricketers
Jamaica cricketers |
The Yeniseysk constituency (No.56) is a Russian legislative constituency in Krasnoyarsk Krai. The constituency covers more than 3/4 territory of the region, mostly northern sparsely populated Krasnoyarsk Krai. Until 2007 the constituency stretched southward to Kansk but lost this part to Krasnoyarsk constituency in 2015. However, Yeniseysk constituency picked Norilsk and the territory of former Evenk and Taymyr constituencies.
Members elected
Election results
1993
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Yaroshenko
|align=left|Agrarian Party
|
|32.45%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Peshkov
|align=left|Independent
| -
|31.70%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1995
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Yaroshenko (incumbent)
|align=left|Agrarian Party
|
|31.58%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Peshkov
|align=left|Independent
|
|17.24%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Ivanov
|align=left|Our Home – Russia
|
|16.24%
|-
|style="background-color:#2C299A"|
|align=left|Feliks Pashennykh
|align=left|Congress of Russian Communities
|
|8.72%
|-
|style="background-color:#DA2021"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Lambin
|align=left|Ivan Rybkin Bloc
|
|4.56%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Luchkin
|align=left|Independent
|
|3.90%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|15.82%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1999
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Pyotr Romanov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|37.39%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Igor Isakov
|align=left|Independent
|
|19.43%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Plotnikov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|12.92%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Leopa
|align=left|Independent
|
|10.30%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Yaroshenko (incumbent)
|align=left|Independent
|
|4.75%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|13.11%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2003
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Igor Isakov
|align=left|United Russia
|
|30.78%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Pyotr Romanov (incumbent)
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|27.79%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Mnogogreshnov
|align=left|Independent
|
|12.22%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Tsukanov
|align=left|Agrarian Party
|
|8.30%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Kaspirovich
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|4.33%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Shevchenko
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.27%
|-
|style="background-color:#164C8C"|
|align=left|Vasily Kovalev
|align=left|United Russian Party Rus'
|
|1.05%
|-
|style="background-color:#00A1FF"|
|align=left|Sergey Natarov
|align=left|Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life
|
|0.85%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|11.68%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2016
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Raisa Karmazina
|align=left|United Russia
|
|48.41%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Natarov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|13.41%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Pyotr Polezhayev
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|10.84%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Aleksandr Dyakov
|align=left|Rodina
|
|5.46%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Andrey Seleznev
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|4.86%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Lympio
|align=left|A Just Russia
|
|4.00%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Olga Lanovaya
|align=left|Civic Platform
|
|2.58%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Tatyana Rykunova
|align=left|Patriots of Russia
|
|2.57%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Artyom Kardanets
|align=left|The Greens
|
|2.28%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2021
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Aleksey Veller
|align=left|United Russia
|
|36.86%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vitaly Makarov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|15.57%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Dmitry Dubrov
|align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth
|
|9.54%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Stogny
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|8.06%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Irina Ivanova
|align=left|The Greens
|
|7.82%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Olga Rychkova
|align=left|New People
|
|6.91%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Mikhail Orda
|align=left|Party of Pensioners
|
|4.87%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Igor Shmarlovsky
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|4.82%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
Notes
References
Russian legislative constituencies
Politics of Krasnoyarsk Krai |
The Burton Agnes drum is a carved chalk cylinder dated from 3005 to 2890 BC which was found in 2015 near Burton Agnes, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The British Museum has described it as "the most important piece of prehistoric art to be found in Britain in the last 100 years" and "one of the most significant ancient objects ever found on the British Isles". It was found in the grave of three children, along with a chalk ball and a bone pin.
The drum was found by archaeologist Alice Beasley, working for Allen Archaeology under director Mark Allen, during a routine investigation made as part of the planning application for a biogas power station to be built on the land, part of the Burton Agnes estate. She has described the find:
Allen has said:
It is similar to the Folkton drums found in Folkton, Yorkshire, about from Burton Agnes, in 1889; these have been associated with the Lavant drum found in Lavant, Sussex in 1979.
References
Stone Age sites in England
Prehistoric art
2015 archaeological discoveries
Archaeology of the East Riding of Yorkshire |
Ramisyllis kingghidorahi are a species of polychaete worm in the family Syllidae. It was found in Sado Island, Japan, where it was living within the internal canals of a sponge of the genus Petrosia.
Description
R. kingghidorahi is a member of the “Ribbon clade” Syllinae, possessing a segmented cylindrical body that exhibits multiaxial branching that is described as "dendritic" or "tree-like". The first branch occurs after segments 14–24. All branches are similar diameter.
Discovery
On 1 October 2019, an international team of marine biologists sampled Petrosia sponges in the sea near Shukunegi Point, at the southern tip of Sado Island. Dissection and analysis of the sponges yielded samples of parasites, including Ramisyllis kingghidorahi, which were preserved in an ethanol solution for further study. R. kingghidorahi is the third known species of syllid worm to exhibit asymmetrical branching of the body.
Etymology
The species is named after King Ghidorah, the winged, three-headed, two-tailed antagonist of Godzilla. The King Ghidorah character was created by Tomoyuki Tanaka, inspired by Japanese mythology and folklore.
References
Syllidae
Animals described in 2022 |
3, The Grove, Highgate, in the London Borough of Camden, is an 17th-century house built by William Blake. In the 19th century it was home of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge; in the 20th, the novelist J. B. Priestley; and in the 21st, the model Kate Moss. It is a Grade II* listed building.
History
In the 17th century, Highgate was a hamlet to the north of London, situated in the midst of the extensive Middlesex estate of the Bishops of London. Nos. 1–6, The Grove, Highgate were built in around 1688 by a City of London merchant William Blake. Constructed in the gardens of a large mansion called Dorchester House, Blake intended the speculative development to fund a charity school he had established in the main building.
In 1816, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, moved to the Highgate home of his doctor, James Gillman, seeking treatment for his addiction to opium. In 1823 the Gillmans moved to No. 3, The Grove, installing Coleridge in a suite of rooms on the top floor. He remained there until his death in 1834; writing, revising and republishing earlier works such as Kubla Khan, receiving visitors and becoming lauded as "the Sage of Highgate".
In 1931 the house was bought by J. B. Priestly, using the profits from his novels, which had brought literary and worldly success since the publication of The Good Companions in 1929. He engaged Seely & Paget to reconstruct the house and the landscape architects Mawson's to redesign the garden.
In the 21st century, No.3 was home to the model, Kate Moss. Moss sold the house in 2022.
Architecture and description
Bridget Cherry, in her 2002 revised London 4: North edition of the Pevsner Buildings of England series, describes Nos. 1–6, The Grove, as "the finest group in Highgate". The row was originally built as three pairs of semi-detached houses, of two storeys with dormers above. Most have been greatly altered since. No. 3 is now of three storeys, with a basement and a slate roof. The construction material is red brick.
No. 3 is a Grade II* listed building, the listing including the low wall which fronts the house, and its wrought iron railings and lamp.
Notes
References
Sources
Houses completed in the 17th century
Grade II* listed houses
Grade II* listed buildings in the London Borough of Camden
Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
Griffin Connor Isip McDaniel (born March 30, 2000) is a Filipino footballer who plays as a midfielder for Stallion Laguna of the Philippines Football League and the Philippines U23 national team.
Personal life
McDaniel was born in Orange County, California and raised in Corona, California. He has attended the Norco High School. His mother Lindy is a Filipino who has roots in Pampanga and Davao City, while his father Clint is a football (soccer coach).
McDaniel's sisters, Olivia and Chandler, are Philippines women's international footballers.
Career
College career
McDaniel played college soccer for California Baptist University. He played 13 games in his freshman year and 15 games in his sophomore year.
Stallion Laguna
In August 2020, McDaniel joined Philippines Football League club Stallion Laguna. He made his debut in a 2–1 defeat against league debutants Maharlika Manila.
International career
McDaniel was born to an American father and Filipino mother making him eligible to play for United States and Philippines at international level.
Philippines U23
McDaniel was called up to represent the Philippines U23 in the 2019 Southeast Asian Games held in the Philippines. He made his debut for the U23 team in a 2–1 defeat against Myanmar U23, coming in as a substitute replacing Chima Uzoka in the 75th minute.
In February 2022, McDaniel was once again, called up to the Philippines U23 for the 2022 AFF U-23 Youth Championship held in Cambodia.
References
2000 births
Living people
Citizens of the Philippines through descent
American sportspeople of Filipino descent
Sportspeople from Orange County, California
Soccer players from California
Sportspeople from Corona, California
Association football midfielders
Philippines youth international footballers |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1971.
Events
3 April: Karina represents Spain at the Eurovision Song Contest 1971 hold in Dublin (Ireland) with the song En un mundo Nuevo, ranking 2nd with 116 points.
Debuts
La 1
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
Foreign series debuts in Spain
La 1
Births
14 January - Manel Fuentes, host.
26 January - Màxim Huerta, host.
4 February - Lorena Castell, hostess.
8 April - Cristina Medina, actress.
10 April - Silvia Abril, actress and comedian.
14 April - Gema López, journalist.
7 May - Lola Baldrich, actress.
7 May - Malena Gracia, showoman.
6 June - Silvia Jato, hostess.
8 June - Luis Fraga, host.
19 June - Eva Isanta, actress.
19 June - Nacho Fresneda, actor.
21 June - Pedro Alonso, actor.
30 June - Guillermo Ortega, actor.
5 July - Roberto Vilar, host
8 August - Jorge Fernández, host.
15 August - María Patiño, journalist.
29 August - Antonio Garrido, actor.
29 August - Frank Cuesta, host
23 September - Lara Dibildos, hostess.
22 October - Mavi Doñate, journalist.
4 December - Marta Jaumandreu, hostess.
23 December - Daniel Albaladejo, actor.
See also
1971 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1971
References
1971 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1972.
Events
24 April: The best known Quiz Show in Spanish Television history debuts at La 1: Un, dos, tres... responda otra vez, directed by Narciso Ibáñez Serrador.
18 September - Debut of the first colour TV program in Spain, the music show Divertido siglo, by Fernando García de la Vega.
13 December: La 1 broadcasts La cabina, directed by Antonio Mercero and starred by José Luis López Vázquez, awarded by the International Emmy and Golden Nymph in the Monte-Carlo Television Festival.
Debuts
La 1
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
Foreign series debuts in Spain
La 1
Births
7 March - Nathalie Poza, actress.
23 March - Nuria Roca, hostess.
9 April - Carmen Alcayde, hostess.
10 April - Toni Acosta, actress.
13 May - María José Molina, hostess.
21 May - Arancha del Sol, hostess.
2 June - Mariano Alameda, actor.
25 June - Albert Barniol , meteorologist.
10 July - Alicia Bogo, actress.
3 August - Adrià Collado, actor.
7 August - Eva Hache, comedian and hostess.
27 August - Patricia Vico, actress.
3 September - Natalia Estrada, hostess.
15 September - Letizia Ortiz, hostess, incumbent Queen of Spain
9 November - Florentino Fernández, comedian and host.
Javier Martín, host.
See also
1972 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1972
References
1972 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1973.
Events
31 March: Informe Semanal debuts at La 1, becoming the longest running TV program in Spain, still running 49 years after.
7 April: Mocedades represents Spain at the Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 1973 hold in Luxembourg, with the song Eres tú ranking 2nd with 125 points.
28 June: Rafael Orbe Cano is appointed Director General of RTVE.
19 July: Los payasos de la tele debut in Televisión Española with their show El gran circo de TVE.
23 November: Debut of the telefilm Juan Soldado, by Fernando Fernán Gómez, awarded in the Prague Television Festival.
Debuts
La 1
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
24 horas (1970-1973)
Animales racionales (1972-1973)
Divertido siglo (1972-1973)
Historias de Juan Español (1972-1973)
Juego de letras (1972-1973)
Si las piedras hablaran (1972-1973)
Tres eran tres (1972-1973)
Vuestro amigo Quique (1972-1973)
La 2
Más lejos (1971-1973)
Foreign series debuts in Spain
La 1
Births
Deaths
24 February - Claudio Guerin, director, 34.
See also
1973 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1973
References
1973 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1974.
Events
11 January: Juan José Rosón is appointed Director General of RTVE.
24 April: The reporter Manolo Alcalá covers from Lisbon for TVE the Carnation Revolution.
12 June: The Commission for Enquiry and Vigilance on Advertising in TVE is created.
22 November: Jesús Sancho Rof is appointed Director General of RTVE.
Debuts
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
Foreign series debuts in Spain
La 1
Births
Deaths
23 January - Artur Kaps, director, 61.
11 February - Antonio Casal, actor, 63.
16 September - Luis Morris, actor, 44.
20 November - Manuel Dicenta, actor, 69.
See also
1974 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1974
References
1974 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1975.
Events
19 December: Gabriel Peña Aranda is appointed Director General of RTVE.
TVE broadcasts 1.143 hours in colour versus 4.205 in Black and white.
Debuts
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
Cuatro tiempos (1974-1975)
Fiesta (1974-1975)
Hoy 14,15 (1974-1975)
Las Instituciones (1974-1975)
¿Le conoce usted? (1974-1975)
Lo de Tip y Coll (1974-1975)
Primera hora (1974-1975)
¡Señoras y señores! (1974-1975)
Suspiros de España (1974-1975)
Tele-Revista (1974-1975)
Telecomedia (1974-1975)
Foreign series debuts in Spain
Births
See also
1975 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1975
References
1975 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1976.
Events
19 March: Second season of Un, dos, tres... responda otra vez, debuts on La 1, with a cast including among others Victoria Abril and María Casal.
22 May: Last episode of anime Heidi airs on TVE; it is the first Japanese anime broadcast in Spain.
22 June: Clown Fofó's death shocks Spain.
23 July: Rafael Anson is appointed Director General of RTVE.
30 October: María Ostiz, representing Spain wins the Festival de la OTI with the song Canta cigarra.
Debuts
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
Foreign series debuts in Spain
Births
Deaths
10 April - Venancio Muro, actor, 47.
22 June - Fofó, clown, 53.
17 August - Valentín Tornos, actor, 75.
See also
1976 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1976
References
1976 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1977.
Events
28 October: Due to a Royal Decree, RTVE becomes an Autonomous Agence.
19 November: Fernando Arias-Salgado is appointed Director General of RTVE.
19 November: Last episode of Japanese anime 3000 Leagues in Search of Mother is aired on La 1. Tha main character finds his mother.
Debuts
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
Los Libros (1974-1977)
La Guagua (1975-1977)
Con otro acento (1976-1977)
Paisaje con figuras (1976-1977)
Sábado cine (1976-1977)
La saga de los Rius (1976-1977)
La Señora García se confiesa (1976-1977)
La 2
Original (1974-1977)
Foreign series debuts in Spain
Births
Deaths
27 March - Romano Villalba, director, 46.
See also
1977 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1977
References
1977 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1978.
Events
25 January: The four directors of the only news program in the country, Telediario, Ladislao Azcona, Eduardo Sotillos, Pedro Macía y Miguel Ángel Gozalo, resign from their position because of disagreements with the channel director.
Debuts
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
El Mundo en acción (1973-1978)
Vivir para ver (1975-1978)
Curro Jiménez (1976-1978)
Última hora (1976-1978)
La Semana (1974-1978)
Lengua viva (1977-1978)
El Monstruo de Sanchezstein (1977-1978)
Las Reglas del juego (1977-1978)
Yo canto (1977-1978)
La 2
Teatro Club (1976-1978)
Foreign series debuts in Spain
Births
2 February - Macarena Gómez, actress.
4 March - María Casado, hostess.
10 March - Marta Torné, actress.
9 April - Salva Reina, actor.
20 May - Edu Soto, actor and comedian.
26 May - Rocío Madrid, hostess.
10 June - Vanessa Romero, actress.
29 June - Jordi Cruz, chef and host.
16 July - Irene Visedo, actress.
18 July - Verónica Romero, singer.
21 July - Marta Flich, actress and hostess.
1 August - Begoña Maestre, actress.
12 September - Nacho Rubio, actor.
11 October - Oriol Nolis, host.
30 October - Cristina Castaño, actress.
20 November - Fran Perea, actor and singer.
27 November - Manu Fullola, actor.
José Ángel Leiras, host.
Deaths
13 August - José María Prada, actor, 53.
See also
1978 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1978
References
1978 in Spanish television |
This is a list of Spanish television related events in 1979.
Events
31 March: Betty Missiego performing the song Su canción represents Spain at the Eurovision Song Contest 1979, that took place in Jerusalem, ranking 2nd.
Debuts
Television shows
La 1
Ending this year
La 1
Novela (1962-1979)
Un Globo, dos globos, tres globos (1974-1979)
Hora 15 (1977-1979)
El Recreo (1977-1979)
Los Espectáculos (1978-1979)
El Hotel de las mil y una estrellas (1978-1979)
El Juglar y la reina (1978-1979)
La Segunda oportunidad (1978-1979)
Sumarísimo (1978-1979)
Tiempo libre (1978-1979)
La 2
Torneo (1967-1979)
Redacción noche (1976-1979)
Foreign series debuts in Spain
Births
1 January - Gisela, singer.
2 January - Alfonso Merlos, host.
30 January - Carlos Latre, comedian.
17 March - Pilar Rubio, hostess.
20 March - Silvia Abascal, actress.
27 March - Susana Guasch, hostess.
5 April - Cristina Urgel, actress.
7 April - Ruth Núñez, actress.
18 April - Nuria Fergó, singer and actress.
20 April - Quique Peinado, comedian.
18 May - Iago García - actor.
29 May - Elena Sánchez, hostess.
5 June - David Bisbal, Singer.
28 June - Roberto Leal, host.
29 June - Alejo Sauras, actor.
30 June - Raquel Martínez, journalist and hostess.
3 July - Berta Collado, hostess.
23 July - Dani Mateo, host and actor.
29 July - Sandra Sabatés, hostess.
10 September - Darío Sánchez Paso, actor.
5 October - Patricia Conde, hostess.
24 October - Silvia Intxaurrondo, hostess
8 November - Ana Morgade, hostess
8 December - Manu Guix, composer
11 July - Marina Gatell - actress.
Deaths
5 June - Gustavo Re, host, 70.
12 September - Laly Soldevila, actress, 46.
See also
1979 in Spain
List of Spanish films of 1979
References
1979 in Spanish television |
USS LST-399 was an in the United States Navy during World War II.
Construction and commissioning
LST-399 was laid down on 28 September 1942 at Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Co., Newport News, Virginia. Launched on 23 November 1942 and commissioned on 4 January 1943, Lt. George F. Baker in command.
During World War II, LST-399 was assigned to the Asiatic-Pacific theater and participated in the occupation of New Georgia-Rendova-Vangunu on 21 July and Vella Lavella from 15 and 26 August 1943. Assault on the Treasury Island from 27 October and 6 November 1943.
The capture and occupation of Guam from 21 to 28 July 1944.
The ship participated in the assault and occupation of Iwo Jima from 19 to 25 February 1945 and later the assault and occupation of Okinawa from 1 to 14 April 1945. After the end of the war, the ship was decommissioned on 8 December 1945 and Commander Naval Forces Far East (COMNAVFE) Shipping Control Authority for Japan (SCAJAP), which the ship was re-designated as Q088.
Military Sea Transportation Service acquired the ship on 31 March 1952 and re-designated again as T-LST-399. On 1 November 1973, the T-LST-399 was struck from the Naval Register and was put into the mothball state at the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet, California. She was later scrapped.
According to Navsource.org, the ship was reinstated and renamed as IX-511, later struck on the Naval Register on 15 June 1985.
LST-399 earned five battle star for World War II service.
Awards
Combat Action Ribbon
Navy Unit Commendation
American Campaign Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal (5 battle stars)
World War II Victory Medal
Navy Occupation Service Medal (with Asia clasp)
National Defense Service Medal
References
LST-1-class tank landing ships
1942 ships
World War II amphibious warfare vessels of the United States
Ships built in Newport News, Virginia |
Oliver Edward Brymer Whyte (born 20 January 2000) is a New Zealand footballer who plays as a midfielder for Haka.
Career
In 2018, Whyte joined the youth academy of Portuguese side Rio Ave. In 2019, he signed for Team Wellington in New Zealand. In 2020, he signed for Turkish second tier club İstanbulspor. In 2021, Whyte signed for Miramar Rangers in New Zealand, helping them win the league. Before the 2022 season, he signed for Finnish top flight team Haka. On 8 February 2022, he debuted for Haka during a 1-1 draw with FC Honka.
Honours
Miramar Rangers
New Zealand National League: 2021
Individual
New Zealand National League Golden Boot: 2021
References
External links
Expatriate footballers in Finland
FC Haka players
New Zealand expatriate sportspeople in Turkey
Team Wellington players
New Zealand expatriate sportspeople in Finland
Miramar Rangers AFC players
Living people
New Zealand expatriate association footballers
New Zealand association footballers
2000 births
Association football midfielders
İstanbulspor footballers
Expatriate footballers in Turkey
Expatriate footballers in Portugal
Sportspeople from Wellington City |
The Class BCL Bay 09 were open coaches for branch line services with the Royal Bavarian State Railways (K.Bay.Sts.B.) that were built in the early 20th century. They included those coaches listed in the 1913 fleet register under design sheet nos. 521, 6055.2 and 6055.3. As a result of remodelling they were reclassified according to the DRG’s 1930 engineering drawing register as classes CL Bay 09/21, BCL Bay 13a, CL Bay 13a/21, BCL Bay 14 and CL Bay 14/21.
Development
With the growth of the Bavarian branch line network known as Lokalbahnen, there was a need for suitable coaches for local passenger services. Between 1909 and 1929, coaches were procured that had the characteristics of normal passenger coaches on mainline railways. In contrast to other local railway coaches, these were suitable for military transport.
Procurement
In the period 1909–1929, 411 wagons in classes BL, BCL, CL, DL and PPostL were procured. They all had a standard floor plan, open end-platforms with Dixi gates on the steps and gangways secured only by an iron railing. Large window panes were installed instead of the composite windows that had been usual up to that point. Of the coaches built to Design Sheet 521, 18 were procured in two batches, in 1909 and 1911, from SE in Nuremberg and Rathgeber in Munich.
Career
The whereabouts of four coaches could not be clarified in 1945 after the end of the Second World War. The rest of the coaches went into the Deutsche Bundesbahn, where they were used until the 1960s.
Design features
Underframe
The underframe of the coach was made entirely of rivetted steel profiles. The outer side beams were U-shaped with outward facing flanges. The crossbeams were also made of U-profiles and not cranked. The wagons had screw couplings of the VDEV type. The drawbar ran the length of the coach and was spring-loaded in the middle. The coaches had slotted cylinder buffers with an installation length of 650 millimetres, the buffer plates had a diameter of 370 millimetres. The platform was shortened for the wagons built to Sheets 6055.2 and 6055.3, resulting in a shorter length over buffers.
Running gear
The coaches had riveted half-timbered axle holders of VDEV design. The axles were housed in sliding axle bearings. The spoked wheels were of the Bavarian Type 38 design. The suspension springs were 1,764 mm long with a cross-section of 96 x 13 mm. They were eleven leaves thick. Because of the long wheelbase of 6,000 millimetres, VDEV radial axles were used.
In addition to a hand-operated screw brake located on one of the platforms at the end of the coach, the coaches also had air brakes of the Westinghouse type.
Body
The coach body had a wooden framework covered with sheet metal on the outside and wood panels on the inside. The joints of the sheets were sealed by cover strips. The roof was gently rounded and flush with the side walls. It extended in a hood over the open end-platforms. The coaches in the first delivery series had steps of Lokalbahn branch line design with a folding last step. The remaining delivery series were equipped with main line coach steps.
Facilities
This class of coach was originally intended for both 2nd and 3rd class passengers and had a total of 48 seats and a toilet. The 2nd class seats were upholstered, the 3rd class seats were wooden slat benches, typical of the class. 20 standing places were designated for the two end-platforms. The end-platforms of coaches built to Sheet 6055.3 and 6055.3 were shortened from 1,000 mm to 900 mm. This also reduced the length over buffers from 1,224 mm to 1,2024 mm.
Lighting was provided by paraffin lamps and heating by steam. The coaches were ventilated by static roof vents and sash windows.
Conversions
The cars of the first two delivery series from 1909 and 1911 were converted to CL Bay 09/21 in 1921 except for two units. The upholstered seats in 2nd class were replaced by wooden slatted benches. The Lokalbahn steps were replaced by those used on main lines.
Drawings
Here are sketches of the different variants of the vehicle type for comparison.
Coach numbering
See also
The following coaches were also built for the Lokalbahn branch line network:
CL Bay 06b, short passenger coach
CL Bay 11a, long passenger coach
GwL, goods van
PwPost Bay 06, mail/luggage van
Footnotes
References
Literature
Railway coaches of the Royal Bavarian State Railways
MAN vehicles |
The elections for the Shimla Municipal Corporation are speculated to be held in May or June 2022.
Schedule
Parties and alliances
Result
See also
2017 Shimla Municipal Corporation election
Shimla Municipal Corporation
References
Shimla
2022_elections_in_India
Shimla
Shimla
Municipal corporations in Himachal Pradesh |
Lasiopetalum dielsii, is a species of flowering plant in the family Malvaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a spreading shrub with hairy stems, heart-shaped leaves and pink or white flowers.
Description
Lasiopetalum dielsii is a spreading shrub that typically grows to a height of , its foliage covered with star-shaped hairs. The leaves are heart-shaped, long and wide. Each flower is borne on a pedicel long, the sepals pink or white, the petals reduced to small scales or lobes and there are five stamens. Flowering occurs in December.
Taxonomy
Lasiopetalum dielsii was first formally described in 1904 by Ernst Georg Pritzel in Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Pflanzen Westaustraliens, ihrer Verbreitung und ihrer Lebensverhaltnisse. The specific epithet (dielsii) honours Ludwig Diels.
Distribution and habitat
This lasiopetalum grows on steep slopes in the Esperance Plains and Mallee biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia.
Conservation status
Lasiopetalum dielsii is listed as "Priority Two" by the Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, meaning that it is poorly known and from only one or a few locations.
References
dielsii
Malvales of Australia
Flora of Western Australia
Plants described in 1904
Taxa named by Ludwig Diels |
Donatella Raffai (8 September 1943 – 10 February 2022) was an Italian radio and television writer and presenter.
Life and career
Born in Fabriano on 8 September 1943, Raffai started her career as a public relations manager for RCA and as an image consultant for several singers, notably Mia Martini and Nada.
In 1971 she debuted as a radio presenter, and she made her television debut in 1980, with the show Chi ci invita?. After co-writing and co-hosting with Corrado Augias the Rai 3 program Telefono giallo''', the popularity among the general public came in 1989, with the Rai 3 true-crime program about missing persons , that she wrote and hosted until 1994 and for which she was awarded a and a Telegatto. In the following years she presented several programs, until her last work, Giallo 4'', that she wrote and hosted between 1999 and 2000 on Rete 4.
Raffai died after a long illness on 10 February 2022, at the age of 78.
References
External links
1943 births
2022 deaths
Italian radio presenters
Italian television presenters
Italian television writers
People from Fabriano |
Esti Rosenberg (Hebrew: אסתי רוזנברג; born July 24, 1965) is an American-Israeli Orthodox Rabbanit who is the founder and head of the Migdal Oz seminary. She is the daughter of Rabbi Aharon Lichtenstein and Dr. Tovah Soloveitchik and the granddaughter of Joseph B. Soloveitchik.
Biography
Esti Rosenberg was born in 1965 in the United States, the fourth child of her parents, Aharon Lichtenstein and Tova Lichtenstein, and immigrated to Israel with her parents on Aliyah in 1971 at the age of six, when her father was offered the position of Rosh Yeshiva at Yeshivat Har Etzion. She studied at the Chorev Ulpana in Jerusalem and was a member of the Ezra youth movement. Rosenberg graduated with a bachelor's degree in Hebrew Literature and History from Hebrew University. She studied Tanach studies at the Jerusalem Michlalah and learned in one of the first graduating classes of Matan Jerusalem.
Rosenberg was Rosh Beit Midrash at Midreshet Bruriah, now known as Midreshet Lindenbaum, and served as Training Coordinator of Bnei Akiva's Jerusalem region. In 1997 she founded Migdal Oz, the sister school of Yeshivat Har Etzion, under the guidance of Aharon Lichtenstein and Yehuda Amital. Rosenberg gives many Shiurim throughout Israel, is a member of Bnei Akiva's national administration and participates in peace dialogue groups between the religious and secular and between the right-wing and left-wing groups in Israel.
Worldview
Regarding the establishment of a Beit Midrash/seminary for women, Rosenberg said, "Placing Torah learning at the center of the Beit Midrash challenged the community of learners to delve into the experience of Abaye and Rava and into the Halachic Sugyot alongside serious, critical thinking and learning. It is in part a building of their religious personalities and in part a meaningful breakthrough for the integration of women into the world of Torah and placing them as exemplary role models for the girls who they will teach." (Translated from original Hebrew.)
Rosenberg believes, in line with the views of her grandfather Joseph B. Soloveitchik, that Torah study is a fundamental and significant component of Avodat Hashem for the Jewish woman. This includes all fields of Torah, including Talmud, Tanach, Machshevet Yisrael and Chassidut. All these subjects are taught in depth at Migdal Oz with an emphasis on independent learning B'Chravuta which is crucial in cultivating Torah learning as a substantive component in the life of the student. Rosenberg has stated that learning in the Beit Midrash is a merit that becomes an obligation towards Am Yisrael. Therefore, she calls upon her students to influence all areas of life in Israeli society, especially in the professions of teaching and education.
Rosenberg has been a prominent figure in the struggle to obtain serious and high-level Torah learning opportunities for women.
Personal
Rosenberg is married to Herzl Rosenberg. They have seven children and live in Alon Shevut.
Family tree
References
Living people
1965 births
Yeshivat Har Etzion
Soloveitchik rabbinic dynasty
Israeli settlers
Jewish religious leaders |
Dow's Hill Interpretation Centre is a museum on Antigua. The hill was part of the estate of Archibald Dow, a civilian Royal Navy official, before it was acquired for the construction of fortifications. Dow's House became a residence for senior garrison officers and then the Governor of the Leeward Islands before it was destroyed by an 1834 earthquake. The museum was established in 1989 with funding from the Canadian International Development Agency and provides a presentation of Antiguan history and tours of nearby ruins.
History
The hill overlooks English Harbour and offers views of the first European settlements on Antigua, established in the early 17th century, and of the fortifications surrounding Nelson's Dockyard. The hill formed part of the estate of Archibald Dow, the civilian storekeeper at the dockyard, who constructed a house there in 1732. The land was compulsorily acquired from Dow in 1789 at a cost of £8,354 0s 8d to allow fortifications to be constructed to protect the ridgeline from attack from the landward side. The fortifications were built by the Royal Engineers and included stone walls intended to make the fortifications appear more imposing to potential attackers than they actually were. Dow's house was used by senior officers of the garrison before being converted to a residence for the Governor of the Leeward Islands. This was destroyed in an earthquake of 1834, which also ended the permanent presence of a garrison on the site.
Museum
A grant of $11 million was provided by the Canadian International Development Agency in 1989 to establish a museum on Dow's Hill, to cater for tourists. The museum was sited close to the ruins of the governor's residence. The museum is operated by the Antigua and Barbuda National Parks Authority and is open daily from 9.00 to 17.00. It contains a gift shop and café/bar. The museum shows a multimedia presentation of Antiguan history from the first Amerindian settlers through to the European agricultural settlements, the island's role as a British military base and the campaign for independence. The museum offers walking tours to nearby historic sites and a weekly "Rum in the Ruins" tour where visitors receive a guided visit to the ruins whilst enjoying rum cocktails.
References
History of British Antigua and Barbuda
Buildings and structures in Antigua and Barbuda
Saint Paul Parish, Antigua and Barbuda
Museums in Antigua and Barbuda
Tourist attractions in Antigua and Barbuda |
Geoffrey Gillman Cradock-Watson (22 August 1908 — 24 June 1989) was an English first-class cricketer and aviator.
Cradock-Watson was born at Great Crosby in Lancashire in August 1908. He was educated in Crosby at the Merchant Taylors' Boys' School, where his father was headmaster. At school, he captained the cricket team. He matriculated to St John's College, Oxford, where he gained a half blue in athletics.
After graduating from Oxford, Cradock-Watson began a career in the petroleum industry for Shell International. His first position was in British Burma, which was then administered as part of British India, where he was a marketing assistant from 1930 to 1940.
In the late 1930s, Cradock-Watson played first-class cricket for Northern India on three occasions in the Ranji Trophy from 1937 to 1939; he also made three first-class appearances for the Europeans cricket team from 1937 to 1940, including one appearance apiece in both the Bombay Pentangular and Madras Presidency Matches. In six first-class matches, he scored 179 runs at an average of 14.91 and with a highest score of 33. A wicket-keeper while fielding, he took 6 catches and made 4 stumpings.
He served with the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve in the Second World War, being commissioned as a pilot officer in the administrative and special duties branch. He was promoted to the war substantive rank of flying officer in January 1942, gaining the rank in full in November 1943. Cradock-Watson was made an OBE in the 1944 New Year Honours. He was mentioned in dispatches in January 1945, at which point he held the acting rank of wing commander. He served in both the European and Middle Eastern theatres. Following the end of the war, he was decorated by the United States as an Officer of the Legion of Merit in October 1945, in recognition of valuable services rendered during the war. After the war he resumed his career in the petroleum industry, working as an aviation manager for the Asiatic Petroleum Company. Cradock-Watson died at Gloucester in June 1989.
References
External links
1908 births
1989 deaths
People from Crosby, Merseyside
People educated at Merchant Taylors' School, Crosby
Alumni of St John's College, Oxford
Shell plc people
English cricketers
Northern India cricketers
Europeans cricketers
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve personnel of World War II
Foreign recipients of the Legion of Merit
Members of the Order of the British Empire
Royal Air Force wing commanders |
Fatal Strike, also known as The Brother Two (), is a 1974 Hong Kong action martial arts film directed by Lung Chien, and starring Yasuaki Kurata.
Plot
Two policemen try to defeat a drug boss just using the art of Kung Fu.
Cast
Kang Chin
Yasuaki Kurata
Ping Lu
Lung Fong
Chi Ma
Ai-ling Pai
Mao Shan
Chin-Lai Sung
References
External links
1970 films
1970 martial arts films
1970s action films
1970s martial arts films
1970s Cantonese-language films
Films shot in Hong Kong
Hong Kong action films
Hong Kong films
Hong Kong films about revenge
Hong Kong martial arts films
Kung fu films
1970s Mandarin-language films
Films directed by Lung Chien |
Miss World Philippines 2022 will be the 11th edition of the Miss World Philippines pageant. It will be held on May 29, 2022. Tracy Perez of Cebu City will crown her successor at the end of the event.
Results
Delegates
References
External links
Beauty pageants in the Philippines
Miss World Philippines
2022 beauty pageants |
Trey Montgomery (born 26 January 1987) is an American basketball head coach who is currently an assistant coach of Penn Quakers under head coach, Steve Donahue.
Coaching Career
On September 5, 2018, Penn Quakers' head coach, Steve Donahue, announced that there will be a reshuffling of the coaching roster. He heralded that Montgomery would be in his new roster. Montgomery, previously, was an assistant coach for the Eastern University Eagles. He described his tenure at Philadelphia as a leap of faith since there are more opportunities in the area than in Louisiana. Since he was the neophyte and youngest in the coaching rotation, he was assigned the responsibility of training the players and as well as checking up on their academic progresses.
References
External links
Trey Montgomery Coaching profile
1987 births
Living people
American men's basketball coaches
American men's basketball players
Guards (basketball)
Penn Quakers men's basketball coaches |
Topo Island is an island located in the Topo town area of Badagry Local Government of Lagos State, in South-west Nigeria. The island was home to the Society of African Missions (SMA) missionaries who built a Chapel, Convent, Teacher training college, cemetary and also a coconut plantation. The island was later abandoned in 1962 when the missionaries left and the locals also left once the plantation could no longer support them.
The island is known for coconut plantation, tourism attractions, and Catholics pilgrimage to a site where an early missionary cemetery is located.
Photo Gallery
References
Lagos State |
Joseph Michael Ervin (June 25, 1951 – July 1, 1981), also known by the alias Joe Michael Erwing, was an American serial killer who was indicted for two murders committed in Texas and Colorado in 1969 and 1981, respectively, but has been posthumously linked to four others committed in the Denver metropolitan area from 1978 to 1981. Ervin was never convicted of the crimes, as he hanged himself while awaiting trial for the final murder.
Crimes
First murder, flight and detention
On August 9, 1969, the 17-year-old Ervin, then a former football player at the Kirkpatrick High School in Fort Worth, Texas, was hanging around with an unidentified friend near the Berry Bowl bowling alley when he came across a car with two men inside. The pair consisted of 21-year-old Rodney Gene Bonham and his friend Larry Holt, both students at the Tarrant County Junior College who had recently arrived at the establishment to play bowling with friends. Ervin and his friend walked up to the driver's window and leaned in to ask him a question, which, depending on the source, was either about offering them a bottle of beer or if Bonham and Holt were waiting for somebody. When Bonham replied that they were about to go inside, Ervin pulled out a pistol and shot him in the neck, threatening to do the same with Holt if he did not do what he ordered him to. Holt pretended to comply, but once they were distracted, he slammed the car door shut, opened the passenger door and fled inside the bowling alley, where he called for help.
Ervin and his accomplice fled the scene and Bonham, who was in critical condition, was driven to the St. Joseph Hospital for treatment. His injuries proved too severe, and Bonham succumbed to them four days later. At the initial stages, police had trouble identifying any suspects due to the seemingly random nature of the killing, which was called 'senseless' by law enforcement. On the same day as this was announced in the news, Ervin phoned the Bonham household and claimed that he was "sorry" for killing their son. One of the detectives assigned to the case, L. V. LeFils, eventually managed to identify Ervin as a potential suspect after he questioned a variety of people in unrelated cases, leading to him being charged with Bonham's murder and a $650 reward for Ervin's arrest.
Fearing arrest, Ervin fled to Colorado and settled in Denver, changing his name to "Joe Michael Erwing" in an attempt to conceal his identity. From 1970 to 1977, Ervin would be repeatedly charged with offenses such as burglary, rape, sexually abusing children, and assault with a deadly weapon, but each time was found not guilty on the grounds of diminished responsibility. Instead of serving jail time, he was repeatedly interned at the Colorado State Hospital in Pueblo, from where he was repeatedly released after months of treatment. Later investigations would reveal that on at least two occasions, typographical errors in listing Ervin's real name and birth date failed to link him to the active arrest warrant in Texas, allowing him to post bail in two cases of rape and theft. Attempts from district attorneys to raise the bail bonds in both cases were also unsuccessful.
Release and serial murders
On December 7, 1978, Ervin knocked on the door of 33-year-old Madeleine Furey-Livaudais, a housewife who was alone with her two young daughters at the time. When she opened the door, he forced her into the bedroom, where he repeatedly stabbed her until she died. Furey-Livaudais' body was later discovered by her husband, Antonio, as he returned home from work. At the time, Denver police were prevented from properly investigating her killing due to a slew of unrelated murders taking place in their jurisdiction.
On August 10, 1980, Ervin confronted 53-year-old Delores Barajas, an employee at the Fairmont Hotel in downtown Denver, who was walking home from work. He stabbed her multiple times and then dragged her body to the back of a nearby apartment building, where it was found several hours later. On December 21, the body of 27-year-old Gwendolyn Harris was found with multiple stab wounds in the Montbello neighborhood, not far from Ervin's own apartment. Her identity could not positively be established at first, but she was later positively identified after an autopsy at the Denver General Hospital.
On January 24, 1981, Ervin stabbed to death his youngest known victim, 17-year-old Antoinette Parks, in a field in Adams County. At the time of her death, Parks was six to seven months pregnant.
Arrest and suicide
On June 27, Ervin was flagged down by 26-year-old police officer Deborah Sue Corr in Aurora for driving under the influence. As she attempted to arrest him, the pair got into a scuffle, with Ervin managing to get a hold of her gun and subsequently shooting Corr. He then fired the weapon at 19-year-old Glen Spies, an Explorer Scout who had driven by the scene and attempted to help Corr, wounding him as well, before driving away. After the shooting was reported to other officers, he was quickly tracked down to his apartment, where he was attempting to saw off a handcuff bracelet that had been placed on his wrist. Ervin was subsequently charged with Corr's murder and the attempted murder of Glen Spies.
While awaiting trial, Ervin was placed in a solitary cell at the Adams County Jail in Brighton. On July 1, he hanged himself with a makeshift rope made from pieces of a towel, and by the time he was driven to Brighton Community Hospital, he was pronounced dead. Upon examining his jail cell, prison officials found a suicide note in which Ervin expressed remorse for his crimes and begged for forgiveness from his victims and the residents of Denver. Due to his death, Bonham and Corr's murders were officially closed. Spies, who fully recovered from his injuries, was later awarded $10,000 by the city of Aurora for his bravery.
Identification
At the time of his death, Ervin was not considered a suspect in the murders of Furey-Livaudais, Barajas, Harris, and Parks, all of which were initially believed to be unrelated to one another and investigated separately. Between 2013 and 2018, the four cases were finally linked via DNA evidence, and in the following year, the Denver Police Crime Laboratory started reinvestigating the cold cases. In the summer of 2021, they found an ancestral link in Texas, which upon further investigation led them to Joe Michael Ervin, whose body had been buried at a cemetery in Arlington, Texas. His body was exhumed to extract DNA from his remains, which conclusively linked him to the four murders in January 2022. As a result, the Denver Police Department announced that they would be closing the cases, as they now considered them solved. Surviving family members of the victims attended the press conference, expressing relief that the murders of their relatives had finally been solved.
See also
List of serial killers in the United States
References
1951 births
1981 deaths
20th-century American criminals
American male criminals
Male serial killers
American serial killers
American murderers of children
People charged with murder
Fugitives wanted by the United States
Fugitives wanted on murder charges
People acquitted by reason of insanity
Serial killers who committed suicide in prison custody
Suicides by hanging in Colorado
Violence against women in the United States
Criminals from Texas
People from Fort Worth, Texas |
Wolfgang Schad (born 27 July 1935 in Biberach an der Riß) is a German evolutionary biologist, anthroposophist and goetheanist.
Life
Schad studied biology, chemistry, physics and education. In the early years of his professional career, he was a teacher at Waldorf schools. After many years as a Waldorf teacher at the Goetheschule in Pforzheim, Wolfgang Schad became a lecturer at the Seminar for Waldorf Education at the Freie Hochschule Stuttgart in 1975. In addition, he was a member of staff at the Educational Research Centre of the Bund der Freien Waldorfschulen in Stuttgart, which he temporarily directed.
In 1992 he founded the Institute for Evolutionary Biology and Morphology at Witten/Herdecke University, which he directed until 2005. The foundation of the chair was supported by the patron Karl Ludwig Schweisfurth, after whom the institute was named.
His son Albrecht Schad also became a Waldorf teacher and, after his father's departure, also a lecturer at the Freie Hochschule Stuttgart in the training for teachers at Waldorf schools.<ref>Dozenten der Freien Hochschule Stuttgart - Prof. Dr. Albrecht Schad</ref>
Wolfgang Schad has since retired and Bernd Rosslenbroich has taken over as head of the institute.University of Witten/Herdecke Faculty of Health: Institute of Evolutionary Biology
Scientific work
In his major work Threefoldness in Humans and Mammals; Toward a Biology of Form, Schad applied Rudolf Steiner’s approach from his idea of the Threefold structure of the human organism in the sense of a comparative morphology to mammals.Wolfgang Schad’s study Threefoldness in Humans and Mammals; Toward a Biology of Form.
From 1982 to 1985 Schad published four anthologies of works by various authors under the title Goetheanist Natural Science in the (anthroposophical) Verlag Freies Geistesleben & Urachhaus. With this he established the term Goetheanism in the environment of anthroposophy. Numerous works by Schad appeared in anthroposophical journals, only occasionally did he write for others. As head of the Institute of Evolutionary Biology, he became editor of the Wissenschaftlichen Schriftenreihe des Instituts für Evolutionsbiologie und Morphologie Universität Witten/Herdecke (Scientific Series of the Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Morphology University of Witten/Herdecke).The Potential Cultural Landscape Vegetation in the Bergisch-Märkische Hügelland
In his research in evolutionary biology, Schad came to the conclusion that evolutionary developments would not take place by coincidence alone, but also not by teleology, but that in many living beings there would live a piece of inner autonomy, which, if the epigenetic changes are inherited by their offspring, could lead them to new forms of development.
"The element of chance frees the course of evolution from the teleological determinism of any plan. In the meantime, quantum and chaos theory have also freed it from the causal determinism in its claim to absoluteness." (Wolfgang Schad, 2009)
His central topics include the temporal shapes in the evolution of animals and humans and heterochrony.Wolfgang Schad: Evolutionary Biology and Education. In: Education and Upbringing, vol. 47, issue 4, 1994. In retirement, he authored several more books published by Urachhausverlag.
Publications (selection)
Man and mammals: Toward a biology of form. Verlag: Waldorf Press, 1977, ISBN 978-0-91461-410-4.
Expanded new edition (with Heinrich Brettschneider and Albrecht Schad), Stuttgart 2012.
Threefoldness in Humans and Mammals: Toward a Biology of Form. Adonis Press 2021. ISBN 978-0-93277-664-8
Die Vorgeburtlichkeit des Menschen – Der Entwicklungsgedanke in der Embryologie. (The Pre-natality of Man - The idea of development in embryology). Urachhaus, Stuttgart 1982, ISBN 978-3-87838-351-2
Vom Leben im Lichtraum. In: Goetheanistische Naturwissenschaft, vol. 3 Zoology, Stuttgart 1983, pp. 42–49.
Stauphänomene am menschlichen Knochenbau. (Congestion Phenomena on the Human Bone Structure). In: Goetheanistische Naturwissenschaft, vol. 4 Anthropology, Stuttgart 1985, pp. 9–29.
Gestaltmotive fossiler Menschenformen. In: Goetheanistische Naturwissenschaft, vol. 4 Anthropology, Stuttgart 1985, pp. 57–152.
Die Ohrorganisation. (The ear organisation). In: Goetheanistische Naturwissenschaft, vol. 4 Anthropology, Stuttgart 1985, pp. 174–189.
Dynamische Morphologie von Herz und Kreislauf. (Dynamic morphology of the heart and circulation.) Goetheanistische Naturwissenschaft, vol. 4 Anthropology, Stuttgart 1985, pp. 190–206.
Andreas Suchantke, Wolfgang Schad: Ökologie. Stuttgart 1998, ISBN 978-3-77250-909-4.
Goethes Weltkultur (= Gesammelte Schriften 1). (Goethe's World Culture (= Collected Writings 1). Stuttgart 2007, ISBN 978-3-77251-971-0.
Evolution als Verständnisprinzip in Kosmos, Mensch und Natur. (Evolution as a principle of understanding in cosmos, man and nature). Stuttgart 2009, ISBN 978-3-77251-809-6.
Zeitbindung in Natur, Kultur und Geist. (Time Binding in Nature, Culture and Spirit). Stuttgart 2016. ISBN 978-3-7725-1402-9.
Was ist Zeit? – Die Welt zwischen Wesen und Erscheinung. (What is Time? - The world between being and appearance). Stuttgart 2017, ISBN 978-3-77251-281-0.
Der Darwinismus im Rückblick und Vorblick – Was den Menschen zum Menschen machte. (Darwinism in retrospect and foresight - What made man man). Stuttgart 2018. ISBN 978-3-77251-403-6.
Weltkinderkunde (Science of world's children). Stuttgart 2018. ISBN 978-3-77252-820-0
External links
References
1935 births
Evolutionary biologists
Living people |
Ashley Lyle and Bart Nickerson are American screenwriters and producers known for creating and executive producing the Showtime drama series Yellowjackets.
Biography
Lyle was born in New Jersey and received her B.A. and MFA from Columbia University.
Lyle and Nickerson wrote for TV shows such as Narcos, The Originals, and AMC's Dispatches from Elsewhere.
In 2022, Lyle and Nickerson were nominated for the Writers Guild of America Award for Television: New Series and Writers Guild of America Award for Television: Dramatic Series for creating the Showtime series Yellowjackets.
References
External links
21st-century American screenwriters
American male screenwriters
American producers
American screenwriters
American women screenwriters
American women television producers
Columbia College (New York) alumni
Columbia University School of the Arts alumni
Filmmaking duos
Living people
People from New Jersey
Screenwriting duos |
Matei Tănasă (born 8 October 2005) is a Romanian footballer who plays for FCSB, as a midfielder.
References
External links
2005 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Iași
Romanian footballers
Association football midfielders
FC Steaua București players
Liga I players |
Lucio Allocca (born 5 July 1943) is an Italian actor, theatre director and playwright.
Life and career
Born in Naples, in 1966 Allocca graduated from the School of Dramatic Art of the Politecnico di Napoli, and was mainly active on theatre, in which he worked with important names such as Eduardo De Filippo, Peppino De Filippo, Mario Martone, Ugo Gregoretti, Michele Galdieri, Mario Scaccia, and Renato Carpentieri. Also a playwright and a theatrical director, he his artistic director of the Theatre de Poche in his hometown.
Allocca got his first film major role in 1979, in Salvatore Piscicelli's Immacolata and Concetta: The Other Jealousy, and then specialized in character roles. He is best known for the role of Otello Testa in the long-running soap opera Un posto al sole. In 2018 he suffered a hearth attack and underwent an angioplasty surgery.
References
External links
1943 births
Living people
People from Naples
Italian male film actors
Italian male television actors
Italian male stage actors
Italian dramatists and playwrights |
Mārtiņš Ints Rītiņš (19 October 1949 – 11 February 2022) was a British-born Latvian chef, restaurateur, businessman and culinary TV presenter. In 2007, he was made Knight of the Order of the Three Stars, a meritorious award for Latvian citizens.
Biography
Born in Nantwich, Cheshire, to Latvian parents and educated in England, Mārtiņš spent part of his life in Canada, but lived in Latvia from 1993.
In 1971, he graduated from Westminster Technical College in London. From the mid-1970s to the early 1990s, he worked for various catering companies in the Grand Metropolitan Hotels hotel chain. From 1984 to 1992, he owned Martins Catering Ltd in Toronto.
Rītiņš was gay. During the 1980s, he sang with a gay mens' choir in Toronto. Rītiņš had struggled with alcoholism as an adult, but later became sober and remained sober until his death.
For many years he hosted his own cooking television LTV show, Kas var būt labāks par šo?. Rītiņš was President of Latvia's Slow Food Association.
On 11 February 2022, Rītiņš died of complications from COVID-19 at Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital in Riga. He was 72.
References
External links
Chef Martins Ritins brings top cuisine to small Latvia
Martins Ritins: The First and Still Brightest Star of Latvia’s Culinary Sky
Vincent Restorans
1949 births
2022 deaths
Latvian television personalities
20th-century Latvian businesspeople
21st-century Latvian businesspeople
British emigrants to Latvia
People from Nantwich
English people of Latvian descent
Recipients of the Order of the Three Stars
Television chefs
LGBT people from Latvia
Gay men
Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Latvia |
Adewale Oluwafemi Sapara (born 27 January 1995) is a Nigerian professional footballer who plays as a Left Winger for Portuguese club Portimonense.
Career
Sapara started with a third division side when he arrived Portugal in the 2018/2019 season. He was adjudged the most valuable player in the division in his first stint.
He would follow that dazzling season with another, with a promotion to the second division with Leixões.
Leixões SC
On 1 July 2020, Sapara signed a contract with Leixões in the Liga Sabseg.
At Leixões, Sapara was six times voted MVP in the course of the season and also emerged his club’s highest goal scorer.
Portimonese S.C.
On 31 January 2022, Sapara moved to Portimonense in the Liga Bwin.
References
External links
1995 births
Living people
Nigerian footballers
Association football wingers
Portimonense S.C. players
Leixões S.C. players
Sportspeople from Lagos |
Cambridge University Australian Rules Football Club (CUARFC, also known as the Lions), founded in the early 20th century, is the Australian rules football club for Cambridge University. Both men's and women's teams represent the club in the National University League, the Fitzpatrick Cup, and the annual Varsity Match against Oxford, among other things.
History
The club has been active for over 100 years, with the first recorded men's game against Oxford taking place on March 18, 1911. The women's game has developed more recently, with the first women's varsity match in 2018 ending in a tie.
The 90th Varsity match was the subject of a short ABC documentary.
The connection between the university and the sport in fact stretches much further back to when Tom Wills, one of the founders of the game, studied there (seemingly to be more concerned about playing cricket than academics), then returning to Australia to set up the Melbourne Football Club.
Club record
Varsity match results
Membership & organisation
Membership of the club is not restricted to Cambridge University students or staff, although a significant proportion of the club would fall into these groups. The club naturally has a large Australian membership, as well as many Irish players, due to the similarity of the game to Gaelic football.
Players have a wide range of sporting backgrounds, ranging from having not played much sport at all, to having played Australian rules previously for a large part of their lives.
The club is managed by a committee, elected annually, consisting of the President, Treasurer, and other responsible people.
The club also has strong ties with the North London Lions, and a handful of players have ended up playing for both teams.
See also
AFL Europe
Australian Rules Football in Europe
Australian Rules Football in the United Kingdom
References
External links
Official website
Sport at Cambridge University
National University League
ABC documentary for 90th Varsity match (on YouTube)
Australian rules football clubs established in 1911
Australian rules football clubs in England
Sport at the University of Cambridge |
Memve'ele Hydroelectric Power Station is a 211 megawatt hydroelectric power station in Cameroon. Construction of this dam began in April 2012 and the dam produced its first 80 megawatts in April 2019. Full commercial operations are expected to begin once the 225 kiloVolt high voltage transmission line to Yaounde is completed.
Location
The power station is located at the village of Nyabissan, in Ntem Valey Département, in the South Region of Cameroon, across the Ntem River. Nyabissan is located approximately , by road, southwest of Ebolowa, the nearest large town.
Nyabissan is located approximately , by road, southwest of Yaoundé, Cameroon's capital and second largest city.
Overview
The development of this power station was originally led by a consortium comprising Globeleq and Sud Energie,
based in the United Kingdom. In May 2009, that consortium backed out of the deal. That same year, Sinohydro, the Chinese state-owned construction company took over the development rights, as engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor.
According to online reports, the construction phase began in earnest after the EPC contract with Sinohydro was executed in April 2012. The design calls for an earth fill dam measuring high, creating a reservoir lake containing of water.
The design also calls for a 225kV high voltage evacuation line from the power station to Yaoundé, where most of the generated energy is destined. The installation of three 225kV/90kV transformers at Ebolowa, Nkoumou and Ahala, is part of the design.
Construction costs
Due to multiple delays, the cost for this project has kept increasing over time. In May 2009, the cost estimates were €556 million (approx. US$795 million). As of August 2021, total cost for all the project components totaled US$831.6 million (approx. €727.2 million). As of December 2021, €5 million (approx. US$5.7 million) was still needed to compensate landowners, in order to allow the completion of the high voltage electricity evacuation line.
Funding
The table below illustrates the funding sources for the power station, evacuation line and associated infrastructure, including electricity substations.
Operations
The energy generated at this power station is sold to Eneo Cameroon SA, the national electricity utility company.
See also
List of power stations in Cameroon
Nachtigal Hydroelectric Power Station
References
External links
Provisional Reception of the Memve'ele Hydroelectric Dam As of 8 May 2018.
Power stations in Cameroon
South Region (Cameroon)
Hydroelectric power stations in Cameroon
Energy infrastructure under construction |
City Clinical Hospital No. 40 () is a major hospital serving Moscow and the region surrounding it.
History
The history of the hospital dates back to 1898, when at a meeting of the Moscow District Zemstvo, Dr. Evgeny Fedorovich Pecherkin was instructed to organize the Rostokino Zemstvo Hospital (). The territory designated for the hospital was a wasteland.
The hospital complex began with 4 peasant huts, which housed an outpatient clinic with a pharmacy, an emergency room for 3-4 beds and rooms for paramedical and obstetrical personnel and families. Medical assistance was provided to the population of the surrounding villages, factory workers.
By 1899, a wooden house was built, which began to function as a hospital with surgical, therapeutic and maternity beds. Separately, a barrack was built for "contagious" patients and apartments for staff. The hospital had a total of 40 beds. The hospital and outpatient clinic served twenty-five thousand people in the villages of Alekseevsky, Rostokino, Medvedkovo, Leonovo, Sviblovo, Ostankino and Mokhovo near Moscow.
In 2019 the hospital expanded significantly with the addition of a new complex in Kommunarka district in southern Moscow called Novomoskovskoye (. Since the breakout of the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia, the Kommunarka complex became one of the largest treatment centers for infected people, with president Putin visiting the hospital.
See also
Healthcare in Russia
References
Buildings and structures in Moscow
Hospitals in Russia |
Maurizia Balmelli (born 1970) is a Swiss-born literary translator, currently residing in Paris. She has translated a number of notable works from English and French into Italian, including works by Sally Rooney, Aleksandar Hemon, Martin Amis, Ian McEwan, Mary Gaitskill, J. M. G. Le Clézio, Emmanuel Carrère, and others. She has won several awards for her translations, including the Swiss Special Prize for Translation, the Gregor von Rezzori Prize and the Terra Nova Prize.
Biography
Balmelli was born in Locarno, Switzerland, in 1970, and grew up on Lake Maggiore, in Switzerland. She currently lives in Paris, France. She initially studied theatre, at the École Internationale de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq in Paris, and later at the Holden School in Turin, where she now teaches an annual French translation workshop.
Career
Balmelli has translated works by several notable authors from French and English into Italian, including Sally Rooney, Aleksandar Hemon, Martin Amis, Wallace Stegner, Ian McEwan, Mary Gaitskill, Miriam Toews, J.M.G. Le Clézio, Emmanuel Carrère, Agota Kristof, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Marie Darrieussecq, Jean Echenoz, Cormac McCarthy, Noëlle Revaz, Yasmina Reza, and Fred Vargas. In 2022, she was awarded the Swiss Federal Office of Culture's Special Prize for Translation, and was cited as "one of the most significant translators from French and English to Italian," and commended for building "...bridges between different literatures, dedicating a constant, precious commitment to teaching and training." Her translations have been published by several notable Italian publishers, including Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Adelphi Edizioni, and Marcos y Marcos. Her recent translations of Sally Rooney's books, Normal People and Beautiful World, Where Are You, received critical appreciation in the Italian press.
She has translated over 80 books into Italian over the course of her career.
Awards
(2010) Gregor von Rezzori Prize for translating Cormac McCarthy's Suttree from English to Italian
(2014) The Schiller Foundation's Terra Nova Prize for translating Noëlle Revaz's Heart of the Beast from French to Italian
(2022) Swiss Federal Office of Culture's Special Prize for Translation
Bibliography
Living people
1970 births
21st-century Swiss writers
Swiss translators
21st-century translators
People from Locarno |
Scorpaena jacksoniensis, the Eastern red scorpionfish, Billy Bougain, cardinal scorpionfish, coral cod, coral perch, Eastern red scorpioncod, fire cod, Northern scorpionfish, ocean perch, prickly heat, red rockcod or red scorpion-cod, is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Scorpaenidae, the scorpionfishes. It is found in the south western Pacific Ocean.
Taxonomy
Scorpaena jacksoniensis was first formally described in 1866 by the Austrian ichthyologist Franz Steindachner with the type locality given as Port Jackson in New South Wales. This species has been considered to be the type species of the genus Ruboralga, in 2011 this taxon was redefined as a species complex with Ruboralga confirmed as a junior synonym of Scorpaena, S. jacksoniensis was confirmed as a separate species from S. cardinalis which is confined to northern New Zealand and some islands in the Tasman Sea. The other valid species in the complex is S. orgila of Easter Island. The specific name jacksonensis means "from Jackson", an reference to the type locality.
Description
Scorpaena jacksoniensis has 12 spines and 9 soft rays in its dorsal fin, the 4th (occasionally the 3rd) spine being the longest, There are 16–18, normally 17, fin rays in the pectoral fin. The pelvic fin base is covered in embedded cycloid scales and these are also found on the rear of the underside which has a thick skin. The lateral lacrimal spine has 2, occasionally 3, points; the forward lacrimal spine has, 1 or 2, small spiny points on its rear edge and the rear lacrimal spine has a single point and us directed forwards and downwards in juveniles and young with a standard length of less than but it is pointed either straight down or diagonally rearwards in adults. There is a ridge in the middle of the interorbital space which has no spines but there is an occipital pit and a supplementary spine on the preoperculum. The pterotic spine is normally simple in young but in large adults, with a standard length greater than it may have 2 or more points. The gap separating the upper and lower opercular spines is clothed in thick skin which has sensory pores and canals. There are many skin flaps and tentacles on front part of the upper body. The colour of this species is frequently bright red but its colouration is extremely variable, it can be light grey to bright red marked with blotches. There are normally small dark spots on the chest. The juveniles can show a white to purplish blotch across the nape. Males have a large black spot on the soft-rayed part of the dorsal fin. This species has reached a maximum length of >
Distribution and habitat
Scorpaena jacksoniensis is endemic to the temperate seas of southeastern Australia. It definitely occurs as far north as Caloundra in Queensland south to the Beware Reef in Victoria. It may also occur as far west as Western Port, Victoria, however the Victorian records are based on a few old specimens and the southern limit of this species appears to be Jervis Bay in New South Wales. This species occurs in shallow estuaries and on rocky coastal to deep, offshore reefs. It is a benthic species which is camouflaged among rocks, corals and algae at depths between .
Biology
Scorpaena jacksonensis is an ambush predator that uses its excellent camouflage to hide on the substrate, lying motionless and waiting for its prey of crustaceans and fishes to come within reach of its large mouth to be swallowed whole. They have separate sexes with external fertilisation, breeding in the summer and autumn. The females extrude hollow, two-lobed, buoyant gelatinous masses to protect their eggs. This is a slow growing species which can take 5 years to reach a length of and 10 years to reach and the oldest fish known was 33 years old. The dorsal spines in the dorsal fin are venomous and envenomation is extremely painful for people.
Fisheries
Scorpaena jacksoniensis has palatable flesh and is of minor interest to commercial line and recreational fisheries.
References
jacksoniensis
Fish described in 1866
Taxa named by Franz Steindachner |
Pierre Farel is a French painter and artist.
Early life and education
Pierre was born in Orange, southern France in 1957. He graduated from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Avignon. When he was 20, he moved to Corsica.
Career
Farel has been an artist and creator since 1987 and has operated his studio workshop in Ajaccio, which was established in 1988. His first exhibition took place in 1989, when Pierre Cardin gave him a place in Espace Cardin. After that, he displayed his work in several galleries. During an exhibition in New York in 2001, he met Richard Elmir, the Director of Medici Gallery in Paris, who asked him to join the artists of his gallery. Since 2002, he has been exhibiting his work at the Place des Vosges every year.
Work
Farel has created over 2000 paintings, along with lithographs and sculptures. His work has been featured in magazines such as Univers des Arts, Corse Matin Presse, Artistes Magazine, Femina, Public Sénat, 3 Corse Viastella, and Select Magazine.
Jean Louis Avril in Univers des arts, said "Over the course of numerous events and exhibitions both in France and around the world, the theme of his works takes the form of his favorite creed: Women, women, women." Farel's paintings depict sensual characters with refined forms that are set in fashionable bars grooving to the sound of dance and music, while Corsica stays his main source of inspiration. In 2018, he celebrated 30 years of painting at the Château de la Buzine in Marseille, Galerie de Médicis in Paris, Casino de soiree in Ajaccio and Manoir de la Roseraie in Grignan, where he was invited to exhibit in residence.
During the COVID-19 lockdown, Farel created Merci, which is a part of the travelling exhibition in Portugal, bringing together many selected artists. This painting has been offered to the staff of 3 hospitals in Ajaccio as a token of gratitude. It was also made the cover of Univers des Arts, a magazine, as a part of its special summer edition in 2020.
Exhibitions
1988 - Paris - Palais de Chaillot Young French Painting for the city of Ajaccio – Foundation Reader's digest France
1995 - Contemporary Art Fair Quai Henri IV - Contemporary Art Fair Place de la Bastille
1998 - Beijing China Art Fair - La Rochelle Salon Art Atlantic - - Contemporary Art Fair Place de la Bastille
2000 - Berlin Contemporary Art Fair Schlossplatz - Paris Salle Wagram Contemporary Art Fair MIA
2001 - New-York Art Expo - Hong-Kong Art Fair in May and November
2004 - Great Britain – London - UK London Art Fair
2013 - Lebanon – Beirut – The Francophonie Art Fair
References
Living people
French painters
1957 births |
Phi I or Phi 1 () is a residential locality in south-western Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. Bordered by Omega I to the north and Phi II to the east, it is known to be one of the real estate hotspots of Greater Noida, alongside Omega II, Omega I, Phi II, Chi I and Chi II. It is named after the Greek letter Phi.
References
Geography of Uttar Pradesh |
Heteroperipatus is a genus of Central American velvet worms in the family Peripatidae.
Species
The genus contains the following two species:
Mongeperipatus solorzanoi (Morera-Brenes & Monge-Nájera, 2010)
Mongeperipatus kekoldi González et al. 2020
References
Onychophorans
Onychophoran genera |
Aarthi Ramamurthy is an American entrepreneur, talk show host and Internet celebrity. She founded two venture-backed companies, as well as launching the “Good Time Show” Clubhouse chat show with her husband, Sriram Krishnan. She has featured guests including Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Virgil Abloh, and Steve Balmer. She is represented by WME.
Early life and education
Ramamurthy was born in Chennai, India, and had a “typical middle-class Indian upbringing.”
Career
Software engineering
In 2005, Ramamurthy was hired by S. Somasegar at Microsoft, moving to the company's Seattle headquarters in 2007. There, she led part of the Xbox Live team. She later worked at Netflix, where she built the consumer SDK. She also worked at Facebook as a software engineer, where she served as Director of Product leading creator monetization products such as Facebook Stars, subscription and tipping products, and later led Facebook Groups and community governance products.
Entrepreneurship
Ramamurthy co-founded True & Co, a lingerie e-commerce company in 2012. The company provides a “big data” approach to fitting bras based on an interactive questionnaire.
She then served as entrepreneur-in-residence at Battery Ventures.
In 2013, she founded Lumoid, a rental/try-before-you-buy service for gadgets such as camera gear and headphones. The company's goal was to allow consumers to test different brands before committing to a purchase. For example, prior to the Apple Watch's launch, over 3,000 people committed to rent the device through Lumoid. Best Buy partnered with Lumoid to power its gear rental program.
The Good Time Show
In December 2020, Ramamurthy and her husband, Sriram Krishnan, launched the Good Time Show, a Clubhouse talk show. They describe it as "focuse[d] on organic conversations on anything from startups to venture capitalism and cryptocurrencies." An early appearance by Elon Musk on The Good Time Show was described as the first show that “broke Clubhouse” by rapidly exceeding the limit of 5,000 simultaneous users. The desire to interact with a larger community led to a variety of later innovations to allow streaming and replaying of Clubhouse chats. On that episode, Elon Musk grilled Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev regarding the GameStop trading controversy. As of July, 2021, the show had over 175,000 subscribers. During Krishnan's interview with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg described augmented and virtual reality as the future of work, alluding to the then-unannounced Meta concept. Additional guests have included Tony Hawk, Diane von Furstenberg, Sonam Kapoor Ahuja, Kanye West, and MrBeast.
In 2022, WME signed Ramamurthy and Krishnan for film and TV development projects, as well as other publishing and podcasting ventures.
Clubhouse
In 2021, Ramamurthy joined Clubhouse as Head of International, launching 30 languages, creator programs in India and Brazil, and the first Indian app icon.
Investing and other activities
Ramamurthy has made early-stage investments in technology and growth companies. She has spoken on panels about diversity in technology and product leadership.
Personal life
Ramamurthy is married to Sriram Krishnan, a venture capitalist and co-host of The Good Time Show. They met in college in 2003 through a Yahoo! chat room related to a coding project and began dating in 2006. They live in San Francisco.
References
Living people
Silicon Valley people
American venture capitalists
People from Chennai
Year of birth missing (living people) |
Mongeperipatus kekoldi is a species of velvet worm in the Peripatidae family. Males of this species have 32 or 33 pairs of legs; females have 37 to 39. This species was discovered in Costa Rica.
References
Onychophorans
Animals described in 2020 |
Santa Maria in Piazza may refer to:
Santa Maria in Piazza, Loro Piceno, a church in Loro Piceno, Marche, Italy
Santa Maria in Piazza, Mogliano, a church in Mogliano, Marche, Italy
See also
Santa Maria a Piazza
Santa Maria di Piazza (disambiguation) |
Arif Khan (cricketer)
Arif Khan (skier)
Arif Khan (warlord)
Arif Mohammad Khan
Arif Khan Joy |
Hypnosis () is a 2020 Russian-Finnish drama film directed by Valery Todorovsky. It was theatrically released in Russia on October 15, 2020.
Plot
A young guy named Misha goes to hypnosis sessions with the hope of getting rid of sleepwalking, but in the end he ceases to distinguish between reality and illusion.
Cast
References
External links
2020 films
Russian-language films
Russian films
2020 drama films |
Phi II or Phi 2 () is a residential locality in south-western Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. Bordered by Omega I to the north, Phi I to the west and Swarn Nagari to the east, it is known to be one of the real estate hotspots of Greater Noida, alongside Omega II, Omega I, Phi I, Phi III, Phi IV, Chi I, Chi II, Chi III, Chi IV and Chi V. It is named after the Greek letter Phi.
References
Geography_of_Uttar_Pradesh
Meerut division geography stubs |
The Fuji GS645 series was a lineup of cameras manufactured by Fujifilm of Japan. The lineup included several cameras, differentiated by their focal length and by some cosmetic features: The GS545, GS645W, and GS645S. The cameras, released between March 1983 and October 1984, are medium format and accept either 120 or 220 film. The cameras take photographs in the 6 × 4.5 frame size in portrait orientation.
History
The initial model in the linuep, the GS645, is designed with a bellows system that has been compared as returning to Fujifilm's original roots in bellows-style medium format camera design.
A similar camera lineup released soon after, the Fuji GA645 series, also has a rangefinder design but offers autofocus.
Models
There are three models in the GS645 line. The first camera introduced was the Fuji GS645. This camera is a folding camera with bellows, and a normal EBC Fujinon S 75mm 3.4 lens. The Fuji GS645W was released soon after, which removed the bellows system in favor of a wider, fixed-in-place 45mm 5.6 lens. A third version, the Fuji GS645S, was later released with a 60mm 4.0 lens, designed for use photographing family settings, which has been compared to the Holga 120 because of its size and focal length. The GS645S includes a crowbar around the lens to protect from damage.
All three models take photographs in portrait orientation, have a rangefinder focusing mechanism, and include a built-in battery powered light meter. They also can accept either 120mm or 220mm film. All models have a fully mechanical operation, meaning they can be used without a battery.
The cameras have received some criticism for their fragility, though their form factor and the quality of the lenses has received praise.
Specifications
References
Fujifilm cameras
Fujifilm rangefinder cameras
Rangefinder cameras
Cameras by format
Cameras introduced in 1983 |
The 54th Dan Kolov & Nikola Petrov Tournament, was a sport wrestling event held in Sofia, Bulgaria between 29 and 31 January 2016.
This international tournament includes competition in both men's and women's freestyle wrestling and men's Greco-Roman wrestling. This tournament is held in honor of Dan Kolov who was the first European freestyle wrestling champion from Bulgaria and European and World Champion Nikola Petroff.
Event videos
The event was air freely on the Bulgarian Wrestling Federation Live YouTube channel.
Medal table
Medal overview
Men's freestyle
Greco-Roman
Women's freestyle
Participating nations
222 competitors from 27 nations participated.
(1)
(19)
(8)
(3)
(66)
(2)
(1)
(5)
(6)
(1)
(22)
(1)
(14)
(1)
(9)
(6)
(7)
(13)
(2)
(1)
(11)
(1)
(7)
(7)
(1)
(6)
References
Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament
Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament
Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament
Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament |
Events in the year 2022 in Kuwait.
Incumbents
Events
Ongoing — COVID-19 pandemic in Kuwait
Deaths
6 February - Sheikh Hamad Badr Khaled Al-Salman Al-Sabah (aged 60).
10 February - Dr. Saleh Mohammad Al-Ojairi, (aged 101) astronomer, founder of astronomy in Kuwait and the region.
References
2020s in Kuwait
Years of the 21st century in Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait |
Deeper! () is a 2020 Russian comedy film directed by Mikhail Segal. It was theatrically released in Russia on October 22, 2020.
Plot
The film tells about a young director who forced all the figures in the porn industry to play by his own rules.
Cast
References
External links
2020 films
Russian-language films
Films about pornography
2020 comedy films
Russian sex comedy films |
Prema is a Hindi language social novel written by Indian writer Munshi Premchand. It is regarded as Premchand's first novel. The story is about the poor condition of widows in India. The novel supports widow remarriage. It was published in 1907 by Indian Press/Hindustan Publishing House.
References
Novels by Premchand |
Judy Mahlatji (born December 2, 2001), is a South African deep house DJ and record producer prominently known as Judy Jay, in November 2021 she abandoned music due to mental health issues, after spending 2 months away from the decks she announced her come back in early 2022.
After she came back from her musical hiatus, she received a massive gig guide with 37 events that are going to last til late June (if not extended) with events outside the country, she will be visiting neighboring countries such as Lesotho, Swaziland and Botswana respectively.
In mid 2021, Judy Jay won the Diesel Denim Friday, where she was up against over seventy DJs across the country. She was brought into the competition by the HERO DJ, Lamiez Holworthy.
Controversies
As many artists tend to be ashamed of their backgrounds or where they come from, Judy seems to be one of those artists. Fans and followers were very disappointed when Judy was interviewed on Channel O where she was asked where does she live and she said Bolivia estate in Polokwane where as her followers thought she was going to put Ga-Sekhukhune on the map, however, sadly she did not.
Discography
References
External links
South African DJs
Women DJs
2001 births
People from Limpopo
People from Sekhukhune District Municipality
South African record producers
South African people
Living people
Sotho people
21st-century South African musicians
South African musicians |
The Waltham Forest Cello Fest is a cello festival based in the London Borough of Waltham Forest, north-east London.
History
Festival was created in 2019 as a cello celebration of the communities in Waltham Forest the first ever Mayor's London Borough of Culture. The WFCF was supported by Make It Happen - London Borough of Waltham Forest.
2019
The 1st Waltham Forest Cello Fest commemorated the 334th anniversary of the birth of Johann Sebastian Bach, the 327th anniversary of the birth if Italian baroque composer Giuseppe Tartini, the 200th anniversary of the birth of German - French composer and cellist Jacques Offenbach, the 100th anniversary of the birth of Jewish composer Gideon Klein - Gideon Klein Centenary, the 100th anniversary of the birth of American Jazz Cellist Fred Katz - Fred Katz Centenary, the 60th anniversary of the death of Swiss-born American composer Ernest Bloch and London's first ever Borough of Culture in 2019!
2020
The 2nd Waltham Forest Cello Fest scheduled many cello events to commemorate the 335th anniversary of the birth of Johann Sebastian Bach, the 250th anniversary of the birth of Ludwig van Beethoven, the 250th anniversary of the death of Italian baroque composer Giuseppe Tartini, the 175th anniversary of the birth of French composer Gabriel Fauré, the 140th anniversary of the birth of Swiss - American composer Ernest Bloch, the 140th anniversary of the death of French - German composer Jacques Offenbach, the 140th anniversary of the birth of Jewish composer James Simon, the 100th anniversary of the birth of Armenian composer Alexander Arutjunjan, Make Music Day 2020 and St David's Day.
2021
The 3rd Waltham Forest Cello fest in London was held mainly online, featuring WFCF Cello Concerts, Underground Lunchtime Recitals (in the historic Victoria Line carriage), Cello Weekend, Make Music Day and Cello Academy. In 2021 festival commemorated the 121st anniversary of the birth of Jiří Weil (1900 - 1959), 211th anniversary of the birth of poet Karel Hynek Mácha (1810 - 1836) and the 336th anniversary of the birth of Johann Sebastian Bach. The WFCF 2021 featured cellists and young promising cello talents from Belgium, China, the Czech Republic, France, Israel, Italy, the UK and the USA.
Artists
Musicians who have appeared include cellists Anna Brikciusová, František Brikcius, Yiqi Chen, Mira Kardan, Stijn Kuppens, Anna Shuttleworth (1927-2021), Duo Brikcius and George Wolfe-McGuire. Together with cellist, Cello Museum founder and curator Brenda Neece, cellist, researcher and guest curator Erica Lessie, conductor and composer Peter Askim, percussionist Brecht Claesen, violinist and philosopher Hugh Desmond, organist and composer Irena Kosíková, violinist and conductor Jan Talich, Talich Chamber Orchestra, soprano Nofar Yacobi and narrator Jan Židlický.
Venues
Concerts were held in The London Borough of Waltham Forest
the Engine House - Walthamstow Wetlands
historic Victoria Line Carriage - Walthamstow Pumphouse Museum
One Hoe Street in Walthamstow
Church of St John the Baptist in Leytonstone
Church of St Michael and All Angels in Walthamstow
the Parish Church of Ss Peter and Paul in Chingford
and online.
References
External links
Official website
Borough of Culture: Cello Fest Two Siblings
London Cello Society: The 3rd WALTHAM FOREST CELLO FEST 2021 in London
BCSA: the 7th Underground Lunchtime Recital
Czech Centre London: František Brikcius, Anna Brikciusová and Irena Kosíková at Waltham Forest Cello Fest
The Strad: Waltham Forest Cello Fest 2021
Classical music festivals in England
Music festivals in London
Music festivals established in 2019 |
Mohammad Saleem Beg (born 1949) is an Indian art conservator, historian and columnist of national repute. He has done pioneering work in the field of conservation and restoration of cultural property, focused on protection and care of cultural property (tangible cultural heritage), including artworks, architecture, archaeology, and museum collections. He remained in the news for his work on heritage conservation of Srinagar City which helped UNESCO to declare Srinagar as Heritage City of India.
A well known name in heritage conservation from Srinagar, Beg has been a member of the prestigious National Monument Authority (NMA), Government of India for five years.
Beg has also been associated with UNESCO, World Monument Fund, Indian Heritage Cities Network as a trustee and other cultural organizations nationally and internationally.
Beg has a marathon experience of heritage conservation in Kashmir , particularly in the architectural sector. He accomplished projects like restoration of Aali Masjid and Thag Baab Sahib (RA) shrine apart from conservation of Mughal monuments. He is associated with many national and international organizations in the field of art and culture.
Early life
Born and brought up in Srinagar City Beg was educated at the Sri Pratap College Srinagar and the University of Kashmir. Mr. Beg entered the erstwhile State government service in 1975 and retired in 2006 as the Director-General of Tourism.
Awards
Jammu and Kashmir Government has awarded Beg for his lifetime contribution in the field of heritage conservation. He was awarded a EEC fellowship in 1998 which allowed him to attend study courses at Universities of Luven, Belgium, and Trinity College, Dublin. Mr. Beg promoted local arts and crafts, and raised public awareness of Kashmir's rich heritage and architecture.
Work and Contribution
He is a leading figure in getting Srinagar listed as one of the 100 most threatened heritage cities by the World Monument Fund in 2008. Mr. Beg has traveled extensively and has attended numerous conferences, including the 1997 UN Special Session on Environment in New York, and the 1997 Kyoto Convention on Climate Change in Japan. His articles and essays have been published in various publications. Since retirement, he has remained active as the Convener of the J&K chapter of the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage.
See also
Masud Choudhary
Shujaat Bukhari
References
1949 births
Living people
University of Kashmir alumni
People from Jammu and Kashmir
Indian Muslims
Writers from Jammu and Kashmir
Scholars from Jammu and Kashmir |
In Deep Sleep () is a 2020 Russian drama film directed by Mariya Ignatenko. The film is a participant of Kinotavr-2020 and the Forum program of the Berlin International Film Festival.
Plot
Victor's wife suddenly dies, causing his world to fall into a deep sleep and Victor decides to look for a man who does not sleep.
Cast
References
External links
2020 films
Russian-language films
Russian films
2020 drama films |
Oleksandr Viktorovych Apanchuk (; born 2 November 1993) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a centre-forward for Ukrainian club Ahrobiznes Volochysk.
References
External links
1993 births
Living people
People from Ostroh Raion
Ukrainian footballers
Association football forwards
FC ODEK Orzhiv players
FC Nyva Ternopil players
FC Dinaz Vyshhorod players
FC Ahrobiznes Volochysk players
Ukrainian Second League players
Ukrainian Amateur Football Championship players |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.