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States. As of the 2020 Census, it had a population of 184. References Further reading External links Pawnee County maps:
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184. References Further reading External links Pawnee County maps: Current, Historic, KDOT Townships in Pawnee County, Kansas Townships
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alongside Omega II, Omega I, Phi I, Phi III, Phi IV, Phi II, Chi I, Chi III, Chi IV and Chi V. It is named
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II, Omega I, Phi I, Phi III, Phi IV, Phi II, Chi I, Chi III, Chi IV and Chi V. It is named after the Greek
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South Korean actor. Kim Dong-wook may also refer to: JK Kim Dong-wook (born 1975), South Korean singer Kim Dong-wook (footballer) (born
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to: JK Kim Dong-wook (born 1975), South Korean singer Kim Dong-wook (footballer) (born 1989), South Korean footballer Kim Dong-wook (speed
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began building a large house, with LMS funding, considered by some to be too ostentatious for a missionary. When Abel took leave in England in 1900, he gave a series of popular lectures. These were supplemented by a small pamphlet, Kwato, New Guinea, 1890-1900, which gave further details. He was asked to write a children's gift book to be presented by LMS. Savage Life in New Guinea was published at the end of 1901. In it, he argued that some Melanesian customs were doomed to decay and others would have to be replaced. He deplored many of the customs of the Papuans, although he respected their practical skills such as canoe building. But he feared that they might be overwhelmed by European "civilization". Indeed, he became increasingly concerned for the future of the indigenous population under the Australian administration, considering that they might experience the same fate of being overwhelmed as the Maoris in New Zealand or the aboriginal Australians. To address this, he believed it important that the Papuans became economically self-sufficient. Relations with other Europeans and Australians From 1901, he became widely known for championing the rights of Papuans in court cases against Europeans and Abel experienced increasing conflict with some Australian residents in the Milne Bay area. His disclosures of various scandals in 1901 made him unpopular amongst the traders in Samarai but earned him the trust of Papuans. Conflict arose from a court action for rape against an Australian in 1902, in which a Kwato mission teacher gave evidence for the prosecution. In the following year, following the murder of a white storekeeper, Abel claimed there had been a miscarriage of justice. He further alleged that a group of armed traders led by a government officer had shot several Milne Bay villagers and burned 38 houses. Noting the decline in the population of the Milne Bay area, he also became an opponent of the practice of blackbirding, a form of slavery in which islanders would be kidnapped and taken to work in Queensland and elsewhere. He also warned local people to avoid "selling" their land and advised them how to oppose expropriation. Through the Australian prime minister Alfred Deakin, he met Atlee Hunt, Secretary of the Department of External Affairs, who encouraged him to continue reporting on affairs in Papua. When the acting administrator of the Territory of Papua, Judge Christopher Robinson, committed suicide after a royal commission into events on Goaribari Island, many Europeans felt that Abel had driven Robinson to his death with an anonymous attack on him in a Sydney newspaper. Robinson had led a reprisal mission to Goaribari after the islanders had killed Chalmers and another missionary, Oliver Tomkins, as well as ten trainee missionaries. Business activities During his 1909 furlough visit to England, Abel persuaded the directors to let him plant coconuts. This was intended to provide work for Papuans on plantations managed by Abel's converts. were planted within two years, with financing from people in Sydney. The main purpose of this was to protect the land of the people in Milne Bay from being taken over by Australians. However, other missionaries objected, so Abel agreed to sell the plantations at cost to the LMS. It soon became clear that the society could not afford to maintain the properties and a deputation, sent out in 1915–16 to investigate, recommended the sale of all but for each mission and also recommended the reduction in the number of children per mission to 50. Abel would not accept this, and in 1917 sailed to London to confer with the directors. In early 1918, Abel left the LMS, taking the 560 members of the Milne Bay church with him to form the Kwato Extension Association (KEA). The Association would lease its land in Milne Bay from the LMS. Abel would remain nominally an LMS missionary but his salary ceased. He persuaded the society to convert the Kwato Extension Association into a company. Reliance on American funding In 1921, Abel and his family went to England, leaving Kwato in the charge of Madge Parkin (1865-1939), his wife's cousin, who had been
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in Port Moresby in October 1890 and briefly relieved James Chalmers at the mission. In August 1891 he joined another missionary, F. W. Walker, at Kwato Island, on the southeast tip of New Guinea in what is now Milne Bay Province. The island had previously been used by Chinese and European traders, but was uninhabited by 1890. The LMS owned the freehold. Initially, he spent some time conducting an anthropological study of the people on Logea Island (also spelled Rogeia), immediately to the south of Kwato. In 1891, Abel went to Sydney and on 22 November 1891 married Elizabeth Beatrice Emma Moxon (1869–1939), known as Beatrice, the daughter of a wealthy Anglican family who he had met aboard ship, returning with her to Kwato. At the mission, the couple began teaching elementary subjects and Bible-study, as well as carpentry, saw-milling and boat building for the boys, and sewing and lace work for girls, while Walker spent much of his time sailing around the islands to supervise local missionary teachers. The Abels enforced strict rules of sexual segregation, unless the couple chose to marry. They introduced sport, particularly cricket and association football. When Kwato later began to play cricket against other teams, particularly Samarai, the "classic formality of English cricket", with white clothing, pads, caps and a scoreboard was imitated exactly. Walker fell out with the directors of the LMS and resigned in 1896. After that, the closest missionaries to the Abels were about 100 km to the west at Lawes College, a teacher-training college for local missionaries named after William George Lawes. Under the Abels, local children were separated from their parents as infants. They worked in the mission at the trades they had learnt, and their products were sold to the nearby trading centre of Samarai. Adults who had converted also worked for the mission and became lay evangelists. Although the system of putting children and adults to work was approved by the LMS, it was subject to some criticism by other missionaries and some of the lay preachers. In 1895, Abel and his wife began building a large house, with LMS funding, considered by some to be too ostentatious for a missionary. When Abel took leave in England in 1900, he gave a series of popular lectures. These were supplemented by a small pamphlet, Kwato, New Guinea, 1890-1900, which gave further details. He was asked to write a children's gift book to be presented by LMS. Savage Life in New Guinea was published at the end of 1901. In it, he argued that some Melanesian customs were doomed to decay and others would have to be replaced. He deplored many of the customs of the Papuans, although he respected their practical skills such as canoe building. But he feared that they might be overwhelmed by European "civilization". Indeed, he became increasingly concerned for the future of the indigenous population under the Australian administration, considering that they might experience the same fate of being overwhelmed as the Maoris in New Zealand or the aboriginal Australians. To address this, he believed it important that the Papuans became economically self-sufficient. Relations with other Europeans and Australians From 1901, he became widely known for championing the rights of Papuans in court cases against Europeans and Abel experienced increasing conflict with some Australian residents in the Milne Bay area. His disclosures of various scandals in 1901 made him unpopular amongst the traders in Samarai but earned him the trust of Papuans. Conflict arose from a court action for rape against an Australian in 1902, in which a Kwato mission teacher gave evidence for the prosecution. In the following year, following the murder of a white storekeeper, Abel claimed there had been a miscarriage of justice. He further alleged that a group of armed traders led by a government officer had shot several Milne Bay villagers and burned 38 houses. Noting the decline in the population of the Milne Bay area, he also became an opponent of the practice of blackbirding, a form of slavery in which islanders would be kidnapped and taken to work in Queensland and elsewhere. He also warned local people to avoid "selling" their land and advised them how to oppose expropriation. Through the Australian prime minister Alfred Deakin, he met Atlee Hunt, Secretary of the Department of External Affairs, who encouraged him to continue reporting on affairs in Papua. When the acting administrator of the Territory of Papua, Judge Christopher Robinson, committed suicide after a royal commission into events on Goaribari Island, many Europeans felt that Abel had driven Robinson to his death with an anonymous attack on him in a Sydney newspaper. Robinson had led a
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International career Fayek made his senior international debut on 29 January 2022 in a friendly loss to Kuwait. International career statistics
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and the Libya national team. International career Fayek made his senior international debut on 29 January 2022 in a friendly loss to Kuwait. International career statistics References External links National Football Teams profile
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the United Nations Convention against Torture regarding the practice in November 2014. According to Metro Weekly, Brinton is also an animal roleplay enthusiast. In 2016, Brinton was a senior policy analyst for the Bipartisan Policy Center, lobbying for updated regulations so nuclear waste can be used to power advanced nuclear reactors. In February 2020, the website of Deep Isolation, a Berkeley, California, nuclear waste storage and disposal company, listed them as its Director of Legislative Affairs. References External links UN Committee Against Torture testimony 1980s births 21st-century LGBT people Kansas State University alumni Living people Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni Non-binary activists People from Perry,
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Iowa, Brinton's parents were Southern Baptist missionaries who disapproved of their homosexuality. Brinton graduated from Kansas State University with a Bachelor of Science in nuclear engineering and vocal music and earned a Master of Science in nuclear science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Brinton is married. Identifying as gender-fluid, Brinton uses they and them pronouns. Brinton experienced conversion therapy and is critical of it; Brinton was one of the first two individuals to testify before the United
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Belle Île. The ship was badly damaged in the action and returned to port to be repaired. After repairs were completed, the ship spent 1761 cruising in the Bay of Biscay. This involved the seizure of a small French privateer named Carnival on 23 March 1761. In 1762, the ship was assigned to the fleet of Rear-Admiral of the Blue Charles Hardy and is recorded to have seized the French privateer Le Formidable of Bordeaux on 20 August 1762 and destroyed the 32-gun ship San Josef at Aviles on 2 September 1762. In September 1777 while on station in Jamaica she captured the American privateer Swallow and with also captured the 36-gun La Prudente (and her
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mythology and means 'quick moving/nimble'. The ship is commemorated with a neo-classical temple in Kew Gardens, London. Aeolus temple was designed by William Chambers, along with two other temples as a memorial to three British ships involved in naval victories in the Seven Years' War. History The ship was built at Deptford Dockyard and launched 29 November 1758. On 28 February 1760, the Aeolus was involved in the Battle of Bishops Court (also known as the Defeat of Thurot) during the Seven Years' War. The naval engagement took place in the waters between the Isle of Man and Northern Ireland. The Aurora served as the flagship of a victorious British squadron commanded by John Elliot, her captain and together with the rest of the squadron they captured three French ships. The name of the ship was given
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from law school in 2009. After graduating from John Marshall Law School with a J.D. in 2009, he set up Dadkhah Law Group in 2009. Career Race car driving As a race car driver, Mo Dadkhah has appeared on shows airing on Motor Trend TV. He has appeared in Hagerty Drivers Club as a race car driver. His future ventures involve full season racing with Round 3 Racing in the World
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Chicago, Illinois. Mo Dadkhah graduated from law school in 2009. After graduating from John Marshall Law School with a J.D. in 2009, he set up Dadkhah Law Group in 2009. Career Race car driving As a race car driver, Mo Dadkhah has appeared on shows airing on Motor Trend TV. He has appeared in Hagerty Drivers Club as a race car driver. His future ventures involve full season racing with Round 3 Racing in the World Racing League and hopefully in IMSA. He has also participated in the Porsche Club of America as a race car
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Widstrand, Stockholm, 1922 Dalgren, Lars (red.), Karlskoga historia 1586-1936: minnesskrift, Hjalmar Petersson, Karlstad, 1936 Ernvik, Arvid, Östvärmländska järnbruk: järnhantering och skogshushållning i Kristinehamnstrakten, Ystads centraltr., Karlstad, 1968 Lagergren, Helmer, Några värmlandsfamiljer på 1600-talet, Nya Wermlands-tidningen, Karlstad, 1916 Lindberg, Gustaf & Johansson, Johan, Karlskoga bergslag, Stockholm, 1895-1897 Lucidor, Helicons blomster, plåckade ok vid åtskilliga tillfällen utdelte af Lucidor den Olyklige, Stockholm, 1835 Löf, Axel Emanuel, Kristinehamns historia: 2. Jorden, staden, styrelsen, Karlstad, 1949 Pihl, Christopher, 'Learning to bring dead capital to life: the Riksens Ständers Bank and the credit market in seventeenth-century Sweden', Continuity and change, 2019(34):2, s. 209-230 Thimon, Gösta, Stockholms nations studenter i Uppsala 1649-1800: Vinculum Stockholmense. D. 1 1649-1700, [Liber distribution], Stockholm, 1982 Toijer, Daniel, Gustafsvik: historien om ett Värmlandsgods och dess ägare, Kristinehamn, 1958 Additional references 1640s births 1700 deaths Year of birth uncertain Year of death
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1895-1897 Lucidor, Helicons blomster, plåckade ok vid åtskilliga tillfällen utdelte af Lucidor den Olyklige, Stockholm, 1835 Löf, Axel Emanuel, Kristinehamns historia: 2. Jorden, staden, styrelsen, Karlstad, 1949 Pihl, Christopher, 'Learning to bring dead capital to life: the Riksens Ständers Bank and the credit market in seventeenth-century Sweden', Continuity and change, 2019(34):2, s. 209-230 Thimon, Gösta, Stockholms nations studenter i Uppsala 1649-1800: Vinculum Stockholmense. D. 1 1649-1700, [Liber distribution], Stockholm, 1982 Toijer, Daniel, Gustafsvik: historien om ett Värmlandsgods och dess ägare, Kristinehamn, 1958 Additional references 1640s births 1700
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footballers Living people 2002 births Zamalek SC players
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Tarek (; born 1 January 2002) is an Egyptian professional footballer who
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king of the Justanid dynasty Justann Crawford (born 1973), retired indigenous Australian Olympic boxer Kurkir ibn Justan,
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Marzuban I, the Sallarid ruler of Azerbaijan Justan III, the sixth king of the Justanid
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addition to her own films, St-Pierre has been a producer on Denis Côté's films Wilcox and Social Hygiene (Hygiène social). She has also had occasional small acting roles, most notably in the films of Matthew Rankin. References External links 21st-century Canadian screenwriters 21st-century Canadian women writers Canadian documentary film directors Canadian women film directors Canadian documentary film producers Canadian women film producers Canadian women screenwriters Canadian
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Academy Awards. In addition to her own films, St-Pierre has been a producer on Denis Côté's films Wilcox and Social Hygiene (Hygiène social). She has also had occasional small acting roles, most notably in the films of Matthew Rankin. References External links 21st-century Canadian screenwriters 21st-century Canadian women writers Canadian documentary
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by Marvel Comics Juston Wood (born 1979), an American football coach and former quarterback See also Justan
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by Marvel Comics Juston Wood (born 1979), an American football coach and former quarterback See
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of Haskell Township, Haskell County, Kansas, United States. It was also the county seat of Haskell County for more than the first quarter of a century of the county's existence. It was located along the road currently designated as U.S. Route 83 (US 83, originally K‑22), just north of its junction with U.S. Route 160 (K‑46 [1926–1930]) and K‑144. History On June 4, 1985 Star City was platted at a site just east of the location where Santa Fe was later established (across the current US 83). Shortly thereafter a company bought the Star City townsite and renamed the community after the Santa Fe Trail (which passed about to the north). The new townsite was platted June 12, 1886 and officially recorded on July 31, 1886. At the time, it was located within Finney County, but by the next year the community found itself at the center of the new Haskell County, after that county was created on March 23, 1887. Several months later, on July 1, 1887, Santa Fe became the temporary county seat and by November 7, it was designated as the permanent county seat (at least for the next 26 years). On January 2, 1888, Santa Fe was incorporated as a city. About that time, the population of Sante Fe reached itss peak, estimated to be (depending the source) from 600–700 to as high as 18,000. However, within a few year the population of Santa Fe (and Haskell County) began
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City townsite and renamed the community after the Santa Fe Trail (which passed about to the north). The new townsite was platted June 12, 1886 and officially recorded on July 31, 1886. At the time, it was located within Finney County, but by the next year the community found itself at the center of the new Haskell County, after that county was created on March 23, 1887. Several months later, on July 1, 1887, Santa Fe became the temporary county seat and by November 7, it was designated as the permanent county seat (at least for the next 26 years). On January 2, 1888, Santa Fe was incorporated as a city. About that time, the population of Sante Fe reached itss peak, estimated to be (depending the source) from 600–700 to as high as 18,000. However, within a few year
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by founding Dean Cheryl A. M. Anderson, who was appointed to the position in June 2020. The school currently offers programs leading to bachelors (B.Sc.), masters (MPH), doctoral (Ph.D.), and professional degrees. The school also offers a joint doctoral program in public health with San
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a 2018 gift from the Dr. Herbert and Nicole Wertheim Family Foundation. The school is currently led by founding Dean Cheryl A. M. Anderson, who was appointed to the position in June 2020. The school currently offers programs leading to bachelors (B.Sc.), masters (MPH), doctoral (Ph.D.), and professional degrees. The school also offers a
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thereafter was elected to the principalship of the Bedford (Pa.) Union School. He taught next at Cressona and Ashland, Pennsylvania, until 1866, when he was called to the chair of English literature, grammar, and rhetoric, in the State Normal School at Kutztown, Pennsylvania. In 1868 he left Kutztown for Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, where he held successively the positions of principal of public schools, city superintendent, and county superintendent of Clinton County. In 1877 he was chosen first principal of the Central State Normal School, which had been established at Lock Haven largely through his own personal efforts. From 1865 to 1885 he was prominent before the teachers' institutes of the state as a lecturer on the teaching of English. In 1885 he left Pennsylvania to assume the principalship of the academy at Newark, Delaware, from which position he was called in 1888 to the presidency of Delaware College, a position which made him ex-officio president of the state board of education. For 18 years he was editor of the Educational News, and during the last few years of
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been established at Lock Haven largely through his own personal efforts. From 1865 to 1885 he was prominent before the teachers' institutes of the state as a lecturer on the teaching of English. In 1885 he left Pennsylvania to assume the principalship of the academy at Newark, Delaware, from which position he was called in 1888 to the presidency of Delaware College, a position which made him ex-officio president of the state board of education. For 18 years he was editor of the Educational News, and during the last few years of his life devoted himself mainly to the interests of the books of which he was the author, treating principally of the English language. He received the degree of master of arts from Princeton in 1867, doctor of philosophy from Lafayette College in 1879, and doctor of laws from Ursinus College in 1895. He served as president of the Pennsylvania State Teachers' Association and was an active member of the National Educational Association from 1892. He died at his home in Newark, Delaware, on February 23, 1904.
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as Channel Nº 4, El programa de Ana Rosa and DEC. She also presented the Antena 3 Canarias program Nos vamos pa la playa (We are going to the beach) in 2010. Her first role in a television series was a leading role in Atresmedia's Veneno, created by Javier Ambrossi and Javier Calvo about the life of La Veneno. For this television role, she received the 2020 Ondas Award in the category of Best Female Performer in National Fiction. On 12 December 2020, she received the Charter 100 Gran Canaria Award, in recognition of her professional career in radio and television. Illness and death In March 2020, Torres announced that she was suffering from metastatic lung cancer. She was appointed ambassador of the Grupo Canario de Cáncer de Pulmón in the same year. In January
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program Nos vamos pa la playa (We are going to the beach) in 2010. Her first role in a television series was a leading role in Atresmedia's Veneno, created by Javier Ambrossi and Javier Calvo about the life of La Veneno. For this television role, she received the 2020 Ondas Award in the category of Best Female Performer in National Fiction. On 12 December 2020, she received the Charter 100 Gran Canaria Award, in recognition of her
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(born 1967), former English rugby union player Justyn Knight (born 1996), Canadian long-distance track runner Justyn Pogue, American artist and musician Justyn Ross (born 1999), American football wide receiver
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and musician Justyn Ross (born 1999), American football wide receiver Justyn Warner (born 1987), Canadian
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In 1990 the school had an enrollment of 190 and 15 teachers, and held classes in fourteen rooms in Swift Hall in the University of Cincinnati. In 1990 parents, many of them not drawing a salary, made up the majority of the teachers. In June 1993 its enrollment was up to 250, and it had some students from Dayton, Ohio. On July 1, 1993, it was scheduled to move to NKU. In September 1993 it had around 230 students and 19 members of the faculty. The majority of the former were children of workers at companies on temporary visas. UC and NKU students made up about 50% of the latter. In 1995 enrollment was about 200. Curriculum In 1990 the curriculum included the Japanese language, social studies, and mathematics. In addition to
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began holding classes at the University of Cincinnati (UC). In 1990 the school had an enrollment of 190 and 15 teachers, and held classes in fourteen rooms in Swift Hall in the University of Cincinnati. In 1990 parents, many of them not drawing a salary, made up the majority of the teachers. In June 1993 its enrollment was up to 250, and it had some students from Dayton, Ohio. On July 1, 1993, it was scheduled to move to NKU. In September 1993 it had around 230 students and 19 members of the faculty. The majority of the former were children of workers at companies on temporary visas. UC and NKU students made up
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is home to Snow Leopard which is very rare in the region. Location Talra Wildlife Sanctuary has an ESZ ranging from 0.954 km to 4.00 km, and 22.56 sq. km. Located about a distance of 92 km away from Shimla district, the wildlife sanctuary has an elevation of 1,500 m to 3,324 m. Wildlife Talra Wildlife Sanctuary is home to forest trees that are native to both the Upper and Lower Western Himalayas. The densely forested areas are covered by trees such as Oak and Fir. Other
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rare in the region. Location Talra Wildlife Sanctuary has an ESZ ranging from 0.954 km to 4.00 km, and 22.56 sq. km. Located about a distance of 92 km away from Shimla district, the wildlife sanctuary has an elevation of 1,500 m to 3,324 m. Wildlife Talra Wildlife Sanctuary is home to forest trees
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East Trout Lake is a lake in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The lake is directly north of Clarence-Steepbank Lakes Provincial Park in Saskatchewan's Northern Administration District. It is a long and narrow lake that runs in a west to east direction and is surrounded by boreal forest, rolling hills, and muskeg. Several streams flow into the lake and its outflow is at the eastern end where it flows directly into neighbouring Nipekamew Lake through a short channel and bay. The lake is part of the Churchill River watershed, which flows into the Hudson Bay. East Trout Lake is accessed from Highway 927 at the south-east corner of the lake. East Trout-Nipekamew Lakes Recreation Site East Trout-Nipekamew Lakes Recreation Site is a provincial recreation site that was established in 1984 along the south-eastern shore of East Trout Lake and south-west corner of
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is accessed from Highway 927 at the south-east corner of the lake. East Trout-Nipekamew Lakes Recreation Site East Trout-Nipekamew Lakes Recreation Site is a provincial recreation site that was established in 1984 along the south-eastern shore of East Trout Lake and south-west corner of Nipekamew Lake. There are three resorts in the park centred on the bay and channel that separate the two lakes. Highway 927 provides access to the park and the resorts. On the East Trout Lake part of the park is Pine Grove Resort. It features cabin rentals and a campground for accommodations. There is also a convenience store, boat rentals, boat launch, public showers, and washrooms. Eagle Bay Resort is situated on the bay between the lakes. Like Pine Gove Resort, it also has cabins for rent and a campground. Eagle Bay Resort has a
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Zinsser SmartCoat 200 may refer
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to: Zinsser SmartCoat 200 (Berlin) Zinsser
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is known to be one of the real estate hotspots of Greater Noida, alongside Omega II, Omega I, Phi I, Phi III, Phi IV, Phi II, Chi II, Chi I, Chi IV and Chi V. It is named after the
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or Chi 3 is a residential locality in south-western Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. Bordered by Phi I, Chi II and Chi I to the north and Chi IV the south, it is
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2016–17 season and stayed with this club for four seasons. Darüşşafaka (2020–present) On September 28, 2020, he has signed with Darüşşafaka of the Basketbol Süper Ligi (BSL). References External links Görkem Doğan Champions League Profile Görkem Doğan TBLStat.net Profile
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he has signed with Darüşşafaka of the Basketbol Süper Ligi (BSL). References External links Görkem Doğan Champions League Profile Görkem Doğan TBLStat.net Profile Görkem Doğan Eurobasket Profile Görkem Doğan TBL Profile Living people 1998 births Centers (basketball)
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Bahru) is a former Malaysian striker. He formerly played with Johor FA and Johor FC. He also the former member of Malaysia Olympic Team (Malaysia U-23) in
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striker. He formerly played with Johor FA and Johor FC. He also the former member of Malaysia Olympic Team (Malaysia U-23) in 1995. Honours
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was a sport wrestling event held in Sofia, Bulgaria between 21 and 23 February 2014. 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. Medal table Team ranking Medal overview Men's freestyle Greco-Roman Women's freestyle Participating nations 351 competitors
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35 nations participated. (13) (17) (8) (7) (2) (64) (6) (2) (3) (5) (3) (2) (1) (20) (8) (9) (1) (1) (3) (2) (1) (5) (10) (15) (25) (23) (1) (6) (2) (4) (4) (6) (36) (30) (6) References Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament Dan Kolov and
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until 13 October 2004, Baldomero Lopez, MV Sgt. William R. Button (AK-3012) and USNS Charlton (T-AKR-314) pulled into the Port of Philadelphia with 400,000 square feet of combat gear for deployed U.S. forces in Operation Iraqi Freedom. On 17 January 2006, the ship was purchased by the Military Sealift Command and was put into the Prepositioning Program and the Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron 2. The ship operates in the Far East and Indian Ocean. During the Exercise Trident Juncture 2018, she unloaded, inspected and transported supplies to designated areas on 12 October 2018. Baldomero Lopez carried and unloaded equipments and supplies as part of the Maritime Prepositioning Force Exercise (MPFEX) 2020 while off the
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MV Sgt. William R. Button (AK-3012) and USNS Charlton (T-AKR-314) pulled into the Port of Philadelphia with 400,000 square feet of combat gear for deployed U.S. forces in Operation Iraqi Freedom. On 17 January 2006, the ship was purchased by the Military Sealift Command and was put into the Prepositioning Program and the Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron 2. The ship operates in the Far East and Indian Ocean. During the Exercise Trident Juncture 2018, she unloaded, inspected and transported supplies to designated areas on 12 October 2018. Baldomero Lopez carried and unloaded equipments
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IV to the east and Chi III to the north, it is known to be one of the real estate hotspots of Greater Noida, alongside Omega
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the east and Chi III to the north, it is known to be one of the real estate hotspots of Greater
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such as 3D design and medical devices. Jensen's research has resulted in several patented medical devices. Jensen is also known for writing several books relating to U.S. politics and economy. Early life and education Jensen was born on July 22, 1971 in Westwood, New Jersey. He graduated from Boston University, where he obtaind a bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering. Career Upon graduation, Jensen worked for EuroMed, where
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Boston University, where he obtaind a bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering. Career Upon graduation, Jensen worked for EuroMed, where he led the company and also focused on Research & Development. He also started Inventagon in 2007. Research Jensen has done research on and received patents for several inventions, include wound dressings, retail boxes, among others. Books Jensen has written several books relating to on economics, politics, and current events. Optimizing America (2017) Showdown in the Economy of Good and Evil (2018) America's History of Empowering Wealth: Understanding the
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directed by Emre Kabakuşak, written by Pelin Karamehmetoğlu and starring Demet Özdemir, Şükrü Özyıldız, Deniz Baydar and Özgür Ozan. The film was released on February 11, 2022, on Netflix. Plot An ad executive
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fashion designer-blogger woman don't believe in love, so they place a bet to make the other fall head over heels - with unusual tactics. Cast Demet Özdemir as Aslı Şükrü Özyıldız as
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Herbert Gute got a degree in fine arts from the Pratt Institute and Yale in 1933. As a graduate student he took part in the Yale expedition to Dura-Europos in Syria, where he was a staff artist for three years. He brought to Yale and reconstructed there the oldest known Christian house church. Jewish Museum in New York, that opened in 1947, exhibited Gute's copies of frescoes from Dura-Europos synagogue. Clark Hopkins, director of the Dura-Europos excavations, wrote about Gute: Herbert Gute, a young and gifted graduate student in the Yale School of Fine Arts, came out to copy the paintings of the Synagogue before they were lifted from the walls. He was a painter of the first order, with a German precision and attention to minute detail. He worked hard, long, and most intelligently. An able athlete as well as a scholar, he added immensely to our recreational activities. He had been a baseball pitcher in high school and quickly excelled in horseshoes. A keen competitor, he kept daily scores of our doubles matches. Herbert Gute, just graduated from the Yale School of Fine Arts, had been carefully chosen as a competent painter interested in making renderings. How far interest and competence as an artist can carry a new recruit in the type of technical drawing required
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vital question. Herb turned out to be a painter of unusual ability; perhaps his German ancestry gave him his flair for meticulous detail. He too was astonished at the extent and richness of the Dura paintings. He recorded them exactly as he saw them, even to the minutest detail on the smallest corner of a panel. Many of the details of the original paintings were brought out in greater clarity in the copies, and where subsequent fading has occurred, the copies have preserved the original lines and colors visible before the fading. Careful study of fragments, where original colors were best preserved in their original shades, was of valuable assistance in making the copies. To study the combination of color, detail, and design today, one will find the copies better than the originals. Of course, one supplements the other, and both are indispensable. Gute taught at the Yale School of Fine Arts from 1938 until his retirement in 1973, and a fellow at Calhoun College, 1955-1973. He also served as an art therapy advisor at the Connecticut Valley Hospital in 1949-1953. Awards and recognition Muriel Alvord prize, Yale, 1935 1st prize Connecticut Contemporary Painting, Springfield, Massachusetts, 1951 2d International Hallmark award, 1954. A.N.A. George A. Zabriskie Prize of the American Watercolor Society for the painting "Low Tide" in 1942. Gute was a member of Audubon Society, Philadelphia Water Color Club, Silvermine Guild, American Watercolor Society; his paintings were exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Louvre, and the Jewish Museum in New York. Family Herbert's parents were Rudolph Herman Gute and Martha (Mueller) Gute. Herbert married Catherine M. Schaefer on October 18, 1936 and had two sons, Herbert Schaefer
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a highly cytotoxic resveratrol-derivative with the molecular
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molecular formula C29H20O9 which has been isolated from the
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where it is known only from the Ariranha River and the Rancho Grande River, two tributaries of the Uruguay River in Brazil. The species may be found in moderate
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of the Uruguay River in Brazil. The species may be found in moderate to fast-flowing waters with stony or sandy substrates and submerged vegetation. It reaches 4.2 cm (1.7 inches) SL. References Endemic fauna of
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cwt MLSB guns and two 6=pounder brass MLSB guns on broadside trucks. The brass guns were later removed and one 32-pounder 42 cwt MLSB was fitted on a pivot mount. She was completed on 2 November 1832 at an initial cost of £31,919 (building - £18,534, fitting - £2,197 and machinery - £11,188). Commissioned Service First Commission She was first commissioned on 4 October 1832 for the blockade of the Dutch Coast during the Belgian war of Independence. At the end of the blockade duties she was assigned to the North America and West Indies Station. She returned to Home Water, paying off at Woolwich on 21 April 1835. During 1836 she underwent a major refit at Woolwich Dockyard. Second Commission She was recommissioned on 23 October 1836 under Commander John Duffill, RN as a packet vessel for the coast of Spain. On 13 July 1837 Commander Arthur Wakefield took command and assigned to the Mediterranean. She returned to Home Waters to pay off on 20 October 1840. She was refitted as a transport at Sheerness before returning to Woolwich. Ancillary Service She commissioned on 28 April 1841 under Thomas Laen, Master at Woolwich. On 29 June she was under Jonathan Aylen, Master. She paid off at Woolwich on 13 February 1849. She was fitted as a troopship in March 1851. She recommissioned under John Belam, Master for
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light draught was forward and aft. Her builder's measure tonnage was 813 tons though her displacement was 1,086 tons. Upon launch she was sailed to Woolwich to have her machinery fitted. Her machinery was supplied by Maudslay, Son & Field of Lambeth. She was fitted with two fire-tube rectangular boilers. Her steam engine was a two-cylinder vertical single expansion (VSE) engine rated at 220 nominal horsepower (NHP). During her steam trials the engine generated for a speed of . She originally was to have a schooner sail plan, however, this was changed to a barque or barquentine sail rig. Her armament would initially consist of one Miller's Original 10-inch 84 hundredweight (cwt) muzzle loading smooth bore (MLSB) shell gun on a pivot mount and two Bloomfield's 32-pounder 25 cwt MLSB guns and two 6=pounder brass MLSB guns on broadside trucks. The brass guns were later removed and one 32-pounder 42 cwt MLSB was fitted on a pivot mount. She was completed on 2 November 1832 at an initial cost of £31,919 (building - £18,534, fitting - £2,197 and machinery - £11,188). Commissioned Service First Commission She was first commissioned on 4 October 1832 for the blockade of the Dutch Coast during the Belgian war of Independence. At the end of the blockade duties she was assigned to the North America and West Indies Station. She returned to Home Water, paying off at Woolwich on 21 April 1835. During 1836 she underwent a major refit at Woolwich Dockyard. Second Commission She was recommissioned on 23 October 1836 under Commander John Duffill, RN as a packet vessel for the coast of Spain. On 13 July 1837 Commander Arthur Wakefield took command and assigned to the Mediterranean. She returned to Home Waters to pay off on 20 October 1840. She was refitted as a transport at Sheerness before returning to Woolwich. Ancillary Service She commissioned on 28 April 1841 under Thomas Laen, Master at Woolwich. On 29 June she was under Jonathan Aylen, Master. She paid off at Woolwich on 13 February 1849. She was fitted as a troopship in March 1851. She recommissioned under John
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first season back in the top flight of Japanese football. The campaign began in February and is scheduled to end in November. Players First-team squad As of 7 January 2022 Out on loan Transfers In Out Competitions Overall record J1 League
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50th season in the history of Júbilo Iwata and the club's first season back in the top flight of Japanese football. The campaign began in February and is scheduled
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Black Ferns debut against England in Exeter in 2021. Biography Mikaele-Tu’u attended Hastings Girls High School and debuted for Hawke's Bay in the Farah Palmer Cup in 2019. She moved to Auckland in 2020 to study physiotherapy at university and currently plays for Auckland. She was named in the historic Blues
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attended Hastings Girls High School and debuted for Hawke's Bay in the Farah Palmer Cup in 2019. She moved to Auckland in 2020 to study physiotherapy at university and currently plays for Auckland. She was named in the historic Blues women's team that played Chiefs at Eden Park
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in France from personnel of Wehrkreis XII. After its training, it served as a occupation, security and defense unit of the coastal areas in the North of France, in the Dieppe and Calais sector within the LXXXI. Armeekorps of the 15th Army in Army Group D. In August 1944, she was sent to Normandy, where she suffered heavy losses during her withdrawal to
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Dieppe and Calais sector within the LXXXI. Armeekorps of the 15th Army in Army Group D. In August 1944, she was sent to Normandy, where she suffered heavy losses during her withdrawal to northern France and Belgium. The division was
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country music artist Jeff Knight (politician) (born
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may refer to: Jeff Knight
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when import restrictions on pulp were lifted and Swedish pulp became a cheaper option. The mill burned in 1931, leaving charred remains on the site until the development of the park in the early 1980s. In 1971, the Marine Corps Reserve tore down the old factory, before a Navy demolition team used fourteen cases of dynamite to raze the remains. Most of the remaining debris was crushed and used as fill for the park but several remnants of the building are still visible today. Visual timeline See also Historical buildings and structures of Yarmouth, Maine References Pulp and paper mills in the United States Industrial buildings and structures in
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to the mill and carried pulp away. Changes in papermaking after World War I made the mill less profitable, and it began to decline. Its workers unionized in August 1916 and went on strike the following month. Many never returned. The mill closed in 1923, when import restrictions on pulp were lifted and Swedish pulp became a cheaper option. The mill burned in 1931, leaving charred remains on the site until the development of the park in the early 1980s. In 1971, the Marine Corps Reserve tore down the old factory, before a Navy demolition team used fourteen cases of dynamite to raze the remains. Most of the remaining debris was crushed and used as fill for the park but several remnants of the building are still visible today. Visual timeline See also Historical buildings and structures of
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historic documents connected to Wales and/or the Welsh language, starting from the early medieval period.
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documents connected to Wales and/or the Welsh language, starting from the early medieval period. These documents are written in various stages of
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(; born 1 January 2003) is an Egyptian professional footballer who
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1 January 2003) is an Egyptian professional footballer who plays as a
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of an orchestral group called Mugurașii. Career The Advahov Brothers Orchestra was founded in 2005. It was originally meant to be a small group, but eventually grew in popularity and various Moldovan and Romanian musicians joined it, forming an orchestra. As of 2020, the orchestra contains forty-five instrumentalists. On 29 January 2022, the song "Trenulețul", a collaboration with folk-rock band Zdob și Zdub, was chosen by Teleradio-Moldova to represent the country at
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founded in 2005 and it is made of brothers and . Along with Zdob și Zdub, they will represent Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022, in Turin, Italy, with the song "Trenulețul". Early life Vitalie and Vasile Advahov were born in Cahul, Moldova, on 18 January 1978, and 26 April 1979, respectively. Their parents, Vasile and Agafia Advahov, originated from Gotești and Cîrpești and were teachers at Cahul's pedagogical school. During their high school years at Ciprian Porumbescu High School, they were part of an orchestral group called Mugurașii. Career The Advahov Brothers Orchestra was founded in 2005. It
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popular for flamboyance. Patil was also a popular writer who wrote many articles in newspapers. Political life He joined Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh in 1942 and was also affiliated with Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad since 1954. He was a member of Bharatiya Jana Sangh from 1955 till it's merger to Janata Party in 1977. He was elected to Mysore Legislative Council 3 times (twice as a Bharatiya Jana Sangh candidate and once from
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wrote many articles in newspapers. Political life He joined Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh in 1942 and was also affiliated with Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad since 1954. He was a member of Bharatiya Jana Sangh from 1955 till it's merger to Janata Party in 1977. He was elected to Mysore Legislative Council 3 times (twice as a Bharatiya Jana Sangh candidate and once from Janata Party representing Graduates' Constituency. He was detained under M.I.S.A. as a Political prisoner in Central Prisons, Karnataka for 13 months during Jaya Prakash movement during 1975–76. Death He died on 25 November 2010 in a hospital in Dharwad after a brief illness. References Living people
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their sexual discomfort. The young protagonists named Léonie, Eugénie and Geisha, respectively played by Larissa Corriveau, Laure Giappiconi and Aude Mathieu, are accompanied in their healing process by a German therapist (Octavia) and a benevolent social worker (Sami). Cast Larissa Corriveau : Léonie Laure Giappiconi : Eugénie Samir Guesmi : Sami Aude Mathieu : Geisha Anne Ratte-Polle : Octavia Release In January 2022, France's Shellac boarded worldwide sales of the film. That Kind of Summer had its world premiere
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official competition at the Berlinale. Plot Three women are invited to a nursing home for 26 days to explore their sexual discomfort. The young protagonists named Léonie, Eugénie and Geisha, respectively played by Larissa Corriveau, Laure Giappiconi and Aude Mathieu, are accompanied in their healing process by a German therapist (Octavia) and a benevolent social worker (Sami). Cast Larissa Corriveau : Léonie
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NASCAR Xfinity Series at Las Vegas (spring race) NASCAR Xfinity Series at Charlotte (spring race)
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of the following NASCAR Xfinity Series races: NASCAR Xfinity Series at Las Vegas
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War II at the San Diego Marine Corps Base. While there he also coached the baseball team at Pepperdine University, where he received a degree, and played professional football in the Pacific Coast Professional Football League (PCPFL) and on a military service team. After the war was over Deniston returned to professional baseball as a player-manager, spending 1947 to 1955 both playing for and managing several minor league teams while also serving as a college coach at Pepperdine and Drake University. Deniston retired from playing in 1956 and became a high school football coach, a position he would serve in until 1977, when he was named head coach at United States International University. He retired from coaching in 1987. Deniston became a centenarian in 2019 and died at the age of 101 in 2020. Early life and college career Deniston was born on February 28, 1919, in Long Beach, California. He grew up in Compton, and attended Alhambra High School. While at Alhambra he competed in football, track, basketball, and baseball. Deniston was described by The Long Beach Sun as "an outstanding end and one of the best pass grabbers in the Southland prep ranks." Deniston attended St. Mary's College of California for one year, in 1938, before accepting an offer to play professional baseball by the New York Yankees. He also briefly attended Pasadena Junior College in 1939, playing catcher in baseball and halfback in football. Playing career Baseball (1939–1942) Despite mainly playing first baseman, Deniston was signed by the New York Yankees as an outfielder in 1939. He attended Yankees spring training in St. Petersburg, Florida, before being sent to the minor league class D El Paso Texans of the Arizona–Texas League. The Texans had him play catcher and compete with Art Gagliardi for the starting role. He made his debut against the Tuscon Cowboys in a 11–2 win, replacing Curdele Lloyd and making two hits. Overall, in the 1939 season, Deniston played in 117 games, appearing at bat 482 times, and making 139 hits. He made 24 doubles, eight triples, and two home runs. In the 1940 season, Deniston played for five teams in four different leagues. He started the season with the double-A Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League (PCL), appearing in eight games with three hits, before playing for the class-C Boise Pilots of the Pioneer League. He was sent on option to the Idaho Falls Russets, where he appeared in one game before being released. After being released, he played for the Big Spring Barons/Odessa Oilers in the West Texas–New Mexico League, appearing in 12 games. With the Barons/Oilers he made ten hits, three doubles, one triple and two home runs. He also played for a team in Wenatchee, Washington. In February 1941, Deniston returned to the Portland Beavers on a one-year contract as a catcher. He ended up playing the season in the California League for the Anaheim Aces, appearing in eight games and making three hits. He also spent time with Portland in 1942, but did not appear in any games. Boxing (1940) Deniston briefly was a boxer in 1940, and won the California State Golden Gloves championship in the lightweight division that year. Football (1942–1948) In 1942, Deniston played professional football in the Pacific Coast Professional Football League (PCPFL) for both the Los Angeles Bulldogs and Hollywood Bears, as a right guard for the Bulldogs and a halfback for the Bears. He was described by The Los Angeles Times as a "demon blocker." With the Bears in a game against the Bulldogs, Deniston caught a fifteen-yard pass that set up a Hollywood touchdown. Deniston attended Pepperdine University in 1943, and spent the year out of sports. In 1944, he was drafted to serve in World War II, and trained at the San Diego Marine Corps Base. That year he played football for the El Toro Flying Marines military service team that compiled a 8–1 record and was ranked number sixteen in the country. Deniston also played for the San Diego Bombers. In 1945, after being released by the Marines, Deniston returned to the Hollywood Bears in the PCPFL, playing the halfback and quarterback positions. He was a starter in four games. Deniston played for a team in Los Angeles in 1946, and returned for a final time to the Bears in 1948. Basketball (1944) In 1944, Deniston played for the Pepperdine basketball team and served as an assistant coach two years later. Baseball (1945–1955) While in the Marines, bone chips and calcium deposits had weakened Deniston's arm, and he "had given up hope of advancing as a baseball player." Describing his arm, Deniston said he "couldn't throw out Whistler's mother trying to steal second." Despite this, he continued playing, with the Pepperdine Waves baseball team in 1945, and scored a home run in their 20–14 win over UCLA. After graduating from Pepperdine in 1947, he was named an assistant coach at the school and additionally was named by the St. Louis Browns as a player-manager of the Mayfield Clothiers minor league team. With the Clothiers in 1947, he appeared in 107 total games, appeared at-bat 350 times, and made 105 hits. Of his hits, 21 were doubles, one was a triple, and 15 scored home runs. His 15 home runs were the largest single-season total he made in his career. In January 1948, St. Louis Browns business manager J. W. Baker named Deniston a player-manager for the Pittsburg Browns of the Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri League (KOM). He replaced Jim Crandall who had left for the Aberdeen Pheasants of the Northern League. He appeared in a total of 48 games before resigning mid-season to return to Pepperdine University. He appeared at-bat 129 times, making 34 hits, 15 doubles and three home runs. "When I left the club early to go back to Pepperdine it was three games out of first," Deniston later said. "Then it lost the next sixteen in a row." His position was filled in by Donald Smith. Deniston was later assigned to coach the Belleville Stags of the Illinois State League. Near the end of the season, Deniston placed second on the team in batting average with a mark of .322. He appeared in a total of 29 games, and was at-bat 107 times, making 35 hits, 11 doubles, one triple, and four home runs. His final batting average was .327. In 1949, Deniston was named player-manager of the Olean Oilers in the Pennsylvania–Ontario–New York League (PONY). Deniston, 30 years old at the time, was 11 years older than the team average. Deniston appeared in 65 games, mainly as a catcher, and was at-bat 203 times, making 54 hits, seven doubles and seven home runs. He also scored 32 runs-batted-in and had five stolen bases as Olean finished with a record of 39–86. After the season ended, Deniston was named a coach at Drake University as well as manager of the Audubon Cardinals for the 1950 season. Deniston was with Audubon for 39 games of the 1950 season, playing catcher, before resigning for "the best interest of the team." The Cardinals compiled a record of 18–21 in the Iowa State League (ISL) with Deniston. The following year, he played in the same league for Lakes-Denison serving as a player-manager, before being signed to play in the Western League. Mid-season in 1951, Deniston
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Beach, Deniston attended St. Mary's College of California for one year before starting a professional baseball career in 1939. He played for several minor league teams before serving in World War II at the San Diego Marine Corps Base. While there he also coached the baseball team at Pepperdine University, where he received a degree, and played professional football in the Pacific Coast Professional Football League (PCPFL) and on a military service team. After the war was over Deniston returned to professional baseball as a player-manager, spending 1947 to 1955 both playing for and managing several minor league teams while also serving as a college coach at Pepperdine and Drake University. Deniston retired from playing in 1956 and became a high school football coach, a position he would serve in until 1977, when he was named head coach at United States International University. He retired from coaching in 1987. Deniston became a centenarian in 2019 and died at the age of 101 in 2020. Early life and college career Deniston was born on February 28, 1919, in Long Beach, California. He grew up in Compton, and attended Alhambra High School. While at Alhambra he competed in football, track, basketball, and baseball. Deniston was described by The Long Beach Sun as "an outstanding end and one of the best pass grabbers in the Southland prep ranks." Deniston attended St. Mary's College of California for one year, in 1938, before accepting an offer to play professional baseball by the New York Yankees. He also briefly attended Pasadena Junior College in 1939, playing catcher in baseball and halfback in football. Playing career Baseball (1939–1942) Despite mainly playing first baseman, Deniston was signed by the New York Yankees as an outfielder in 1939. He attended Yankees spring training in St. Petersburg, Florida, before being sent to the minor league class D El Paso Texans of the Arizona–Texas League. The Texans had him play catcher and compete with Art Gagliardi for the starting role. He made his debut against the Tuscon Cowboys in a 11–2 win, replacing Curdele Lloyd and making two hits. Overall, in the 1939 season, Deniston played in 117 games, appearing at bat 482 times, and making 139 hits. He made 24 doubles, eight triples, and two home runs. In the 1940 season, Deniston played for five teams in four different leagues. He started the season with the double-A Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League (PCL), appearing in eight games with three hits, before playing for the class-C Boise Pilots of the Pioneer League. He was sent on option to the Idaho Falls Russets, where he appeared in one game before being released. After being released, he played for the Big Spring Barons/Odessa Oilers in the West Texas–New Mexico League, appearing in 12 games. With the Barons/Oilers he made ten hits, three doubles, one triple and two home runs. He also played for a team in Wenatchee, Washington. In February 1941, Deniston returned to the Portland Beavers on a one-year contract as a catcher. He ended up playing the season in the California League for the Anaheim Aces, appearing in eight games and making three hits. He also spent time with Portland in 1942, but did not appear in any games. Boxing (1940) Deniston briefly was a boxer in 1940, and won the California State Golden Gloves championship in the lightweight division that year. Football (1942–1948) In 1942, Deniston played professional football in the Pacific Coast Professional Football League (PCPFL) for both the Los Angeles Bulldogs and Hollywood Bears, as a right guard for the Bulldogs and a halfback for the Bears. He was described by The Los Angeles Times as a "demon blocker." With the Bears in a game against the Bulldogs, Deniston caught a fifteen-yard pass that set up a Hollywood touchdown. Deniston attended Pepperdine University in 1943, and spent the year out of sports. In 1944, he was drafted to serve in World War II, and trained at the San Diego Marine Corps Base. That year he played football for the El Toro Flying Marines military service team that compiled a 8–1 record and was ranked number sixteen in the country. Deniston also played for the San Diego Bombers. In 1945, after being released by the Marines, Deniston returned to the Hollywood Bears in the PCPFL, playing the halfback and quarterback positions. He was a starter in four games. Deniston played for a team in Los Angeles in 1946, and returned for a final time to the Bears in 1948. Basketball (1944) In 1944, Deniston played for the Pepperdine basketball team and served as an assistant coach two years later. Baseball (1945–1955) While in the Marines, bone chips and calcium deposits had weakened Deniston's arm, and he "had given up hope of advancing as a baseball player." Describing his arm, Deniston said he "couldn't throw out Whistler's mother trying to steal second." Despite this, he continued playing, with the Pepperdine Waves baseball team in 1945, and scored a home run in their 20–14 win over UCLA. After graduating from Pepperdine in 1947, he was named an assistant coach at the school and additionally was named by the St. Louis Browns as a player-manager of the Mayfield Clothiers minor league team. With the Clothiers in 1947, he appeared in 107 total games, appeared at-bat 350 times, and made 105 hits. Of his hits, 21 were doubles, one was a triple, and 15 scored home runs. His 15 home runs were the largest single-season total he made in his career. In January 1948, St. Louis Browns business manager J. W. Baker named Deniston a player-manager for the Pittsburg Browns of the Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri League (KOM). He replaced Jim Crandall who had left for the Aberdeen Pheasants of the Northern League. He appeared in a total of 48 games before resigning mid-season to return to Pepperdine University. He appeared at-bat 129 times, making 34 hits, 15 doubles and three home runs. "When I left the club early to go back to Pepperdine it was three games out of first," Deniston later said. "Then it lost the next sixteen in a row." His position was filled in by Donald Smith. Deniston was later assigned to coach the Belleville Stags of the Illinois State League. Near the end of the season, Deniston placed second on the team in batting average with a mark of .322. He appeared in a total of 29 games, and was at-bat 107 times, making 35 hits, 11 doubles, one triple, and four home runs. His final batting average was .327. In 1949, Deniston was named player-manager of the Olean Oilers in the Pennsylvania–Ontario–New York League (PONY). Deniston, 30 years old at the time, was 11 years older than the team average. Deniston appeared in 65 games, mainly as a catcher, and was at-bat 203 times, making 54 hits, seven doubles and seven home runs. He also scored 32 runs-batted-in and had five stolen bases as Olean finished with a record of 39–86. After the season ended, Deniston was named a coach at Drake University as well as manager of the Audubon Cardinals for the 1950 season. Deniston was with Audubon for 39 games of the 1950 season, playing catcher, before resigning for "the best interest of the team." The Cardinals compiled a record of 18–21 in the Iowa State League (ISL) with Deniston. The following year, he played in the same league for Lakes-Denison serving as a player-manager, before being signed to play in the Western League.
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must form her own council of eleven connected by the Ray and work as the High Lady Judge alongside Emperor Ekundayo while also trying to fulfill her promise of scarifying herself to the Abiku by going to the Underworld to stop the death of 200 Redemptor as the Ojiji, spirits of dead Redemptor children begins to haunt her. Meanwhile, An activist called the Crocodile is turning the mind of peasants and miners away from the throne and he is trying to overthrown the rulers of Aristar. Tarisai must fight to defend the empire or else lose everything. Reception The book received generally positive receptions from reviewers and readers. A review from Kirkus Reviews called the novel “A strong and worthy successor that
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overthrown the rulers of Aristar. Tarisai must fight to defend the empire or else lose everything. Reception The book received generally positive receptions from reviewers and readers. A review from Kirkus Reviews called the novel “A strong and worthy successor that showcases the skill of a master worldbuilder.” A review from NPR states that “Redemptor continues the breathtakingly beautiful tale of a young woman who is being torn apart by the responsibilities of being both empress and sacrifice”. Alex Brown in a review for Locus stated that “this is a series begging to be reread. Jordan Ifueko’s West African-influenced duology is one of the best YA fantasies I’ve read in a
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HMS Hearty from 1900 to 1902, HMS Narcissus from 1903 to 1905, HMS Grafton from 1905 to 1906, HMS Cumberland from 1906 to 1907, HMS London from 1907 to 1908, and HMS Canopus from 1908 to 1909. He was Rear-Admiral-in-Charge of the Eastern Coast Guard District from 1909 to 1911. He was promoted to rear-admiral in 1911 and retired at his own request in 1912, settling in Guelph, Ontario. On the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Story offered his services and was appointed Admiral-Superintendent, Esquimalt Dockyard, in the Royal Canadian Navy, as well as Senior Naval Officer West Coast. From 1918 to 1919, he was Admiral-Superintendent, Halifax Dockyard. He was promoted to vice-admiral on the Retired List in 1917 and admiral on the Retired
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specially promoted to lieutenant the same year. He again saw service in the Suakin Expedition of 1884, as a lieutenant on HMS Dryad. Promoted to commander in 1896 and captain in 1902, Story successively commanded HMS Hearty from 1900 to 1902, HMS Narcissus from 1903 to 1905, HMS Grafton from 1905 to 1906, HMS Cumberland from 1906 to 1907, HMS London from 1907 to 1908, and HMS Canopus from 1908 to 1909. He was Rear-Admiral-in-Charge of the Eastern Coast Guard District from 1909 to 1911. He was promoted to rear-admiral in 1911 and retired at his own request in 1912, settling in Guelph, Ontario. On the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Story offered his services and
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coach Ben Hurt, the Blue Raiders compiled a record an overall record of 3–8 with a mark of 3–4 in conference play. The team's captains were Moore, Buck, and Murphy. Schedule References Middle Tennessee Middle
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University—as a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) during the 1977 NCAA Division II football season. Led by third-year head coach Ben Hurt, the Blue Raiders compiled a record an overall record of 3–8 with a mark of
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In the confused struggle, Ḥājjī Muḥammad was killed against Barāq, perhaps as early as 1423; Manṣūr betrayed Barāq in turn, in favor of Ghiyāth ad-Dīn II and possibly Ulugh Muḥammad, later returned to Barāq, and was finally executed by him in 1427. Descendants According to the Tawārīḫ-i guzīdah-i nuṣrat-nāmah, Ḥājjī Muḥammad had three sons, two of whom claimed the throne in Sibir and one of whom was the ancestor of the later khans of Sibir. Maḥmūd (Maḥmūdāq), Khan of Sibir 1431–1464, ancestor of the later khans of Sibir Sayyid Aḥmad (Sayyidāq), Khan of Sibir 1464–after 1468 Shibā Ghāzī Genealogy Genghis Khan Jochi Shiban Bahadur Jochi Buqa Badaqul Ming Tīmūr Beg Qundī ʿAlī Ḥājjī Muḥammad References Gaev, A. G., "Genealogija i hronologija Džučidov," Numizmatičeskij sbornik 3 (2002) 9-55. Howorth, H. H., History of the Mongols from the 9th to the 19th Century. Part II.1. London, 1880. Počekaev, R. J., Cari ordynskie: Biografii hanov i pravitelej Zolotoj Ordy. Saint Petersburg, 2010. Reva, R., "Borba za vlast' v pervoj polovine XV v.," in Zolotaja Orda v mirovoj istorii, Kazan', 2016: 704–729. Sabitov, Ž. M., Genealogija "Tore", Astana, 2008. Seleznëv, J. V., Èlita Zolotoj Ordy: Naučno-spravočnoe izdanie, Kazan', 2009. Tizengauzen, V. G. (trans.), Sbornik materialov otnosjaščihsja k istorii Zolotoj Ordy. Izvlečenija iz persidskih sočinenii, republished as Istorija Kazahstana v persidskih istočnikah. 4. Almaty, 2006. Vohidov, Š. H. (trans.), Istorija Kazahstana v persidskih istočnikah. 3.
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khan. As Qādir Berdi himself perished in the struggle at this time, Edigu's sons, led by Manṣūr, quickly succeeded in making Ḥājjī Muḥammad the monarch of the majority of the territory of the Golden Horde. Ḥājjī Muḥammad's success, however, was tenuous and short-lived, especially where the western part of the Golden Horde was concerned, as he was soon faced with opposition by several rivals for the throne and their supporters. The first assertions of the claims of Ulugh Muḥammad, supported by the Shīrīn emir Tekne, are dated variously to 1419 or 1421 or even 1424, and there is much confusion among scholars as to which khan is designated in the historical sources. More certain rivals of Ḥājjī Muḥammad included the Tuqa-Timurids Beg Ṣūfī and his apparent successor Khudāydād in the Crimea, Ghiyāth ad-Dīn II son of Shādī Beg at Tana, and Barāq son of Quyurchuq, supported by the Timurids in the East. Ḥājjī Muḥammad seems to have made headway against his rivals in the Crimea (if he is the Khan Muḥammad who issued a diploma there in April 1420), but he subsequently started to lose ground in the east, where Barāq advanced with the support of the Timurid Ulugh Beg in 1421. Ḥājjī Muḥammad soon lost the support of his beglerbeg Manṣūr, who deserted to his kinsman Barāq, tipping the scales in the latter's favor. In the confused struggle, Ḥājjī Muḥammad was killed against Barāq, perhaps as early as 1423; Manṣūr betrayed Barāq in turn, in favor of Ghiyāth ad-Dīn II and possibly Ulugh Muḥammad, later returned to Barāq, and was finally executed by him in 1427. Descendants According to the Tawārīḫ-i guzīdah-i nuṣrat-nāmah, Ḥājjī Muḥammad
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history of the Province, particularly of the U.E. Loyalists. At the Brock Centenary at Queenston, Egerton, who was secretary of the U.E. Loyalists Association of Canada, under whose auspices the celebration was held, was adopted formally into the Oneida of the Six Nations Indians and given the name of "Kaya-tonhs" (Keeper of records). Egerton was a member of the executive committee of the U.E. Loyalists, and vice-president of the Toronto Branch of the Canadian Authors Association. She was a member of the Theatre Guild of Toronto, the Chamberlain Association, and the American Society of Colonial Families of Boston. In 1920, she was appointed to organize
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a sister, Anne, who was also a writer. Helen was of United Empire Loyalist and French Huguenot ancestry and a kinswoman of Jonathan Edwards and Nathan Hale. Her home, “Morella Villa," at Picton, was set upon a hill overlooking the Bay of Quinte. She was educated at the Ottawa Ladies' College. Career While not a prolific writer, her work in prose and verse was vital and wholesome. Some critics called her a pantheist. Her interests were divided between literary pursuits and the history of the Province, particularly of the U.E. Loyalists. At the Brock Centenary at Queenston, Egerton, who was secretary of the U.E. Loyalists Association of Canada, under whose auspices the celebration was held, was adopted formally into the Oneida of the Six Nations Indians and given the name of "Kaya-tonhs" (Keeper of records). Egerton was a member of the executive committee of the U.E. Loyalists, and vice-president of the Toronto Branch of the Canadian Authors Association. She was a
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Research Speaker Boundary Interference Response - Interaction of sound from loudspeakers
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Business Innovation Research Speaker Boundary Interference Response - Interaction
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I. In the next year he was assigned to the Trigonometric Department of the General Staff in Berlin. Having become premier lieutenant in 1846, with his uncle, lieutenant general Friedrich Graf von Wrangel, when he had received the supreme command of the German troops intended for the First Schleswig War in April 1848 to the Elbe duchies, where he became a captain who got transferred to the General Staff of Schleswig-Holstein and took part in the campaigns of 1848 and 49. Before that he had acquired the nickname of the "Drummer of Kolding", which a newspaper gave him. The incident that gave him the name took place on 29 April 1849, during the Battle of Kolding, which was occupied by the Schleswig-Holsteiners. When they gave way to the advancing Danes, Wrangel brought them to a halt by snatching the drum from a drummer and began playing it in a march. When Prussia recalled its officers in April 1850, Wrangel became head of the topographical department and only returned to frontline service as a lieutenant colonel during the mobilization of 1859. He was now at the head of a Landwehr regiment, which soon became the Pomeranian Infantry Regiment No. 61 in Stolp. In the Austro-Prussian War, he went into the field at the head of the 26th Infantry Brigade in Münster and took part in the Campaign of the Main. In the battles at Dermbach, Kissingen, Laufach, Aschaffenburg, Tauberbischofsheim and the Battle of Gerchsheim where he played a major role and employed independently. For his services at Gerchsheim, he was awarded the Pour le Mérite. On 10 August 1867, he was appointed commander of the 18th Division in Flensburg and promoted to lieutenant general in the spring of 1868. In the Franco-Prussian War, his division took part in the IX Army Corps at the battles of Colombey-Nouilly, Mars-la-Tour and Gravelotte. During the Siege of Metz, his troops attacked from September 1 during the Battle of Noiseville in support of the defensive battle of the Prussian 1st Army Corps stationed on the east bank of the Moselleone. His division distinguished itself particularly in the Second Battle of Orléans in early December. From there the Commander-in-Chief, Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, telegraphed to Versailles: For this Wrangel was awarded the oak leaves to his Pour le Mérite. As the war progressed, Wrangel's division was still involved in the Battle of Le Mans on January 11, 1871. After peace was concluded, Wrangel remained at the head of his division in Flensburg until June 1872, when he became governor of Posen. On September 2, 1873, he received the rank of General of Infantry. Wrangel would retire on 12 December 1876; in recognition of his many years of service, Wilhelm I awarded him the Grand Cross of the Order of the Red Eagle with Oak Leaves and Swords on September 16, 1881. He was also a knight of the Johanniter Order. Family Wrangel had married Elisabeth Adelheid Ernestine
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captain who got transferred to the General Staff of Schleswig-Holstein and took part in the campaigns of 1848 and 49. Before that he had acquired the nickname of the "Drummer of Kolding", which a newspaper gave him. The incident that gave him the name took place on 29 April 1849, during the Battle of Kolding, which was occupied by the Schleswig-Holsteiners. When they gave way to the advancing Danes, Wrangel brought them to a halt by snatching the drum from a drummer and began playing it in a march. When Prussia recalled its officers in April 1850, Wrangel became head of the topographical department and only returned to frontline service as a lieutenant colonel during the mobilization of 1859. He was now at the head of a Landwehr regiment, which soon became the Pomeranian Infantry Regiment No. 61 in Stolp. In the Austro-Prussian War, he went into the field at the head of the 26th Infantry Brigade in Münster and took part in the Campaign of the Main. In the battles at Dermbach, Kissingen, Laufach, Aschaffenburg, Tauberbischofsheim and the Battle of Gerchsheim where he played a major role and employed independently. For his services at Gerchsheim, he was awarded the Pour le Mérite. On 10 August 1867, he was appointed commander of the 18th Division in Flensburg and promoted to lieutenant general in the spring of 1868. In the Franco-Prussian War, his division took part in the IX Army Corps at the battles of Colombey-Nouilly, Mars-la-Tour and Gravelotte. During the Siege of Metz, his troops attacked from September 1 during the Battle of Noiseville in support of the defensive battle of the Prussian 1st Army Corps stationed on the east bank of the Moselleone. His division distinguished itself particularly in the Second Battle of Orléans in early December. From there the Commander-in-Chief, Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, telegraphed to Versailles: For this Wrangel was awarded the oak leaves to his Pour le Mérite. As the war progressed, Wrangel's
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Italy Santa Maria di Piazza, Turin, a church in Turin, Piedmont, Italy
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Piedmont, Italy See also Santa Maria a Piazza Santa Maria
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formula C56H42O12. Hopeahainol A has been isolated from the tree Hopea hainanensis. Hopeahainol A may be used
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from the tree Hopea hainanensis. Hopeahainol A may be used for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease. References Further
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Film Festival, where it won the award for Best Canadian Short Film. It received a Genie Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Drama at the 21st Genie Awards in 2001. References External links 1999 films 1999 drama films 1999 short films Canadian films
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and released in 1999. Inspired by the old legend of The Soul Cages, in which the souls of drowned sailors are trapped in clay pots at the bottom of the ocean, the film adapts it to the present day by depicting the interactions between a photographer (Susanna Hood) and the clerk (Srinivas Krishna) processing her film in a one-hour photo lab, around the philosophical question of whether the souls of photographic subjects are trapped
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and Chabówka stations (change of the train's head) had not been abandoned, the improvement of traffic would have been even greater. On December 31, 1974, electric trains began to operate along the entire length of the Tarnowskie Góry - Kalety - Kluczbork - Ostrów Wlkp. - Jarocin - Poznań route (203 km). On the section Kluczbork - Ostrów Wlkp. Electric traction started earlier, i.e. on September 7, 1973. The electrification of the above-mentioned line created a second electric connection between Silesia and Poznań, and soon electric traction was introduced for further elements of port routes: Poznań - Inowrocław (101 km ) on December 14, 1976, and Jarocin - Gniezno (65 km) In the years 1975 - 1977, electric trains were introduced according to the given dates also on the following lines (sections): - Koluszki - Żakowice - Tomaszów Maz. - Radzice - Radom 123 km 29 May 1976 - section Żakowice - Tomaszów Maz. 30 km was opened earlier on December 31, 1974. - Tomaszów Mazowiecki - Radzice, 30 km, December 30, 1975 - Lubliniec - Opole 60 km., Supplementing the connection Częstochowa - Herby - Opole on December 18, 1976. - Sitówka - Włoszczowice 23 km, which is the beginning of the electrification of the so-called the sulfur line on December 30, 1976 - Mrozy - Siedlce - Łuków 62 km, constituting the next stage of electrification of the east–west route on December 22, 1977. In the years 1971–1976, the central railway line was built, the CMK line was electrified in stages: - Zawiercie - Włoszczowa 68 km on May 31, 1975. - Włoszczowa - Idzikowice 73 km and the line (Koluszki) Tomaszów Maz. - Idzikowice - Radom, enabling the introduction of trains on electrified routes to Łódź, Warsaw and Lublin (electrification of which was completed on May 29, 1976). 30 XII. 1975 - Idzikowice - Mszczonów - Grodzisk Maz. 80 km, ending the electrification of the line on December 23, 1977. In 1978, the phased electrification of another important Poznań-Szczecin main line was completed: - Poznań - Rokietnica 18 km June 27, 1975. - Rokietnica - Krzyż 66 km. September 10, 1977. - Cross - Choszczno 55 km June 21, 1978. - Choszczno - Stargard Szczeciński, 35 km. July 21, 1978. - Stargard Szczeciński - Szczecin 40 km December 15, 1978 After a thorough modernization, the Szczecin Dębie - Świnoujście route (101 km) became a two-track line. On December 15, 1980, its electrification was completed (the section Szczecin Dąbie - Goleniów, 23 km was electrified earlier - December 21, 1979) On September 11, 1982, the adjacent electrified connection, Wysoka Kamieńska - Kamień Pomorski, was opened, 17 km. In the years 1971 - 1981 the electrification of the east–west transit main was extended, the following sections were put into operation: - Poznań - Zbąszynek 76 km, December 20, 1979. - Łuków - Biala Podlaska, 52 km, December 20, 1979. - Biała Podl - Terespol 37 km, December 30, 1980 - Terespol - state border 2 km on March 2, 1981. The electrification of the east–west main line covered the dry transhipment port in Małaszewice. In 1981, the following electrified lines were put into operation: - Zgierz - Kutno 57 km, 30 May 1981. - Herby - Wieluń - Kępno 102 km October 24, 1981. In the years 1981–1982, the line from Warsaw to Białystok and Ostrołęka was electrified: - Tłuszcz - Łochów 21 km December 22, 1981. - Łochów - Małkinia 30 km (direction to Białystok) September 10, 1982. - Tłuszcz - Wyszków 21 km (direction to Ostrołęka), September 13, 1982. After a thorough reconstruction and modernization, the electrification of the so-called The 101 km long line on the Odtzanska line Wrocław - Głogów - Zielona Góra - Rzepin - Szczecin Głogów (Wróblin Głogowski) was put into operation on 23 December 1982. - Lublin - Zemborzyce 9 km April 15, 1976. - Lublin - Świdnik 12 km, December 20, 1981. - Skarżysko Kam. - Wąchock, 12 km, September 10, 1982 - Szczecin - Trzebież Szczec. 28 km December 23, 1982 - Trzebinia - Bolęcin, 5 km (in the vicinity of the Kraków junction), June 30, 1982. Many lines in the area of the Katowice junction were covered by electrification: - Oświęcim - Trzebinia, 25 km, April 30, 1973 - Oświęcim - Mysłowice, 23 km, December 20, 1981 - Rybnik - Żory - Chybie 42 km, the cross-city line of the Rybnik Weglowy District, December 27, 1973. - Chorzów Batory - Tarnowskie Góry 28 km, direct exit from the Katowice junction to the coal main line on 23 May 1974. - Chybie - Skoczów - Goleszów - Wisła Głębce 42 km 23.12.1974 - Bieruń Stary - Lędziny - Krasowy - Mąkołowiec 28 km 28 December 1974 - Rudzieniec Gliwicki - Trzonek North, 17 km, the section closing the electrification of the northern bypass of the Katowice junction on 13 February 1976. - Katowice Ligota - Kochanowice - Gliwice 29 km, the so-called small ring road of the Katowice junction, relieving the Katowice - Gliwice cross-city line from freight traffic, enabling the transport of coal directly from the mine stations located along this line on September 8, 1977. - Katowice Ligota - Orzesze - Leszczyny - Rybnik 40 km, a section facilitating passenger traffic in the Rybnik District of Węglowago, December 10, 1977. - Tychy - Orzesze Jask. - Żory, 31 km, December 30, 1978. - Pyskowice - Zabrze Mikulczyce - Zabrze Biskupice 17 km, the second electrified exit on the Śląsk - Opole - Wrocław route, December 31, 1979. - Bytom \ Bytom Karb - Zabrze Biskupice - Gliwice \ Zabrze Makoszowy 25 km 23.XII.1980 - Tarnowskie Góry - Tworóg Brynek - Borowiany - Krupski Młyn 23 December 22, 1980 - Niedobczyce - Wodzisław Śl. 9 km 17.XI.1981 - Zabrze Mikulczyce - Tworóg Brynek 21 km, September 8, 1982. - Żory - Pszczyna 22 km September 15, 1982 - Nędza - Racibórz 9 km 23.XII.1982 - Bielsko Biała - Skoczów 22 km, 29.12.1982 In this way, almost the entire Katowice junction was electrified. From the 1960s, the domestic industry at a rapid pace began to provide new electric locomotives and electric multiple units, which allowed a large part to replace steam locomotives, which in the late 1970s began to be phased out in favor of diesel locomotives on non-electrified lines. In addition to the mass-scale introduction of the domestic ET22, EU07 and two-section ET41 locomotives, Polish State Railways also purchased two-section locomotives of the ET40 series in Czechoslovakia, which were produced by Skoda, and in the Soviet Union Novocherkassk Electric Locomotive Plant, locomotives of the ET42 series were purchased, which were one of the strongest series at the Polish State Railways. On October 10, 1983, the electrified section Siedlce - Mordy (19 km) was put into operation. It was the initial stage of electrification of the entire Siedlce - Czeremcha line (91 km) planned for later implementation. The electrification of this line was never completed. On December 20, 1983, the electric traction was introduced to the section Toruń - Inowrocław (35 km). On May 31, 1984, the section Poznań - Zbąszynek - Rzepin (74 km) was covered by electrification as the last fragment of the great east–west transit main, running from Terespol through Kutno, Poznań to Rzepin station. On June 1, 1984, the electric traction on the Lublin - Dorohusk line was put into operation, the first section of which was already electrified from Lublin to Świdnik. On the section Świdnik - Chełm Lub. - Dorohusk (83 km). On December 29, 1984, the additional electrified section Rejowiec - Żulin (9 km) was put into operation. On July 20, 1984, the Toruń - Bydgoszcz section (45 km) was put into operation by electric traction. It is the last stage of electrification of the Toruń-Bydgoszcz-Inowrocław triangle. On September 30, 1984, the section Florek - Płock Miasto (46 km) was put into operation by electric traction, extended on November 27, 1984, by the section Płock Miasto - Płock Trzepowo (6 km). On December 21, 1985, the electric traction was introduced on the entire line Kutno - Toruń Gł. (106 km) together with the adjacent section of Aleksandrów Kujawski - Ciechocinek (7 km). On the Toruń - Aleksandrów Kujawski (17 km) and Aleksandrów - Ciechocinek (7 km) sections, the electric traction was introduced a little earlier - on May 31, 1985. On May 28, 1985, the electrification of the transport line, which had been going on since 1982, was put into operation Wrocław - Głogów - Zielona Góra - Rzepin - Kostrzyń - Szczecin (342 km) - Wrocław - Głogów (Wróblin Głogowski) 101 km, December 23, 1982 - Wróblin Głogowski - Czerwiensk, 58 km, December 23, 1983 - Szczecin - Dolna Odra, 20 km December 27, 1983 - Czerwięsk - Rzepin 57 km on December 19, 1984 - Rzepin - Dolna Odra 106 km on May 28, 1985. On December 9, 1985, electric traction was introduced on the shortest connection between Warsaw and Gdańsk, 235 km long, with simultaneous activation of electric traction on the Malbork - Elbląg (29 km) branch - on July 20, 1985, and in 1986 on the Działdowo - Olsztyn line (83 km). The Tczew - Gdańsk section was already electrified in 1969 as part of the electrification of the coal main line, the Warsaw - Nasielsk section in 1972 as part of the electrification of the WWK region. - Tczew - Malbork 18 km, September 30, 1983 - Nasielsk
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steam traction, 60% carbon savings and significant savings in wagons were achieved. Rail transport between Silesia and Warsaw has been improved for a long time. The obtained investment and operational experience related to the first main line and the WWK electrification allowed the Ministry of Communications to develop general assumptions for the electrification of railways in Poland, which were used, among others, by to make a significant decision by the minister to abandon the purchase of steam locomotives for PKP from 1957. It is worth adding that during its construction, a practically large team of specialists was educated for the electrification of subsequent railway routes. In the area of the Łódź junction, the Bedoń - Łódź Olechów - Łódź Kaliska and Łódź Widzew - Łodź Chojny connections with a total length of 26 km were electrified (January 25, 1958). In this way, it was possible to connect three most important stations of the Łódź agglomeration by electric traction. (Widzew, Chojny, Łódź Kaliska) In the years 1961–1962, the electrification of the very important Warsaw-Poznań bus began. On March 22, 1961, 71 km electrified section Sochaczew - Łowicz - Kutno was put into operation. On the 29 September 1962 section Kutno - Konin 79 km, electrification thus reached the area of DOKP Poznań. Ongoing plans for the electrification of the PKP network include the main lines connecting Upper Silesia with the developing Kraków district and connecting Upper Silesia with Lower Silesia, i.e. with the Wrocław district. The following set of lines were electrified and commissioned: - Katowice - Szczakowa 22 km, May 14, 1959 - Ząbkowice - Szczakowa 16 km, April 30, 1959 - Szczakowa - Mydlinki - Kraków Płaszów 59 km, September 29, 1959 - Mydlinki - Kraków Prokocim, 13 km on July 31, 1959 - Krakow Płaszów - Bieżanó - Wieliczka 10 km 29 March 1960 - Bieżanów - Podłęże - Niepołomice, 15 km on May 28, 1960 - Kraków Główny - Batowice 7 km on May 28, 1960 - Nowa Huta - Podłęże 12 km, December 23, 1961. - Prokocim - Gaj 3 km The necessity to improve and increase the railway transport capacity on the Upper Silesia - Wrocław communication route formed the basis of government decisions regarding the modernization and electrification of the Gliwice - Pyskowice - Opole - Wrocław railway line. The electrification of this trunk was carried out in stages, the entire trunk line was commissioned by electric traction on the following dates: - Gliwice - Pyskowice - Strzelce Opolskie (along with the second pair of tracks on the section Gliwice - Łabędy) - Opole Główna - Święta Katarzyna - Wrocław Brochów 158 km on 3 October 1960. - Święta Katarzyna - Wrocław Główny 10 km on December 15, 1960, In 1961, additional connections in the Opole area were electrified: Groszowice - Opole Główna Towarowe (3 km) and Groszowice - Opole Wschodnie (6 km). In 1962, the section Brochów - Wrocław Towarowy (3 km) was additionally electrified in the area of Wrocław. The electrification investment Gliwice - Wrocław also includes the electrification of branches along the Odra River: Gliwice - Łabędy - Kędzierzyn - Groszowice (83 km). In the Katowice junction itself, in 1961, the suburban section Katowice - Katowice Ligota - Tychy - Tychy Miasto was electrified. In 1962, the following sections were put into operation by electric traction: - Podłęże - Bogumiłowice, 51 km, April 28, 1962. - Bogumiłowice - Tarnów Zachodni 4 km In 1959, the traction network on the Jugowice Walim railway line was liquidated along with passenger traffic, which was served by steam locomotives for a few more months, and was finally liquidated by 1960. Freight traffic on this line was served until 1975, and the line itself was dismantled in 1984. The EP02 series electric locomotives (1953-1954) and three-car electric multiple units of the EW53 series (1953-1955), intended for WWK, were built in Pafawag Wrocław with the use of electrical equipment purchased in England. In 1957, 2 prototypes were built, and in 1958, serial production of the locomotives began based on the Soviet technical documentation, ET21. In 1958, a prototype of the domestic three-car EMU (EW55 series) was built for suburban traffic with adaptation to high platforms, and in the years 1958 - 1962 a series of these vehicles was delivered for WWK. In 1962, the first three-car multiple unit for local traffic was built, with the same equipment as the EW55, but adapted to low platforms, the EN57 series. On the other hand, the demand for electric locomotives for servicing long-distance passenger trains was covered by the intervention purchase of 30 BoBo electric locomotives in CSRS (EU05 series). A contract was also concluded for the delivery from England of 20 BoBo electric locomotives (EU06 series) with full production documentation. In April 1959, an inter-ministerial working team was established. Thanks to the efforts of this team, a number of studies and design studies have been carried out. The electrification projects for several lines were carried out at that time in two variants: for 3 kV direct current and 25 kV 50 Hz alternating current (e.g. for the Kraków - Medyka line, the Silesia - Gdańsk and Gdynia ports and Poznań - Szczecin coal lines). a reasonable compromise, the Wrocław - Legnica line (50 km long) was selected for electrification with 50 Hz alternating current, for which a preliminary project of electrification with this system was developed. The Ministry of Communications placed an order for the supply of 70 50 Hz AC electric locomotives for this line, but the rolling stock industry did not even start to build a prototype of these locomotives, considering that it could not risk starting new production for such a small series of locomotives. In 1959, PKP also tried to convince the Ministry of Communications to electrify the Coal Main to 25 kV 50 Hz alternating current, but the idea was also rejected. In 1964, the electrification of the last part of the Kraków - Medyka line was completed, which had been going on since 1960 (in 1963 the Tarnów Zachodni - Dębica - Rzeszów section was electrified, and the final section Rzeszów - Medyka in 1964). On June 6, 1964, the electrification of the entire length of the Warsaw - Poznań line (after the Konin - Poznań section was electrified) started in 1958. Together with the electrified sections of Łowicz - Skierniewice (22 km - May 25, 1963) and Odolany - Warszawa Gdańska - Warszawa Praga (14 km - May 25, 1963), it constituted the electrification of an important route for the east–west direction, linking two electrified main lines Warsaw - Katowice and Warsaw - Poznań. On November 29, 1963, the electric traction connection of Katowice through Ligota - Tychy - Czechowice with Bielsko (38 km) was launched, extended on December 30, 1970, by the Bielsko - Żywiec section (21 km). On September 9, 1964, it took place on the section Czechowice - Zebrzydowice - state border (37 km). On December 19, 1966, electric traction was introduced along the entire length of the Wrocław - Wałbrzych - Jelenia Góra line (151 km); on the section Wrocław - Kuźnice Świdnickie a year earlier - December 18, 1965. It is the first electrified line of the PKP network of a piedmont character. From that moment, also in Lower Silesia, parts of the lines on which the traction network were located before the war were re-electrified. The next important electrified route was the Śląsk - Lublin main railway line with connections towards Kraków (Batowice - Tunel section) and Warsaw (from Radom to Czachówek and from Dęblin to Pilawa), electrified in stages and launched on the following dates: - Strzemieszyce - Sędziszów 98 km, September 8, 1966. - Sędziszów - Kielce 66 km, September 29, 1967 - Kielce - Radom - Dęblin 143 km 28 December 1967 - Dęblin - Lublin 67 km November 8, 1968 - Dęblin - Pilawa 49 km November 8, 1968 Launching the supplementary sections, forming the shortest connection, was as follows: - Tunel - Batowice 46 km September 22, 1968 - Czachówek - Radom 70 km By the resolution of the Council of Ministers of February 21, 1963, the electrification of the Coal Main was officially started. The first completed section was Tarnowskie Góry - Zduńska Wola Karsznice, the electrification of which was completed on November 28, 1965. The second section from Zduńska Wola to Maksymilianowo has been divided into stages: Zduńska Wola Karsznice - Lipie Góry, Lipie Góry - Inowrocław, Inowrocław - Maksymilianowo along with the electrification of the Bydgoszcz Railway Junction and Maksymilianowo - Tczew (and further to Gdynia by line Warsaw–Gdańsk railway). These stages were completed on May 30, 1966, December 30, 1966, September 9, 1967, and December 23, 1968, respectively. Due to electrification, line 131 took over 70% of the freight transport of DOKP Gdańsk. The reduction in travel costs resulted in a return on investment after 5 years. The introduction of electric traction also resulted in changes in the workshops of the locomotive shed and the creation of a control point for electric locomotives in Karsznice. The electrification of the bus was completed on May 23, 1974, when the last section from Chorzów Batory to Tarnowskie Góry was electrified. The total length of electrified lines under this project was 714 km. As soon as the 3kV direct current electrification system reached Gdynia, the voltage was switched from 800 V to 3000 V on the Gdynia Stocznia - Wejcherowo section (23 km) (October 19, 1969). At the same time, the voltage was also switched from 800 V to 3000 V on the Gdańsk Gł. - Gdańsk Nowy Port section. The separate electric traction system 800 V on the Gdańsk - Gdynia route was liquidated on December 20, 1976. The power supply was switched to 3000 V and the system was unified in the GWK. Thus, the operation of the post-German 800 V electric rolling stock operated on the Coast lasted 25 years, instead of the initially anticipated 10 years. In the period 1969 - 1970, an electric traction was put into operation on the Wrocław - Poznań line, 165 km long, and 198 km including slip roads (September 24, 1970). In addition, in the first decade of the period in question, the following lines or sections of the PKP network were electrified, starting to operate trains with electric traction: - Łódź Widzew - Zgierz 14 km, December 23, 1969 - Skierniewice - Pilawa - Łuków 160 km on December 15, 1971 - Kraków - Spytkowice - Oświęcim - Czechowice 90 km, December 4, 1971 - Dorota - Muchowice - Chorzów Batory 40 km, May 30, 1970 - Kędzierzyn Koźle - Rybnik - Niedobczyce - Chybie 51 km on December 1, 1970 - Tychy Miasto - Bieruń Stary 8 km September 7, 1972 - Pilawa - Minsk Maz. - Tłuszcz 60 km 27 May 1972 - Warsaw Praga - Legionowo - Wieliszew - Zegrze and Tłuszcz 62 km on 27 May
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middle-distance runner who specializes in various events. Bratan Tsenov, is a Bulgarian former wrestler
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in various events. Bratan Tsenov, is a Bulgarian former wrestler Gancho Tsenov, was a Bulgarian
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fifth Cazonci of the Irechikwa Ts'intsuntsani in Mesoamerica, in what is now
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He ruled from 1454 to 1479. Under his rule, the nation conquered parts of the Aztec Empire, up to Jiquipilco.
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Dutch–French border commission tasked with mapping the Marowijne River which forms to boundary between Suriname and French Guiana. On 10 April 1862, a map and a report was produced by the commission, and the border was considered solved. In 1885, gold was discovered near the Marowijne River, and the border was in dispute. As of 2021, the dispute has not been resolved. In 1863, van Heerdt tot Eversberg was appointed District Commissioner of Upper Suriname (nowadays approximates Paramaribo District), and served until 1968. In 1868, he became custodian of the first mortgage office in Suriname., however he returned the same year to the Netherlands for health reasons, and in 1869 started to work for the Ministry of the Colonies. On 31 May 1880, van Heerdt tot Eversberg was appointed Governor of Curaçao and Dependencies, and was installed on 1 October 1880. , the governor of Suriname, was accused of personally profiting from
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van Heerdt tot Eversberg was appointed District Commissioner of Upper Suriname (nowadays approximates Paramaribo District), and served until 1968. In 1868, he became custodian of the first mortgage office in Suriname., however he returned the same year to the Netherlands for health reasons, and in 1869 started to work for the Ministry of the Colonies. On 31 May 1880, van Heerdt tot Eversberg was appointed Governor of Curaçao and Dependencies, and was installed on 1 October 1880. , the governor of Suriname, was accused of personally profiting from gold concessions, and subsequently turned in his resignation. On 5 September 1882, it was announced that van Heerdt tot Eversberg would be transferred from Curaçao to Suriname. Van Heerdt tot Eversberg left Curaçao on 18 October 1882. On 11 November 1882, van Heerdt tot Eversberg was installed as Governor of Suriname and served until 1 August 1885. Van Heerdt tot Eversberg died on 10 January 1893 in The Hague, at the age of 63. Honours Knight of the Order of the Netherlands Lion. References 1829 births 1893 deaths Governors
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9th Lok Sabha from Bulandshahr constituency. He served as Union Minister of State in Ministry of Food and Civil Supplies in Chandra Shekhar cabinet from November 1990 to February 1991. In November 1990, he was one of the 64 MPs
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Sabha from Bulandshahr constituency. He served as Union Minister of State in Ministry of Food and Civil Supplies in Chandra Shekhar cabinet from November 1990 to February 1991. In November 1990, he was one of the 64
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Cazonci of the Irechikwa Ts'intsuntsani in Mesoamerica, in what is now Mexico. He was the nephew
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now Mexico. He was the nephew of Tariácuri. It is unknown when his rule began,
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(song), the title track and lead single from the Barbara Mandrell album "Midnight Angel", a song by Penny McLean from
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Angel is a 1976 album by Barbara Mandrell. Midnight Angel may also refer to: "Midnight Angel"
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thousand works in the collection. It presents objects from ancient civilizations in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas and the Middle East, related by theme. The exposition was designed by Tsuyashi Tane. The first of the four galleries is called an "imaginary museum", with a mixture of different cultures. The second gallery has eleven showcase, by theme. The third is reserved for temporary exhibits. The fourth, 18 meters long,is offers a tour of objects from different ancient treasuries. One notable object is a bust carved of chalcedony of the Roman Emperor Hadrian, made in the 13th century for the Holy Roman Emperor, and then moved two centuries later to Venice, where it was set upon shoulders in armor made of gilded enamel, precious stones and pearls. Another notable work is a quartzite bust of a Princess of the Amarna Period, Egyptian New Empire, XVIII Dynasty (1351-1334 BC), The collection also contains a gold pendant from 3500 BC, considered the oldest existing example of worked gold; a Mughal decorative bird made of gold, lacquer, rubies and emeralds; A bear-shaped gilded bronze carpet weight from the Han Dynasty in China (202-220 AD; as well as sabers, textiles, and illuminated texts of the Koran. Another object
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notable work is a quartzite bust of a Princess of the Amarna Period, Egyptian New Empire, XVIII Dynasty (1351-1334 BC), The collection also contains a gold pendant from 3500 BC, considered the oldest existing example of worked gold; a Mughal decorative bird made of gold, lacquer, rubies and emeralds; A bear-shaped gilded bronze carpet weight from the Han Dynasty in China (202-220 AD; as well as sabers, textiles, and illuminated texts of the Koran. Another object on display is a 16th-century tunic covered with citations from the Koran, which was worn as protection against harm under a suit of armour. It is accompanied by two sabers, made of Damascus steel, which are marked with the name of Emperor. The collection displays a jade wine cup made for the fourth of the Mughal emperors, Jahangir in 1607-1608, the only known dated object specifically connected with an Emperor's name. The Persian text on the cup contains quotations from the Koran, and notes that it is the personal cup of the Emperor, with a date. Bibliography (in French) Pommereau, Claude, "Hôtel de la Marine" (June 2021), Beaux Arts Éditions, Paris (ISBN=979-10-204-0646-0) "Connaissance des arts" special edition, "L'Hôtel de la Marine", (in French), published September, 2021 External links Hotel de la
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towards conserving the rare markhor wild goat. It is also a part of an eco-sensitive zone as notified by the Government of Jammu & Kashmir. Location Limber Wildlife Sanctuary covers an area of 26.00 sq. km or 4,375 ha. It is located on North bank of Jhelum in Baramulla district of Jammu & Kashmir. It is close to the Line of Control, which
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4,375 ha. It is located on North bank of Jhelum in Baramulla district of Jammu & Kashmir. It is close to the Line of Control, which is the international jurisdiction border that India holds with Pakistan. It is situated at a distance of about 70 km from Srinagar. Wildlife The sanctuary is a conservation ground for Markhor wild goats. Apart from other species of goats, Limber Wildlife Sanctuary also is home to Himalayan musk deer, leopards
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professor at the National University of Rosario and at the University of Buenos Aires, and was a visiting faculty at the Walsh School of Foreign Service. He participated in the United Nations Disarmament Fellowship. Career Villegas entered the Argentine foreign service in 1993, when he graduated from the Instituto del Servicio Exterior de la Nación (ISEN). From 1993 to 1995, he formed part of the Foreign Ministry's Directorate for International Security, Nuclear and Space Affairs. He additionally served as alternate representative to the Organization of American States from 1995 to 2003. Later, from 2005 to 2007 and from 2012 to 2015, he was the Argentine MFA's Director General for Human Rights. Villegas headed the Argentine MFA's project to establish the first National Programme against Discrimination, in co-operation with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. He was also involved in the establishment of the Mercosur Centre of Human Rights Public Policy (IPPDH) and the UNESCO International Centre for Human Rights, both of which are headquartered in Argentina. In
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University. His final dissertation was on "Co-operative Security in the post-Cold War". He has taught courses on international public law as an auxiliary professor at the National University of Rosario and at the University of Buenos Aires, and was a visiting faculty at the Walsh School of Foreign Service. He participated in the United Nations Disarmament Fellowship. Career Villegas entered the Argentine foreign service in 1993, when he graduated from the Instituto del Servicio Exterior de la Nación (ISEN). From 1993 to 1995, he formed part of the Foreign Ministry's Directorate for International Security, Nuclear and Space Affairs. He additionally served as alternate representative to the Organization of American States from 1995 to 2003. Later, from 2005 to 2007 and from 2012 to 2015, he was the Argentine MFA's Director General for Human Rights. Villegas headed the Argentine MFA's project to establish the first National Programme against
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refer to: "One Little Smile", a song performed by Helen Morgan in the 1934 short film The Doctor "One Little
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song performed by Helen Morgan in the 1934 short film The Doctor "One
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On 28 January 1995, Razik-Al-Jalil became a lawyer of the High Court Division of Bangladesh Supreme Court. Razik-Al-Jalil was appointed an additional judge of the High Court Division on 12 February 2015. On 8 February 2017, Razik-Al-Jalil was made a permanent judge of the High Court Division of Bangladesh Supreme Court. Razik-Al-Jalil and Justice FRM Nazmul Ahasan refused to hear a petition on 20 December 2018 that challenged the legality of the upcoming 11th parliamentary election scheduled to be held on 30 December 2018. Razik-Al-Jalil and Justice Sheikh Hassan Arif issued a verdict on 13 February saying the media reports should not disclose the identities of those under 18. The verdict was given after barrister Sayedul Haque Sumon filed a petition following a report on The Daily Star that mentioned the name of an underage convict. On 11 December 2019, Razik-Al-Jalil and Justice Md Ashraful Kamal issued an order cancelling
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Kakrail to four claimants. Razik-Al-Jalil and Kamal observed that the judgement was flawed and questioned the integrity of Justice Khandker Musa Khaled. On 1 November 2020, Razik-Al-Jalil and Justice Naima Haider ordered the government to pay the benefits and retrospectively promote 39 members of the first Bangladesh Civil Service Batch, known as the freedom fighters batch, which had been denied to them from 2001 to 2003. Razik-Al-Jalil and Justice Md Ashraful Kamal on 8 November asked the government to collect tax revenue from Amazon, Facebook, and Google. On 19 November 2020, Razik-Al-Jalil and Justice Md Ashraful Kamal in a verdict declared the government policy change of allowing practitioners of alternate medicine to use the title of doctor to be illegal. Razik-Al-Jalil and Justice Md
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one of those visits, she met a young Eleanor Roosevelt, a friend and classmate of her cousin Nelly Post, and recalled her as “the little American girl who was so homesick." In 1913, Wadsworth married Fletcher Harper (1874-1963), a polo player who was the grandson of Fletcher Harper. They were engaged while Harper was in the hospital with a broken leg following "a tussle with a fractious horse". They eventually settled in Friendship Farm near The Plains, Virginia. Fletcher Harper was master of the Orange County Hunt from 1920 to 1953. The couple
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grandson of Fletcher Harper. They were engaged while Harper was in the hospital with a broken leg following "a tussle with a fractious horse". They eventually settled in Friendship Farm near The Plains, Virginia. Fletcher Harper was master of the Orange County Hunt from 1920 to 1953. The couple are credited with promoting the sport of foxhunting in the area, working with local landowners to open the land to the sport and popularizing it there among American elites. In 1930 Harper and her husband were painted by the portrait painter Ellen Emmet Rand. Both portraits were included in Rand's 1936 New York exhibition Sporting Portraits. In 1966, she published an autobiography, Around the World in Eighty Years on
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footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Gabala. Career Atangana started his career with Spanish La Liga side Athletic. In 2016, he was sent on loan to Basconia in the Spanish fourth tier. In 2018, Atangana was sent on loan to Spanish third tier club Leioa. In 2020, he was sent on loan
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Christophe Atangana Assimba (born 2 March 2000) is a Cameroonian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Gabala. Career Atangana started his career with Spanish La Liga side Athletic. In 2016, he was sent on loan to Basconia in the Spanish fourth tier. In 2018, Atangana was sent on loan to Spanish third tier club Leioa. In 2020, he was sent on loan to Somorrostro in
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He formerly played with Selangor FA,Terengganu FA and ATM FA. He also the former member of
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striker. He formerly played with Selangor FA,Terengganu FA and ATM FA. He also the former member of Malaysia national
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of Tariácuri. His rule began around ~1430 and ended in
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in Mesoamerica, in what is now Mexico. He was the nephew of
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title was the fifth overall for the Hofstra men's soccer program all of which have come under head coach Richard Nuttall. As tournament champions, Hofstra earned the CAA's automatic berth into the 2021 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. Seeding The top four teams in the regular season earned a spot in the tournament. Teams were seeded based on regular season conference record and tiebreakers were used to determine
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all of which have come under head coach Richard Nuttall. As tournament champions, Hofstra earned the CAA's automatic berth into the 2021 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament. Seeding The top four teams in the regular season earned a spot in the tournament. Teams were seeded based on regular season conference record and tiebreakers were used to determine seedings of teams that finished with the same record. James Madison Dukes finished third in the regular season standings but could not participate due to a postseason ban handed down by the CAA. A tiebreaker was required to determine who
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to score three times in the tournament as LISCR were the eventual champions. International career In March 2020 Quiah was part of the Liberia national under-17 team that competed in a tournament hosted by Tanzania which also included Malawi and Zambia. Quiah was called up for a friendly against Egypt on 30 September 2021. He went on to make his senior international debut in the 0–2 defeat at age 15. He scored his first league goal on 6 December 2020 in a 2–2 draw with Nimba United. International career statistics References External
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by LISCR of the Liberian First Division in Summer 2020. He joined on a 3-year deal and scored in a preseason tournament on his club debut in October of that year. He went on to score three times in the tournament as LISCR were the eventual champions. International career In March 2020 Quiah was part of the Liberia national under-17 team that competed in a tournament hosted by Tanzania which also included Malawi and Zambia. Quiah was called up for a friendly against Egypt on 30 September 2021. He went on to make his
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Attiyah. It did not last long. In the mid-seventies with coaches from Sudan, including Hassan Othman for three years, to begin the stage of contracting with Brazilian coaches from the eighties until the end of the nineties, their number reached 14, most notably Zé Mário, Evaristo de Macedo and Procópio Cardoso, With the beginning of the millennium Al Sadd SC contracted with several coaches and there was no stability and from several nationalities. They are Džemaludin Mušović for the second time after the first season 1994–95, Luka Peruzović, Jorge Fossati, Ilie Balaci, Bora Milutinović, Émerson Leão, Cosmin Olăroiu, René Meulensteen, Co Adriaanse, and for the third time the Bosnian Mušović. On January 14, 2011 Al Sadd SC contracted with Jorge Fossati for the second time after the first in the 2006–07 season which was not successful, but in the second Fossati managed to lead him to win the 2011 AFC Champions League for the second time in its history after the first in 1988–89 to ensure a historic participation in the FIFA Club World Cup where they played against the giant FC Barcelona to occupy third place and guarantee a bronze medal, and at the end of the season after failing to win the 2011–12 Qatar Stars League and not guaranteeing participation in the AFC Champions League, Fossati officially
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a bronze medal, and at the end of the season after failing to win the 2011–12 Qatar Stars League and not guaranteeing participation in the AFC Champions League, Fossati officially left his post. He was succeeded by Moroccan Hussein Ammouta where he spent more than three years during which Ammouta achieved four titles, His first test came in the 2012 Sheikh Jassem Cup. Al Sadd, playing most of their matches with their second team, achieved the runners-up position when they lost to Al Rayyan SC in the final. In the league, his team's form won the appraisal of many pundits, with them winning all of their first nine games, setting a new league record. Sadd were eventually held to a goalless draw by Al Kharaitiyat on 8 December 2012. Al-Sadd won the league on 13 April 2013, one match before the end of the league. It was the first Al-Sadd's championship since 2007. On 28 November 2015, Ferreira was named the head coach of Al Sadd SC, on a six-month deal with the option
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other African territories (through the eAfrica feed), which is also branded in those regions as "an e.tv production". As almost all of e.tv's original programming is multilingual, the languages used in the program is also listed (all non-English programming, including segments of unscripted programming where another language is used, is subtitled in English), is organized by its primary genre or format, and is sorted by premiere date. These are productions that have been (or is currently) shown on e.tv, including sister channels eExtra, eReality, eToonz, News
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unscripted programming where another language is used, is subtitled in English), is organized by its primary genre or format, and is sorted by premiere date. These are productions that have been (or is currently) shown on e.tv, including sister channels eExtra, eReality, eToonz, News and Sports, Rewind and eNCA, as well as their
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variety show that premiered on BBC in 1976. The show was hosted by Welsh singer Shirley Bassey and produced by Stewart Morris. The first six-episode season was nominated for the Golden Rose of Montreux in 1977. This was followed by a second season of six episodes in 1979. The musical guests included The Three Degrees, Charles Aznavour, Neil Diamond and Dusty Springfield. Season 1 Season one was broadcast on Saturdays on BBC1. The
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the Golden Rose of Montreux in 1977. This was followed by a second season of six episodes in 1979. The musical guests included The Three Degrees, Charles Aznavour, Neil Diamond and Dusty Springfield. Season 1 Season one was broadcast on Saturdays on BBC1. The series (excluding the 7th highlights episode) was repeated on BBC2 on non-consecutive Thursdays
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Zeller was born in Stonington, where he lived his entire life other than short sojourns in West Hartford and Seekonk, Massachusetts, while in his 70s. He attended Stonington's public schools and worked as secretary and treasurer for a Bridgeport-based manufacturer and as president of a New York-based manufacturer. Zeller died at Providence Hospital in Rhode Island at the age of 78. He was survived by his wife, Marjorie Mackenzie Zeller, and two daughters. References 1899 births 1978 deaths People from Stonington, Connecticut American people of German descent 20th-century American politicians Connecticut Republicans Connecticut Comptrollers Connecticut state senators Businesspeople from Connecticut American people convicted of fraud
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Board of Education, Zeller had served as a member of the Connecticut State Senate from 1936 to 1938. Conviction In 1966, Zeller pled guilty to having embezzled $26,297 from the First Baptist Church of Stonington, Connecticut, where he had served as church treasurer for many years. He was sentenced to 1–3 years in prison and served nine months. Personal life The son of a German immigrant, Zeller was born in Stonington, where he lived his
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|- |Goals conceded || |- |Goal difference || |- |Clean sheets ||1 |- |Yellow cards ||3 |- |Red cards || |- |Worst discipline || |- |Best result(s) || |- |Worst result(s) || |- |Most appearances || |- |Top scorer || |- |Points || 1 |- Appearances and goals Numbers after plus–sign (+) denote appearances as a substitute. Top scorers As of 11 February 2022. Top assists Disciplinary record Transfers Transfers in Transfers out Awards and honors References 2022 2022 Major League Soccer season American soccer clubs 2022 season 2022 in sports
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States. Outside of MLS, the club will participate in the U.S. Open Cup. Background Review Offseason Team information Roster Front office and coaching staff |- !colspan="2" style="background:#F7B5CD; color:#000000; text-align:left" |Ownership |- |- !colspan="2" style="background:#F7B5CD; color:#000000; text-align:left" |Front office |- Friendlies Preseason Competitive Major League Soccer Standings Eastern Conference Overall table Results summary Results by round Match results U.S. Open Cup Statistics Overall {|class="wikitable" |- |Games played ||1 |- |Games won || |- |Games drawn ||1 |-
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Vigod was appointed the chief of psychiatry at Women’s College Hospital. While serving in these leadership roles, Vigod developed an online patient decision aid to help women make choices about antidepressant use in pregnancy. In 2020, Vigod studied mental health support for mothers during the COVID-19 pandemic by looking at demographic data and mental health visits for more than 137,000 people in Ontario. Following this, she was named the winner of The Royal-Mach-Gaensslen Prize for Mental Health Research as an outstanding mental health researcher enabling future exploration and discovery. She appears regularly in the media on maternal and pregnancy issues. Current positions Head, Department of Psychiatry, Women’s College Hospital Shirley A. Brown Memorial Chair in Women’s Mental Health Research and Senior Scientist, Women’s College Research Institute Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto Senior Adjunct Scientist, ICES, Toronto, Ontario Awards and honours The Royal-Mach-Gaensslen Prize for Mental Health Research (2021) Shirley A. Brown Memorial Chair
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some of the largest studies worldwide on maternal mental illness around the time of pregnancy. Education and training Vigod graduated from McGill University in 1999 with her Honours Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology. She then earned her medical degree from the University of Toronto, where she completed her psychiatric residency in 2009, and an MSc in Clinical Epidemiology in 2011. Career Following her residency in psychiatry, Vigod joined Women's College Hospital to continue her research on reproductive health. In 2014, Vigod became the program lead for Women's College Hospital's Reproductive Life Stages (RLS) program. The aim of the program was to provide care to women with mental health issues across their reproductive life cycle. Under her leadership, the team created and evaluated Mother Matters, an online therapist-facilitated support group for women across Ontario with postpartum mental health issues. At the same time, she was also appointed the Shirley A. Brown Memorial Chair in Women’s Mental Health Research for a term of five years. In this role, Vigod collaborated with an international team of women’s mental health researchers to develop a primer on PPDs. In November 2018, Vigod was appointed the chief of
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Zhu, the 7th generation monarch of Zhu. History The descendants of Yan An (晏安) were given the small regional state of Zhu during Zhou Dynasty. Cao Yifu earned merits and was appointed
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Zhu, the 7th generation monarch of Zhu. History The descendants of Yan An (晏安) were given the small regional state of Zhu during Zhou Dynasty. Cao Yifu earned merits and was appointed ruler to the Ni (state), also known as Xiao Zhu.
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two species, Luciola malaccae and Luciola testacea, which were later reassigned to the Pteroptyx genus. Three subsequent species, P. tener, P. bearni, and P. valida were described by Olivier between 1907 and 1909. Much of the work revising the genera within Luciolinae has been done by Australian entomologist Lesley Ballantyne, beginning in 1970. The genus was originally defined based on characteristics of adult males: deflexed elytral apex, trisinuate ventrite 7, and a metafemoral comb. However some of the recently assigned species do not have either the deflexed elytral apex or the metafemoral comb. Developments in molecular sequencing techniques have improved the ability of entomologists to identify and delineate new species based on only female or larval specimens that were not collected in association with males. Jusoh et al. (2014) used these techniques to propose a new species, P. balingiana, as distinct from P. malaccae, but it has not been widely accepted. Ecology The males of two species, P. malaccae and P. tener, are often found in large groups on certain trees and perform synchronized flashing displays to attract females for mating. The first report of these synchronous displays was recorded in Thailand over a century ago, although the number of fireflies have decreased, likely due
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assigned species do not have either the deflexed elytral apex or the metafemoral comb. Developments in molecular sequencing techniques have improved the ability of entomologists to identify and delineate new species based on only female or larval specimens that were not collected in association with males. Jusoh et al. (2014) used these techniques to propose a new species, P. balingiana, as distinct from P. malaccae, but it has not been widely accepted. Ecology The males of two species, P. malaccae and P. tener, are often found in large groups on certain trees and perform synchronized flashing displays to attract females for mating. The first report of these synchronous displays was recorded in Thailand over a century ago, although the number of fireflies have decreased, likely due to the reduction of the necessary mangrove forests due to urbanization and shrimp farming in Thailand. Pollution and habitat loss have
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games in New Zealand, the team are playing their home games at WIN Stadium located in Wollongong, Australia. Season milestones Former Perth Glory keeper and 2020–21 players’ player of the year, Lily Alfeld, was announced as the club's inaugural signing. She was later announced as the club's inaugural captain. Wellington Phoenix started their debut season with a 0–0 draw against Western Sydney Wanderers at the Wollongong Showgrounds. Ava Pritchard scored the club's
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related to the on-going COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, including not being able to play home games in New Zealand, the team are playing their home games at WIN Stadium located in Wollongong, Australia. Season milestones Former Perth Glory keeper and 2020–21 players’ player of the year, Lily Alfeld, was announced as the club's inaugural signing. She was later announced as the club's inaugural captain. Wellington Phoenix started their debut season with a 0–0 draw against Western Sydney Wanderers at the Wollongong Showgrounds. Ava Pritchard scored the club's first goal in their second game of the season, in a 1–5 loss to Newcastle Jets. On 11 February 2022, the Phoenix achieved their first ever win in the A-League Women in a
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current Arem population is 800 people. According to Vietnamese government report, the population of Arem is falling drastically, and many are heading back to original nomadic lifestyle. Today, among several hundred Arem, only 20 (Babaev-Samarina 2018) to 100 (UNESCO 2011) of them could still speak their own Arem language, which still is poorly understood researched, mostly spoken by elderly. The Arem are not willing to share their language and are tended to speak other groups' languages.
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Bru Ma Coong who outnumber the Arem, and thus Ma Coong is used by the Arem at the village as daily lingua franca communicating language. Another, yet to be confirmed 250 Arem, are dwelling in the Laotian side of the Annamite mountains. Estimated that the current Arem population is 800 people. According to Vietnamese government report, the population of Arem is falling drastically, and many are heading back to original nomadic lifestyle. Today, among several hundred Arem, only 20 (Babaev-Samarina 2018) to 100 (UNESCO 2011) of them could still speak their own Arem language, which still is
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at the 2022 Winter Olympics. His coach is Gheorghe Garnita. References Living people
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is a Romanian biathlete who competed at the 2022 Winter Olympics. His coach is Gheorghe Garnita. References Living
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was inspired to write about motherhood and parenting due to her anxiety over whether or not to have a child. Two articles published in The New Yorker, one by Rachel Aviv concerning a mother's experience with family courts, and a second by Margaret Talbot about an effort in Providence to close the "word gap", both informed Chan as she wrote the story. The novel includes a large cast of characters, and Chan found creating unique, full-fledged personalities for
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began writing the novel in 2014. Chan was inspired to write about motherhood and parenting due to her anxiety over whether or not to have a child. Two articles published in The New Yorker, one by Rachel Aviv concerning a mother's experience with family courts, and a second by Margaret Talbot about an effort in Providence to close the "word gap", both informed Chan as she wrote the story. The novel includes a large cast of characters, and Chan found creating unique, full-fledged personalities for the mothers at the
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Goodnight", a 1934 song by Rudy Vallée & His Connecticut Yankees "Don't Say Goodnight", a 1957 single by the Valentines "Don't Say Goodnight", a song by the Everly Brothers from Born Yesterday, 1985 "Don't Say Goodnight", a song by Rheostatics from The Nightlines Sessions, 1998 "Don't Say Goodnight", a song
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2014 "Don't Say Goodnight and Mean Goodbye", a song by the Shirelles from Foolish Little Girl, 1963 "Don't Say Goodnight, My Love", a song by Penny McLean from Midnight Explosion, 1978 "Don't Say Goodnight (It's Time for Love)", a single by the Isley Brothers from Go All the Way, 1980 "Don't Say Goodnight, Say Good Morning", a song
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access within the cemetery, in which graves are lined up in neat rows separated by grass. There are estimated to be more than 500 burials. When Watertown was founded by English colonists in 1630, its first town center was located near Gerry's Landing on the Charles River. This town center included a small burying ground, which does not appear to have survived. The town center eventually migrated to the junction of Arlington and Mount Auburn Streets, with the meeting house north of Mount Auburn Street and what is now the Old Burying Ground to the south. About 1750 the town center moved again, to its present location at Watertown Square, at which time the Common Street Cemetery
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access within the cemetery, in which graves are lined up in neat rows separated by grass. There are estimated to be more than 500 burials. When Watertown was founded by English colonists in 1630, its first town center was located near Gerry's Landing on the Charles River. This town center included a small burying ground, which does not appear to have survived. The town center eventually migrated to the junction of Arlington and Mount Auburn Streets, with the meeting house north of Mount Auburn Street and what is now the Old Burying Ground to the south. About 1750 the town center moved again, to
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railway station in the town of Weil am Rhein, in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is located on the Mannheim–Karlsruhe–Basel railway (Rhine Valley Railway) of Deutsche Bahn. The Kander Valley Railway heritage railway operates from a platform just north of the station. Services the following services
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north of the station. Services the following services stop at Haltingen: Regional-Express: service every ninety minutes between Basel Bad Bf and or . Basel S-Bahn : hourly service between Basel Bad Bf and . References External links Haltingen layout
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and Engineering Research Council. Following this, Sekuler discovered that the aging process improves their ability to grasp big picture concepts through the use of computer-generated stimuli. She later received the Hamilton Spectator Publisher's Award for Educators in recognition of her "devotion and efforts toward increasing public science outreach." In 2017, Sekuler left McMaster after being named the next Vice-president Research and Sandra A. Rotman Chair at Baycrest Health Sciences in Toronto. In this role, she was also appointed the managing director of the Centre for Aging + Brain Health Innovation. In 2019, Sekuler was recognized by the Women's Executive Network as one of Canada's Most Powerful Women in the Science and Technology category. Personal life
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there, she also served as president and a board member of the Royal Canadian Institute. The couple remained at U of T for a decade before accepting a Canada Research Chair position at McMaster University in July 2001. Upon joining the faculty, Sekuler also established a laboratory of eye trackers and scanning machines to continue her research into face and object recognition. As a Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience, Sekuler focused on how the human brain processes visual information, and how that processing changes as a function of aging. She also focused on face perception, motion perception, object recognition, perceptual organization, visual attention, perceptual learning, and pattern vision. As such, Sekuler was recognized as a Canadian "Leader of Tomorrow" in 2004 by the Partnership Group for Science and Engineering and Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council. Following this, Sekuler discovered that the aging process improves their ability to grasp big picture concepts through the use of computer-generated stimuli. She later received the Hamilton Spectator Publisher's Award for Educators in recognition of her "devotion and efforts
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department of main gas pipelines. »NJSC" Naftogaz "of Ukraine in the city of Tarutyne, Odessa Oblast. From 2005 to 2006, he worked as an engineer of electrochemical protection of the Odessa Linear Production Department of Main Gas Pipelines of UMG "Prikarpattransgaz". From July 2006 to February 2010, he was an engineer of compressor stations and a linear maintenance service of the Odessa Linear Production Department of Main Gas Pipelines, "Prykarpattransgaz" PJSC "Ukrtransgaz" NJSC "Naftogaz" and in Odessa. From February 2010 to November 2011, he was the Engineer of the 2nd category of the Laboratory of Technical Diagnostics of Ivano-Frankivsk Technical Center of the Research and Production Center of Technical Diagnostics "Techdiagaz" PJSC "Ukrtransgaz" NJSC "Naftogaz" in Ivano-Frankivsk. In 2011, he has been an engineer in the capital construction department. JSC "Ukrtransgaz", from 2010 to 2011 worked as an engineer of the second category in the Technical Diagnostics Laboratory of the Ivano-Frankivsk Technical Center of the Research and Production Center for Technical Diagnostics. From November 2011 to June 2014, he was a l Leading Engineer of the Department of Capital Construction, Repairs and ICC of the Department of Planning, Preparation and Financing of Repairs of the Department of Preparation and Support of Repairs of PJSC "Ukrtransgaz" NJSC "Naftogaz" in Kyiv. In the winter of 2013 to 2014, Boychuck was a
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Linear Production Department of Main Gas Pipelines, "Prykarpattransgaz" PJSC "Ukrtransgaz" NJSC "Naftogaz" and in Odessa. From February 2010 to November 2011, he was the Engineer of the 2nd category of the Laboratory of Technical Diagnostics of Ivano-Frankivsk Technical Center of the Research and Production Center of Technical Diagnostics "Techdiagaz" PJSC "Ukrtransgaz" NJSC "Naftogaz" in Ivano-Frankivsk. In 2011, he has been an engineer in the capital construction department. JSC "Ukrtransgaz", from 2010 to 2011 worked as an engineer of the second category in the Technical Diagnostics Laboratory of the Ivano-Frankivsk Technical Center of the Research and Production Center for Technical Diagnostics. From November 2011 to June 2014, he was a l Leading Engineer of the Department of Capital Construction, Repairs and ICC of the Department of Planning, Preparation and Financing of Repairs of the Department of Preparation and Support of Repairs of PJSC "Ukrtransgaz" NJSC "Naftogaz" in Kyiv. In the winter of 2013 to 2014, Boychuck was a member of the Euromaidan, and was a centurion of the 37th hundred of the Maidan Self-Defense during the 2014 Ukrainian revolution. From June 2014 to April 2015, he had been the Assistant Minister of Energy and Coal
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football defenders N.V. Dash F.C. Inter Wanica players SVB Eerste Divisie players Suriname
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Eerste Divisie club Inter Wanica and the Suriname national team. References 1998 births Living people Surinamese footballers Association football defenders N.V. Dash F.C.
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grandfather was Alexander Walker, Lord Provost of Aberdeen. Career He went to Italy and became engaged in business in Venice, where he lived. In 1761, he was appointed British Consul at Venice, holding the office until 1777 when he was appointed Consul at Leghorn. He held that role until his death in 1800. "During his residence at Venice and Leghorn, he was in the practice of buying Italian works of art and sending them home for sale. He also supplied His Britannic Majesty's ships with fresh provisions when they touched at Leghorn, which was a perquisite of the consulship, and he seemed, further, in partnership with some other parties at Leghorn, to have entered into contracts for victualling the Mediterranean fleet." He also acted as intermediary for Henry Farnum, a Philadelphia collector, and the British sculptor John Gibson. Personal life In August 1777, Udny married Selina Shore Cleveland, a daughter of John Clevland MP and Secretary to the Admiralty and, his third wife, Sarah Shuckburgh (the daughter of Charles Shuckburgh and a sister of Sir Charles Shuckburgh, 5th Baronet). Together, they were the parents of two children, both born at Leghorn: Julia Udny (b. ), who married William Richard Hamilton, the son of Rev.
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daughter of John Clevland MP and Secretary to the Admiralty and, his third wife, Sarah Shuckburgh (the daughter of Charles Shuckburgh and a sister of Sir Charles Shuckburgh, 5th Baronet). Together, they were the parents of two children, both born at Leghorn: Julia Udny (b. ), who married William Richard Hamilton, the son of Rev. Anthony Hamilton, Archdeacon of Colchester and the former Anne Terrick (daughter of Richard Terrick, Bishop of London), in 1804; Hamilton later served as British Minister to the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies in the 1820s. John Robert Fullerton Udny (1779–1861), who married Emily Fitzhugh (–1846), daughter of Thomas Fitzhugh of Plus Power, in 1812. After her death he married Ann Allat, daughter of David Allat. In 1784, Selina and their children went to London with their children. In 1794 his elder brother became proprietor of the estates of Udny. As he had no sons, John became the heir next entitled to succeed. During his later years, John "carried out considerable correspondnece with his brother, and purchased parts of a property contiguous to the Udny estates." Udny died in 1800. His son John inherited
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she also completed her PhD in medical science at the University of Toronto. Career Upon earning her PhD, Metcalfe returned to WCH and accepted a faculty position at U of T. In these roles, she continued to focus her research on understanding the clinical and psychosocial implications of genetic testing for BRCA mutations in women, men, and their families. In 2004, she led a research team in surveying half of 120 women in Ontario who had preventive double mastectomies between 1991 and 2000. Between 2007 and 2011, Metcalfe received funding to help researchers understand the differences in uptake of cancer prevention options in Canadian women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation. Through this, Metcalfe became the first to investigate the predictors of contralateral breast cancer in women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations. As such, she received another grant in 2012 while working as U of T's Bloomberg Nursing interim director of research to develop and test a decision support tool for post-mastectomy breast reconstruction. At the same time, Metcalfe was appointed the Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing Limited-Term Professor in Cancer Genetics and became an Adjunct Scientist at the Familial Breast Cancer Research Institute at the Women’s College Research Institute. In these roles, she continued to focus on the prevention and treatment of breast and ovarian cancers in high-risk women by collaborating with the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Through these partnerships, she aimed to interview 1200 women with young-onset breast cancer to evaluate the contributions of 25 known breast cancer-causing genes in that population. Metcalfe was subsequently elected an International Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing in 2016. Following her election, Metcalfe was recognized locally with an election to the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists and was named a Fellow of Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. She also received U of T's Rising Star Alumni Award. That same year, Metcalfe received another grant to
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to investigate the predictors of contralateral breast cancer in women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations. As such, she received another grant in 2012 while working as U of T's Bloomberg Nursing interim director of research to develop and test a decision support tool for post-mastectomy breast reconstruction. At the same time, Metcalfe was appointed the Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing Limited-Term Professor in Cancer Genetics and became an Adjunct Scientist at the Familial Breast Cancer Research Institute at the Women’s College Research Institute. In these roles, she continued to focus on the prevention and treatment of breast and ovarian cancers in high-risk women by collaborating with the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Through these partnerships, she aimed to interview 1200 women with young-onset breast cancer to evaluate the contributions of 25 known breast cancer-causing genes in that population. Metcalfe was subsequently elected an International Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing in 2016. Following her election, Metcalfe was recognized locally with an election to the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists and was named a Fellow of Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. She also received U of T's Rising Star Alumni Award. That same year, Metcalfe received another grant to fund her study, Breast cancer treatment in women with PALB2 mutations. In 2018, Metcalfe was appointed Acting Associate
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that follows an aging woman (Jo Deseure) dealing with her progressing dementia with the help of her son (Le Peltier). The film marked his fourth collaboration with directors Ann Sirot and Raphaël Balboni, after starring in their previous short films. At the 11th Magritte Awards, Madly in Life received twelve nominations and won seven awards, including Best Actor for Le Peltier.
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2008. He began working in theatre appearing in productions from Belgium and France over the span of ten years. He later started directing his own stage productions, most notably with the theatrical company Ives & Pony. He made his film debut in Madly in Life (2020), a comedy-drama film that follows an aging woman (Jo Deseure) dealing with her progressing dementia with the help of her son (Le Peltier). The film marked his fourth collaboration with directors Ann Sirot and Raphaël Balboni, after starring in their previous
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and antitumor antibiotic with the molecular formula C14H20Cl2N2O6. Bactobolin was discovered
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C14H20Cl2N2O6. Bactobolin was discovered in 1979. References Further reading Organochlorides Amides
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El Paso, Texas. She went to the University of Kansas, Boise State University, and College of Idaho. In 1971, Snodgrass moved to Boise, Idaho with her husband and family. She was involved
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Snodgrass (July 22, 1936 – January 30, 2022) was an American politician. Snodgrass was born in El Paso, Texas. She went to the University of Kansas, Boise State University, and College of Idaho. In 1971, Snodgrass moved to Boise, Idaho with her husband and
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Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas Province Sucumbíos Province Tungurahua Province Zamora-Chinchipe Province Municipal flag For the use by the municipalities, a flag with the same colors and proportions as the national flag was adopted, which instead of a
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Province Cotopaxi Province El Oro Province Esmeraldas Province Galápagos Province Guayas Province Imbabura Province Loja Province Los Ríos Province Manabí Province Morona-Santiago Province Napo Province Orellana Province Pastaza Province Pichincha Province Santa Elena Province Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas
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EST, and would last for an hour and 20 minutes. Austin Dillon of Richard Childress Racing would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 15.451 and an average speed of . Second and final practice The second and final practice session, sometimes referred to as Happy Hour, was held on Friday, March 15, at 2:00 PM EST, and would last for an hour and 30 minutes. Kevin Harvick of Richard Childress Racing would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 15.488 and an average speed of . Qualifying Qualifying was held on Saturday, March 16, at 10:35 AM EST. Each driver would have two laps to set a fastest time; the fastest of the two would count as their official qualifying lap. Justin Allgaier of Turner Scott Motorsports would win the pole, setting a time of 15.380 and an average speed of . Three drivers would fail to qualify: Morgan Shepherd, Danny Efland, and Joey Gase, who withdrew after crashing
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event. The race was held on Saturday, March 16, in Bristol, Tennessee, at Bristol Motor Speedway, a 0.533 miles (0.858 km) permanent oval-shaped racetrack. The race took the scheduled 300 laps to complete. In a wild finish, Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle Busch would defend eventual second-place Turner Scott Motorsports driver Kyle Larson in one of closest NASCAR Nationwide Series finishes to date, by 0.023 seconds. The win was Busch's 53rd career NASCAR Nationwide Series win and his second of the season. To fill out the podium, Brian Vickers of Joe Gibbs Racing finished third. Background The Bristol Motor Speedway, formerly known as Bristol International Raceway and Bristol Raceway, is a NASCAR short track venue located in
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finished with a record of 23–9 and second in the MAC regular season with a conference record of 12–6. They won the MAC Tournament with wins over Eastern Michigan, Toledo, and MAC regular season champion Bowling Green. John Devereaux was named the tournament MVP. They
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record of 12–6. They won the MAC Tournament with wins over Eastern Michigan, Toledo, and MAC regular season champion Bowling Green. John Devereaux was named the tournament MVP. They received a bid to the NCAA Tournament. There they defeated Illinois State before
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