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would be educated by private teachers. At the exile of the imperial family in March 1924, Tevhide, and his family moved to Beirut, Lebanon, then to Rome, Italy, and finally to Cimiez, Nice, France. They bought a villa near the Villa Carabacel which belonged to Seniha Sultan, daughter of Sultan Abdulmejid I. Here his father died in 1927. In 1940, Tevhid settled in Cairo, Egypt. He died unmarried on 24 April 1966 at the age
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than him. Şevket began his education in the princes school located in the Ihlamur Pavilion. On 5 June 1918, he was enrolled in the Imperial Naval School located on Heybeliada Island. On 9 July 1918, he was given the rank of junior officer in the navy. However, a few months later, his education in the naval school ended, and he was sent back to Ihlamur Pavilion for military training. However, after the Armistice of Mudros in October 1918, his education in
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The sums of four cubes problem is to ask whether any rational integer is the sum of four cubes of rational integers. By putting X = T, Y = T, Z = - T + 1 in the identity we get the identity which shows that in any ring, any multiple of 6 (i.e. any element of this ring of the form 6a, a being itself an element of the ring) is sum of four cubes. Since every rational integer is congruent in
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integer would be the sum of four cubes of rational integers. In 1966, V. A. Demjanenko proved that any rational integer that is congruent neither to 4 nor to - 4 modulo 9 is the sum of four cubes of rational integers. For this, he used in particular the following identities: These identities (and those derived from them by passing to opposites) immediately show that any rational integer which is congruent neither to 4 nor to -4 modulo 9 and is congruent neither to 2 nor to -2 modulo 18 is a sum of four cubes of rational integers. Using more subtle reasonings, Demjanenko proved that rational integers congruent to 2 or to - 2 modulo 18 are also
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first APEC Women's Economic Summit, chaired by Hillary Clinton in San Francisco, USA. The following year, Vega did a keynote at the second Women and the Economy APEC Summit in Saint Petersburg to present her national research findings on self-employed women and female entrepreneurs in Australia. Vega's national research on self-employed women and female entrepreneurs have also been cited in journals and included in a published dissertation. Over the past decades, Vega's work has been quoted in several books, and has appeared on various television programs, including the SBS documentary film 'Is Australia Sexist?' and on the ABC Q&A talk show. As a social commentator, Vega has advocated for women, and child care.
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national research findings on self-employed women and female entrepreneurs in Australia. Vega's national research on self-employed women and female entrepreneurs have also been cited in journals and included in a published dissertation. Over the past decades, Vega's work has been quoted in several books, and has appeared on various television programs, including the SBS documentary film 'Is Australia Sexist?' and on the ABC Q&A talk show. As a social commentator, Vega has advocated for women, and child care. In 2009, Vega represented Australia as a ‘Young Leader' at the 2009 International Women's Forum World Conference, held in Hong Kong. The following year, Vega established Peacebeliever, a not-for-profit organization promoting peace through music, and for the first time in history, Yoko Ono and Sir Paul McCartney provided their permission for Vega to re-record the John Lennon song Give Peace A Chance, with an added verse,
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8th Lok Sabha of Madhya Pradesh state of India. References 1947
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of Parliament of 8th Lok Sabha of Madhya Pradesh state of
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8 May 1949 to 6 June 1949. He was from Sikkim State Congress. In 1949, Sikkim State Congress led a statewide
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June 1949. He was from Sikkim State Congress. In 1949, Sikkim State Congress led a statewide agitation for democracy leading to formation of Sikkim's first interim government led by Chief Minister
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for Great Britain in the sport of bobsleigh for seven years until 2021, when he decided to represent his mother's homeland of Trinidad and Tobago, with which he holds dual citizenship. Axel represented Great Britain as a brakeman and featured in the World Cup, North American Cup, and Europe Cup, as well as being a reserve for the 2019 World Championships in Whistler, Canada. He became a pilot in 2019 where he placed 5th in the North American cup in his debut season. He played American Football for Colorado State Rams from 2013 - 2014, as well as winning a Bronze and Silver medal in Taekwondo at the national level in the United Kingdom. References 1992 births Living people Trinidad and Tobago male bobsledders Bobsledders at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic bobsledders of Trinidad and Tobago
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Great Britain to a British father and a Trinidadian mother. He competed for Great Britain in the sport of bobsleigh for seven years until 2021, when he decided to represent his mother's homeland of Trinidad and Tobago, with which he holds dual citizenship. Axel represented Great Britain as a brakeman and featured in the World Cup, North American Cup, and Europe Cup, as well as being a reserve for the 2019 World Championships in Whistler, Canada. He became a pilot in 2019 where he placed 5th in the North American cup in his
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he feigns indifference, he actually hopes to find means to save them from their fate. Nothing seems possible until the Baroness of Spangenberg, the prince's mistress, approaches Pederit, requesting his help in getting the seemingly spoiled noblewoman an appointment with a hair stylist of high standing. As the prince has forbidden all but official communications with parts of Germany outside his principality, Pederit uses the Baroness's official seal, not to request the hairdresser, but to alert the king, Frederick the Great, to the prince's plan for providing mercenaries, knowing that Frederick, a more humane ruler, will stop his underling's plan. When an emissary of Frederick's shows up just in time to forestall the departure of the twelve thousand conscripts, the prince realizes that Pederit has tricked
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the Baroness of Spangenberg, the prince's mistress, approaches Pederit, requesting his help in getting the seemingly spoiled noblewoman an appointment with a hair stylist of high standing. As the prince has forbidden all but official communications with parts of Germany outside his principality, Pederit uses the Baroness's official seal, not to request the hairdresser, but to alert the king, Frederick the Great, to the prince's plan for providing mercenaries, knowing that Frederick, a more humane ruler, will stop his underling's plan. When an emissary of Frederick's shows up just in time to forestall the departure of the twelve thousand conscripts, the prince realizes that Pederit has tricked him. He condemns his secretary to death. But Frederick's emissary reveals that Frederick has put the whistle-blower under his protection. The fuming prince frees Pederit, and the three brothers, inspired by the emissary's reading out of the American Declaration of Independence, set out to sail to America, not as conscripted soldiers, but as free men looking for a free home. Production History Twelve Thousand was produced (as 12,000) on Broadway in March, 1928, at the Garrick Theatre under the direction of Basil Sydney, who starred as Pederit. The play was produced at the Pasadena Community Playhouse's Playbox theatre in April, 1938, with George Reeves as Pederit. The British Broadcasting Corporation produced a television
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Sonu Nigam.The film festival is showcasing 225 films from 60 countries screened four different venues across the city from 26 February to 4 March 2020. Asian cinema competition Indian cinema competition Kannada competition Kannada Cinema popular Entertainment competition International Jury Prize Special Jury Mention Special Jury Award
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actorss Jayaprada , producer Boney Kapoor and singer Sonu Nigam.The film festival is showcasing 225 films from 60 countries screened four different venues across the city from 26 February to 4 March 2020. Asian cinema competition Indian cinema competition Kannada competition Kannada Cinema popular Entertainment competition International
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end towards the base, and yellow to orange, red and cream-coloured flowers. Description Daviesia mesophylla is a low-lying, glossy green, glabrous shrub that typically grows to a height of and has ridged branchlets. Its phyllodes are sharply-pointed, linear to narrowly egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, vertically flattened, long and wide. The flowers are arranged singly or in pairs in leaf axils on a peduncle long, each flower on a pedicel long. The sepals are long and joined at the base, the two upper lobes joined for most of their length and the three lower lobes triangular and about long. The standard petal is broadly egg-shaped with a notched centre, long and
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dark red centre, the wings about long and light red, the keel about long and cream-coloured. Flowering occurs from October to April and the fruit is an inflated triangular pod long. Taxonomy and naming Daviesia mesophylla was first formally described in 1907 by Alfred James Ewart in Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria. The specific epithet (mesophylla) means "middle-leaved", apparently referring to the inner leaf tissue. Distribution and habitat This daviesia grows in sand and on rocky slopes in mallee-heath and heath in the Stirling Range and near Denmark in the Esperance Plains and Jarrah Forest biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia. Conservation status Daviesia mesophylla is listed as "Priority Two" by the Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity,
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Pacific Island populations in New Zealand. Since the 2000s his work utilizes 'mythology and spiritualism' with 'fantastical creatures' although still drawing upon 'social dislocation'. His 2006 exhibition Empowered Wallflower - Whitespace, Ponsonby was about a new generations relationship to Fa'a Samoa and how domestic aspects such as using a traditional salu broom are important. In 2017 he won the Wallace Art Awards including a six-month residency in New York the 'International Studio and Curatorial Programme'. His art work is held in the collections of Christchurch Art Gallery, The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, the Auckland Art Gallery, the Chartwell Collection, and the James Wallace Arts Trust collection. And also Auckland University Collection, BCA Collection, Casula Powerhouse, Frankfurt Museum, Ilam University Collection, Manukau City Collection and Pataka Museum of Arts and Cultures. Exhibitions This is a small selection of exhibitions. By 2019 Leleisi'uao had already had 85 solo exhibitions, and many groups ones. 2005: Cheeky Darkie - Whitespace, Ponsonby (featuring miniature sculptures) 2006: Andy Leleisi'uao: Empowered Wallflower - Whitespace, Ponsonby 2011: The World of Erodipolis, Milford Galleries, Dunedin 2012: Polyneitus Spring, Milford Galleries, Dunedin 2013: The Choirs of Lupotea, Milford Galleries, Dunedin 2014: Waking up to the Obscurity People, Te Uru Gallery, Auckland 2014: Waking up to the Oculus People, Milford Galleries, Queenstown
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Samoa and are Pepe (Lalomauga, Upolu) and Tuifa’asisina Tinou'amea (Palauli, Savai'i). Leleisi'uao went to Māngere College and afterwards had some factory jobs. He studied at the Auckland University of Technology (AUT) School of Art and Design and received the first ever Pasifika Scholarship in 2000. In 2002 Leleisi’uao graduated with a Master of Fine Arts (with Honours). He has been a full time artist since 1996. He has attended a number of arts residencies including a Research Scholarship at Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, University of Canterbury, and the McCahon House Artists’ Residency in 2010. He spent three months in Taiwan in 2010 on an Asia New Zealand Foundation residency with the Taipei Artist Village. Leleisi'uao has been based in the Auckland suburb of Māngere for over 40 years. He said about artists in an interview with Ema Tavola "For any artist to be mentally fecund, they have to be open." Some of the visual references in his work are Stone Age rock art, classical Greek vase painting, Egyptian hieroglyphs, and Samoan siapa (tapa) cloth. It is said in his paintings that reoccurring motifs, "remind us of the inherent humanity of his creatures, and the universality of their struggle and endeavour within a limited existence". His work style has changed over the years of his practice, in the late 1990s his paintings were highly politicized dealing with subjects such as prejudice and racism, poverty and youth suicide amongst Pacific Island populations in New Zealand. Since the 2000s his work utilizes 'mythology and spiritualism' with 'fantastical creatures' although still drawing upon 'social dislocation'. His 2006 exhibition Empowered Wallflower - Whitespace, Ponsonby was about a new generations relationship to Fa'a Samoa and how domestic aspects such as using a traditional salu broom are
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and Supply (MCIPS) at the United Kingdom, Fellow, BOARDROOM Institute, Graduate School of Governance and Leadership in Accra, Ghana, LLB (Hons) from the University of London. and P.G Cert Laws, University of London. Career Okubi-Appiah started his public service with the Ghana Air Force and rose through the ranks and retired as Squadron Leader. He then began his diplomatic career as Assistant Director I, Economic, Trade and Investment Bureau at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Ghana. Preceding his appointment as an ambassador, he served as the Director, Middle East Bureau from 2019 to 2021, and Deputy High Commissioner of the Ghana High Commission to Lusaka, Zambia from 2016 to 2019. In 2015, he was Consul General of the Ghana Consulate General in Lagos, Nigeria, he worked in this capacity for a year. From
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2013 to 2015, he was the Director the Americas Bureau of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration. He was Minister-Counselor, and Head of Chancery of the Ghana Embassy in Tehran, The Islamic Republic of Iran, and the Ghana Embassy in Prague, The Czech Republic in 2008 and 2006 respectively. Personal life Okubi-Appiah is married to Ms. Elizabeth Johnson and together, they have four (4) children See also List of ambassadors and high
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Adamenko became a champion of the USSR. On Sunday, June 22, 1941, Katerina was supposed to participate in a sports parade at the opening of the renovated Red Stadium, which, after reconstruction, was named after Nikita Khrushchev but the celebration did not take place due to the outbreak of the war. At the beginning of the war, she and her son were evacuated to the Russian hinterland, where the funeral of Adamenko's first husband took place. In January 1944 Adamenko and her son Mykola returned to Kyiv. Since 1944 she worked as a teacher, and later a senior lecturer at Kyiv University. In 1950, Adamenko was awarded the title of Honored Master of Sports of the USSR. The same year she married for the second time to Interior Ministry officer Volodymyr Blokhin. In 1952 their son Oleg was born. Motherhood did not prevent Adamenko from joining the USSR Olympic team at the Summer Olympics in Helsinki. From 1936 to 1952 Adamenko was a member of the national teams of the Ukrainian SSR and the USSR (pentathlon, long jump, running 80 and 100 meters with barriers), setting 87 records of the Ukrainian SSR. In 1958, Adamenko graduated from the Kyiv Institute of
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the renovated Red Stadium, which, after reconstruction, was named after Nikita Khrushchev but the celebration did not take place due to the outbreak of the war. At the beginning of the war, she and her son were evacuated to the Russian hinterland, where the funeral of Adamenko's first husband took place. In January 1944 Adamenko and her son Mykola returned to Kyiv. Since 1944 she worked as a teacher, and later a senior lecturer at Kyiv University. In 1950, Adamenko was awarded the title of Honored Master of Sports of the USSR. The same year she married for the second time to Interior Ministry officer Volodymyr Blokhin. In 1952 their son Oleg was born. Motherhood did not prevent Adamenko from joining the USSR Olympic team at the Summer Olympics in Helsinki. From 1936 to 1952 Adamenko was a member of
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Game Boy games List of Game Boy Advance games List of Game Boy Color games List of Nintendo DS Wi-Fi Connection games List of Wii games Lists of video games References DS Nintendo DS games Nintendo
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Applications There are applications included in the list. Bundles There are games included in the list. See also List of DSiWare games and applications List of Game Boy games List of Game Boy Advance games
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so a number of changes were asked to be made. Kobayashi refused to do make the changes, choosing to simply not release it. The film was shelved the film, however, it was finally released unaltered. The film was written by Kôbô Abe, though the content for the script was adapted from diaries of real jailed Japanese soldiers. The film was also the acting role for famed actor Tatsuya Nakadai The film is notable as one of the first to deal with the Japanese involvement in the atrocities and war crimes of WWII, and follows Kobaoyashi's interest in war, often
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revolves around the plight of ordinary Japanese WWII soldiers, who are being kept prisoner in Sugamo Prison. Production It was the first major film directed by Masaki Kobayashi. The film release was delayed in Japan, for four years until 1956. This was due to the content, the subject of Japanese soldiers, war crimes and their imprisonment was controversial. The US occupation had ended in 1952, but the Japanese Government was concerned that the film would offend the United States, so a number of changes were asked to be made. Kobayashi refused to do make the changes, choosing to simply not release it. The film was shelved the
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at the Sun Shipbuilding, Chester, Pennsylvania. She was put into the service of Waterman Steamship Corp. as Thomas Heyward. In 1985, she was acquired and chartered by the Navy under a long-term contract as SS PFC Eugene A. Obregon (AK-3006). The ship underwent conversion at the National Steel and Shipbuilding, San Diego. In January 2010, PFC Eugene A. Obregon was put into the Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron 1, based in the Atlantic Ocean. On 14 September later that year,
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during the Korean War. Construction and commissioning The ship was built in 1982 at the Sun Shipbuilding, Chester, Pennsylvania. She was put into the service of Waterman Steamship Corp. as Thomas Heyward. In 1985, she was acquired and chartered by the Navy under a long-term contract as SS PFC Eugene A. Obregon (AK-3006). The ship underwent conversion at the National Steel and Shipbuilding, San Diego. In January 2010, PFC Eugene A. Obregon was put
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events Source Results Women's events Source Results Combat Sambo Events Source Results Medal table References External links World Sambo Championships World Championships Sambo Sambo
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Championships is an edition of the World Sambo Championships, organised by the International Sambo Federation. It was held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan from 12 to 14 November 2021. Medal summary Men's
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Egyptian government in 1954. The title of the paper was a reference to a range of hills outside Cairo. History and profile Al Muqattam was first published on 18 April 1888. It produced only three issues until 14 February 1889 when it became a daily newspaper. The founders were three Christians: Fares Nimr, Khalil Thabet and Anton Najib Matar. The paper was affiliated with the Al Muqtafa Foundation. The publishers were Syrian-origin Christians, Faris Nimr, Yaqub Sarruf and Shahin Makaryus. Fares Nimr also served as the editor-in-chief of the paper from its start to his death in 1951. The paper initially produced news based on the translations of the telegraph messages sent by the major news agencies such as Reuters and Havas. Muhammad Al Muwaylihi's work entitled Ma Hunalik was first published in the paper and
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8 February 1896.During the British occupation of Egypt, namely between 1892 and 1914, Al Muqattam held a pro-British political stance. Therefore, the paper was subject to frequent criticisms and allegations that it was financed by the British authorities. Due to these there were tensions between Al Muqattam and another Cairo-based newspaper Al Muayyad which supported the independence of Egypt. In addition the publishers of Al Muqattam were frequently mocked by the political satire magazine Al Siyassa Al Musawwara. Al Muqattam began to support another event which also caused criticisms: migration of Jews to Palestine. In 1911 Nissim Malul, a Zionist activist, began to work as the correspondent of Al Muqattam in Haifa. The paper had a regular column on Palestine of which the editor was anonymous, and the articles were signed as “senior Zionist”. Salim Tamari, a Palestinian sociologist and writer, argues that the editor of the column was possibly Shimon Moyal, a Jaffa-born
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upright shrub with red and orange pea-like flowers. Description Eutaxia cuneata is an upright shrub densely branched or occasionally sparsely branched, high and wide with glabrous, greyish brown to red brown stems. The leaves are arranged opposite, decussate, spreading, long, upper surface mid green, glabrous, lower surface smooth with a prominent mid-vein, grey-brown, cuneate, apex blunt or with a hard tip. The flowers are borne singly or in pairs in the leaf axils, bracteoles egg-shaped, reddish-brown, long, wide, smooth, margins and apex with occasional, spreading, straight
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family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a slender, upright shrub with red and orange pea-like flowers. Description Eutaxia cuneata is an upright shrub densely branched or occasionally sparsely branched, high and wide with glabrous, greyish brown to red brown stems. The leaves are arranged opposite, decussate, spreading, long, upper surface mid green, glabrous, lower surface smooth with a prominent mid-vein, grey-brown, cuneate, apex blunt or with a hard tip. The flowers are borne singly or in pairs in the leaf axils, bracteoles egg-shaped, reddish-brown, long, wide, smooth, margins and apex with occasional, spreading, straight hairs about long, pedicels straight, sometimes
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of Parliament of 6th Lok Sabha of Uttar Pradesh, India. References 1942 births
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of 6th Lok Sabha of Uttar Pradesh, India. References 1942 births
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municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population
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2013 census, its population was only 5, all
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2013 census, its population was only 3, all Bosniaks.
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of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According
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jumper Lucas von Deschwanden (born 1989), Swiss handball player Melchior Paul von Deschwanden (1811–1881),
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surname include: Gregor Deschwanden (born 1991), Swiss ski jumper Lucas von Deschwanden (born 1989), Swiss handball
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to the 2013 census, its population was 48. References
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Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population
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people with the surname include: David Hablützel (born 1996), Swiss snowboarder
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with the surname include: David Hablützel (born 1996), Swiss
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Bengaluru International Film Festival 2022 (BIFFES 2022). The film festival is showcasing 200 films from 55 countries this year, films will be screened at three locations
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from 3 March to 10 March 2022. Asian cinema competition Indian cinema competition Kannada competition Kannada
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the surname include: Christophe Saioni (born 1969), French skier Maruša
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include: Christophe Saioni (born 1969), French
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Brgule is a village in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and
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the 2013 census, its population was 13. References
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games released on DSiWare or the iQue DS. The last game for the Nintendo DS, Big Hero 6: Battle in the Bay, was released on October 28, 2014. Games There are currently games in this table across all pages: A to C, D to I, J to P, and Q to
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28, 2014. Games There are currently games in this table across all pages: A to C, D to I, J to P, and Q to Z. Applications There are applications included in the list. Bundles There are games included in the list. See also List of DSiWare games and applications List of Game Boy games List of Game Boy Advance games
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(born 1990), Slovenian racing cyclist Miha Šimenc (born 1995), Slovenian skier Zlatko Šimenc (born 1938), Croatian water polo player and coach
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Šimenc (born 1966), Croatian water polo player and coach Laura Šimenc (born 1990), Slovenian racing
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Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was
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Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the
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sports team owner Kaleigh Quennec (born 1998),
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team owner Kaleigh Quennec (born 1998), Canadian-Swiss ice hockey player
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Food Act 2006, Sweden Food Act 2014,
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Act 2006, Sweden Food Act
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with the surname include: Sinja Leemann (born
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Swiss ice hockey player Timothy Leemann (born 1991), Swiss figure skater
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people with the surname include: Mirko Bullo (born 1959), Swiss football player
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1987), Swiss ice hockey player See also
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Dabravine is a village in the municipality of
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village in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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studied law and also practiced as a barrister. He did his PhD on the ‘Social Life of India, 1200-1550’. He came in contact with Shapurji Saklatvala, Sajjad Zaheer and others, and finally adopted Communist ideology. He left everything and went back to London. He completed his PhD. In the mean- time, he along with Srinivas Iyyengar, Md Ali, Saklatvala and others founded the London Committee of the Indian National Congress. He also got actively involved in Marxist activities. Political and academic career On return to India in 1932, he became a professor in Muslim University. In the meantime, he joined the Congress and soon became a leading figure of its leftwing. He was included in the central executive of the Congress Socialist Party, along with Jaiprakash Narain, EMS, Acharya Narendra Dev, Z A Ahmed, Sajjad Zaheer, Ram Manohar Lohia, Ashok Mehta, etc. He was made one of the secretaries of the AICC in 1936. Congress president made him in-charge of Muslim Affairs. Ashraf has full authority in Persian, Urdu, medieval social and philosophical life, etc., and was in close proximity with Muslim leaders. As such he was the most suitable for this job. Dr K M Ashraf worked in the AICC office in Allahabad. Dr Ashraf was assigned by CPI to work on the student front too, and he used to guide the CPI fraction in the student movement. He presided over the Calcutta session of All India Students Federation in January 1939, and inaugurated the historic AISF session held in Nagpur in (December) 1940. He became a centre of attraction of student meetings all over the country, and played
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work. Dr Ashraf also worked as the secretary to Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. Dr Ashraf along with other Communist leaders was interned in Deoli Detention Camp 1940 onwards. He participated in the 30-day hunger strike there. This and the conditions in Deoli Camp seriously affected his health. He was released in 1943 with a shattered health. He worked in the party centre in Bombay after release, and wrote a lot. R D Bhardwaj was in a bad shape due to deteriorating health. Therefore, Dr Ashraf took over some of his work including acting as Communist spokesman within the Congress. He shifted to Delhi in 1946 and used to live in the party commune in Daryaganj on a paltry wage of just Rs 8. Most of the comrades in the commune were youth, with Ashraf as the eldest. He was very co-operative, soft, humble and highly disciplined. He created an atmosphere of happiness and optimism. Party decided to publish ‘Awami Daur’, an Urdu daily, from Delhi. Dr K M Ashraf was appointed its editor. Dr Ashraf was asked by the party to shift to Pakistan in 1948 after ‘Awami Daur’ was closed down. The conditions there were very difficult and Communists had to face severe repressions. Party was banned there and Ashraf had to go underground. He was arrested on the charge of being an Indian living in Pakistan illegally. His physical condition deteriorated further. He was released on the condition that he would never return to Pakistan. India too was not prepared to accept him as he was not an Indian citizen. He went to England and resumed his research
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the next ten years he was on half-pay in China, and afterwards on service in Canada from September 1833 to August 1835. From that time until April 1841 he was in Mexico charged with the duty of raising dollars for the commissariat chests, after which he served from April 1843 to July 1845 in China, and from January 1846 to March 1848 in Ireland and Scotland, and had charge of the relief operations at Limerick and in the west of Ireland during the Famine up to August 1846, at the termination of which he was knighted by patent in recognition of his services. He was employed and paid from 1 April 1848 as one of the commissioners of inquiry into the working of the Royal Mint, whose report will be
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Spain in 1808–9, including the Corunna retreat, and in the Peninsular from April 1809 to August 1810, from October 1810 to June 1811, and from July 1812 to September 1814; also in the Netherlands and France in 1815–16, on special service at Brussels in 1819, and in Canada from June 1819 to December 1822. During the next ten years he was on half-pay in China, and afterwards on service in Canada from September 1833 to August 1835. From that time until April 1841 he was in Mexico charged with the duty of raising dollars for the
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Repura Sahadi Chhapra Salkhua Sandalpur Saray Bakhsh Shahpur Shekhpura Shekhpura Shekhpura Shikarpur Sirsia Bali Sirsia Jagdeo Sirsia Khap Sirsia Mani Sirsia Rai Sonaha Takia Tarwar Umarpur Baniapur Agrauli Amanw Amanw Khurd Anandpur Andhar Ajor Banakar Bangalipatti Baniapur Banropur Basatpur Batrauli Bedauli Bengali Bhithi Berui Bhagwanpur Bhaiya Ramki Dhauri Bhakura Bhatwalia Bhithi Bhithi Bazar Bhuidhara Bhusanw Bindra Patak Chak pir Chandpur Chandpur Birt Chhapia Chhapia Chhatwa Khurd Chhatwan Kalan Chhitauni Chorauan Darhibarhi Darhibarhi Dewalkha Dhanawn Dhanawn Dhangaraha Dhobwal Dungurpatti Goapipar Panti Hafizpur Hansrajpur Kalan Hansrajpur Kalan Birti Hansrajpur Khurd Harakhpura Hardew Tola Hardi Tola Hariharpur Harpur Harpur Hunraraha Kalan Hunraraha Khurd Ibrahimpur Jahangirpur Kalhua Kamta Kanhauli Manohar Kanhauli Sangram Kanth Chhapra Karah Karahi Katsa Khabsa Khabsi Khalispur Lauwa Kalan Lutha Dhananw Machhagra Majhaulia Majhaulia Kalan Majhaulia Khurd Manikpura Manopali Maricha Menruka Menruka Menruka Milkipur Mirzapur Muslimpur Nadauan Nagdiha Najiba Nandlal Tola Pachmahla Paighambarpur Panrepur Paterhia Piarepur Pindra Pindra Pipra Pirari Pirauta Khas Ghurahu Pirauta Megha Pithauri Rajauli Repura Sarea Sarea Sarmi Satua Shekhpura Shekhpura Sihoria Siripur Siripur Sisai Suhai Gajan Suhai Sahpur Suraudha Tola Tawakal Rai Usti Chapra Amar Chhapra Badalpura Badalpura Diara Badlutola Bahoran Tola Balgarha Balua Banathi Bangra Barhampur Barhara Mahazi Basarhi Batani Bazidpur Bhairopur Aima Bhairopur Nizamat Bichla Telpa Bichli Badhar Bishunpura Chak Haji Chak Jamali Chakia Chan Chaura Chhuri Chhapra Chirand Daftarpur Dahiawan Dariyawganj Dhanpat Chhapra Dharampura Dhusaria Diara Singahi Dumaria Dumri Ekauna Gheghta Gopalpur Harnarayan Chhapra Hasanpurwa Ismailpur Itahia Jagdishpur Jalalpur Jalalpur Jamuna Jatia Bajidpur Jatua Kans Diar Karinga Khalpura Bala Khalpura Kamala Khawaspur Khawaspur Khurd Kotwapatti Rampur Lodipur Lodipur Diara Lohra Lohri Madanipatti Mahaji Dharhara Mahaji Khalpura Bala Mahaji Khalpura Kamala Maharajganj Makhdumganj Mala Mirja Tukra II Malamirza Tukra Malasherpur Mangaidih Manupur Jahangir Manupur Manjhan Marahia Mauna Mehian Mehrauli Methwalia Mira Musehri Misraulia Mohaddipur Musehri Musehri Mahto Musepur Naini Nandlal Chhapra Narayanpur Nauadih Panapur Parsotim Chhapra Phakuli Phul Chak Purbari Telpa Qazipur Raipur Bingawan Rajaiya Tola Ram Kolwa Rasalpura Ratanpura Semaria Mahazi Shankarpur Urf Kutubpur Sherpur Shukulpura Sidhwalia Singahi Siram Chak Sujan Chhapra
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Lohra Lohri Madanipatti Mahaji Dharhara Mahaji Khalpura Bala Mahaji Khalpura Kamala Maharajganj Makhdumganj Mala Mirja Tukra II Malamirza Tukra Malasherpur Mangaidih Manupur Jahangir Manupur Manjhan Marahia Mauna Mehian Mehrauli Methwalia Mira Musehri Misraulia Mohaddipur Musehri Musehri Mahto Musepur Naini Nandlal Chhapra Narayanpur Nauadih Panapur Parsotim Chhapra Phakuli Phul Chak Purbari Telpa Qazipur Raipur Bingawan Rajaiya Tola Ram Kolwa Rasalpura Ratanpura Semaria Mahazi Shankarpur Urf Kutubpur Sherpur Shukulpura Sidhwalia Singahi Siram Chak Sujan Chhapra Taufir Maharajganj Tejpurwa Tenua Todarpur Turkaulia Dariapur Admapur Akbarpur I Akbarpur II Aqilpur Bajahia Bajaraha Bali Chhapra Baluahia Banwaripur Banwaripur Banwaripur Barka Banea Barua Barwa Bedaulia Bela Belahar Janki Belahar Pattu Bhagwan Chak Bhagwanpur Bhagwanpur Bhagwanpur Bhairopur Bhaw Chak Bhetwalia Bhopan Chak Bisahi Bisamharpur Chak Akbarpur Chak Banwaripur Chak Han Chak Hasan Chak Jalal Chak Khanpur Mahartha Chak Nagwa Khurd Mahartha Chak Ruddi Chak Semrahiya Mahartha Chandwa Chak Chaubhaia Chhotami Chhotka Banea Daluwa Chak Darihara Bhual Darihara Chaturbhuj Darihara Nisakh Dariyapur Darwesha Derni Dewti Dhanauti Sultanpur DhanneChapra Dhanuki Dharam Chak Dhongaha Fatuh Dhongaha Inam Diara Mahazi Dumaria Dumaria Sani Edilpur Faqir Chak Fatehpur Chain Fursatpur Fursatpur Garauna Gariba Chak Gay Ghat Ghurhu Kothia Gopalpur Hakar Patti Hardia Chak Hariharpur Hariharpur Harna Harpur Hewantpur Hingua Hukraha Hukrahi Ibrahimpur Inglish Itwa Jadopur Jadurampur Jaduwa Chak Jagdish Jagdishpur Jaitipur Jalalpur Jamira Jitwarpur Joga Chak Kakarahat Kamalpur Karam Chak Karanpura Kewatia Khajauta Khajuhta Khanpur Khirkia Khojauli Khushihal pur Kishun Das Koila Konhwa Kothia Kothia Kusiari Kuwari Lachhmanpur Litiahi Lohchha Lohchha- Kapurtal Mahammadpur Mahammadpur Mahesia Mahesia Malahi Chak Malmala Manchitwa Mangarpal Murtuza Mangarpal Nuran Manika Chak Manoharpur Manpur Manpur Mansa Chak Manupur Masti Chak Math Balgobinda Math Kakara Math Kewatia Mathchelwa Mohan Chak Mohan Kothia Mujauna Mujauna Mahartha Murar chak Nagwa Naso Chak Natha Chhapra Nawada Nonphar Panch Bhaia Parsurampur Partappur Patti Sital Piara Math Pipra Pirari Pirari Pitu Chak Pojhi Porai Purdilpur Purnadih Rahimapur Rajapur Ramjitpur Rampur Rampur Rampur Aanant Rampur Jagdish Ranipur Rasulpur Sadwara Sahay Chak Saidpur Sajnupur Mathihan Sakhnauli Salempur Salempur Saman Chak Samaspura Sanjha Sarae Muzaffar Sarae Saho Saraia Sarari Sarnarayan Sarnath Chak Semrahia Shahar Chhapra Sikandara Sisauni Sitalpur Chak Mahartha Sultanpur Sumerpatti Sundarpur Sutihar Tapsia Tinbhaia Turki Ubhwa Yar Mohammadpur Zaminpur Dighwara Ahiman Patti Akilpur Ami Anu CHak Babhangawan Baguraha Baqarpur Barua Basti Jalal Batrauli
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statistics Club References External links Manuel Monzeglio at Atilio Software 2000 births Living people Association football midfielders Uruguayan footballers Uruguayan Primera División players
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Liverpool Montevideo. Career statistics Club References External links Manuel Monzeglio at Atilio Software 2000 births Living people Association football midfielders Uruguayan footballers Uruguayan Primera División players Club Nacional de
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and made it into the Triple J Hottest 200, 2021. Chloe suffers from Epilepsy. The duo signed to Pnau's label 'Lab78' in 2021. Sumner have recently supported Vera Blue, Montaigne, Slowly Slowly (band) and performed at Party In The Paddock Festival and Falls Festival. Discography EP's 'All That I Am EP' (2018) Singles 'Pictures' (2018) 'Put It Out' (2018) 'Blame Myself' (2019) 'Standed' (2021) 'South' (2021) References Living people
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made it into the Triple J Hottest 200, 2021. Chloe suffers from Epilepsy. The duo signed to Pnau's label 'Lab78' in 2021. Sumner have recently supported Vera Blue, Montaigne, Slowly Slowly (band) and performed at Party In The Paddock Festival and Falls Festival. Discography EP's 'All That I Am EP' (2018) Singles
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actions. On 11 September 2020, Gani and Justice Md Badruzzaman issued a verdict that stated the lower courts could not cancel the bail of someone who had been granted bail by the High Court unless there was evidence that the conditions of bail were broken. On 22 September 2021, Gani and Justice Md Riaz Uddin Khan refused bail to Moazzem Hossain, officer in charge of Sonagazi Police Station, who had been jailed for eight years. Hossain had recorded the death statement of victim in the Murder of Nusrat Jahan Rafi and circulated the video without the victim's consent. In December 2021, Gani and Md Riaz Uddin Khan issued a stay of six months on a labor law case against Muhammad Yunus, founder of Grameen Bank and Nobel Peace Prize winner. The case was filed by Arifuzzaman, inspector of Department of Inspection for Factories and Establishments for not making permanent and
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Supreme Court. Gani was appointed an additional judge of the High Court Division of Bangladesh Supreme Court on 18 April 2010. Gani became a permanent judge of the High Court Division on 15 April 2012. On 11 January 2015, three bombs, weighing 500 grams, were recovered from the courtroom of Gani and Justice Zinat Ara. On 17 December 2017, Gani and Justice KM Kamrul Kader issued a Sua sponte ruling on the legality of the Assistant Commissioner of land and executive magistrate of Dinajpur, Biroda Rani Roy, sentencing a lawyer, Nirod Bihari Roy, to imprisonment and fined him 500 taka. The incident stemmed from a sitting dispute at the office of the Upazila Land Office. Biroda Rani Roy apologized to the court unconditionally for her actions. On 11 September 2020, Gani and Justice Md Badruzzaman issued a verdict that
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was sent to jail. He also participated in the "Jail Bharo Andolan" and was imprisoned again. References People from Uttar Pradesh People from Jalaun
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Shakyawar took part in the Quit India Movement in 1942 and was sent to jail. He also participated in the "Jail Bharo Andolan" and
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player. Francisco Maciel may also refer to: Francisco Antonio Maciel (1757–1807),
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is a Mexican tennis player. Francisco Maciel may also refer to:
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of groups, character theory, and combinatorics." Biography Ernst Snapper, born to a Jewish family in the Netherlands, received in 1936 the equivalent of a master's degree from the University of Amsterdam. In 1938 his father, Isidore Snapper, an internationally known physician and medical researcher, accepted an offer to become the director of medical research at the Rockefeller Foundation's Peking Union Medical College. Acting on a suggestion from Abraham Flexner, Isidore Snapper encouraged Ernst Snapper to apply to Princeton University to become a graduate student. As a doctoral student of Joseph Wedderburn, Ernst Spanner graduated with a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1941. In China, his father and mother were interned by the Japanese, but were later released in an exchange. Ernst Snapper was an
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an offer to become the director of medical research at the Rockefeller Foundation's Peking Union Medical College. Acting on a suggestion from Abraham Flexner, Isidore Snapper encouraged Ernst Snapper to apply to Princeton University to become a graduate student. As a doctoral student of Joseph Wedderburn, Ernst Spanner graduated with a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1941. In China, his father and mother were interned by the Japanese, but were later released in an exchange. Ernst Snapper was an instructor from 1941 ti 1945 at Princeton University. He was a professor of mathematics from 1945 to 1955 at the University of Southern California, from 1955 to 1958 at Miami University of Ohio, from 1958 to 1963 at Indiana University, and from 1963 to 1979 at Dartmouth College, where he retired as professor emeritus. He was a visiting professor for the academic years 1949–1950 and 1954–1955 at Princeton University and for the academic
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at Tallinn University. 1999-2001 she was the program director of Kanal 2. Filmography 1995 "Wikmani poisid" (director) 1998 "Isa" (television
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Tallinn. Since 1975 she worked at Estonian Television. 1994-2005 she taught at Tallinn University. 1999-2001 she was the program director of Kanal 2. Filmography 1995 "Wikmani poisid" (director) 1998 "Isa" (television feature film; producer) 1999
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Q to Z. Applications There are applications included in the list. Bundles There are games included in the list. See also List of DSiWare games and applications List of Game Boy games List of Game Boy Advance games List of Game Boy Color games List of Nintendo DS Wi-Fi Connection games
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in this table across all pages: A to C, D to I, J to P, and Q to Z. Applications There are applications included in the list. Bundles There are games included in the list. See also List of DSiWare games and applications List of Game Boy games List of Game Boy Advance games List of Game Boy Color games List of Nintendo DS Wi-Fi Connection games
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married Ingibjörg Ýr Óskarsdóttir. Together they have three children. References External links Living people 1980 births 21st-century Icelandic male actors Icelandic male television actors Icelandic male film actors Icelandic male stage
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Ingibjörg Ýr Óskarsdóttir. Together they have three children. References External links Living people 1980 births 21st-century Icelandic male actors Icelandic male television actors Icelandic male film actors Icelandic male stage actors Male actors from
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the Lagos State Government in 2010 in honor of the medical doctor and human rights activist, Dr Beko Ransome-Kuti who lived from 2 August 1940 – 10 February 2006. This park is open to residents for relaxation, hanging out, taking photography sessions and is characterized by
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Lagos, Nigeria. This park was developed by the Lagos State Government in 2010 in honor of the medical doctor and human rights activist, Dr Beko Ransome-Kuti who lived from 2 August 1940 – 10 February 2006. This park is open to residents for relaxation, hanging out, taking photography
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the West Indies where he studied Law and Arts. He obtained a BSc in Law and Arts. Career Symmonds was elected the first MP of St. James Central, Barbados. Between 2003 to 2008 he served as the Minister of State in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade of Barbados. He was the youngest to chair the COTED (Council for Trade and Economic Development) group of CARICOM Ministers. He subsequently served as the Deputy Chairman of Barbados' Joint Parliamentary Committee on Foreign Trade and Deputy Chairman of the Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation. After an unsuccessful run at the 2008 general elections, he was elected into the Barbados House of Assembly on February 21, 2013. In the 2018 general elections, he was re-elected member of the Barbados House of Assembly and was appointed Minister
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After an unsuccessful run at the 2008 general elections, he was elected into the Barbados House of Assembly on February 21, 2013. In the 2018 general elections, he was re-elected member of the Barbados House of Assembly and was appointed Minister of Tourism and International Transport in the Mia Mottley Administration. In January 2022, he was reassigned another ministerial portfolio as Minister of Energy and Business Development, Senior Minister coordinating the Productive Sectors by Mia Mottley. He is a member of the Barbados Labour Party. Controversy On February 2, 2018 Symmonds made a statement calling 3
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complete his plans; the partial fruit of his labors appears in De Phoeniciae Litteraturae Fontibus (Rome, 1803, 2 volumes, 8vo). Perhaps his best work is Des Titres primitifs de la Révélation, ou considérations critiques sur la pureté et l’intégrité du texte original des livres saints de l’ancien Testament (Rome, 1772, 2 volumes, 8vo), which is still of value in Biblical criticism. The author examines fully the character of that portion of the original text of the Old Testament which is still preserved; and he defends the reading of the text according to the Masoretic system as superior to any other that could be proposed. Fabricy was in correspondence with a collaborator of Benjamin Kennicott, Paul Jakob Bruns, and had sent him information about Hebrew biblical manuscripts
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Fontibus (Rome, 1803, 2 volumes, 8vo). Perhaps his best work is Des Titres primitifs de la Révélation, ou considérations critiques sur la pureté et l’intégrité du texte original des livres saints de l’ancien Testament (Rome, 1772, 2 volumes, 8vo), which is still of value in Biblical criticism. The author examines fully the character of that portion of the original text of the Old Testament which is still preserved; and he defends the reading of the text according to the Masoretic system as superior to any other that could be proposed. Fabricy was in correspondence with a collaborator of Benjamin Kennicott,
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Russian male short track speed skaters Sportspeople from Moscow Olympic short track speed skaters of Russia Short track speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics Medalists at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic medalists in short track speed skating Olympic silver medalists for the Russian Olympic Committee athletes Competitors at the 2019 Winter Universiade Universiade silver
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Ivliev (; born 7 August 2000) is a Russian short track speed skater. He competed at the 2022 Winter Olympics. Career Ivliev competed at the 2021 European Championships where he won a gold medal in the 500 metres, and a bronze medal in the 5000 metre relay. He represented the Russian Olympic Committee athletes at the
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(born 1963) is an American actor and film producer. Brad Pitt may also refer to: Brad Pitt (boxer) (born 1981), Australian boxer "Brad
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1963) is an American actor and film producer. Brad Pitt may also refer to: Brad Pitt (boxer) (born 1981), Australian boxer "Brad Pitt",
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summary Medal table Men's events Women's events Source Results References External links European Cadet Judo Championships European Championships, U18 Judo Judo competitions in the
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events Women's events Source Results References External links European Cadet Judo Championships European Championships, U18 Judo Judo
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her best received works was The Cross of Latitude, based on her experience as a social-worker and women's prison officer. Novels All That Seemed Final (1941) The Northerner (1948) Nonfiction The Cross of Latitude (1968) Innocents of the West (1979) A House of Trees (1987). References 1910 births 1991 deaths Australian emigrants to the United States Journalists from Queensland American journalists American women journalists University of Queensland alumni American women novelists 20th-century American novelists 20th-century
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settling permanently in Cape Cod in the US in the late 1940s. She had two sons and a daughter. Works Colebrook wrote several novels and non-fiction books. She wrote journalism for magazines including Commentary, The New Republic and The New Yorker. One of her best received works was The Cross of Latitude, based on her experience as a social-worker and women's prison officer. Novels All That Seemed Final (1941) The Northerner (1948) Nonfiction The Cross
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Kerama Retto under tow. Three officers and 15 enlisted men from the destroyer received decorations, the highest being Silver Stars to Lt. Comdr. Brown and Lt. J. D. McCormich, USNR. On 4 April, Van Valkenburgh retired almost to the east of Okinawa with the feint group whose maneuvers had accomplished their purpose. That group remained as a floating reserve, occasionally detaching transports to disembark their needed troops and marines on Okinawa, until they sailed back to the Marianas, reaching Saipan on 15 April. Four days later, Van Valkenburgh returned to Okinawa, and spent the initial part of that tour in the inner screen, patrolling the transport area just off the beach. "The first night ...", the destroyer's commanding officer recounted, "... we had eighteen raids and not one of them turned out to be friendly." As Van Valkenburgh subsequently entered the anchorage at Kerama Retto, a group of small, rocky islands off the southwestern coast of Okinawa, her men saw the after-effects of other ships' encounters with the "Special Attack Corps", or, the kamikaze. After seeing the devastation wrought by the suicide planes, Van Valkenburgh headed out to report and relieve on radar picket station 14 (RP-14), as support ship to . The radar picket was to the northwest of Okinawa, and was, in the words of Van Valkenburgh'''s commanding officer, "more nearly in the direction of Japan than anywhere else." The proximity to Japanese air bases soon became evident. Within six hours of her assuming station, the local combat air patrol (CAP), controlled by Wickes, had shot down 21 planes. Van Valkenburgh herself accounted for another and assisted in destroying a second.Van Valkenburgh also went to the aid of a second kamikaze victim, , which was hit by a flaming suicider and sank immediately. The destroyer picked up the ship's survivors; and her doctor, assisted by his pharmacist's mates, worked into the wee hours of the morning on the wounded, some of them badly burned. Over half of the following 63 days which the destroyer spent in Okinawan waters were spent on one of the 15 stations surrounding the island itself. The radar picket ships not only provided an early warning of the approach of enemy aircraft or surface units but also drew fire. The Japanese concentrated their kamikazes on the picket line of destroyers and smaller units like LCIs and LCSs. During those weeks, no one rested. Few, if any, of the crew even bothered to undress when attempting sleep. Most slept fully clothed, awaiting the general quarters alarm. Van Valkenburgh experienced at least two general quarters alarms per night; often four or five times between 21:00 and dawn. As soon as it was light, Corsairs of the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing based ashore reported for duty on each station, joining with carrier-based aircraft to form the CAP. On 28 April, within a week of her rescue of the survivors of LCS-15, Van Valkenburgh made her third "Good Samaritan" trip. and , on RP-1, drew the ire of a determined group of suiciders. Daly suffered heavy casualties when a kamikaze, plummeting downward, exploded just before it was about to crash the bridge on the port side. Among those killed by the shrapnel and flying debris was the ship's doctor.Van Valkenburgh went alongside Daly and transferred her doctor, Lt. M. E. Smale, to her stricken sister ship, along with Pharmacist's Mate 3d Class Charles B. Reed, to attend the wounded. Since neither Daly nor the other damaged ship required any further assistance, Van Valkenburgh returned to her station and later embarked Doctor Smale and Pharmacist's Mate Reed at Kerama Retto. Between her tours on the radar picket stations, Van Valkenburgh received upkeep back at Kerama Retto and conducted one shore bombardment mission. It was a one-night assignment at Buckner Bay, where she blasted pockets of Japanese resistance on the southern tip of Okinawa. The next day, however, she steamed back to the picket line. The busiest time for Van Valkenburgh came on the evening of 17 May, when, in company with and a group of four LCIs, she was on patrol on RP-9. The CAP had just returned to base, and the group wondered when they could secure from the evening alert when suddenly the word came: "Several planes approaching from the west—very low—on the deck." Over the next 30 minutes, a "melee" took place. "Apparently", Van Valkenburgh's commanding officer recalled, "we were marked for 'liquidation' that night as RP-10 had been on the night of the sinking of the ." With "everybody for himself", Van Valkenburgh twisted and turned, maneuvering while firing with every gun that could be brought to bear. At one point, five blips appeared on the radar screen within a radius. Two Japanese planes splashed—victims of Van Valkenburghs direct fire—one only off the fantail. Douglas H. Fox splashed two more, and the pair of destroyers teamed up for a fifth kill. Unfortunately for Douglas H. Fox, one kamikaze found its mark, crashing that destroyer's forward gun mount.Van Valkenburgh closed her stricken sister and rendered what aid she could. While thus engaged, she diverted her attention long enough to lay down a barrage to discourage a seventh Japanese plane "who appeared to be calculating his chances in on the attractive target of the two slow-moving destroyers." At a range of , the plane suddenly disappeared from the radar screen, and Van Valkenburgh claimed that her antiaircraft fire had scored again. After assisting Douglas H. Fox, Van Valkenburgh patrolled the area to search for possible missing men. The night prowl proved fruitless, but the ship was later relieved to hear that only one man of the stricken destroyer's complement remained unaccounted for. Subsequently, Van Valkenburgh was deployed to RP-16, in company with , and spent a relatively quiet patrol until her radar picked up the approach of , en route to relieve Robert H. Smith. While Shubrick was still some away and as Van Valkenburgh was about to secure from general quarters, the latter's radar picked up two low-flying bogies, 10 miles to the north and closing.Van Valkenburgh and Robert H. Smith cleared for action, but the pair of planes turned and headed for the newcomer, Shubrick. Van Valkenburgh passed a warning to her sister ship, but too late. At 00:10 on 29 May, one of the two enemy aircraft crashed Shubrick astern. Van Valkenburghs lookouts saw the splash of fire in the pre-dawn darkness and heard the "crump" of the explosion. Communicating her intentions to Robert H. Smith, Van Valkenburgh veered off and headed for her damaged sister. She arrived to find that the kamikaze had blown a hole in the starboard side, and one of the stricken destroyer's own depth charges had exploded, causing further damage. With the situation looking grim, Van Valkenburgh came alongside at 01:13, taking on board survivors—some of whom had been badly wounded. "Gear of all types was carried, dumped, and hurled across from the sinking destroyer", as she transferred classified material and all unnecessary personnel. Again Van Valkenburghs Doctor Smale transformed the wardroom into a dressing station to minister to the casualties. "Once more our decks and passageways bore the stretchers of the dead and dying", wrote Van Valkenburghs commanding officer. In the wardroom, "plasma flowed in life-giving torrents." With flooding controlled and fires extinguished, Shubrick remained doggedly afloat. soon arrived on the scene and towed the crippled destroyer to Kerama Retto. Van Valkenburgh had performed "Good Samaritan" duty for the fourth time. The attacks, however, did not cease. On the evening of 5 June, while on RP-11 in company with and , Van Valkenburgh came under a concentrated torpedo attack. About dusk on that day, four or five planes closed, low from the west and heavy with bombs and torpedoes. Van Valkenburghs 40 millimeter Bofors batteries hurled out shell after shell, peppering the skies with flak. One bomber launched its torpedo—the "fish" passing ahead of the ship—but did not emerge from the attack. The destroyer's 40 millimeter barrage slapped it into the sea. The second torpedo dropped, which was aimed in Van Valkenburghs direction, passed astern. Following that last incident, Van Valkenburghs sailors noted a definite slackening in the Japanese attacks. The massive B-29 raids on the home islands, together with the attrition caused by steady pounding by American carrier-based air power, had slowed the Japanese down considerably. Final operations Late on 24 June, Van Valkenburgh finally left the forward areas, bound for the Philippines. For the ensuing fortnight, the ship rested at San Pedro Bay, Leyte, enjoying a breather from the hectic pace of operations that had lasted for over two months. Early in July, she put to sea as part of a surface force consisting of the new large cruisers and , four light cruisers, and seven destroyers. Assigned to operate along the China coast between Formosa and Shanghai, the force searched for any signs of Japanese surface ship activity in that area but found no opposition of any kind. Ready for anything when they put to sea, Van Valkenburghs sailors found the situation almost anti-climactic. As one member of the crew wrote: "Our tension relaxed considerably and our sweep took on the aspect of tactical maneuvers in Chesapeake Bay." Neither ships nor planes inquired or resisted the task force's progress, as the ships set a course back to Okinawa after a five-day patrol, off Shanghai. The task force commander offered consoling thoughts: "If the lack of action is a disappointment at least we have the satisfaction of knowing that the East China Sea was under 'our control.'" Subsequently, returning to Buckner Bay, Van Valkenburgh lay at anchor there when, at
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stretchers of the dead and dying", wrote Van Valkenburghs commanding officer. In the wardroom, "plasma flowed in life-giving torrents." With flooding controlled and fires extinguished, Shubrick remained doggedly afloat. soon arrived on the scene and towed the crippled destroyer to Kerama Retto. Van Valkenburgh had performed "Good Samaritan" duty for the fourth time. The attacks, however, did not cease. On the evening of 5 June, while on RP-11 in company with and , Van Valkenburgh came under a concentrated torpedo attack. About dusk on that day, four or five planes closed, low from the west and heavy with bombs and torpedoes. Van Valkenburghs 40 millimeter Bofors batteries hurled out shell after shell, peppering the skies with flak. One bomber launched its torpedo—the "fish" passing ahead of the ship—but did not emerge from the attack. The destroyer's 40 millimeter barrage slapped it into the sea. The second torpedo dropped, which was aimed in Van Valkenburghs direction, passed astern. Following that last incident, Van Valkenburghs sailors noted a definite slackening in the Japanese attacks. The massive B-29 raids on the home islands, together with the attrition caused by steady pounding by American carrier-based air power, had slowed the Japanese down considerably. Final operations Late on 24 June, Van Valkenburgh finally left the forward areas, bound for the Philippines. For the ensuing fortnight, the ship rested at San Pedro Bay, Leyte, enjoying a breather from the hectic pace of operations that had lasted for over two months. Early in July, she put to sea as part of a surface force consisting of the new large cruisers and , four light cruisers, and seven destroyers. Assigned to operate along the China coast between Formosa and Shanghai, the force searched for any signs of Japanese surface ship activity in that area but found no opposition of any kind. Ready for anything when they put to sea, Van Valkenburghs sailors found the situation almost anti-climactic. As one member of the crew wrote: "Our tension relaxed considerably and our sweep took on the aspect of tactical maneuvers in Chesapeake Bay." Neither ships nor planes inquired or resisted the task force's progress, as the ships set a course back to Okinawa after a five-day patrol, off Shanghai. The task force commander offered consoling thoughts: "If the lack of action is a disappointment at least we have the satisfaction of knowing that the East China Sea was under 'our control.'" Subsequently, returning to Buckner Bay, Van Valkenburgh lay at anchor there when, at 21:00 on 10 August 1945, "all Hell broke loose." Something akin to a Fourth of July celebration occurred, as some 150 warships threw everything they had—searchlights; tracers; red, white, and green flares; and star shell—into a 15-minute celebration that commemorated the word that the Japanese were entertaining thoughts of surrender. The demonstration subsided as quickly as it had formed, and darkness again descended upon Buckner Bay. Two days later, however, the torpedoing of brought home the fact that war was still very much "on." It was not until after 15 August that the signal "cease present operations" could be hoisted, indicating that the war was over at last. On 7 September, Van Valkenburgh stood out of Buckner Bay in company with , , , and , as screen for the escort carriers , , , and , bound for Japan and occupation duty in the erstwhile enemy's waters. For the week that followed, the group operated off the coast of Kyūshū, southwest of Nagasaki, Japan, while aircraft from the carriers patrolled the island and coast and assisted in locating mines in the clearance operations paving the way for entry into the harbor at Nagasaki. On 15 September, as Van Valkenburgh steamed into Nagasaki harbor, every available vantage point topside was occupied by men silently taking in the incredible devastation wrought by the atomic bomb dropped on the city over a month before. During her week there, Van Valkenburgh stood by as Allied prisoners of war were taken on board the hospital ship which lay moored at the port's principal dock. For the next six weeks, Van Valkenburgh remained in Japanese waters, carrying out two courier trips to Wakayama, Honshū, Japan, on the Inland Sea. Finally, her tour of duty in the Far East completed, Van Valkenburgh sailed for the United States on 17 November, departing Sasebo on that day, bound for the West Coast. Reaching San Diego on 6 December—via Midway and Pearl Harbor—the destroyer soon pushed on for the East Coast, transiting the Panama Canal on 18 and 19 December. Making port at Charleston, South Carolina, two days before Christmas of 1945, Van Valkenburgh was decommissioned and placed in reserve on 12 April 1946. 1950 – 1954 On 31 August 1950, some two months after North Korea invaded South Korea, the Navy ordered Van Valkenburghs activation in light of the recently erupting Far Eastern crisis. Accordingly, Van Valkenburgh was recommissioned at Charleston on 8 March 1951, Comdr. C. A. Marinke in command. She trained off the Virginia Capes and up the coast to Nova Scotian waters, as well as into the Caribbean, from Guantanamo Bay to Culebra, Puerto Rico.Van Valkenburgh subsequently departed Norfolk on 2 May; transited the Panama Canal between 20 and 22 May; and reached Yokosuka, Japan, on 17 June, via San Diego, Pearl Harbor, and Midway. Leaving Yokosuka in her wake on 22 June, Van Valkenburgh spent the next 36 days at sea with Task Force 77 (TF 77), screening the fast carriers as they launched air strikes against Communist forces ashore. Putting into Sasebo at the end of July, the destroyer spent a brief period in-port before she got underway on 1 August for the "bomb line."Van Valkenburgh relieved as Task Element 95.28 (TE 95.28) shortly after noon on 3 August. Operating under the control of Commander, Task Group 95.2 (TG 95.2) Commander, East Coast Blockading and Patrol Group, the destroyer commenced a period of operations in support of the I Corps, Republic of Korea (ROK) Army. No sooner had she actually commenced those activities, than she received a call for indirect fire. She expended 20 rounds of 5-inch shells against enemy positions before conducting night inshore patrol from Kojo, south to the "bomb line." Over the ensuing days, Van Valkenburgh expended over 2,400 rounds of ammunition
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a half hours long, the film is a generational portrait of youth blending documentary and fiction pieces. Plot The film tracks a group high schoolers in Madrid, following them from mid-teens to their early 20s. Cast Production A Los Ilusos Films production, Who's Stopping Us was shot from 2016 to 2021. Release The film had its world premiere at the 69th San Sebastián International Film Festival (SSIFF), screened on 22 September 2021 (6th day) as pàrt of the festival's official competition. Distributed by Atalante Cinema, the film was theatrically released in Spain on 22 October 2021. Reception Pablo Vázquez of Fotogramas scored 5 out of 5 stars, extolling the absence of any sort of imposture, while noting that its extended runtime perhaps will dissuade cowards, assessing the film to be "a cum laude thesis with which its director embraces his maturity as a filmmaker". Carmen L. Lobo of La Razón gave it 4 out of 5 stars, considering "its splendid, immersive direction,
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El Periódico de Catalunya rated the film with 4 out of 5 stars, considering that the vast amount of material "has taken an exciting form, in different blocks perfectly articulated with each other." Jonathan Romney of ScreenDaily wrote that the film is "not as revelatory as it intends, this is an only intermittently fascinating watch, an over-extended experiment that doesn't quite hold its own against 21st-century cinema's more incisive portraits of youth". Accolades |- | align = "center" rowspan = "3" | 2021 || rowspan = "3" | 69th San Sebastián International Film Festival || Silver Shell for Best Supporting Performance || The whole cast || || rowspan = "3" | |- | colspan = "2" | Feroz Zinemaldia Award || |- | colspan = "2" | FIPRESCI Award || |- | align = "center" rowspan = "3" | 2022 || 9th Feroz Awards || colspan = "2" | Arrebato Award (Non-Fiction Film) || || |- | 77th
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with a cameo appearance from Ben Shockley. In 2021 Simon Cox began fundraising for a second film, Of Infinite Worlds. References External links 2019
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2019 low-budget science fiction film written and directed by Simon Cox, with the original title Kaleidoscope Man. Filming was supported by crowdfunding and took place over ten years, with many
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named after the Nigerian business man who died October 6, 1995. The park is open for the residents within and around the radius of the garden to relax, and have a
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in Lagos. The garden which was developed by the Lagos State Government in 2018 sits on a land size of 9,174 square meters from Osborne junction through Lugard Avenue to NNPC and was named after the Nigerian business man who died October 6, 1995. The
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census, its population was 118. References Populated places in Vareš
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is a village in the municipality of Vareš,
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Italian Confederation of Workers' Trade Unions during the secretariat of Pierre Carniti. In 1993 he co-founded the movement of the Social Christians with Ermanno Gorrieri, Pierre Carniti and other political exponents. He then became a senator of the Republic for two legislatures. During the 1996-2001 legislature he was Undersecretary for Labour with Minister Cesare
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Salvi; in the next legislature (2001-2006) he was vice-president of the Democrats of the Left group in the Senate. References External links 1937 births Living people Democrats of the Left politicians Italian trade unionists Politicians from Verona Senators of Legislature XIII of Italy Senators of Legislature XIV of Italy 20th-century Italian
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of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census,
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municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the
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is a village in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According
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of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its
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Ireland until 1806, afterwards accompanying Lord Cathcart to the Isle of Rugen and in the expedition against Copenhagen in 1807. In 1808 he was sent to the Mediterranean as deputy quartermaster-general with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and was employed with the expedition to the Bay of Naples, which ended in the capture of Ischia and Procida. In 1810 he organised the flotilla of gunboats equipped for the defence of the Straits of Messina, when Murat's army was encamped on the opposite shore; and in 1813 he commanded the troops of a battalion of the 10th foot on board the Thames, 32 guns, under Captain afterwards Admiral Sir Charles Napier, and the Furieuse, 36 (18-pounders), under Captain William Mounsey, sent to attack the Isle of Ponza, which was captured by the frigates sailing right into the harbour, under a heavy cross-fire from the shore-batteries, and landing the troops without losing a man. He was afterwards employed by Lord William Bentinck on staff duties at Tarragona and at Genoa, and attained the rank of brevet-colonel in 1814. After the renewal of hostilities in 1815, when the Austrian and Piedmontese armies of occupation, a hundred thousand strong, entered France, Coffin was attached, in the capacity of British military commissioner with the rank of brigadier-general, to the Austro-Sardinians, who crossed Mont Cenis, and remained with them until they quitted French territory, in accordance with the Treaty of Paris. St. Helena In 1817 he was appointed regimental major of the Royal Staff Corps, at headquarters, Hythe, Kent, and in 1819 was nominated Lieutenant-governor and second in command under Sir Hudson Lowe at St. Helena, in the room of Sir George Bingham, returned home. This portion of Coffin's services has
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in July 1821, after the death of the imperial captive, Coffin succeeded to the command, which he held until, the last of the King's troops having been removed, he was relieved, in March 1823, by Brigadier-general Alexander Walker, HEICS, when the government of the island reverted for some years to the East India Company. Coffin's correspondence with the council of the island, which was at first disposed to question his authority, will be found in the archives of the British Library. Coffin was advanced to the rank of major-general in 1825. Personal life He married, in 1820, the only daughter of George Monkland, late of Belmont, Bath, by whom he had no issue. He died at Bath on 10 February 1830. Coffin was the English translator of Stutterheim's Account of the Battle of Austerlitz (London, 1806). Sources Burke's Landed Gentry, under "Pine-Coffin"; The Gentleman's Magazine c. (i.), 369. The following works may be consulted for details of some of the historic events with which Coffin was connected: Sir J. W. Gordon's Military Transactions, London, 1809 (for affairs, in the Baltic); Sir H. E. Bunbury's Narrative of Passages in the War with France, 1851 (for some very curious information respecting the expedition to the Bay of Naples and the defence of Sicily); Walter Henry's Events of Military Life (for St. Helena). Coffin's letters to Sir Hudson Lowe, of various dates from 1808 to 1823, will be found in Addit. MSS. 20133, 20139, 20191, 20192, 20206, 20211. See also Edward Pine Coffin References Bibliography Chichester, H. M.; Stearn, Roger T. (2004). "Coffin, John Pine". In Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford:
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In 1951, Petronia was first elected to the island council of Aruba for the Aruban Patriotic Party (PPA). In June 1961, he was appointed Minister of Traffic and Communications in the Netherlands Antilles which had been vacant since 1959. In June 1962, he became Minister with three portfolios: Education, Traffic, and Culture. For a brief period, Petronia had five portfolios when was appointed lieutenant governor of Aruba. In 1967, he served with a single portfolio as Minister of Education. Even though Petronia had been a Papiamentu author, he would encourage the use of Dutch as Minister of Education in order to increase opportunities for the Antilles. The 1969 Curaçao uprising resulted in a collapse of the government, and the formation of an ad interim government led by which would be a place holder until the 1969 elections. In November 1969, the Accords of Kralendijk resulted in a coalition government of five parties headed by Petronia. On 12 December 1969, Petronia was installed as Prime Minister of the Netherlands Antilles. Petronia was the first prime minister of the Antilles of African descend. The Netherlands Antilles faced a high rate of unemployment and a large deficit. Petronia was of the opinion that the islands needed several years of stability, however he doubted whether it could be achieved during his term. In December 1970, a tax increase failed to pass
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1971. Biography Petronia was born on 14 December 1916 on plantation Santa Lucia near Plantersrust in Curaçao which is nowadays part of Willemstad. After elementary school, he became a draughtsman for the civil service, and attended a course in technical drawing. In 1932, he published the novel Venganza di un amigo written in Papiamentu. In 1933, he was transferred to Aruba where he would remain for the rest of his life. On 1 February 1940, he resigned and founded the construction company Petronia & Croes together with his business partner Bonifacio Croes. In 1951, Petronia was first elected to the island council of Aruba for the Aruban Patriotic Party (PPA). In June 1961, he was appointed Minister of Traffic and Communications in the Netherlands Antilles which had been vacant since
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Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population
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of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its
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According to the 2013 census, its population was 181. References Populated places
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a village in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia
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in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the
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Ivančevo is a village in the municipality of Vareš,
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Revolutionary War, committed suicide at the plantation. The coroner found "he had been for some time before insane and not of sound memory and perfect understanding". In 1859, Augustus Wetter purchased the plantation. Around Christmas 1862, the body of a Mrs. Haig, a relative of his wife, was stolen from its vault at the Sharon Plantation. The vault had been forced open, and the body (along with a silver plate that had been resting atop the coffin) was missing. Wetter offered a large reward in the Savannah Morning News
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1814 and bequeathed the plantation to his sister, Sarah. Edward married Sarah at the plantation in 1774. One of their children, born in 1791, was philanthropist Mary Telfair. She was their first daughter of eight children. In 1782, during the Revolutionary War, Emistisiguo, chief of the local Upper Creek Indian tribe, attacked Anthony Wayne's camp at the plantation in the early hours of June 24. Wayne had arrived with the intention of disbanding the British alliance with Indian tribes in Georgia. He negotiated peace treaties with both the Creeks and the Cherokees, for which Georgia rewarded him with a large rice plantation. On October 15, 1785, Dr. Samuel Vickers, Surgeon of the Hospitals during the Revolutionary War, committed suicide at the plantation. The coroner found "he had been for some time before insane and not of sound memory and perfect understanding". In 1859, Augustus Wetter purchased the plantation. Around Christmas 1862, the body of a Mrs. Haig, a relative of his wife, was stolen from its vault at the Sharon Plantation.
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an Azerbaijani footballer, who playes as a goalkeeper for the Azerbaijan waomen's national team. She last played for Beşiktaş J.K in Turkey. Club career İsmayilova played in her country for Fidan F.C. By November 2017, she moved to Turkey, and signed a six-mpnth deal with the
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births Living people Azerbaijani women's footballers Women's association football goalkeepers Azerbaijan women's international footballers Azerbaijani expatriate footballers Azerbaijani expatriate sportspeople in Turkey Expatriate women's footballers in Turkey Beşiktaş J.K.
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instructor of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, Lalitpur 1985, Member of legislative assembly, Uttar Pradesh 1988 - 1990, Organising secretary of Vishwa Hindu Parishad 1990 onwards, Propagandist of
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Pradesh. Other posts held 1965, Chief instructor of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, Lalitpur 1985, Member of legislative assembly, Uttar Pradesh 1988 - 1990, Organising secretary of Vishwa Hindu Parishad 1990 onwards, Propagandist of
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Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census,
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the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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a threshold of 15 percent across the territory to be considered viable. The 6 pledged delegates to the 2020 Democratic National Convention will be allocated proportionally on the basis of the results of the caucuses. Of the 6 pledged delegates, all 6 are at-large pledged delegates. The 6 pledged delegates Guam sends to the national convention will be joined by 5 unpledged PLEO delegates (4 members of the Democratic National Committee and nonvoting delegate Michael San Nicolas). Results On June 6, Joe Biden won the caucuses in Guam, pushing him over the delegate threshold to formally secure
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basis of the results of the caucuses. Procedure When the Guam Democratic Party published its draft delegate selection plan on July 7, 2019, it specified a May 2 date for the 2020 caucuses. In the closed caucuses, candidates must meet a threshold of 15 percent across the territory to be considered viable. The 6 pledged delegates to the 2020 Democratic National Convention will be allocated proportionally on the basis of the results of the caucuses. Of the 6 pledged delegates, all 6 are at-large pledged delegates. The 6 pledged delegates Guam sends
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who is affiliated with I'm Enterprise. She started her voice acting activities after winning the grand prize at an international voice acting audition in 2016. After a period of training at the Japan Narration Actor Institute, she debuted as a voice actress
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grand prize at an international voice acting audition in 2016. After a period of training at the Japan Narration Actor Institute, she debuted as a voice actress in 2020. In 2022, she was cast in her first main anime role as Koharu Minagi in
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Alvin Stardust (1942-2014) Laura Jewry, birth name of
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that name include: Bernard Jewry, birth name of
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unde-20 team and won an All-Ireland Under-20 Championship title in 2020. O'Brien joined the Cork senior hurling team as a member of the extended training panel in 2021 and made his debut against Offaly in the 2022 National League. Career statistics Honours Cork All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship: 2020 Munster Under-20 Hurling Championship: 2020 Munster Minor Hurling Championship:
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team and won an All-Ireland Under-20 Championship title in 2020. O'Brien joined the Cork senior hurling team as a member of the extended training panel in 2021 and made his debut against Offaly in the 2022 National League. Career statistics Honours Cork All-Ireland Under-20 Hurling Championship: 2020 Munster Under-20 Hurling Championship: 2020 Munster Minor Hurling Championship: 2017 All-Ireland Under-17 Hurling Championship: 2017 Munster Under-17 Hurling Championship: 2017 References 2000 births Living
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Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census,
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Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population
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12 February 2022) was a Chilean Roman Catholic bishop. González Morales was born in Chile on 20 April 1935. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1963, before serving as
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was born in Chile on 20 April 1935. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1963, before serving as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Punta Arenas, Chile, from 1974 until his retirement in 2006. González Morales died from
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with Azparren winning the mountains classification and Pöstlberger winning the intermediate sprint classification. With over left, De Wilde was the first to be dropped from the lead group, while the remaining duo were caught by the peloton with under left. There were several crashes in the final few kilometres, but in the final sprint, Alexander Kristoff won by a narrow margin ahead of Nacer Bouhanni and defending champion Giacomo Nizzolo. Teams Eight of the 18 UCI WorldTeams and 11 UCI ProTeams made up
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intermediate sprint classification. With over left, De Wilde was the first to be dropped from the lead group, while the remaining duo were caught by the peloton with under left. There were several crashes in the final few kilometres, but in the final sprint, Alexander Kristoff won by a narrow margin ahead of Nacer Bouhanni and defending champion Giacomo Nizzolo. Teams Eight of the 18 UCI WorldTeams and 11 UCI ProTeams made up the 19 teams that participated in the race. 12 teams entered a full squad of seven riders each. Four teams (, ,
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in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to
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in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013
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Fähndrich (born 1944), German scholar and translator Hugo Fähndrich (1851–1930), Austrian–Hungarian chess master
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Jenny Fähndrich (born 1989), Swiss BMX cyclist Markus Fähndrich (born 1960), Swiss skier Nadine Fähndrich (born 1995), Swiss skier See also Musée Chappuis-Fähndrich,
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According to the 2013 census, its population was
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village in the municipality of Vareš, Bosnia
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in biology and geology and later became a secondary school teacher. Political career Maciel has said that she was inspired by Maria de Lurdes Pintassilgo, the first and, as of 2022, the only woman to have been prime minister of Portugal. Maciel initially worked with the Lamaçães Parish Assembly, later becoming president of the Lamaçães Parish Council and a councillor on the Braga Municipal Council. Maciel was elected to the Assembly of the Republic in 2015 and 2019. In the 2022
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of Portugal. Maciel initially worked with the Lamaçães Parish Assembly, later becoming president of the Lamaçães Parish Council and a councillor on the Braga Municipal Council. Maciel was elected to the Assembly of the Republic in 2015 and 2019. In the 2022 Portuguese legislative election, when the PS won an overall majority, she was fifth on the PS list of candidates for the Braga District, in which the PS had nine candidates
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editor from 1942 to 1973. As the sports editor, Westwick sought for his staff to report the facts first, then develop a personal writing style with time. Columns by Westwick regularly covered ice hockey, Canadian football, and boxing. He frequently wrote about heavyweight boxing championships, and also reported on the World Series, the Stanley Cup, the Olympic Games, and the British Empire Games. Notable sports events covered were the heavyweight championship won by Cassius Clay, the Richard Riot, the 1960 World Series, and the perfect game pitched by Don Larsen. During the mid-1950s when the Ottawa Rough Riders were struggling, Westwick poked fun at the team rather than criticize. When coach Chan Caldwell suggested that the team could practice on a train ride to an away game by attaching a railway flatcar filled with dirt, Westwick played along with the joke although the plan never happened. Fellow journalist Eddie MacCabe recalled that Westwick reported on the idea with "brilliant clarity and memorable hilarity". Following a 1959 National Hockey League playoffs game, Westwick quoted league president Clarence Campbell as accusing the referee Red Storey of "freezing" in the final minutes of a near-riotous game. Storey subsequently resigned as a referee. Campbell stated that Westwick took the words out of context, accused him of "breaking confidence" in the article. Westwick's fellow newsmen defended his article and did not question its veracity. In addition to writing, Westwick served as a horse racing official, and was on the selection committee for the Canadian Football Hall of Fame from 1964 to 1982. He retired from the Ottawa Journal on August 29, 1973, and was succeeded by Eddie MacCabe as the sports editor, who had been his assistant since 1952. Reputation The Canadian Press journalist Stuart Lake described Westwick as an "old school journalist", a two-fingered typist who signed off with -30- to end his copy, that he "could belt back beers with the best of them" until he quit drinking, and that he "had a deep sense of responsibility for what he wrote and went out of his way not to hurt people with the millions of words that flowed from his typewriter". Eddie MacCabe described Westwick as "always the gentleman", had gained the confidence of athletes and colleagues, and that "he was at pains not to hurt anyone, but never so much that he would take a back
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the joke although the plan never happened. Fellow journalist Eddie MacCabe recalled that Westwick reported on the idea with "brilliant clarity and memorable hilarity". Following a 1959 National Hockey League playoffs game, Westwick quoted league president Clarence Campbell as accusing the referee Red Storey of "freezing" in the final minutes of a near-riotous game. Storey subsequently resigned as a referee. Campbell stated that Westwick took the words out of context, accused him of "breaking confidence" in the article. Westwick's fellow newsmen defended his article and did not question its veracity. In addition to writing, Westwick served as a horse racing official, and was on the selection committee for the Canadian Football Hall of Fame from 1964 to 1982. He retired from the Ottawa Journal on August 29, 1973, and was succeeded by Eddie MacCabe as the sports editor, who had been his assistant since 1952. Reputation The Canadian Press journalist Stuart Lake described Westwick as an "old school journalist", a two-fingered typist who signed off with -30- to end his copy, that he "could belt back beers with the best of them" until he quit drinking, and that he "had a deep sense of responsibility for what he wrote and went out of his way not to hurt people with the millions of words that flowed from his typewriter". Eddie MacCabe described Westwick as "always the gentleman", had gained the confidence of athletes and colleagues, and that "he was at pains not to hurt anyone, but never so much that he would take a back step from a testy situation". MacCabe recalled that Westwick may have appeared disorganized, but never missed a deadline. Personal life Westwick was married to Rita, and had two sons and three daughters. He resided in the Sandy Hill neighbourhood of Ottawa, and had a family cottage on Long Lake near Buckingham, Quebec. He died on June 19, 1990, in Ottawa, and was cremated. Honours and awards In 1948, Westwick received the National Press Club of Canada Sports Award for his coverage of the 36th Grey Cup, when the Ottawa Rough Riders lost to Calgary Stampeders. In 1961, he received a Canadian Sports Advisory Council award for encouragement of amateur sport. His career in journalism was also recognized with a Governor General's Award. After his retirement from the Ottawa Journal, he was the guest of honour at a testimonial dinner held at the Château Laurier on October 24, 1973. The dinner was attended by more than 500 people including prominent sports persons. He received lifetime passes to
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(born 1992), German ice hockey player
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Höfflin is a surname. Notable people with the surname
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is a surname. Notable people with the surname
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surname. Notable people with the surname include:
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Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 187. References
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Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population
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Bertschy is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Christoph Bertschy (born 1994), Swiss ice
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René Bertschy (1912–1999), Swiss jazz double-bassist and vocalist See also Bertschy House, a house in
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is opposed by essentialists, who contend that a set of features constitutes the essence of philosophy and characterizes all and only its parts. Many of the definitions based on subject matter, method, its relation to science or to meaning and understanding are essentialists conceptions of philosophy. They are controversial since they often exclude various theories and activities usually treated as part of philosophy. These difficulties with the deflationist and the essentialist approach have moved some philosophers towards a middle ground, according to which the different parts of philosophy are characterized by family resemblances. This means that the various parts of philosophy resemble each other by sharing several features. But different parts share different features with each other, i.e. they do not all share the same features. This approach can explain both that the term "philosophy" has some substance to it, i.e. that it is not just based on an empty convention, and that some parts of philosophy may differ a lot from each other, for example, that some parts are very similar to mathematics while others almost belong to the natural sciences and psychology. This approach has the disadvantage that it leaves the definition of philosophy vague, thereby making it difficult for the non-paradigmatic cases to determine whether they belong to philosophy or not, i.e. that there is no clear-cut distinction. Based on method and subject matter Two important aspects for distinguishing philosophy from other disciplines have been its topic or domain of inquiry and its method. The problem with these approaches is usually that they are either too wide, i.e. they include various other disciplines, like empirical sciences or fine arts, in their definition, or too narrow by excluding various parts of philosophy. Some have argued that its method focuses on apriori knowledge, i.e. that philosophy does not depend on empirical observations and experiments. Instead, such an approach bases philosophical justification primarily on pure reasoning, similar to how mathematical theory-making is based on mathematical proofs and in contrast to the scientific method based on empirical evidence. This way of doing philosophy is often referred to as armchair philosophy or armchair theorizing since it can be done from the comfort of one's armchair without any field work. But this characterization by itself is not sufficient as a definition, since it applies equally well to other fields, such as mathematics. Giving a more precise account of the method, for example, as conceptual analysis or phenomenological inquiry, on the other hand, results in a too narrow definition that excludes various parts of philosophy. Definitions focusing on the domain of inquiry or topic of philosophy often emphasize its wide scope in contrast to the individual sciences. According to Wilfrid Sellars, for example, philosophy aims "to understand how things in the broadest possible sense of the term hang together in the broadest possible sense of the term". Similar definitions focus on how philosophy is concerned with the whole of the universe or at least with the big questions regarding life and the world. Such attempts usually result in a definition that is too broad and may include both some natural sciences and some forms of fine art and literature in it. On the other hand, they may also be too narrow, since some philosophical topics concern very specific questions that do not directly deal with the big questions or the world as a whole. Because of these difficulties, philosophers have often tried to combine methodological and topical characterizations in their definitions. This can happen, for example, by emphasizing the wideness of its domain of inquiry, to distinguish it from the other individual sciences, together with its rational method, to distinguish it from fine art and literature. Such approaches are usually more successful at determining the right extension of the term but they also do not fully solve this problem. Based on relation to science Various definitions of philosophy emphasize its close relation to science, either by seeing it itself as a science or by characterizing the role it plays for science. The plausibility of such definitions is affected by how wide the term "science" is to be understood. If it refers to the natural sciences, such definitions are usually quite controversial. But if science is understood in a very wide sense as a form of rational inquiry that includes both the formal sciences and the humanities, such characterizations are less controversial but also less specific. This wide sense is how the term "philosophy" was traditionally used to cover various disciplines that are today considered as distinct disciplines. But this does not reflect its contemporary usage. Many science-based definitions of philosophy face the difficulty of explaining why philosophy has historically not shown the same level of progress as the sciences. Some reject this claim by emphasizing that philosophy has significantly progressed, but in a different and less obvious way. Others allow that this type of progress is not found in philosophy and try to find other explanations why it should still be considered a science. As a proper science The strongest relation to science is posited by definitions that see philosophy itself as a science. One such conception of philosophy is found within the phenomenological movement, which sees philosophy as a rigorous science. On this view, philosophy studies the structures of consciousness, more specifically, the essences that show themselves in consciousness and their relations to each other, independent of whether they have instances in the external world. It contrasts with other sciences in that they do not reflect on the essences themselves but research whether and in which ways these essences are manifested in the world. This position was already anticipated by Arthur Schopenhauer, who holds that philosophy is only interested in the nature of what there is but not in the causal relations explaining why it is there or what will become of it. But this science-based definition of philosophy found in phenomenology has come under attack on various points. On the one hand, it does not seem to be as rigorously scientific as its proponents proclaim. This is reflected in the fact that even within the phenomenological movement, there are still various fundamental disagreements that the phenomenological method has not been able to resolve, suggesting that philosophy has not yet found a solid epistemological footing. On the other hand, different forms of philosophy study various other topics besides essences and the relations between them. Another conception of philosophy as a science is due to Willard Van Orman Quine. His outlook is based on the idea that there are no analytic propositions, i.e. that any claim may be revised based on new experiences. On this view, both philosophy and mathematics are empirical sciences. They differ from other sciences in that they are more abstract by being concerned with wide-reaching empirical patterns instead of particular empirical observations. But this distance to individual observations does not mean that their claims are non-empirical, according to Quine. A similar outlook in the contemporary discourse is sometimes found in experimental philosophers, who reject the exclusive armchair approach and try to base their theories on experiments. Seeing philosophy as a proper science is often paired with the claim that philosophy has just recently reached this status, for example, due to the discovery of a new philosophical methodology. Such a view can explain that philosophy is a science despite not having made much progress: because it has had much less time in comparison to the other sciences. As an immature science But a more common approach is to see philosophy not as a fully developed science on its own but as an immature or preliminary science. Georg Simmel, for example, sees it as a provisional science studying appearances. On this view, a field of inquiry belongs to philosophy until it has developed sufficiently to provide exact knowledge of the real elements underlying these appearances. Karl Jaspers gives a similar characterization by emphasizing the deep disagreements within philosophy in contrast to the sciences, which have achieved the status of generally accepted knowledge. This is often connected to the idea that philosophy does not have a clearly demarcated domain of inquiry, in contrast to the individual sciences: the demarcation only happens once a philosophical subdiscipline has reached its full maturity. This approach has the advantage of explaining both the lack of progress in philosophy and the fact that many sciences used to be part of philosophy before they matured enough to constitute fully developed sciences. But the parts that still belong to philosophy have so far failed to reach a sufficient consensus on their fundamental theories and methods. A philosophical discipline ceases to be philosophy and becomes a science once definite knowledge of its topic is possible. In this sense, philosophy is the midwife of the sciences. Philosophy itself makes no progress because the newly created science takes all the credit. On such a view, it is even conceivable that philosophy ceases to exist at some point once all its sub-disciplines have been turned into sciences. An important disadvantage of this view is that it has difficulty in accounting for the seriousness and the importance of the achievements of philosophers, including the ones affecting the sciences. The reason for this is that labeling philosophy as an immature science implies that philosophers are unable to go about their research in the proper manner. Another disadvantage of this conception is that the closeness to science does not fit equally well for all parts of philosophy, especially in relation to moral and political philosophy. Some even hold that philosophy as a whole may never outgrow its immature status since humans lack the cognitive faculties to give answers based on solid evidence to the philosophical questions they are considering. If this view were true, it would have the serious consequence that doing philosophy would be downright pointless. Based on meaning, understanding, and clarification Many definitions of philosophy see as its main task the creation of meaning and understanding or the clarification of concepts. In this sense, philosophy is often contrasted with the sciences in the sense that it is not so much about what the actual world is like but about how we experience it or how we think and talk about it. This may be expressed by stating that philosophy is "the pursuit not of knowledge but of understanding". In some cases, this takes the form of making various practices and assumptions explicit that have been implicit before, similar to how a grammar makes the rules of a language explicit without inventing them. This is a form of reflective, second-order understanding that can be applied to various fields, not just the sciences. A conception of philosophy based on clarification and meaning is defended by logical positivists, who saw the "clarification of problems and assertions" as the main task of philosophy. According to Moritz Schlick, for example, philosophy is unlike the sciences in that it does not aim at establishing a system of true propositions. Instead, it is the activity of finding meaning. But this activity is nonetheless quite relevant for the sciences since familiarity with the meaning of a proposition is important for assessing whether it is true. A closely related definition is given by Rudolf Carnap, who sees philosophy as the logic of science, meaning that it is concerned with analyzing scientific concepts and theories. From the perspective of logical atomism, this clarification takes the form of decomposing propositions into basic elements, which are then correlated to the entities found in the world. On this approach, philosophy has both a destructive and a constructive side. Its destructive side focuses on eliminating meaningless statements that are neither verifiable by experience nor true by definition. This position is often connected to the idea that some sentences, such as metaphysical, ethical, or aesthetical sentences, lack a meaning since they cannot be correlated to elements in the world that determine whether they are true or false. In this sense, philosophy can be understood as a critique of language that exposes senseless expressions. Its constructive side, on the other hand, concerns epistemology and philosophy of science, often with the goal of finding a unified science. Other conceptions of philosophy agree that
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phenomenological movement, there are still various fundamental disagreements that the phenomenological method has not been able to resolve, suggesting that philosophy has not yet found a solid epistemological footing. On the other hand, different forms of philosophy study various other topics besides essences and the relations between them. Another conception of philosophy as a science is due to Willard Van Orman Quine. His outlook is based on the idea that there are no analytic propositions, i.e. that any claim may be revised based on new experiences. On this view, both philosophy and mathematics are empirical sciences. They differ from other sciences in that they are more abstract by being concerned with wide-reaching empirical patterns instead of particular empirical observations. But this distance to individual observations does not mean that their claims are non-empirical, according to Quine. A similar outlook in the contemporary discourse is sometimes found in experimental philosophers, who reject the exclusive armchair approach and try to base their theories on experiments. Seeing philosophy as a proper science is often paired with the claim that philosophy has just recently reached this status, for example, due to the discovery of a new philosophical methodology. Such a view can explain that philosophy is a science despite not having made much progress: because it has had much less time in comparison to the other sciences. As an immature science But a more common approach is to see philosophy not as a fully developed science on its own but as an immature or preliminary science. Georg Simmel, for example, sees it as a provisional science studying appearances. On this view, a field of inquiry belongs to philosophy until it has developed sufficiently to provide exact knowledge of the real elements underlying these appearances. Karl Jaspers gives a similar characterization by emphasizing the deep disagreements within philosophy in contrast to the sciences, which have achieved the status of generally accepted knowledge. This is often connected to the idea that philosophy does not have a clearly demarcated domain of inquiry, in contrast to the individual sciences: the demarcation only happens once a philosophical subdiscipline has reached its full maturity. This approach has the advantage of explaining both the lack of progress in philosophy and the fact that many sciences used to be part of philosophy before they matured enough to constitute fully developed sciences. But the parts that still belong to philosophy have so far failed to reach a sufficient consensus on their fundamental theories and methods. A philosophical discipline ceases to be philosophy and becomes a science once definite knowledge of its topic is possible. In this sense, philosophy is the midwife of the sciences. Philosophy itself makes no progress because the newly created science takes all the credit. On such a view, it is even conceivable that philosophy ceases to exist at some point once all its sub-disciplines have been turned into sciences. An important disadvantage of this view is that it has difficulty in accounting for the seriousness and the importance of the achievements of philosophers, including the ones affecting the sciences. The reason for this is that labeling philosophy as an immature science implies that philosophers are unable to go about their research in the proper manner. Another disadvantage of this conception is that the closeness to science does not fit equally well for all parts of philosophy, especially in relation to moral and political philosophy. Some even hold that philosophy as a whole may never outgrow its immature status since humans lack the cognitive faculties to give answers based on solid evidence to the philosophical questions they are considering. If this view were true, it would have the serious consequence that doing philosophy would be downright pointless. Based on meaning, understanding, and clarification Many definitions of philosophy see as its main task the creation of meaning and understanding or the clarification of concepts. In this sense, philosophy is often contrasted with the sciences in the sense that it is not so much about what the actual world is like but about how we experience it or how we think and talk about it. This may be expressed by stating that philosophy is "the pursuit not of knowledge but of understanding". In some cases, this takes the form of making various practices and assumptions explicit that have been implicit before, similar to how a grammar makes the rules of a language explicit without inventing them. This is a form of reflective, second-order understanding that can be applied to various fields, not just the sciences. A conception of philosophy based on clarification and meaning is defended by logical positivists, who saw the "clarification of problems and assertions" as the main task of philosophy. According to Moritz Schlick, for example, philosophy is unlike the sciences in that it does not aim at establishing a system of true propositions. Instead, it is the activity of finding meaning. But this activity is nonetheless quite relevant for the sciences since familiarity with the meaning of a proposition is important for assessing whether it is true. A closely related definition is given by Rudolf Carnap, who sees philosophy as the logic of science, meaning that it is concerned with analyzing scientific concepts and theories. From the perspective of logical atomism, this clarification takes the form of decomposing propositions into basic elements, which are then correlated to the entities found in the world. On this approach, philosophy has both a destructive and a constructive side. Its destructive side focuses on eliminating meaningless statements that are neither verifiable by experience nor true by definition. This position is often connected to the idea that some sentences, such as metaphysical, ethical, or aesthetical sentences, lack a meaning since they cannot be correlated to elements in the world that determine whether they are true or false. In this sense, philosophy can be understood as a critique of language that exposes senseless expressions. Its constructive side, on the other hand, concerns epistemology and philosophy of science, often with the goal of finding a unified science. Other conceptions of philosophy agree that it has to do with finding meaning and clarifying concepts but focus on a wider domain beyond the sciences. For example, a conception commonly found in the analytic tradition equates philosophy with conceptual analysis. In this sense, philosophy has as its main task to clarify the meanings of the terms we use, often in the form of searching for the necessary and sufficient conditions under which a concept applies to something. Such an analysis is not interested in whether any actual entity falls under this concept. For example, a physicist may study what causes a certain event to happen while a philosopher may study what we mean when using the term "causation". This analysis may be applied to scientific terms but is not limited to them. From the perspective of ordinary language philosophy, philosophy has as its main enterprise the analysis of natural language. According to Ludwig Wittgenstein, for example, philosophy is not a theory but a practice that takes the form of linguistic therapy. This therapy is important because ordinary language is structured in confusing ways that make us susceptible to all kinds of misunderstandings. It is the task of the philosopher to uncover the root causes of such illusions. This often takes the form of exposing how traditional philosophical "problems" are only pseudo-problems, thereby dissolving them rather than resolving them. So on a theoretical level, philosophy leaves everything as it is without trying to provide new insights, explanations, or deductions. The focus on understanding is also reflected in the transcendental traditions and in some strands of phenomenology, where the task of philosophy is identified with making comprehensible and articulating the understanding we already have of the world, sometimes referred to as pre-understanding or pre-ontological understanding. The need for such an inquiry is expressed in Saint Augustine's remark concerning the nature of time: "I know well enough what it is, provided that nobody asks me; but if I am asked what it is and try to explain, I am baffled". This type of understanding is prior to experience in the sense that experience of a particular thing is not possible without some form of pre-understanding of this thing. In this sense, philosophy is a transcendental inquiry into the apriori conditions of possibility underlying both ordinary and scientific experience. But characterizing philosophy this way seems to exclude many of its sub-disciplines, like applied ethics. Others Various other definitions of philosophy have been proposed. Some focus on its role in helping the practitioner lead a good life: they see philosophy as the spiritual practice of developing one's reasoning ability through which some ideal of health is to be realized. Such an outlook on philosophy was already explicitly articulated in stoicism and has also been adopted by some contemporary philosophers. A closely related conception sees philosophy as
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have published 10+ podcasts. ISSIA Online Their online media publication (issiahk.org) serves as the base for their multimedia content and the main website for ISSIA. They also introduced “ISSIA Weekly”, a weekly roundup of select articles from ISSIA Online! They have published over 140 articles on issiahk.org, with more to come. ISSIA Research They have conducted comprehensive surveys, investigating social engagement in high school students in Hong Kong (100+ respondents). Our second survey focused on and the effects of COVID-19 on student wellbeing and student opinion on online learning (60+ respondents). New Initiatives and Projects ISSIA Events They recently hosted ISSIA's first 'Youth NGOS Forum'. Through the event, they hope to foster a greater sense of connectivity between different youth organizations as well as increase exposure for ongoing projects and opportunities. The event connected 10+ Youth NGOS through a variety of events including a panel (featuring AliveVibe, ReBooked and Colour Away Covid), skill-based workshops, networking events and more. They also organized our own Model United Nations conference (ISSIAMUN), where we had two councils (ECOSOC, US Senate), introducing the topic of Black Lives Matter and the aftermath of Colonialism to ~40 students from a variety of schools in Hong Kong. Multimedia Team They are expanding our multimedia coverage. We are working on a documentary series, diversifying the content for their podcasts and expanding our research and advocacy efforts. Outreach They have three main areas of expansion 1) local schools 2) universities 3) international recruitment. They are looking to expand on all three fronts, helping
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the World Economic Forum, Nasdaq, SCMP, RTHK, Ariana Magazine, Expat Living, Little Steps Asia and Pixl Media; and has been represented at the HK Mental Health Conference, World Humanitarian Forum (WHF London 2021) and won Enactus' 'Action Accelerator'. They produce a variety of multimedia content, including magazines, podcasts, webinars, surveys and videos. In 2021, they have launched a series of events and programmes (e.g. the ISSIA Youth NGOS Forum, ISSIAMUN, ISSIA Debate Programme). They have also launched 10+ school chapters throughout Hong Kong. ISSIA Magazine A leading youth-led social issues publication and the first inter-school magazine in Hong Kong; the group targets SDG 4 (quality education), with a focus on target 4.7 (global citizenship) as a community-driven, peer-to-peer platform for global issues education. At 95 pages, they feature a plethora of student work, ranging from articles and poems, to student artwork and photography submissions across Hong Kong. They discuss LGBTQ+ Identity in Hong Kong, mental health, restorative justice, capitalism, gentrification, foreign domestic workers, refugees and more! The first edition was published in 2021. Please note: the views and opinions expressed in the ISSIA Magazine are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official position of ISSIA HK unless indicated otherwise. ISSIA Podcast In addition to the magazine, they also have a weekly podcast programme in which contributors discuss contentious topics ranging from social apathy in Hong Kong to intersectional feminism. They also discuss academic topics e.g. nihilism, economic systems and more! They have published 10+ podcasts. ISSIA Online Their online media publication (issiahk.org) serves as the base for their multimedia content and
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1987), Swiss ice hockey player Rosa Genoni (1867–1954),
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player Rosa Genoni (1867–1954), Italain fashion designer, teacher, feminist and advocate
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species References capensis Plants described in 1842 Flora of South Africa
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of sedge that is native to southern parts of Africa. See also List of Cyperus species References capensis Plants described in
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a midfielder for Kicks United FC of the AFA Senior Male League, and Anguilla national football team. He has also played internationally for the country of his birth, Dominica. Career International Anthony Jr made his
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Senior Male League, and Anguilla national football team. He has also played internationally for the country of his birth, Dominica. Career International Anthony Jr made his senior international debut in 2002 for Dominica. He switched to playing for Anguilla with his first international match in 2008. After a long gap away
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Architects, built by Kier Group at a cost of £40 million and opened in March 2017. Services The hospital has 48 bedrooms with bathrooms for vulnerable adults with mental health problems, a 26-bed unit providing short stay intermediate care for patients with dementia and memory difficulties and a 16-bed unit for senior citizens with mental health difficulties. It uses a new type of door safety hinges and an innovative design for
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Services The hospital has 48 bedrooms with bathrooms for vulnerable adults with mental health problems, a 26-bed unit providing short stay intermediate care for patients with dementia and memory difficulties and a 16-bed unit for senior citizens with mental health difficulties. It uses a new type of door safety hinges
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links European U23 Judo Championships European Championships, U23 Judo Judo competitions in Armenia Judo Judo, European Championships
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Yerevan, Armenia from 3 to 4 May 2003. Medal summary Medal table Men's events Women's events Source Results References External links European U23 Judo Championships European Championships, U23
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in Bologna, the son of an army colonel, Ninchi trained at the drama school of . He made his stage debut with Ermete Zacconi, and later became one of the major names of the Italian theatre of the time, working among others with Emma Gramatica, Ruggero Ruggeri, Maria Melato, Giovanna Scotto, Cele Abba, and forming his own theatrical company in 1919. After the World War II he collaborated as a teacher with the Pesaro drama school
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Italian actor, playwright and drama teacher. He was the progenitor of a well-known family of actors. Life and career Born in Bologna, the son of an army colonel, Ninchi trained at the drama school of . He made his stage debut with Ermete Zacconi, and later became one of the major names of the Italian theatre of the time, working among others with Emma Gramatica, Ruggero Ruggeri, Maria Melato, Giovanna Scotto, Cele Abba, and forming his own theatrical
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July 1994) is an Indonesian rifle shooter.She won two gold medals at
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is an Indonesian rifle shooter.She won two gold medals at
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cities in Turkey. Workers' Film Festival is a non-competitive, ticketless and free film festival. In addition, various exhibitions are held at the festival. Worker Film Festival uses Karagöz and Charlie Chaplin figures, which it has introduced as the "festival mascot" since 2006, in all its posters and visuals. These festival mascots have also inspired banners in some actions. References Recurring events established
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and Izmir between May 1 and 8, and after these dates it travels to many cities in Turkey. Workers' Film Festival is a non-competitive, ticketless and free film festival. In addition, various exhibitions are held at the festival. Worker Film Festival uses
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February 2022) was an Indonesian Roman Catholic bishop. Biography Hadisumarta was born in the Dutch East Indies and was ordained to the priesthood in 1959. He served as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Malang, Indonesia,
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1932 – 12 February 2022) was an Indonesian Roman Catholic bishop. Biography Hadisumarta was born in the Dutch East Indies and was ordained to the priesthood
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Witte had three sons: Floris I van Haamstede, Arnoud van Haamstede and Jan van Haamstede. In 1335 Witte's inheritance was split between on one side Floris and Jan, and on the other side Arnoud. Arnoud van Haamstede built the second Moermond Castle. Arnoud was killed somewhere between 1346 and 1349. The Van Haamstede's were firmly on the Hook side during the first years of the Hook and Cod wars. In 1351–1352 the Hook side lost the first round of these wars, which might have led to damage at Moermond Castle. Arnoud's daughter Margaret was still single in early 1351. She later married the Cod Lord Wouter van Heemskerk. By this, she was again on the losing side when Wouter's Marquette Castle was besieged and taken in 1358–1359. It is very well possible that Moermond Castle was also damaged at this time. In 1360 Margaret agreed to pay 7,000 shields to reconcile her husband with the count of Holland. In April 1361 Wouter van Heemskerk and Margaret of Moermond were allowed to make a polder in an area between Schouwen and Noord-Beveland. Wouter van Heemskerk died childless in 1380. To all appearances, Moermont then reverted to the main branch of the Van Haamstede's. In 1396 an Arnout van Moermont ende van Haemstede is mentioned. By 1500 Moermont Castle had become ruinous. Van Serooskerke Pieter van Tuyll Hugenzone (1430-1492) became Lord of Welland and Serooskerke in 1483. He then changed his name to Van Serooskerke. His son Jacob was a squire in 1500. He acquired Moermont, Stavenisse and Westkerke. In 1500 he married Jacqueline van den Eynde. In 1513 Jacob van Serooskerke turned the former gatehouse of the second castle into a country house. Jeronimus van Serooskerke (1500-1571) was the second Van Serooskerke owner of Moermond. He became burgrave of Zeeland in 1547, lieutenant admiral, and governor of Bergen op Zoom. He built Stavenisse Castle in 1653, so it's likely that from that time onward, Moermond was no longer the main residence of the family. Philibert van Serooskerke (1537-1579) was lord of Serooskerke, Popkensburg, Moermond and Stavenisse. He was also burgrave of Zeeland and governor of Bergen op Zoom. Hendrik van Tuyll van Serooskerke (1574-1627) was probably the last Van Serooskerke to own Moermond Castle. Hendrik was mayor of Tholen, deputy to the States General, and special envoy to England. In 1620 he was lord of Stavenisse, Tienhoven, and Rijnhuizen. In 1593 Caesar Porquin was mentioned as owner, he died in 1612. Van Zuidland and Van Wijngaarden In 1612 Iman van Zuidland (1585-1638), later mayor of Zierikzee, bought Moermont. Iman made many changes that gave the castle its current outlook of a 16-17th century mansion. Catharina van Zuidland, Iman's only child, married Daniël Oem van Wijngaarden in 1634. Daniël Oem van Wijngaarden (c. 1626–1688) was Baron of Wijngaarden, president of the Hof van Holland, member of the knighthood of Holland, member of the States General etc. Their second daughter Jacoba lady of Moermond died unmarried. Kemp Next came Pieter Kemp, Lord of Bommenede, Moermond and Zuidland. He married Anthonia Hoffer. Their daughter brought Moermond to Mr. van Schuilenburgh. In 1751 Pieter van Schuilenburgh (1714-1764) made large renovations, 'so that it could again accommodate a gentleman and his company'. He was married to the miniature portrait artist Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn (1724-1774), who signed as Schuylenburch a Moermont. In 1788 Cornelis Ascanius van Sijpesteyn was owner of Moermont. After the September 1787 Prussian invasion of Holland, Moermont was plundered by an Orangist mob. Van IJsselstein and Van Adrichem Later Moermond Castle was bought by the Van IJsselstein family, and the Van Adrichem family. In 1871 it was bought by mr. C. van der Lek de Clerq, notary in Zierikzee and member of the Dutch senate. In 1908 the then owner had structural renovations started by the architect Joh. Hoogenboom. These were finished in early 1911. The renovation was characterized by not being an attempt to return Moermont to e.g. its 1513 or 1613 state. Vriezendorp In 1910 Mr. J.J. Vriesendorp from Dordrecht bought Moermond Castle from Mr. J.F van der Lek de Clerq. In February 1911 a more final restoration was tendered and awarded for 9,506 guilders. In August 1917 an aerial bombardment just missed the castle, with some bombs landing in the garden. Vriesendorp was responsible for (re?)creating the wall around the moat. He stored a large collection of porcelain and arms at the castle. On 10 December 1944 there was a gruesome execution of 10 young men in the lawn of Moermond Castle. They had tried to evade forced labor in Germany, but were caught. They were then executed by hanging, as though they were criminals. The local population was forced to witness the execution, and the bodies were left to hang for 36 hours. The affair is known as 'The Ten of Renesse'. A monument stands near the entrance of the castle grounds. The North Sea flood of 1953 The 31 January North Sea flood of 1953 also inundated Schouwen. From the tower window Jacob Vriesendorp saw the water rushing towards the castle. He was able to save some small art work and silver by bringing it upstairs, but all the furniture, and even the paintings could not be saved. The sea water then ruined everything that was left, even the doors and woodwork, which were flooded with salt water for up to two meters on a daily basis. Moermond Castle Foundation In 1954 the (Moermond Castle foundation) was founded. Thanks to a 172,000 guilders gift from Sweden, the castle was restored. 1956 Renovation In November 1956 the remnants of the first Moermont Castle were found, see above. In February 1957 the remnants of the second castle were discovered. Outward Bound In 1960 the Dutch branch of Outward Bound decided to found a school at Moermond Castle. This was supported by major Dutch companies, and a gift from the Bernard Van Leer Foundation. Cost was 300 guilders per person for a course of one month. The Outward Bound School took a 10-year lease on Moermond Castle. In 1961 Lieutenant-Colonel J.H. Ranst, a commando officer became headmaster of the school. At first the very physical training paid by major companies raised suspicion, especially on the left and Christian side. During the 1960s program at Moermond evolved from character‐training to personal growth and self‐discovery. While the groups were first led by sports instructors, these were replaced by social workers during the late 1960s. In 1971, Outward Bound left Moermond, because the location cost them 50,000 a year. Buitencentrum Moermond In 1972 the foundations for harbor schooling in Amsterdam and Rotterdam, and three transport labor unions, founded the Buitencentrum Moermond foundation, which then leased Moermont Castle. They wanted to use it for schooling young port workers, training, and conferences. The castle was then refurbished for this purpose. The orangery was also taken in use, and a separate sleeping accommodation was built. The schooling of labor union men took place in boarding school style. The employer organizations also used Moermond for their activities. The activities at Moermond were paid by a social
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castle could not be clearly established in the 1950s. Another question that was not answered at the time, was the location of the wall that one might suppose to have to been located to the east of the wall that was found. At the northern edge of the second castle there was a gatehouse. It was built from re-used brick of the first castle. measuring 27.5-28.5 * 13.5-14.5 * 6.5–8 cm. When the third castle was built, this medieval gatehouse became its core. It led to the supposition that the current castle was a tower house that succeeded the first castle. A part of this misconception was solved when in 1957 the second castle was discovered. Later, the supposed tower house was investigated. The third and current castle The current castle was built in 1513 by changing the gatehouse of the second castle. This date is known from an inscription above the fireplace of the castle. It had the arms of the new owners, and the statement that it was the third time the castle was newly built. The first change was to close the gate openings on both sides. Next, the basement was vaulted, see picture. A square wing was then added on the southwest of the former gatehouse, also from repurposed brick. Somewhat later, this was expanded to the north and south. This was also when the southwest stair house was built, that is now topped with a shed roof. Some ceiling beams from the early 16th century still remain. In the 17th century, the octagonal stair tower and east wing were built in 1612. This created an inner courtyard, where the façade on the western side was also changed. The small renaissance gate south of it dates from 1613. Still somewhat later, the low annex southeast of it was built. The castle was repaired in 1751. In 1911 the castle was restored based on the plans of J. Hoogenboom. After the damage caused by the North Sea flood of 1953, the castle was again restored in 1958–1960. This was also when the three decorative little towers on the low wall around the castle were restored based on old pictures. The orangery was built in about 1840. The neoclassical façade remains. History Van Renesse The Lords of Renesse were might have been a younger branch of the Counts of Holland. Costijn van Zierikzee was the first lord of Renesse who can be clearly verified. In 1229 he exchanged his lands in Zierikzee for Floris IV, Count of Holland's lands in the western part of Schouwen with the exception of Burgh and Haamstede. Shortly after 1229 the round water castle at Moermond was built by order of Costijn. In 1244 Count William II of Holland visited Moermond Castle, where he issued a charter: ''. Costijn van Zierikzee / Renesse had at least two sons: Jan (c. 1250 - c. 1294) and Costijn. Jan rebelled against Holland. In 1289 he paid homage for Moermond Castle to Guy, Count of Flanders. In 1291 he was reconciled with Floris V, Count of Holland. Jan had: John III, Lord of Renesse (1268–1304), Hendrik and Costijn. Costijn, brother of the Jan who died in 1294, had a son called Jan van Haamstede, who died childless in 1295. It led to Haamstede Castle coming to the unrelated Witte van Haemstede in 1299. John III came into conflict with Wolfert I van Borselen (c. 1245–1299). It led to the Siege of Moermond Castle in 1297. Melis Stoke (c. 1235 – c. 1305) would write: After Wolfert I and John I, Count of Holland both died in 1299, Jan returned to Zeeland. In 1301 he rebelled against John II, Count of Holland, and in 1303 he joined the Flemish invasion of Holland and Utrecht. In 1304 he drowned while crossing the River Lek. Jan's defeat led to
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momentarily benefited during this time was Unification Church-owned The News World, which had been launched in 1976 and reached its highest-ever circulation of 400,000 during the strike, where again some well-known reporters for the three closed papers wrote for it. Two months into the strike, a parody of The New York Times called Not The New York Times was distributed in the city, with contributors such as Carl Bernstein, Christopher Cerf, Tony Hendra and George Plimpton. Contrary to initial expectations, New York businesses such as restaurants, theaters, hotels, and retail stores did not suffer during the strike, finding alternate ways to advertise their presence and offerings. What is sometimes claimed as an unanticipated consequence of the strike was the turnaround in the 1978 New York Yankees season, wherein the team, once trailing the Boston Red Sox of that year by 14 games, turned things around in a late-season push and eventually won a dramatic tie-breaker game against the Red Sox and then ultimately won the 1978 World Series. Those Yankees were full of volatile personalities, including owner George Steinbrenner, oft-hired, oft-fired manager Billy Martin, and slugger Reggie Jackson, as well as a number of other entertaining players with colorful nicknames, and the battles within the Yankee organization often consumed attention of the daily papers and especially the tabloid headlines of the News and the Post. Once the papers went on strike, so the conjecture goes, the press distractions diminished and the team could focus on playing well. At the time, a Yankees representation noted that "We've heard that theory, but we started our winning streak when the papers were still publishing." Nonethless, the belief that the newspaper strike enabled the team's turnaround was still being given credit decades later, and in 2018 caused longtime sportswriter and Red Sox historian Gordon Edes to wonder if the newspaper strike had been a bigger villain than "Bucky Bleepin' Dent" in the annals of Red Sox fandom pain. The New York Times resumed publication along with the Daily News on November 6, 1978, after 88 days of non-production. The newspapers reached an agreement with the unions representing the pressmen. The agreement preserved some 1,500 existing jobs
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as an unofficial mediator between the two sides, and played an important role in talks eventually making progress. On October 5, the Post resumed publication when Rupert Murdoch, its owner and publisher, signed an agreement with the pressmen, however, the Daily News and the Times were still not being produced. Murdoch's agreement essentially said that the Post would abide by whatever terms would be eventually worked out between the unions and the other two papers. The Post had been shut down for 56 days. During the outage, several strike papers popped into existence, being sold on newsstands and with bylines from the three regular papers; these included The City News, The New York Daily Press, and The New York Daily Metro. One existing paper that momentarily benefited during this time was Unification Church-owned The News World, which had been launched in 1976 and reached its highest-ever circulation of 400,000 during the strike, where again some well-known reporters for the three closed papers wrote for it. Two months into the strike, a parody of The New York Times called Not The New York Times was distributed in the city, with contributors such as Carl Bernstein, Christopher Cerf, Tony Hendra and George Plimpton. Contrary to initial expectations, New York businesses such as restaurants, theaters, hotels, and retail stores did not suffer during the strike, finding alternate ways to advertise their presence and offerings. What is sometimes claimed as an unanticipated consequence of the strike was the turnaround in the 1978 New York Yankees season, wherein the team, once trailing the Boston Red Sox of that year by 14 games, turned things around in a late-season push and eventually won a dramatic tie-breaker
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