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Nepal Democratic Congress was founded by Subarna Shumsher Rana in Calcutta on 4 August 1948. The two parties merged on 10 April 1950 to form the Nepali Congress and Koirala became its first president. The party called for an armed revolution against the Rana regime. During the Bairgania Conference in Bairgania, Bihar, on 27 September 1950 the Nepali Congress announced an armed revolution against the Rana regime. The president of the party also announced the liquidation of operations in India and that the party would operate only inside Nepal. After King Tribhuvan took refuge inside the Indian Embassy on 6 November 1950. The Congress Liberation Army decided to take this opportunity to launch attacks against the regime before the King "left Nepalese soil". Matrika and Bisheshwor Prasad Koirala and Subarna Shamsher Rana flew to Purnia, Bihar. They called the commanders posted at different locations inside Nepal to prepare for armed strikes near the Nepal-India border. On 11
Upadhyaya, Mahendra Bikram Shah and others from Rana-Shah family. It merged with the Nepali National Congress led by BP Koirala and others on 27 Chaitra(?) 2006 to form present day Nepali Congress. History Nepali Congress formation, 1946–1950 The Nepali Congress Party was formed by the merger of Nepali National Congress and Nepal Democratic Congress. The Nepali National Congress was founded by Matrika Prasad Koirala in Calcutta, India on 25 January 1946. The Nepal Democratic Congress was founded by Subarna Shumsher Rana in Calcutta on 4 August 1948. The two parties merged on 10 April 1950 to form the Nepali Congress and Koirala became its first president. The party called
songs from the film whose tracklist was released on June 24, 2009, and the soundtrack released through Sire Records launched on July 13, 2009. The second album titled 500 Days of Summer: Score from the Motion Picture features original score composed by Mychael Danna and Rob Simonsen. It was released on August 3, 2009. 500 Days of Summer: Music from the Motion Picture Track listing Reception Andrew Leahey of Allmusic rated the album three and a half stars out of five, saying "With music playing such an integral role in the story line, it's refreshing to see that the accompanying soundtrack does its job well, distilling the characters' record collections (not to mention
refreshing to see that the accompanying soundtrack does its job well, distilling the characters' record collections (not to mention the movie's quirky, nostalgic ambiance) into one eclectic track list." A review from Sputnikmusic called it as "a mandatory component to the movie for those who loved it" and "a worthwhile listen even for those who didn't". Jeniffer Cooke of PopMatters said that " The music isn’t just confined to the soundtrack — it colors the story to the point where it almost becomes another character in the script". Charts 500 Days of Summer: Score from the Motion Picture Track listing References External links 2009 soundtrack albums Sire Records soundtracks Romance film soundtracks Drama film soundtracks Various artists albums
choose one of the king's mermaid daughters to take as his wife. Following the advice of a saint, Sadko refuses three times three hundred daughters before accepting the last one, Chernavushka. Repin painted Sadko to the right, overlooking a procession of half-human, half-aquatic women who pass by; the rejected mermaids at the front look disappointed. Chernavushka appears behind everybody else and glances toward the man. The image composition is made with a worm's-eye view and a high horizon. The picture is painted in oil on canvas and has the dimensions . Reception and provenance Upon Repin's return to Russia, Sadko was exhibited by the Imperial Academy of Arts with two of Repin's other Paris paintings, and Paris Café. Sadko puzzled and polarised the politically inclined Russian critics. Conservative and Slavophile publications such as Russkiy Mir preferred it to the cosmopolitan Paris Café, but criticised what was described as an excess of technical prowess at the expense of narrative details from the source material. In the liberal newspaper Golos, Sadko was called a "tragic mistake". The critic said poetic and fantastical
but it reflects my current state of mind, and maybe even the state of all Russian art, such as it is." Work on the painting went slowly and Repin began to lose interest in the subject when Alexey Bogolyubov convinced Tsesarevich Alexander Alexandrovich, the future Tsar Alexander III, to commission it, prompting Repin to finish the work. Subject and composition The subject of Sadko is from a bylina—an oral epic poem—recorded in north-western Russia. The merchant and musician Sadko has been brought to the realm of the Underwater King to give a performance. After the Underwater King has danced to his music—causing a devastating storm in the process—Sadko is asked to choose one of the king's mermaid daughters to take as his wife. Following the advice of a saint, Sadko refuses three times three hundred daughters before accepting the last one, Chernavushka. Repin painted Sadko to the right, overlooking a procession of half-human, half-aquatic women who pass by; the rejected mermaids at the front look disappointed. Chernavushka appears behind everybody else and glances toward the man. The image composition is made with a worm's-eye view and a high horizon. The picture is painted in oil on canvas and has the dimensions . Reception and provenance Upon Repin's return to Russia, Sadko was exhibited by the Imperial Academy of Arts with two of Repin's other Paris paintings, and Paris Café. Sadko puzzled and polarised the politically inclined Russian critics. Conservative and Slavophile publications
Minister by giving an explosive interview to Saleem Safi. In Febeuray 2022, he was arrested by FIA in a raid by the complaint of fedral minister Murad Saeed. Baig was arrested for quoting Reham Khan's book while talking about
was arrested by FIA in a raid by the complaint of fedral minister Murad Saeed. Baig was arrested for quoting Reham Khan's book while talking about Murad Saeed's performance in Gharida Farooqi show. References Living people Pakistani male journalists People from Islamabad
professionally as Wongo, is an Australian electronic dance music producer and DJ. He is most known for his song "Groove Society" with Canadian DJ A-Trak Matt is the founder
Discography Singles EPs Wiggle Out Ep (2009) Beat The Game Ep (2015) Periodicals (2016) Redline Ep (2018) References Living people Year of
Act of 1830 caused many Choctaw to move to what is now Oklahoma, and the Choctaw ceased funding the school in 1842 when various reservation schools were founded including Spencer Academy. As of 2017 the stone Choctaw Academy building was dilapidatated, and the roof was caving in, but private fundraising was started to save the 1825 building, and a grant was given by Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma's Chahta Foundation. Notable alumni and faculty Julia Chinn,
building was constructed. Johnson's own mixed-race children and other family members attended the school as well as children from various tribes. Closure and preservation of site The Indian Removal Act of 1830 caused many Choctaw to move to what is now Oklahoma, and the Choctaw ceased funding the school in 1842 when various reservation schools were founded including Spencer Academy. As of 2017 the stone Choctaw Academy building was dilapidatated, and the roof was caving in, but private fundraising was started to save the 1825 building, and a grant was given by Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma's Chahta Foundation. Notable alumni and faculty Julia Chinn, wife/slave of Vice President Johnson, manager of the Choctaw Academy, John Tecumseh Jones, interpreter, Baptist minister, businessman, friend
Belgian water polo player Nicolas Dumont (cyclist) (born 1973), French road cyclist
polo) (born 1940), Belgian water polo player Nicolas Dumont (cyclist)
session were to assist Indians in their independence movement, support Vietnam struggling for freedom against French colonization, ask for the immediate release of imprisoned members of the Nepal Praja Parishad, and initiate a non-violence movement in Nepal for the establishment of an accountable ruling system. The organization's modus operandi was chosen, and attached itself to the civil conscience process in Nepal by establishing Tanka Prasad Acharya as its chairman. Nepali Congress formation, 1946–1950 The Nepali Congress Party was formed by the merger of Nepali National Congress and Nepal Democratic Congress. The Nepali National Congress was founded by Matrika Prasad Koirala in Calcutta, India on 25 January 1946. The Nepal Democratic Congress was founded by Subarna Shumsher Rana in Calcutta on 4 August 1948. The two parties merged on 10 April 1950 to form the Nepali Congress and Koirala became its first president. The party called for an armed revolution against the Rana regime. During the Bairgania Conference in Bairgania, Bihar, on 27 September 1950 the Nepali Congress announced an armed revolution against the Rana regime. The president
Prasad Bhattarai, and Narendra Regmi, while its coordinator was Bishweshwar Prasad Koirala. Around the same time, Nepalese located in Calcutta formed another organization by the name All Indian Nepali Gorkha Congress () whose chairman was Dharma Narayan Pradhan. Koirala traveled extensively to places such as Benaras, Calcutta, Darjeeling, Assam, Bhaksu, and Dehradhun, and established contact with the Nepalese there. He met with Ganesh Man Singh during the same period. Nepalese representatives from different areas of Nepal and India organized one session in Calcutta. Koirala, Dilli Raman Regmi, Dharma Narayan Pradhan, and Dhan Man Singh Pariyar were present. In the same session, dropping Akhil Bharatiya from its name, the organization was named Nepali National Congress. Tanka Prasad Acharya, who was facing a life-sentence in Kathmandu, was made its chairman. The flag was square-shaped with white, blue, and red colors in succession, with the moon and the sun in its center. The major four proposals passed by the session were to assist Indians in their independence movement, support Vietnam struggling for freedom against French colonization, ask for the immediate release of imprisoned members of the Nepal Praja Parishad, and initiate a non-violence movement in Nepal for the establishment of an accountable ruling system. The organization's modus operandi was chosen, and attached itself to the civil conscience process in Nepal by establishing Tanka Prasad Acharya as its chairman. Nepali Congress formation, 1946–1950 The Nepali Congress Party was formed by the merger of Nepali National Congress and Nepal Democratic Congress. The Nepali National Congress was founded by Matrika Prasad Koirala in Calcutta, India on 25 January 1946. The Nepal Democratic Congress was founded by Subarna Shumsher Rana in Calcutta on 4 August 1948. The two parties merged on 10 April 1950 to form the Nepali Congress and Koirala became its first president. The party called for an armed revolution against the Rana regime. During the Bairgania Conference in Bairgania, Bihar, on 27 September 1950 the Nepali Congress announced an armed revolution against the Rana regime. The president of the party also announced the liquidation of
sanguine interludes. Murphy shines radiantly thanks to his relentless attack, awash with tumbling, polyrhythmic-type fills and stinging press rolls. The group engages a modus operandi that is founded upon maddening flurries and verbose exchanges. And despite the rather serious implications, this is a fun-filled affair. Recommended." The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz awarded the album 3½ stars, and commented: "The Enarre trio have worked together before and... they were clearly bursting to play: one piece, "SFERICS", passes the 30-minute mark with no apparent loss of energy or — more surprisingly
Penguin Guide to Jazz awarded the album 3½ stars, and commented: "The Enarre trio have worked together before and... they were clearly bursting to play: one piece, "SFERICS", passes the 30-minute mark with no apparent loss of energy or — more surprisingly — invention. Murphy can stoke up some terrific bouts of noise at the kit, although for much of the way he's happy to play more sparsely... Futterman is as fulsome as usual, but Killion is perhaps the most interesting contributor, favouring the bow over the fingers and finding a powerful middle ground between cello and bass terrain." Track listing All compositions by Paul Murphy. "D1T1" – 4:43 "Desert Fire" – 9:40 "Intersections" – 15:05 "SFERICS" – 30:56 "ZYGOUN" – 11:10 Personnel Kash Killion – cello Joel Futterman – piano Paul Murphy – drums References 2002 albums Paul Murphy
height are referred to as seamounts. They are believed to cover around 16.3% of the world's seafloor.
underwater features exceeding that height are referred to as seamounts. They are believed to cover around 16.3%
the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks (MFWP). The Wildlife Management area, located in the Yellowstone River, is used primarily in tandem with the nearby Amelia Island Fishing Access. Flora and fauna There is great variety in the species that can be found on the Island. Birds are particularly in abundance, with four
Amelia Island, is a tract of protected land located in Treasure County, Montana, owned and managed by the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks (MFWP). The Wildlife Management area, located in the Yellowstone River, is used primarily in tandem with the nearby Amelia Island Fishing Access. Flora and fauna There is great variety
She represented Hong Kong at the 2017 Women's Rugby World Cup in Ireland. It was Hong Kong's first World Cup appearance. Olson-Thorne created history when she scored Hong Kong's first World Cup try in their match against Wales. Biography Olson-Thorne began playing rugby at the age of 15 while attending Sha Tin College. She made her international debut for the Hong Kong women's national rugby union team in 2010. She then made her sevens debut at the 2011 Hong Kong Women's Sevens.
player. She represented Hong Kong at the 2017 Women's Rugby World Cup in Ireland. It was Hong Kong's first World Cup appearance. Olson-Thorne created history when she scored Hong Kong's first World Cup try in their match against Wales. Biography Olson-Thorne began playing rugby at the age of 15 while attending Sha Tin College. She made her international debut for the Hong Kong women's national rugby union team in 2010. She then made her sevens debut at the 2011 Hong Kong Women's Sevens. In 2015 she graduated from the University of Hong Kong with a Bachelor of Science in Exercise and Health. She captained the sevens team for the
in 1979. She is the author of "Shoot Me While I'm Happy: Memories of The Tap Goddess of the Lower East Side (2008)," an autobiographical work describing her experiences within the world of tap. Since 1977, Jane has received numerous awards for her tap dancing performances and productions, expanding the legend and lore of tap dancing into the community. Early life Jane was born in Washington, DC Career Career as a Journalist Jane began her career as a journalist, writing for The Boston Globe, The Patriot Ledger, The Village Voice, Dance Magazine
The New York Times, among other periodicals. Career as a Dancer and Event Promoter During her fifty-year history as a tap dancer and promoter, Jane interviewed, worked with and learned from many of the greats including: Honi Coles, Cookie Cook, Bubba Gaines, Bert 'Gip' Gibson, Chuck Green, Gregory Hines, Meredith Monk and others. The year 1978 was
Sutrisno Bin Darimin (born 1975) is an Indonesian powerlifter. He won three gold medals World Championships. In 2005 he broke the world
broke the world record. The record that Sutrisno made was a total lift of
Chief Executive of the Afram Plains North District of the Volta Region
is a Ghanaian politician. He is the District Chief Executive of the Afram Plains North District of the Volta
out of 9 in the main tournament of the Isle of Man Open chess festival. In January 2019, he shared 1st-4th place at the IIFL Wealth Mumbai Open international chess tournament with 7 points out of 9 and finished third in the tie-break. Then in July 2019, he took 2nd place in the Bienne chess festival open tournament. In 2018, Abhimanyu Puranik was runner-up
(; born 11 February 2000, Mumbai) is an Indian chess player who holds the title of chess grandmaster (GM, 2017). Biography In 2016 and 2018, Abhimanyu Puranik scored 5.5 points out of 9 in the main tournament of the Isle of Man Open chess festival. In January 2019, he shared 1st-4th place at the IIFL Wealth Mumbai Open international chess tournament with 7 points out of 9 and finished third in the tie-break. Then in July 2019, he took 2nd place in the Bienne chess festival open tournament. In 2018, Abhimanyu Puranik was runner-up at the World Junior Chess Championship.
recoveries. As a sophomore, he had 17 tackles with three tackles for loss and one sack. Wright was named second team All-Conference USA after finishing his junior season with 46 tackles, 7.5 tackles for loss, seven sacks, and two forced fumbles. Following the end of the season, Wright declared that he would forgo his senior season and enter the 2022 NFL draft. References External links UAB Blazers bio Living
School. He was named second team All-State as a senior after recording 63 tackles, 17 tackles for loss, and 6 sacks. Wright committed to play college football at UAB over offers from Wake Forest, Duke, Tulane, Virginia, and Louisville. College career Wright was named to the Conference USA All-Freshman team after recording 28 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss, and 4.5 sacks with
– 4 October 2009) was a highly decorated German military aviator, officer and General, whose military career spanned nearly forty years. Rall was the third most successful fighter pilot in aviation history, behind Gerhard Barkhorn, who is second, and Erich Hartmann, who is first. List of aerial victories claimed Matthews and Foreman, authors of Luftwaffe Aces — Biographies and Victory Claims, researched the German Federal Archives and found records for 274 aerial victory claims, plus one further unconfirmed claim. This number includes one victory over a French P-36, one
German military aviator, officer and General, whose military career spanned nearly forty years. Rall was the third most successful fighter pilot in aviation history, behind Gerhard Barkhorn, who is second, and Erich Hartmann, who is first. List of aerial victories claimed Matthews and Foreman, authors of Luftwaffe Aces — Biographies and Victory Claims, researched the German Federal Archives and found records for 274 aerial victory claims, plus one further unconfirmed claim. This
youth setup at the age of 15. After finishing his formation, he went on a series of loans to Itaúna, Guarani-MG, Monte Azul, Tupi and Volta Redonda. Douglas Borges signed a permanent deal with Tupi on 27 November 2013, but moved to Olímpia the following 8 June. He then returned to Volta Redonda, where he became a starter. On 18 August 2015, Douglas Borges moved to Ceará until the end of the year. He signed for Remo in the following January, and returned to his parent club in October 2016. On 3 December 2020, Douglas Borges moved to CRB on loan for the remainder of the 2020 Série B. He terminated
loans to Itaúna, Guarani-MG, Monte Azul, Tupi and Volta Redonda. Douglas Borges signed a permanent deal with Tupi on 27 November 2013, but moved to Olímpia the following 8 June. He then returned to Volta Redonda, where he became a starter. On 18 August 2015, Douglas Borges moved to Ceará until the end of the year. He signed for Remo in the following January, and returned to his parent club in October 2016. On 3 December 2020, Douglas Borges moved to CRB on loan for the remainder of the 2020 Série B. He terminated his contract with Voltaço on 10 February 2021, and was announced at Novorizontino on the same day. Fourteen days later, however, he left the latter club after receiving an "irrefutable offer", and signed for Botafogo on 4 March. Career statistics Honours Tupi
business was founded by chief executive officer Molly Moon Neitzel. History A location opened in the Madrona neighborhood in May 2011. A fifth location opened in downtown Seattle in June. The Queen Anne location opened in September 2011. On opening day, the shop offered free ice cream scoops to children. Molly Moon's built small parks outside shops in Wallingford and Madrona
Moon's Homemade Ice Cream is an ice cream parlor with multiple locations in the Seattle metropolitan area, in the U.S. state of Washington. The business was founded by chief executive officer Molly Moon Neitzel. History A location opened in the Madrona neighborhood in May 2011. A fifth location opened in downtown Seattle in June. The Queen Anne location opened in September 2011. On opening day, the shop offered free ice cream scoops to children. Molly Moon's built small parks outside shops in Wallingford and Madrona in 2014, as part of Seattle's pilot
was disbanded at the arrival of the US Army in 1945. Railways and routes disruptions, together with the Allied occupation the industrialized North, had divided Italy in two parts. Sport consequently restarted under a special transitional season. Clubs from Northern Italy restored a free football league after 19 years of fascist rule. It organized the
disruptions, together with the Allied occupation the industrialized North, had divided Italy in two parts. Sport consequently restarted under a special transitional season. Clubs from Northern Italy restored a free football league after 19 years of fascist rule. It organized the local section of the Serie A, whose best teams would join a final national phase, while the Serie B clubs were united with the best Serie C teams. The league organized also a local post season cup which was won by Bologna FC. The situation changed a year after the end of World War
Nazis seized power, Hochmuth was wanted by the police and had to go underground. Nevertheless, he was a member of the illegal leadership of the KPD until August 1934. He continued to write for the now illegal Hamburger Volkszeitung and worked with Albert Bennies in the district leadership of the Revolutionäre Gewerkschafts Opposition (RGO), where he published the RGO newspaper Der Klassengewerkschafter. He began a love affair with one of his lodgers, the tailor's assistant Renate Brake, which resulted in their son Peter in March 1934. After Bennies and other comrades were arrested, Hochmuth fled to Denmark with Brake's help. There he came into conflict with the emigration leadership of the KPD and had to move his exile to Amsterdam in 1935 by decision of the party. Hochmuth stowed away on a cargo ship from Denmark to Antwerp. Brake and his son Peter followed him to the Netherlands. In 1938, Hochmuth was stripped of his German citizenship and deported from the Netherlands to Belgium as an "undesirable person" after he had already been interned from March to June of that year. In Belgium, too, he lived illegally with communist miners' families without valid identification papers. In March, their daughter Birgid was born in Charleroi. After Germany's invasion of Belgium, Hochmuth was interned. In May 1940 he was transported by freight wagon to the Gurs internment camp in southern France and interned there. After the German troops had also occupied southern France, Hochmuth was arrested by the Gestapo (via Wehrmacht) and imprisoned in the Fuhlsbüttel police prison in March 1943. In Germany he was in custody by the Gestapo until January 1944, then in judicial custody, and finally on July 21 the People's Court in Potsdam sentenced him to five years in prison for "preparing to commit high treason". After his first marriage ended in divorce in 1939, Hochmuth married Renate Brake in January 1944. Franz Jacob married his first wife Katharina, who also lived with their daughter Ursel. In 1945 he was liberated by the Red Army along with other prisoners from the Brandenburg Prison. Career in East Germany In May 1945, Hochmuth became head of the personnel department of the Post and Telecommunications Department of the Greater Berlin Municipality. Shortly thereafter he fetched his wife and children from Reichenbach, where they had found shelter with his brother Rudolf Hochmuth. In 1947 he became Head of Human Resources in the Post and Telecommunications Department of the German Economic Commission (DWK). He was also one of the founding members of the postal and telecommunications industrial union and was a member of its central board. After the president of the Oberpostdirektion Schwerin had fled to the western zones, Hochmuth was removed from the personnel manager function "due to a lack of vigilance" and became an procurator at the Deutsche Handelsgesellschaft in March 1949, and in 1950 finally group leader in the GDR government chancellery, main office administration. From 1949 he lived in
found shelter with his brother Rudolf Hochmuth. In 1947 he became Head of Human Resources in the Post and Telecommunications Department of the German Economic Commission (DWK). He was also one of the founding members of the postal and telecommunications industrial union and was a member of its central board. After the president of the Oberpostdirektion Schwerin had fled to the western zones, Hochmuth was removed from the personnel manager function "due to a lack of vigilance" and became an procurator at the Deutsche Handelsgesellschaft in March 1949, and in 1950 finally group leader in the GDR government chancellery, main office administration. From 1949 he lived in Woltersdorf, Brandenburg, where he was chairman of the Main Committee of the National Front. At this time he began distance learning at the Deutsche Akademie für Staats- und Rechtswissenschaft „Walter Ulbricht“ (German Academy for Political Science and Law "Walter Ulbricht"). He completed it with the state examination. From April 1956 Hochmuth was deputy head and from 1957 head of the East German trade mission (Commercial attaché) in Jakarta, Indonesia. From 1959 to 1962 he was a Legationsrat (legation counselor) in Iraq, from June 1962 until his return due to illness in 1963 as Consul General in Baghdad. Among other things, he was involved in setting up the GDR embassy in Iraq. He was thus the first representative of the GDR in a non-socialist country. In 1964, Hochmuth moved to the Ministry of the Interior and was initially deputy head of the Deutsches Zentralarchiv (DZA) (the East German Central Archives) in Potsdam. After a lengthy illness, in 1965 he succeeded Karl Schirdewan as head of the State Archives Administration in Potsdam, where he also lived in the meantime. Hochmuth had been a pensioner since 1968. In the last years of his life he was chairman of the Potsdam district committee of the anti-fascist resistance fighters in the GDR. In addition to other awards, Hochmuth received the Vaterländischer Verdienstorden in silver in 1960 and in gold in 1974, and in 1979 the clasp of honor for the Patriotic Order of Merit. Hochmuth's grave can be found in the "Pergolenweg" grave complex of the Gedenkstätte der Sozialisten (Socialist Memorial) at the Zentralfriedhof Friedrichsfelde (Friedrichsfelde Central Cemetery), where he is buried alongsite his wife. Publications Das Personalwesen der Deutschen Post in der sowjetischen Besatzungszone, Deutscher Zentralverlag, Berlin 1948. Brief von Walter Hochmuth aus der Internierungshaft in Merxplas/Belgien an seine Tochter Ursel vom 31. März 1940, In: Was bleibt ist Hoffnung. Eine Briefdokumentation aus Brandenburger Konzentrationslagern, Zuchthäusern und Gefängnissen der NS-Zeit 1933-1945, Brandenburgische Landeszentrale für Politische Bildung, Potsdam 1994, p. 104f. Further reading Andreas Herbst: Hochmuth, Walter. In: Wer war wer in der DDR? Volume 1. 5th edition, Ch. Links, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-86153-561-4. Hochmuth, Walter. In: Hermann Weber, Andreas Herbst: Deutsche Kommunisten. Biographisches Handbuch 1918 bis 1945. 2nd edition. Karl Dietz, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-320-02130-6. Ursel Hochmuth, Peter Hochmuth: Vor 75 Jahren – Dissonanzen im Kopenhagener Exil. Ein Gedächtnisprotokoll Walter Hochmuths vom Oktober 1934. In: Jahrbuch für Forschungen zur Geschichte der Arbeiterbewegung. Band 8, Heft 3, 2009, S. 123–144. External links Nachlass im Archiv der Parteien und Massenorganisationen der DDR im Bundesarchiv Bundesarchiv NY 4630 (Nachlass) References 1904 births 1979 deaths Commercial attachés Communist Party of Germany politicians Communists in the German Resistance Consuls East German diplomats Free German Trade Union Federation members German archivists
L'Aurore (; ) is a French newspaper published in the period 1897–1916. There are other publications with the same name: L'Aurore, a French publication published first in
from 1944 to 1985 in France L'Aurore boréale, a Canadian bi-weekly newspaper based in Whitehorse, Yukon See also L'Aurore, an oil painting by William-Adolphe Bouguereau French words and phrases
has 13 or 14 spines and 7 to 9 spines in its dorsal fin while there are 3 spines and 5 soft rays in the anal fin. There are between 17 and 20 fin rays in the pectoral fin. typically 18, with some rays being branched in individuals with a standard length greater than . There is a nasal spine, the lateral lacrimal spine is normally present, there are 2 suborbital spines with the first spine underneath the eye and the second spine at the rear of the suborbital ridge. There are no interorbital and coronal spines. The body, head and fins are a mottled reddish colour and there is a large dark blotch on the operculum but there is no dark blotch on suboperculum or on the spiny part of the dorsal fin. This species reaches a maximum total length of . Distribution and habitat Scorpaenodes guamensis has a wide Indo-Pacific distribution from the Red Sea and the coasts of eastern Africa eastwards through the Indian and PAcific Oceans as far east as Tonga and the Society
in the anal fin. There are between 17 and 20 fin rays in the pectoral fin. typically 18, with some rays being branched in individuals with a standard length greater than . There is a nasal spine, the lateral lacrimal spine is normally present, there are 2 suborbital spines with the first spine underneath the eye and the second spine at the rear of the suborbital ridge. There are no interorbital and coronal spines. The body, head and fins are a mottled reddish colour and there is a large dark blotch on the operculum but there is no dark blotch
is a species of plants
of plants in the
medal at the 2019 Junior World Championships in the individual event. She competed in multiple biathlon events at the 2022 Winter Olympics. She was part of the Chinese team in the mixed relay, placing 15th out of 20 teams. She placed 47th in the individual event, 62nd in the sprint, and 12th with the Chinese team in the women's relay. References 1998 births Living people Biathletes
relay, placing 15th out of 20 teams. She placed 47th in the individual event, 62nd in the sprint, and 12th with the Chinese team in the women's relay. References 1998 births Living people Biathletes at the 2022 Winter Olympics Chinese female biathletes Olympic biathletes of China Sportspeople from Jilin
Heavyweight World Grand Prix Tournament as Bellator Light Heavyweight champion Vadim Nemkov will take on Corey Anderson for the 205-pound title as well as the $1 million prize. To get to the final, Nemkov won a unanimous decision against Phil Davis and secured a fourth-round submission of Julius Anglickas. Anderson advanced to the final by defeating both Dovletdzhan Yagshimuradov and Ryan Bader by TKO. A heavyweight bout between Tim Johnson and Tyrell Fortune was scheduled for the event. However, in March 1, 2022, it was announced by Bellator
will take on Corey Anderson for the 205-pound title as well as the $1 million prize. To get to the final, Nemkov won a unanimous decision against Phil Davis and secured a fourth-round submission of Julius Anglickas. Anderson advanced to the final by defeating both Dovletdzhan Yagshimuradov and Ryan Bader by TKO. A heavyweight bout between Tim Johnson and Tyrell Fortune was scheduled for the event. However, in March 1, 2022, it was announced by Bellator that Johnson was expected to face Linton Vassell and Fortune was set to meet Steve Mowry in the event. Fight card See also 2022 in Bellator MMA List of
The island government promised to spend US$150,000 annually on the promotion of the hotel, and Richard Hart would remain president of the hotel. Van der Valk wanted to expand the hotel with an artificial beach, however the negotiations with the island government were difficult, and environmental groups demonstrated against further destruction of the coral reef. Van der Valk complained that they were one of the few hotels on the island without a private beach. Barney Ivanovic In 2006, the Plaza hotel was sold to Barney Ivanovic, a Yugoslavian-born American businessman. In 2008, a dispute arose between Ivanovic and his business partner Chester Peterson about the ownership of the hotel, and Ivanovic was forcibly removed from the hotel. A lengthy legal battle followed. In 2011, Ivanovic sued Adèle van der Pluijm-Vrede, the notary at the time and acting Governor of the Netherlands Antilles, in a Florida court. Van der Pluijm-Vrede refused to appear in court citing costs and no time. The Florida judge dismissed the charges as not related to Florida. Girobank was the mortgage holder of the hotel. In 2017, Plaza Hotel Management owed Girobank NAf 26 million (~US$14 million). Girobank went to court, and Plaza Hotel Management was declared bankrupt. Aftermath In June 2017, Plaza hotel was sold by auction to John W. Burcham of Waterfront Hotel Group for US$9 million who
Pacific Canadian Pacific demanded loans and large investments of the island government. On 2 September 1976, the hotel was purchased, and renamed Plaza Hotel Curaçao. The headquarters of Canadian Pacific for Latin America and the Caribbean were moved to Curaçao, and Air Canada announced that it would commence charter flights to Curaçao. In 1981, large losses were reported, and the hotel only managed to keep afloat on the casino and subsidies from the island government. In 1983, Canadian Pacific started negotiations with the Hart Hotel Group. Hart Group In June 1984, the hotel was sold to the Hart Group, a joint venture of Richard Hart and Ramada Hotels. The hotel was renovated, and a discotheque was added. The renovated hotel reopened in December 1986, and Richard Hart expressed confidence that it would be profitable. In January 1989, the island government who already had a 32% share in the hotel in 1981, announced its intention to sell its share. Van der Valk In March 1989, the hotel was sold to Van der Valk Hotels for US$3 million. The island government promised to spend US$150,000 annually on the promotion of the hotel, and Richard Hart would remain president of the hotel. Van der Valk wanted to expand the hotel with an artificial beach, however the negotiations with the island government were difficult, and environmental groups demonstrated against further destruction of the coral reef. Van der Valk complained that they were one of the few hotels on the island without a private beach. Barney Ivanovic In 2006, the Plaza hotel was sold to Barney Ivanovic, a Yugoslavian-born American businessman. In 2008, a dispute arose between Ivanovic
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a species of plants in the
viminea is a species of annual herb in the family
annual herb in the family Brassicaceae. They have a self-supporting growth
the family Asparagaceae. Source References
plants in the family
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the Faroese national team. Achievements Swedish Handball League Winner: 2021 Swedish Handball Cup Winner: 2022 European Open Handball Championship Winner:
Cup Winner: 2022 European Open Handball Championship Winner: 2019 References 2002 births Living people Faroese male handball players IK Sävehof players Expatriate
Savannah (1854) Personal life In December 1839, Scudder married Sarah Amanda Crawford Wilson at Savannah's First Baptist Church, which his father helped construct six years earlier. They had two children: Mary Elizabeth and Henry Wyler. Amos Scudder was living in Savannah when daughter Catherine was baptized at the First Baptist Church on October 7, 1853. Death Scudder died on May 23, 1869, in Westfield, from acute pneumonia. He was 54. Ephraim died in Savannah three years later while visiting Thomas Davis, a friend of his. He had been ill for a period of time, and was visiting Bryan County in the hopes of recuperating. He is buried in Savannah's Laurel Grove North Cemetery. His headstone reads "a beloved brother". His and John's sister, Caroline (1823–1884), is also buried in Laurel Grove North, alongside her husband, Milton Julius Buckner (1809–1875). References 1815 births 1869 deaths American builders People from Westfield, New Jersey People
Baptist Church on October 7, 1853. Death Scudder died on May 23, 1869, in Westfield, from acute pneumonia. He was 54. Ephraim died in Savannah three years later while visiting Thomas Davis, a friend of his. He had been ill for a period of time, and was visiting Bryan County in the hopes of recuperating. He is buried in Savannah's Laurel Grove North Cemetery. His headstone reads "a beloved brother". His and John's sister, Caroline (1823–1884), is also buried in Laurel Grove North, alongside her husband, Milton Julius Buckner (1809–1875). References 1815 births 1869 deaths American builders People from Westfield, New Jersey People from Savannah, Georgia American slave owners Deaths from pneumonia in New Jersey
created and written by David Simon and George Pelecanos, and directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green. The six-episode series is set to premiere on HBO on April 25, 2022. Cast Main Jon Bernthal as Sgt. Wayne Jenkins, the central figure in the Baltimore Police Department's (BPD) Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF) Wunmi Mosaku as Nicole Steele, an attorney assigned to the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice Jamie Hector as Sean M. Suiter, a BPD homicide detective caught up in the GTTF case McKinley Belcher III as Momodu "G Money" Gondo, a BPD veteran and member of the GTTF Darrell Britt-Gibson as Jemell Rayam, a BPD officer involved in the GTTF Josh Charles as Daniel Hersl, a BPD officer involved in the GTTF Dagmara Domińczyk as Erika Jensen, an FBI agent who investigated the GTTF Rob Brown as Maurice Ward, a plainclothes officer involved in the GTTF Don Harvey as John Sieracki, a BPD officer assigned to the public corruption task force who aided the FBI David Corenswet as David McDougall, a veteran investigator with the Harford County Narcotics Task Force Larry Mitchell as Scott Kilpatrick, a veteran investigator with the Harford County Narcotics Task Force Ian Duff as Ahmed Jackson, a former Department of Justice trial
president of the Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police Thaddeus Street as James Otis, a Baltimore resident and HVAC repairman Jermaine Crawford as Jaquan Dixon, a young BPD patrolman Nathan E. Corbett as Tariq Touré, a West Baltimore author and community activist Chris Clanton as Brian Hairston, a BPD officer Production In March 2021, HBO ordered a six-episode series based on the book We Own This City: A True Story of Crime, Cops and Corruption by Baltimore Sun investigative journalist Justin Fenton, to be written by David Simon and George Pelecanos. Filming In May 2021, it was confirmed that Reinaldo Marcus Green would direct the series. Production was reported to begin in July 2021 with filming occurring in Baltimore. Production was temporarily halted for a week in September 2021 due to a "COVID-19 event". Casting In May 2021, Jon Bernthal, Josh Charles, Jamie Hector were announced to have been cast in leading roles. Darrell Britt-Gibson, Rob Brown, McKinley Belcher III, Larry Mitchell and Wunmi Mosaku were cast in June. In August,
the album's contents "vividly reveal that [Cornwell] remains a creative force to be reckoned with." He wrote: "Mired in glossy 80s production values, the selections from Wolf have, admittedly, dated, but the hooky, bittersweet "Under Her Spell," the mellow, poetic "Cadiz" and the No More Heroes-esque punch of Hooverdam highlight "Please Don't Put Me on a Slow Boat to Trowbridge" all serve notice that Cornwell's post-Stranglers oeuvre ought to be regarded with considerably more respect." Goldmine magazine's Patrick Prince felt that the only time the compilation "slips and falls" is when it "temporarily embarks into the slick area of MTV-ish '80s" in songs like "Break of Dawn" and "First Bus to Babylon." Otherwise, he was positive, writing, ""Under Her Spell" is a wonderful Syd Barrett-type sing-a-long to a '60s Who beat; "Please Don't Put Me on a Slow Boat to Trowbridge" is close to the pop aggression that made the Jam unique in their day; and "Lay Back on Me Pal" has a nice case of its own Britpop ... but it's all Hugh Cornwell." Track listing Personnel See individual albums for full personnel credits. Laurie Latham
sing-a-long to a '60s Who beat; "Please Don't Put Me on a Slow Boat to Trowbridge" is close to the pop aggression that made the Jam unique in their day; and "Lay Back on Me Pal" has a nice case of its own Britpop ... but it's all Hugh Cornwell." Track listing Personnel See individual albums for full personnel credits. Laurie Latham – producer (1, 8, 9, 11) Liam Watson – producer (2, 7) Gary Langan – producer (3, 6) Hugh Cornwell – producer (4, 12), artwork concept Ian Ritchie – producer (4, 12) Danny Kadar – producer (5, 10) Tony Visconti – producer (5, 10) Miles Showell – mastering (at Abbey Road Studios) Sara-Jane Morley – design Charles Kennedy – liner notes References Hugh Cornwell albums 2015 compilation albums Albums produced by Laurie Latham Albums
Gymnasium. They finished the season 5–14 and 2–6 in the Buckeye Athletic Association. Schedule |- !colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| Regular Season Source:
the head coach for Ohio. The Bobcats played their home games at the Men's Gymnasium. They finished the season 5–14
off-season and the 2020–21 P. League+ season. Retirement Front office movements Head coaching changes Off-season Off-season General manager changes Off-season
office movements Head coaching changes Off-season Off-season General manager changes Off-season
the NAIA to determine the national champion of women's college basketball among its members in the United States and Canada. Fort Hays State defeated defending champions Southwestern Oklahoma State in the championship game, 57–53, to claim the Tigers' first NAIA national title. The tournament was played at the Oman Arena in Jackson, Tennessee. Qualification The tournament field remained expanded for the second time
Southwestern Oklahoma State in the championship game, 57–53, to claim the Tigers' first NAIA national title. The tournament was played at the Oman Arena in Jackson, Tennessee. Qualification The tournament field remained expanded for the second time in its history, increasing from sixteen to thirty-two teams. The top sixteen teams received seeds. The tournament continue to utilize a simple single-elimination
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family Boraginaceae. Source
he won gold medal at the Asian Championships and World Junior Championships. References 1966
Ventje Male (born 1966) is an Indonesian powerlifter. He won gold medal at the 1989 World Games. In the 1988, he won
North Omaha, Nebraska Great Plains Art Museum, at Center for Great Plains Studies, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Great Plains Transportation Museum, Wichita, Kansas Great Plains Dinosaur Museum and Field Station, Malta, Montana Great Plains Zoo and Delbridge Museum of Natural History, Sioux Falls, South Dakota See also Plains Art Museum, Fargo, North Dakota Southern Plains
Kansas, in the National Register-listed Municipal Auditorium and City Hall Great Plains Black History Museum, North Omaha, Nebraska Great Plains Art Museum, at Center for Great Plains Studies, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Great Plains Transportation Museum, Wichita, Kansas Great Plains Dinosaur Museum and Field
Paul Murphy. It was recorded in June 1982 in New York City, and was originally released privately with limited distribution before being reissued by Cadence Jazz Records in 2003. On the album, Murphy is joined by saxophonist Jimmy Lyons, trumpeter Dewey Johnson, bassoonist Karen Borca, and pianist Mary Anne Driscoll. Reception In a review for AllMusic, Steve Loewy wrote: "One look at the personnel and the importance of this recording is self-evident... the original album would be called "legendary" if it were better known... The album features stellar playing by the
it is all spontaneous, Murphy carefully steers it away from anything approaching chaos, with the focus on individual rather than group improvisation... Murphy, as leader, keeps it all paced, but he also often takes the lead with impressive spurts and occasionally longer solos. While not everyone plays on each track, each member of the quintet has time to burn, with Murphy and Lyons featured the most prominently." The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz commented: "Borca is one of the strongest voices here, but it's Lyons who gets the most space in what is actually a series of duos and trios rather than any full performances by the quintet... the dialogue between Murphy and Lyons yield some powerful episodes." Track listing "Sailing Out" – 5:32 "Settin In" – 1:13 "The
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a species of perennial grass in the family Poaceae (True grasses). They have
grasses). They have a self-supporting growth form and simple, broad leaves. Individuals
is a professor of history at the Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. His core area of study include the history of the Marathas and European powers, Socio-economic and cultural History of the Deccan, Trade and Commerce in the 17th and 18th century Konkan coast, Bhakti movement from 10th to 17th century, Maritime History of Western India, and Urbanization in the Medieval Maratha country. Early life Kadam was born on 28 May 1976 as the son of Ashok Narayan Kadam and Gayatri Kadam. After the completion of his B.A. and M.A., Kadam enrolled for Ph.D. at Shivaji University, Kolhapur. His Ph.D. thesis entitled French Maratha Relations,1668–1818 was awarded the Late Smt. Sitabai Kulkarni Research Prize of 2006–07 academic year. Career Kadam started his career as a lecturer at his alma mater and became an assistant professor in 1999. He was promoted as a senior assistant professor in 2007 and a full-fledged professor in 2013. Currently, he is teaching at CHS-JNU. He is an expert in the history of Medieval India from 8th to 18th century, and specializes in 16th to 18th century western India, primarily focusing on Marathas and their interactions with the European powers of the era. Kadam was the Visitors Nominee (President of India) on the Executive Council of Aligarh Muslim University in 2017, Executive Council Member of Academic Council and Court of JNU and Dean of Students in JNU in that same year, Chairperson of CHS, Member of Indian Historical Records Committee under the National Archives of India, Governing Council member of Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR), V-C's Nominee (JNU) on the Academic Council of National Defense Academy (NDA) at Pune, Member of Board of University Departments and Interdisciplinary Studies at Solapur University in 2018, Deputy Coordinator of National Resource Centres (NRCs) for Annual Refresher Programme in Teaching (ARPIT) of Higher Education Faculty through SWAYAM, Deputy Coordinator of UGC-CAS Programme of CHS, Editor at Member of Committee to review NCERT history syllabus class VIII to XI, Govt.of India, Member of 14th Educational Research and Innovations Committee (ERIC) of the NCERT, and Member of committee for Medieval History (part of ICHR's Special Research Project ‘Comprehensive History of Bharat’) in 2021. He is also the editor of the Indian Historical Review (the Peer Reviewed Journal of ICHR) and Studies In History (Journal of CHS-JNU and Sage Publications). JNU protests In March 2018, Kadam was appointed Dean of Students at Jawaharlal Nehru University
His Ph.D. thesis entitled French Maratha Relations,1668–1818 was awarded the Late Smt. Sitabai Kulkarni Research Prize of 2006–07 academic year. Career Kadam started his career as a lecturer at his alma mater and became an assistant professor in 1999. He was promoted as a senior assistant professor in 2007 and a full-fledged professor in 2013. Currently, he is teaching at CHS-JNU. He is an expert in the history of Medieval India from 8th to 18th century, and specializes in 16th to 18th century western India, primarily focusing on Marathas and their interactions with the European powers of the era. Kadam was the Visitors Nominee (President of India) on the Executive Council of Aligarh Muslim University in 2017, Executive Council Member of Academic Council and Court of JNU and Dean of Students in JNU in that same year, Chairperson of CHS, Member of Indian Historical Records Committee under the National Archives of India, Governing Council member of Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR), V-C's Nominee (JNU) on the Academic Council of National Defense Academy (NDA) at Pune, Member of Board of University Departments and Interdisciplinary Studies at Solapur University in 2018, Deputy Coordinator of National Resource Centres (NRCs) for Annual Refresher Programme in Teaching (ARPIT) of Higher Education Faculty through SWAYAM, Deputy Coordinator of UGC-CAS Programme of CHS, Editor at Member of Committee to review NCERT history syllabus class VIII to XI, Govt.of India, Member of 14th Educational Research and Innovations Committee (ERIC) of the NCERT, and Member of committee for Medieval History (part of ICHR's Special Research Project ‘Comprehensive History of Bharat’) in 2021. He is also the editor of the Indian Historical Review (the Peer Reviewed Journal of ICHR) and Studies In History (Journal of CHS-JNU and Sage Publications). JNU protests In March 2018, Kadam was appointed Dean of Students at Jawaharlal Nehru University after eight chairs of departments were removed for non-attendance and insubordination. Kadam faced allegations of nepotism after getting his wife enrolled in a PhD at the university. Kadam alleged that he and his wife were being targeted by a left faction as they are both members of the Dalit community. In March 2018, Kadam lodged a complaint of "caste discrimination" against most of the faculty of the Centre for Historical Studies, alleging "humiliation, victimisation and casteist remarks." His colleagues said the allegations were "baseless." He also filed a First information report against 17 students alleging they assaulted and manhandled him at his office while protesting new rules he had implemented. The police said the allegations reflected "professional rivalry more than rivalry on caste lines." In his role as Dean, Kadam was
Teachers' Institute was reorganized into the Orsk State Pedagogical Institute, consisting of two faculties: physics and mathematics and philology (for training teachers of the Russian language with the right to teach a foreign language). In 1952, the Department of Physical Education was created. In 1959, the Faculty of Pedagogy and Methods of Primary Education appeared as part of the institute, in 1962 - the Faculty of Foreign Languages, in 1982 - the Faculty of Labor Training and in 1992 - the Faculty of Preschool Pedagogy and Psychology. Since 1956, the Institute began to publish "Scientific Notes of the Orsk State Pedagogical Institute". In 1961, by the Decree of the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR No. 263, the Orsk State Pedagogical Institute was named after the Ukrainian poet, prose writer, thinker, ethnographer and public figure Taras Shevchenko. From 1937 to 1998, OGPI named after T. Shevchenko trained tens of thousands of teachers for primary and secondary general education schools. On May 27, 1998, by Order of the Government of the Russian Federation No. 608-r and Order of the Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation No. 1728, T. Shevchenko OGPI was merged with the Orsk branch of the All-Union Correspondence Polytechnic Institute and the creation on their basis of the Orsk Humanitarian and Technological Institute, as a branch
of the institute, in 1962 - the Faculty of Foreign Languages, in 1982 - the Faculty of Labor Training and in 1992 - the Faculty of Preschool Pedagogy and Psychology. Since 1956, the Institute began to publish "Scientific Notes of the Orsk State Pedagogical Institute". In 1961, by the Decree of the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR No. 263, the Orsk State Pedagogical Institute was named after the Ukrainian poet, prose writer, thinker, ethnographer and public figure Taras Shevchenko. From 1937 to 1998, OGPI named after T. Shevchenko trained tens of thousands of teachers for primary and secondary general education schools. On May 27, 1998, by Order of the Government of the Russian Federation No. 608-r and Order of the Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation No. 1728, T. Shevchenko OGPI was merged with the Orsk branch of the All-Union Correspondence Polytechnic Institute and the creation on their basis of the Orsk Humanitarian and Technological Institute, as a branch included in the Orenburg State University. Management Pavel Ivanovich Solovyov (1937-1941) Danil Moiseevich Skuratovsky (1941-1945) Pavel Alexandrovich Arkhangelsky (1945-1947) Sergei Petrovich Bukin (1947-1949) Fyodor Konstantinovich Alimov (1949-1952) Alexander Fedorovich Parkhomenko (1952-1962) Viktor Nikolaevich Yantsen (1976-1992) Gennady Anatolyevich Melekesov (1992-1998) Notable alumni and faculty Gorstkov, Evgeny Nikolaevich - Honored Master of Sports of the USSR, four-time absolute champion
as a law clerk to judge David Sentelle of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and then to associate justice Clarence Thomas of the United States Supreme Court. Pinson was a lawyer at Jones Day in Atlanta where he served in the issues and appeals practice. He then went on to be the deputy solicitor general and later solicitor general of Georgia, taking office on September 16, 2018, after the elevation of Sarah Hawkins Warren to the Supreme Court. Judicial career Pinson was sworn in as a judge of the Georgia Court of Appeals on August 31, 2021, after being appointed by governor Brian Kemp, becoming one of the youngest members at age 35. In July 2021, Pinson was one of six candidates under consideration for appointment to the Supreme Court following the retirement of justice Harold Melton, the seat was eventually filled
an associate justice of the Georgia Supreme Court. Education Pinson received a Bachelor of Business Administration in Finance summa cum laude from the University of Georgia and his Juris Doctor summa cum laude from the University of Georgia School of Law. While at Georgia Law, he served as Executive Articles Editor for the Georgia Law Review. Legal career Pinson served as a law clerk to judge David Sentelle of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and then to associate justice Clarence Thomas of the United States Supreme Court. Pinson was a lawyer at Jones Day in Atlanta where he served in the issues and appeals practice. He then went on to be the deputy solicitor general and later solicitor general of Georgia, taking office on September 16, 2018, after the elevation of Sarah Hawkins Warren to the Supreme Court. Judicial career Pinson was sworn in as a judge of the Georgia Court of Appeals on August 31,
a species of perennial herb in the family Poaceae
and simple, broad leaves. Individuals can grow to 52 cm tall. Source References Thinopyrum
to 1918, Baird was in command of HMS Ajax and took part in the Battle of Jutland as part of the 2nd
HMS Ajax and took part in the Battle of Jutland as part of the 2nd Battle Squadron. References
of the Chinese team in the mixed relay, placing 15th out of 20 teams. He placed 69th in the individual event, 32nd in the sprint, 22nd in the pursuit, and 16th with the Chinese team in the men's relay. References 1994 births Living people Biathletes at the 2022 Winter Olympics Chinese male biathletes Olympic biathletes of China Doping cases in biathlon Chinese sportspeople in doping cases
part of the Chinese team in the mixed relay, placing 15th out of 20 teams. He placed 69th in the individual event, 32nd in the sprint, 22nd in the pursuit, and 16th with the Chinese team in the men's relay. References 1994 births Living people Biathletes at the 2022 Winter Olympics
stations External links Ninghai power station on Global Energy Monitor References Coal-fired power
Ninghai Power Station is a large coal-fired power station in China. See also List
the municipal chief executive for New Juaben North Municipal in the Eastern region of
Municipal in the Eastern region of Ghana. References Ghanaian politicians 21st-century Ghanaian women politicians
at the Swedish house of nobility in 1664 (No. 678). Notable members Carl Bildt (born 1949), Swedish prime minister Carl Bildt
house of nobility in 1664 (No. 678). Notable members Carl Bildt (born 1949), Swedish prime minister Carl Bildt (1850–1931), Swedish diplomat and historian Gillis Bildt (1820–1894), Swedish baron and prime minister
for work not completed at Hoboken during the initial conversion, Arlington sailed for Seattle on 3 July 1944, arriving there three days later. Assigned duty with the Fleet Operational Training Command, Arlington, the flagship for Capt. Melville E. Eaton, was attached to the Pre-Commissioning Training Center until 18 December. During that time she trained 40 Navy auxiliary ships' complements on board. Each received nine days of intensive instruction afloat in amphibious operations, gunnery, damage control, seamanship, communications, engineering, first aid, handling of casualties, and navigation. Upon termination of that program in Seattle, Arlington headed for San Francisco, where she arrived on 21 December. She served as a training ship at the Pre-Commissioning Center for auxiliary ships at Treasure Island through the end of the war, her last trainee crew leaving the ship on 15 September 1945. During her second stint as a training ship, Arlington served as the platform for the instruction of 53 additional crews, each receiving from six to 12 days of instruction afloat. They spent the first part of their instruction at anchor; the last two underway at sea. Besides antiaircraft and surface gunnery drills, other evolutions included underway replenishment, streaming and recovering paravanes, correcting magnetic compasses for deviation, ship-handling, and all phases of seamanship, damage control, engineering and handling casualties. All told, the ship trained approximately 25,000 men at Seattle and Treasure Island. Relieved of instructional duty on 16 September 1945, Arlington was assigned to Service Force Pacific, for duty in Operation Magic Carpet, the return of servicemen to the United States. She sailed on 18 September for Okinawa, Tokyo and Yokosuka, Japan, with 1,400 troops embarked, ultimately returning to Seattle on 14 November for repairs and upkeep. She conducted a second voyage to Japan, proceeding via Adak and Attu
west coast on 17 June, arriving at San Francisco on 23 June. Following a brief availability for work not completed at Hoboken during the initial conversion, Arlington sailed for Seattle on 3 July 1944, arriving there three days later. Assigned duty with the Fleet Operational Training Command, Arlington, the flagship for Capt. Melville E. Eaton, was attached to the Pre-Commissioning Training Center until 18 December. During that time she trained 40 Navy auxiliary ships' complements on board. Each received nine days of intensive instruction afloat in amphibious operations, gunnery, damage control, seamanship, communications, engineering, first aid, handling of casualties, and navigation. Upon termination of that program in Seattle, Arlington headed for San Francisco, where she arrived on 21 December. She served as a training ship at the Pre-Commissioning Center for auxiliary ships at Treasure Island through the end of the war, her last trainee crew leaving the ship on 15 September 1945. During her second stint as a training ship, Arlington served as the platform for the instruction of 53 additional crews, each receiving from six to 12 days of instruction afloat. They spent the first part of their instruction at anchor; the last two underway at sea. Besides antiaircraft and surface gunnery drills, other evolutions included underway replenishment, streaming and recovering paravanes, correcting magnetic compasses for deviation, ship-handling, and all phases of seamanship, damage control, engineering and handling casualties. All told, the ship trained approximately 25,000 men at Seattle and Treasure Island. Relieved of instructional duty on 16 September 1945, Arlington was assigned to Service Force Pacific, for duty in Operation Magic Carpet, the return of servicemen to the United States. She sailed on 18 September for Okinawa, Tokyo and Yokosuka, Japan, with 1,400 troops embarked, ultimately returning to Seattle on 14 November
Backhouse, 1st Baronet, and the younger brother of Sir Edmund Backhouse, 2nd Baronet. Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger Backhouse, First Sea Lord from
of the Fleet Sir Roger Backhouse, First Sea Lord from 1938 to 1939, was his younger brother. References 1875 births 1943 deaths Royal Navy admirals Royal Navy personnel of World War
Honolulu molasses spill, September 2013 Dublin whiskey fire, June 1875 London Beer Flood, October 1814
Apart from water, floods can also be caused by an overflow of juice,
first-ever World Cup appearance. Chor graduated from Georgetown University with a Bachelor of Science in International Health and Development, and is studying for a Master's degree in Biodiversity, Conservation and Management at Christ Church, Oxford. References
Kong photographer, journalist and filmmaker. She is also a rugby player and competed at the 2017 Women's Rugby World Cup, it
These formed a booklet which was restricted to private circulation. The reception of this work was so cordial that Parkinson reluctantly consented to its publication in the regular way. Unfortunately, nine-tenths of the edition was destroyed by The Globe fire of 1898, in the printing office of Brough & Caswell. Parkinson's works appeared in periodicals, such as the Methodist Magazine, The Christian Workers Magazine, The Western Christian Advocate, and The Christian Advocate. No complete volume of her poems was published, but a number of small collections in booklet form were issued from time to time. Parkinson's lyrics to "He Doeth All Things Well" were set to music by W. J. Hunter Emory, M.D. and published in Best (1902). Earlier, Love through all, 1893; "In his keeping", 1897; and At Yuletide, 1901, were published. Later life After the death of her mother (1909) and father (1910), Parkinson left the family home and resided in a "Home for Incurables" and in a "Church Home" before she died in Toronto, 13 February 1938. "A Song in the Night" “Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for him."-Ps. xxxvii. 7. Rest thou in Him—no need for fear— Thou knowost not His plan for thee, But well thou know'st that He is near, Then rest in Him, rest quietly. Not much seems left of earthly joy— But oh, thy Father knoweth best! Let this blesť word thy thought employ— And rest. Wait thou for Him-take what He sends, Sure that His every thought for thee In naught but love begins and ends ; Then wait for Him, ""wait patiently." For tbee may rise-thou canst not tell— New joys, e'en this side heaven's gate; If not—He always chooseth well,— Just wait. Selected works Poetry books Love through all : a voice from a sick room : thoughts for each day, 1893 "In his keeping" : words of sustaining from the source of all strength ; with kindred thoughts in verse, 1897 At Yuletide, 1901 Best : the story of the messenger hours with some of the thoughts they have brought to Amy Parkinson., 1902 Poems "A Song in the Night" "Westward", 1893 "Comfort", 1895 "Compensation", 1895 "Worship", 1895 "The Twenty-Third Psalm", 1900 "Enoch", 1901 "God Shall Supply All Your Needs" "His Great Love""Enoch", 1901 "A Hymn for Christmas-Day", 1902 "Heights and Depths", 1902 "In the Valley", 1903 "Acquiescence", 1904 "Anticipation", 1904 "At Summer's Close", 1904 "First Christmas Night", 1904 "In Silence", 1904 "He Will Not Suffer Thy Foot to Be Moved", 1911 "Thanksgiving", 1918 Hymns "He Doeth All
verses. She dictated her verses to her father as he knelt next to her bed. He was obliged to put his ear to her lips to catch her words, so weak was she while dictating to him. Many of her verses —her "messages," as she called them- came to her when she was in a state of almost complete physical exhaustion. It is noteworthy that her mind was specially vigorous in composition as she passed into or recovered from the severe attacks which seized her, any one of which might have proved fatal. Her work was almost wholly of a deeply spiritual character, marked by beauty of thought and expression. Parkinson did not envision her poetry being shared beyond the circle of her own family, but a friend, having obtained possession of some of the manuscripts, showed them to the Rev. Dr. William Henry Withrow. His highly appreciative letter, requesting them for publication, convinced Parkinson that it was her duty to send them out. She thereafter became a regular contributor to the periodicals edited by Withrow, and to others, in the United States and Canada. Letters attesting their usefulness were received by Parkinson from sufferers like herself, who had read them and derived great comfort from them.The idea then occurred to her that, sich as she was, God had a mission for her to discharge in endeavoring to give comfort to others. She determined to make a selection from her poems, and with appropriate passages of Scripture for each, she apportioned them among the days of one month. These formed a booklet which was restricted to private circulation. The reception of this work was so cordial that Parkinson reluctantly consented to its publication in the regular way. Unfortunately, nine-tenths of the edition was destroyed by The Globe fire of 1898, in the printing office of Brough & Caswell. Parkinson's works appeared in periodicals, such as the Methodist Magazine, The Christian Workers Magazine, The Western Christian Advocate, and The Christian Advocate. No complete volume of her poems was published, but a number of small collections in booklet form were issued from time to time. Parkinson's lyrics to "He Doeth All Things Well" were set to music by W. J. Hunter Emory, M.D. and published in Best (1902). Earlier, Love through all, 1893; "In his keeping", 1897; and At Yuletide, 1901, were published. Later life After the death of her mother (1909) and father (1910), Parkinson left the family home and resided in a "Home for Incurables" and in a "Church Home" before she
follow up to her Grapefruit book of conceptual art. It is (paperback), (ebook). The book gathers together 100 brief thought experiments, such as: “Find a spot that is comfortable for you. / Keep the spot clean. / Think about the spot when you are away.” This statement is the City Piece I text in its entirety. And Dance Piece III that states: "Take your pants off
artist's book written by Yoko Ono published in 2013 by Algonquin Books as a follow up to her Grapefruit book of conceptual art. It is (paperback), (ebook). The book gathers together 100 brief thought experiments, such as: “Find a spot that is comfortable for you. / Keep the spot clean. / Think about the spot when you are away.” This statement is the City Piece I text in its entirety. And Dance Piece III that states: "Take your pants off / before you fight." Each
completed a Master of Science and Ph.D. in psychology at the University of Oregon in 1983 and 1986. In 1990, Ivry received a Sloan Research Fellowship in neuroscience. In 1997, he received a Troland Research Award. In 2016, Ivry received the William James Fellow Award. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Cognitive neuroscientists Brown University alumni University
currently Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley and a founding member of the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute. Ivry previously served as chair of the university's Department of Psychology and director of its Institute of Cognitive and Brain
of this. Gaugel felt a second connection to the Anabaptists and their persecutions when he learned that some of the executions of early Anabaptists had taken place near the village where he'd grown up; he could not recall having learned about them or the Anabaptist movement in Germany. In 1978, there was growing Amish tourism in the Holmes County area and a resulting frustration expressed by his Amish neighbors with the constant interruptions of their lives by tourists; an Amish blacksmith told him, "I wish there was some place in the area that people could go and find out about why we live the way we do. Gaugel decided to create the Behalt cyclorama to explain Anabaptist history to visitors. Works Gaugel's works include multiple very large installations. He painted "hundreds" of murals, according to The Budget. In Canada He created a 16'x80' window of slablass at St. Mary's Church in Richmond Hill, Ontario, as well as a 14' tall statue of the Virgin Mary. He created a 17'x72' mural depicting the history of the Welland Canal for a Sears department store in Welland, Ontario. He created a 5-story tall mural for the facade of the E. L. Crossley school. In the United States He created an 18'x44' mosaic of Byzantine glass at St. Hyacinth Church in Dunkirk, New York. He created a 20'x80' sgraffito at St. John Vianney Church in Orchard Park, New York. In 1975 he created a life-size statue of Clinton Rickard, a Tuscarora tribal leader who founded the Indian Defense League; as of 1990 the statue was in place at the New York State Park at Niagara Falls. Behalt Gaugel's largest installation and best-known work is the Behalt cyclorama, a 10'x265' oil-on-canvas mural in the round, which he worked on for 14 years from 1978 through 1992. Before starting the mural he researched the history of the Anabaptist movement and travelled to Europe to find descendants of the movement's leaders to study their facial features. He began painting it in the Dunkard Brethren Church in Bunker Hill, Ohio, which at the time held the Mennonite Information Center, where he
Europe to find descendants of the movement's leaders to study their facial features. He began painting it in the Dunkard Brethren Church in Bunker Hill, Ohio, which at the time held the Mennonite Information Center, where he had set up a studio. That year he completed approximately 45 feet and had sketched out additional portions. The following year the project's primary financial backer died, and issues with her estate delayed the project multiple times over the next decade. In 1989 he resumed work and had the mural ready to hang in 1990, after which he spent another two years on details and touchups. Visitors to the center were able to watch while he did this work. He had originally planned it to be 180' long, but realized there was too much content to cover and expanded it to 265'; even then he referred to the content as "being squeezed into" that length. After the Amish & Mennonite Heritage Center (AMHC) purchased the unfinished painting in 1988, he continued his work on it in their space, often while visitors watched. He completed the painting in 1992, but continued to work in his studio at the center until shortly before his death in 2000. He also completed a 22'x34' sgraffito, Immigration, on the exterior of the building that houses the cyclorama. The sgraffito depicts 18th and 19th century Swiss immigrants. According to AMHC's executive director, Marcus Yoder, it is believed to be the largest sgraffito in the US. The work has achieved prominence. According to Paul Locher writing in The Daily Record after Gaugel's death, Anabaptist leaders said "only Gaugel could have painted such a masterpiece because he was both willing to do the massive research...and brought no biases to the project as someone from within the faith might have done." Behalt is one of only four extant
a late substitute in a 0–0 Campeonato Paulista Série A2 home draw against Nacional-SP. On 30 October 2020, after being a regular starter for XV, Erison was loaned to Série B side Figueirense until the end of the season. After suffering relegation, he returned to his parent club in February 2021. On 18 August 2021, Erison
footballer who plays as a forward for Botafogo. Club career Erison was born in Cosmópolis, São Paulo, and joined XV de Piracicaba's youth setup at the age of 18, after playing amateur tournaments. He made his first team debut on 26 January 2019, coming on as a late substitute in a 0–0 Campeonato Paulista Série A2 home draw against Nacional-SP. On 30 October 2020, after being a regular starter for XV, Erison was loaned to Série B side Figueirense until the end of the season. After suffering relegation,
candidate of each sex. In the first round, the list having received an absolute majority of votes in its section is awarded the majority bonus, then the remaining seats are distributed proportionally among all the lists having crossed the electoral threshold of 5% of the votes according to the method of voting. If no list obtains more than 50% of the votes cast, a second round is held between all the lists having collected more than 12.5% of the votes, those having collected between 5% and 12.5% being able to merge with the lists that have been maintained. The leading list then gets the majority bonus, and the
elect 57 representatives to the Assembly of French Polynesia. The last election was in 2018. Background The 2018 French Polynesian legislative election saw the Tapura Huiraatira party led by Édouard Fritch emerge as the largest in the Assembly, winning 38 of the 57 seats. Fritch was re-elected as President of French Polynesia, while Gaston Tong Sang was elected President of the Assembly. French Polynesia has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Electoral system The 57 members of the Assembly of French Polynesia are elected by a proportional multi-member list of two rounds, with a majority premium. Polynesia is a single constituency whose communes make up of eight sub-divisions called sections, each with a majority premium of 1 to 4 seats according to their population for a total of 19 premium seats. Each list presents 73
name. It may refer to: Erison Carlos dos Santos Silva (born 1980), commonly known as Pingo, Brazilian footballer Erison
commonly known as Baiano, Brazilian footballer Erison Danilo de Souza (born 1999), Brazilian footballer Erison
to Nsawam Adoagyiri Municipal to be distributed to the schools within the municipal. References
director to Nsawam Adoagyiri Municipal to be distributed to the schools within the municipal. References Ghanaian politicians Ghanaian men Year of birth missing (living people) Living people
to the National Assembly as a member of the Cameroonian Party for National Reconciliation (CPRN). She is the founder of the Nourishka brand and runs the companies Nourishka Hair, Nourishka Cosmétiques
as Nourane Foster (born December 11, 1987, in Cairo, Egypt) is a Cameroonian entrepreneur and politician. In the 2020 Cameroonian parliamentary election she was elected to the National Assembly as a member of the Cameroonian Party for National
He even wrote: "If one day the Revolution occurs there, this is how we will organise ourselves". At the end of 1908, Lenin and his wife left Geneva for good. In 1940, the Société de Lecture had the Latin motto "Timeo hominem unius libri" ("I fear the man of one book") inscribed above its entrance. Thomas Aquinas's formula was then given an ominous topicality: another political theorist, Adolf Hitler, spread his visions in his Mein Kampf and set Europe on fire. In a twist of history, when US President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin came to Geneva on 16 June 2021, at the Villa La Grange, the four armchairs and 20 chairs on which all the participants in the summit sat, were loaned by the Société de Lecture. These Louis-Philippe style chairs date from 1840 and are covered with a fabric made of horsehair. An article in the newspaper Le Temps humorously notes that "in 1904, Lenin became a member of the Société de Lecture, introduced by Tolstoy's secretary. 120 years later, it is Putin who sits in this seat that may have served Lenin. An anecdote that may have escaped the Americans". Missions Enrich the library While the Société de Lecture's library has never ceased growing, its orientations have evolved. Founded by men mainly interested in academic subjects, it initially focused on law, natural sciences, theology and political philosophy. From 1818 to 1833, the statutes obliged the members to enrich the collection themselves by donating books. The Société de Lecture quickly became the owner of 20,000 volumes. At first, novels were banned, then literature was gradually relegated to the highest floors. The only "pleasure" books tolerated were travelogues. Apart from classical authors, plays remained as suspect as historical novels. The latter were a "waste of precious time" for "more than one category of people". From 1845 onwards, the arrival of the novel was a revolution. Authors sometimes offered their works, such as Eugène Sue's Les Mystères de Paris, which the Société de Lecture did not want to buy. The scandalous books were removed and stored in a "Hell" section inaccessible to the public. Their condemnation in France in 1857 did not prevent Charles Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal from entering the catalogue, twenty-five years after its publication. On the other hand, Guy de Maupassant's Mademoiselle Fifi and Octave Mirbeau's Le jardin des supplices were withdrawn from circulation at the request of scandalised members. In 1923, Victor Margueritte's novel La garçonne caused a new outcry: the heroine led "a sexual life that was clearly too free for the taste of decent people". As for the detective novels requested by readers, the Committee gave little consideration to the genre: detective stories were not included in the catalogue. They were discarded without mercy as soon as their extreme wear and tear made it necessary. In 1954, a reading Commission was created. It was made up of twelve volunteer readers who chose which of the new books lent by the booksellers would be bought and put into circulation. It selected more than five hundred new literary acquisitions each year. The monthly magazine Plume au Vent brought together reviews, in French or English, of the various works selected since 1976. This selection allows the acquisitions, without being perfect, to be independent and demanding. In 1978, the Commission refused the acquisition of Pipes de terre et pipes de porcelaine, souvenirs d'une femme de chambre en Suisse romande, the testimony of Madeleine Lamouille, former maid to the grandparents of the Geneva writer Luc Weibel. Her memoirs are not very flattering for certain employers in Geneva's upper-class society. The librarian at the time, Jacques Picot, himself a member of this milieu, insisted that the book be purchased. In 1972, the age of admission was lowered to 16 and a book-buying committee for young readers aged 6 to 12 was set up in 1979. In order to pass on a useful library to future generations, successive committees have directed book acquisitions essentially towards the promotion of Francophone culture. An important literary collection has thus been built up with classics, works by great thinkers, philosophers, economists and scientists, in translation but also in the original language. Today, this library offers its members direct access to 200,000 volumes, including nearly 9,000 works in English. The library is a historian's dream, providing access to numerous complete collections of journals and newspapers. It contains numerous old European periodicals, particularly from the 17th and 18th centuries (Mercure de France, Mercure danois, Journal des savants, Bibliothèque britannique, La rivista europea, Simplicissimus, Revue des Deux Mondes, Punch). It owns all the issues of the Journal de Genève, a Swiss daily newspaper with an international audience (1826-1998). It subscribes to about a hundred current periodicals and about ten daily newspapers are available to members. From 1976 to 1980, the Société de Lecture even received Playboy. Over the years, a collection of old books has been built up, including old editions (notably of Bibles, Latin classics or eighteenth-century works such as Buffon's Histoire naturelle or Diderot and d'Alembert's Encyclopédie, published in Geneva in 1779), original editions of Calvin and art editions from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, such as the first editions of the father of comics, Rodolphe Töpffer, which are a delight to bibliophiles. In 2020, researcher Max Engammare discovered unpublished handwritten annotations by the reformer John Calvin in a book in these collections. In order to avoid irreparable damage, a specially equipped and air-conditioned room was created in 1984. Rare or fragile books are kept there. Since its foundation, the Société de Lecture has regularly called on bookbinders and craftsmen to maintain its collections and to restore the oldest works, such as René Descartes' Discourse on Method (Leiden, 1637) or Vitruvius' De architectura (Venice, 1497). The computerised catalogue of the collections is accessible via the Internet. The library's literary holdings make it possible to link writers' meetings to the very thing that justifies them: i.e. reading. Developing cultural programming At the beginning of the 1980s, the institution initiated conferences in the spirit of the old "salon" tradition where literature, history or current themes were discussed in the form of lunch debates, workshops or lecture cycles. This organisation coincided with the launch of Bernard Pivot's literary TV programme Apostrophes, which introduced a new approach to books on television: the public became accustomed to meeting authors, independently of reading their works. The Société de Lecture receives mainly writers but also lecturers from all walks of life. In 20 years, 700 meetings have taken place, 500 personalities from the arts and letters have given lectures or spoken with journalists within the walls of the institution. Here is a selection of speakers by categories: Members of the Académie française: Dominique Bona, Barbara Cassin, Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, Dominique Fernandez, Alain Finkielkraut, Patrick Grainville, Amin Maalouf, Andreï Makine, Jean d'Ormesson, Erik Orsenna, Jean-Marie Rouard, Jean-Christophe Rufin, Danièle Sallenave, Maurizio Serra Prix de l'Académie française: Sorj Chalandon, Adélaïde de Clermont-Tonnerre, François-Henri Désérable, Joël Dicker, Franz-Olivier Giesbert, Pascal Quignard, Amélie Nothomb, Jean d'Ormesson Prix Femina: Patrick Deville, Jean-Paul Dubois, Clara Dupont-Monod, Anne-Marie Garat, Sylvie Germain, Nancy Huston, Alexandre Jardin, Camille Laurens, Léonora Miano, Sylvain Prudhomme Prix Goncourt: Tahar Ben Jelloun, Didier van Cauwelaert, Jacques Chessex, Didier Decoin, Jean-Paul Dubois, Jean Echenoz, Dominique Fernandez, Laurent Gaudé, Patrick Grainville, Pascal Guignard, Pierre Lemaître, Amin Maalouf, Andreï Makine, Erik Orsenna, Atiq Rahimi, Jean-Christophe Rufin, Lydie Salvayre, Leïla Slimani Prix Goncourt des lycéens: Philippe Claudel, Catherine Cusset, Sorj Chalendon, Joël Dicker, Clara Dupont-Monod, David Foenkinos, Laurent Gaudé, Sylvie Germin, Philippe Grimbert, Jean-Michel Guenassia, Nancy Huston, Andreï Makine, Carole Martinez, Léonora Miano, Erik Orsenna, Karine Tuil, Delphine de Vigan, Anne Wiazemsky Prix Médicis: Sorj Chalandon, Jean Echenoz, Dominique Fernandez, Jean Hatzfeld, Amélie Nothomb Prix Renaudot: Frédéric Beigbeder, Dominique Bona, Pascal Bruckner, Philippe Claudel, Annie Ernaux, David Foenkinos, Olivier Guez, Marie-Hélène Lafon, Alain Mabanckou, Amélie Nothomb, Daniel Pennac, Sylvain Tesson, Delphine de Vigan Non French-speaking authors: Carmine Abate, Alaa al-Aswany, Richard Ford, David Grossman, Siri Hustvedt, Ismaël Kadaré, Douglas Kennedy, Colum McCann, William Ospina Actors: Dominique Blanc, Golshifteh Farahani, Brigitte Fossey, Guillaume Gallienne, Jacques Gamblin, Bernard Giraudeau, Francis Huster, Tom Novembre, Charlotte Ramplin Directors: Jacob Berger, Jean-Claude Carrière, Alain Françon, Dan Jemmet, Jean Liermier, Daniel Mesguich, Roger Planchon, Omar Porras, Olivier Py, Dominique Ziegler Cartoonists: Patrick Chapatte, Xavier Gorce, Martial Leiter, Mix et Remix, Gérald Poussin, Marjane Satrapi, Tom Tirabosco, Zep Journalists: Laure Adler, François Busnel, Claire Chazal, Eric Fottorino, Jérome Garcin, Bernard Pivot, Anne Sinclair Musicians: Karol Beffa, David Greilsammer, Barbara Hendricks Philosophers: Elisabeth Badinter, Lytta Basset, Pascal Bruckner, André Comte-Sponville, Régis Debray, Raphaël Enthoven, Luc Ferry, Frédéric Lenoir, Fabrice Midal, Josef Schovanec Political personalities: Robert Badinter, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Pascal Couchepin, Ruth Dreifuss, Bernard Kouchner, Edouard Philippe, Jean Ziegler The complete list of all speakers since 2002 is available on the Société de Lecture website. The sixty or so conferences organized each year, open to members and non-members alike, allow for "a real alchemy" between authors and readers. An annual cycle of eight to nine thematic conferences is organized around a geopolitical, cultural or existential question. A dozen literary workshops (writing workshops, reading circles) are organized each year and storytelling sessions are also organized for children. From autumn 2021, the cultural program will also welcome non-French speaking authors, an open door to international Geneva. Preserving the historic building In May, 1679, the diplomatic relations between the Republic of Geneva and its powerful neighbour, France, underwent an important innovation: Louis XIV
the Société de Lecture. However, playing chess was permitted. Nevertheless, success was immediate: after one year of existence, the Society already had 225 members. The initial objective of making up for the shortcomings of the Public Library of the time was quickly supported by the Geneva patriciate, which wished to offer itself a place of instruction, knowledge, and intellectual exchange. One of the strengths of the institution was that it was able to open up to the world and welcome foreigners, whether famous or not. The Société de Lecture thus became a discreet and sought-after meeting place. In 1835, for example, Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, the future Napoléon III, met Count Camillo of Cavour, the future architect of Italian unity. Originally, the practice of sponsorship favoured the emergence of an identity specific to the Société de Lecture. In order to become a member, two members had to introduce the candidate to the committee. The Committee then decided whether or not the candidate was accepted. It was not until the mid-1970s that membership practices became more flexible. Today, anyone who pays the subscription (the equivalent of one Swiss franc a day) can become a member. The "ladies' issue" At that time, however, membership was still very firmly limited to men. Women were not welcomed until the end of the 19th century. Initially, they were completely excluded. Then, from 1888 onwards, widows, sisters and daughters of deceased members were allowed to borrow books but not to sit in the salons, "where their chatter was deemed incompatible with the concentration for scholarly reading requires". They were called "subscribing ladies". One of them was the Geneva suffragette Émilie Gourd: a subscriber from the time of her father's death in 1909, she remained a subscriber until her own death in 1946, without being able to obtain full membership for women. In her monthly Le mouvement féministe, the activist considers that "the members of the Société de Lecture consider themselves superior, privileged and they do not intend to give up any of their privileges to these inferior beings, i.e. women". Moreover, throughtout Switzerland, women were not allowed to be distracted from their family obligations by reading. They were confined to the stories of magazines such as the Schweizer Familie founded in 1893. The ridiculousness of this situation culminated in 1940, when a young woman wona competition in the Journal de Genève for a year's free membership of the Société de Lecture. It was impossible for her to take advantage of it. The "ladies’ issue" would carry on for decades. It was not until 1947 that the Sphere Room was opened to them "on a trial basis. Six years later, in 1953, they were allowed to become members. This was 18 years before they obtained the right to vote in Switzerland. As women emerged from this long reign of male exclusivity, they also took a major role in the management of the institution. Lenine, member of the Société de Lecture Great names of European culture such as Alice Rivaz, Nicolas Bouvier, Andreas Calvos, Jean Capo d'Istria, Camillo Cavour, Albert Cohen, Pierre de Coubertin, Henri Dunant, Guglielmo Ferrero, Franz Liszt, Edgard Milhaud, Gustave Moynier, Elisée Reclus, Ferdinand de Saussure, Juliusz Slowacki, Carl Vogt were members of the Société de Lecture. One of the most famous was Vladimir Ilitch Ulyanov, better known as Lenin. At the beginning of the 20th century, Geneva was teeming with Russian refugees. Lenin settled in Geneva in 1903 and applied for admission on 12th December, 1904. Among other things, it allowed him to escape the many other Russian refugees around the Public Library and to find the calm that was essential for his work. Paul Birukoff, former secretary to Leo Tolstoy, sponsored him. In his book "My Life with Lenin", his wife writes: "Vladimir Ilyich joined the Société de Lecture, where one could work comfortably and have access to a large number of books, as well as all kinds of magazines and newspapers in French, German and English. The Société de Lecture was not very busy, with only a few old professors in attendance, and Vladimir Ilyich was usually alone in one of the rooms. He could not only write in peace there, but also, as was his habit, wander around murmuring the sentences of his articles and take the books he needed from the shelves himself. It was really quiet there. Not a single Russian comrade came to join him; no one came to tell him that the Mensheviks were saying this and saying that; he could think. And he had something to think about". And a little further on, Nadezhda Krupskaya adds: "every morning the librarian of the Société de Lecture would see a Russian revolutionary arrive, with his trousers rolled up in the Swiss fashion to avoid the mud; he would open the military art book he had left the day before, sit down as usual at a small table in front of the window, pull back his thinning hair and start reading. From time to time he would go and consult some dictionary, then return to his seat and fill up many sheets of quarto paper in his small, quick handwriting". Lenin also prepared speeches for political meetings in Geneva. According to accounts of the time, he would read his speeches aloud while walking between the shelves of the library to practise his elocution. Alphonse Bernoud, a doctor of science and member of the Société de Lecture since 1901, also sheds light on the revolutionary's habits in the library: "Our tables were next to each other, Ulyanov had a predilection for the room where a huge globe stood and where the walls were covered with maps. Usually Ulyanov took notes on sheets of paper while reading. I often saw him copying large extracts from his readings". Another member remembers being called to order one day while he was talking aloud in the room, which he thought was empty, by a loud "shush": hidden by a pile of books, a gentleman with a blond beard was demanding silence. The two chatterboxes learned a few days later that the excited reader was called Ulyanov". It is comical to see the members of the Société de Lecture generally very bourgeois take pride in the fact that the Russian revolutionary found in their premises a place conducive to the development of his devastating theories. Lenin followed the first clashes of the Russian Revolution of 1905 from the Société de Lecture. Haunted by the Paris Commune, he set about translating the Memoirs of General Cluseret, borrowed Alphonse Aulard's Histoire politique de la Révolution française and Edgard Quinet's La Révolution. In November, unable to bear it any longer, he left for Russia. He did not return to Geneva until January 1908 and reapplied for admission to the Société de Lecture on 25 February. He stayed there for just under a year, during which time he and his wife went there twenty-eight times to borrow books of all kinds. The Russian revolutionary mixed serious and recreational reading: he alternated between military treatises and novels by Guy de Maupassant or Pierre Lotti, philosophical treatises such as those by Hegel and the poetry of Victor Hugo. He also read Julius Caesar's Gallic War and Ernest Renan's Life of Jesus, which he annotated several times. Renan wrote that "Jesus wanted to destroy wealth and power, but not to seize them". In the margin, a fine annotation attributed to Lenin comments in French: "Comme le socialisme moderne" ("Like modern socialism"). Vladimir Ilyich was delighted with the services offered by the Société de Lecture. He marvelled at the fact that "in Switzerland, the reader is trusted". He even wrote: "If one day the Revolution occurs there, this is how we will organise ourselves". At the end of 1908, Lenin and his wife left Geneva for good. In 1940, the Société de Lecture had the Latin motto "Timeo hominem unius libri" ("I fear the man of one book") inscribed above its entrance. Thomas Aquinas's formula was then given an ominous topicality: another political theorist, Adolf Hitler, spread his visions in his Mein Kampf and set Europe on fire. In a twist of history, when US President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin came to Geneva on 16 June 2021, at the Villa La Grange, the four armchairs and 20 chairs on which all the participants in the summit sat, were loaned by the Société de Lecture. These Louis-Philippe style chairs date from 1840 and are covered with a fabric made of horsehair. An article in the newspaper Le Temps humorously notes that "in 1904, Lenin became a member of the Société de Lecture, introduced by Tolstoy's secretary. 120 years later, it is Putin who sits in this seat that may have served Lenin. An anecdote that may have escaped the Americans". Missions Enrich the library While the Société de Lecture's library has never ceased growing, its orientations have evolved. Founded by men mainly interested in academic subjects, it initially focused on law, natural sciences, theology and political philosophy. From 1818 to 1833, the statutes obliged the members to enrich the collection themselves by donating books. The Société de Lecture quickly became the owner of 20,000 volumes. At first, novels were banned, then literature was gradually relegated to the highest floors. The only "pleasure" books tolerated were travelogues. Apart from classical authors, plays remained as suspect as historical novels. The latter were a "waste of precious time" for "more than one category of people". From 1845 onwards, the arrival of the novel was a revolution. Authors sometimes offered their works, such as Eugène Sue's Les Mystères de Paris, which the Société de Lecture did not want to buy. The scandalous books were removed and stored in a "Hell" section inaccessible to the public. Their condemnation in France in 1857 did not prevent Charles Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal from entering the catalogue, twenty-five years after its publication. On the other hand, Guy de Maupassant's Mademoiselle Fifi and Octave Mirbeau's Le jardin des supplices were withdrawn from circulation at the request of scandalised members. In 1923, Victor Margueritte's novel La garçonne caused a new outcry: the heroine led "a sexual life that was clearly too free for the taste of decent people". As for the detective novels requested by readers, the Committee gave little consideration to the genre: detective stories were not included in the catalogue. They were discarded without mercy as soon as their extreme wear and tear made it necessary. In 1954, a reading Commission was created. It was made up of twelve volunteer readers who chose which of the new books lent by the booksellers would be bought and put into circulation. It selected more than five hundred new literary acquisitions each year. The monthly magazine Plume au Vent brought together reviews, in French or English, of the various works selected since 1976. This selection allows the acquisitions, without being perfect, to be independent and demanding. In 1978, the Commission refused the acquisition of Pipes de terre et pipes de porcelaine, souvenirs d'une femme de chambre en Suisse romande, the testimony of Madeleine Lamouille, former maid to the grandparents of the Geneva writer Luc Weibel. Her memoirs are not very flattering for certain employers in Geneva's upper-class society. The librarian at the time, Jacques Picot, himself a member of this milieu, insisted that the book be purchased. In 1972, the age of admission was lowered to 16 and a book-buying committee for young readers aged 6 to 12 was set up in 1979. In order to pass on a useful library to future generations, successive committees have directed book acquisitions essentially towards the promotion of Francophone culture. An important literary collection has thus been built up with classics, works by great thinkers, philosophers, economists and scientists, in translation but also in the original language. Today, this library offers its members direct access to 200,000 volumes, including nearly 9,000 works in English. The library is a historian's dream, providing access to numerous complete collections of journals and newspapers. It contains numerous old European periodicals, particularly from the 17th and 18th centuries (Mercure de France, Mercure danois, Journal des savants, Bibliothèque britannique, La rivista europea, Simplicissimus, Revue des Deux Mondes, Punch). It owns all the issues of the Journal de Genève, a Swiss daily newspaper with an international audience (1826-1998). It subscribes to about a hundred current periodicals and about ten daily newspapers are available to members. From 1976 to 1980, the Société de Lecture even received Playboy. Over the years, a collection of old books has been built up, including old editions (notably of Bibles, Latin
of Sir William Parker, 9th Baronet, Parker came from a family with strong naval connections over five generations. His grandfather was Vice-Admiral Hyde Parker, First Naval Lord from 1852 to 1854; his great-grandfather was Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, and his great-great-grandfather was Vice-Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, 5th Baronet. An uncle, Captain Hyde Parker (1824–1854) was killed storming Russian batteries in the in the Sulina Channel during the Crimean War. Parker entered HMS Britannia in July 1881, was promoted to lieutenant in 1891, and to commander
before being appointed in command of the cruiser of HMS Niobe, the flagship of Rear-Admiral Harry S. F. Niblett, Rear-Admiral Commanding, Devonport Division, Home Fleet. In 1910, he was appointed to command the protected cruiser HMS Minerva, and in 1913 to the command of the first-class protected cruiser HMS Endymion. After paying off Endymion in November 1914, Parker was appointed Captain of the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth in December 1914. In February 1915 he was given command of the battleship HMS Superb in the Grand Fleet, participating in the Battle of Jutland in 1906: Superb scored several hits against the crippled light cruiser SMS Wiesbaden, and received no damage. Parker was appointed an aide-de-camp to the King in August 1917, promoted to rear-admiral in October 1917, and appointed a CB in 1918. After the war, Hyde served as Director of Naval Mobilisation from 1918 to 1919 or 1920. References 1868 births 1951 deaths Royal
of the D. M. Nanjundappa report on correction of regional disparities in Karnataka, the institute was converted into a autonomous post-graduation training institute and renamed as Dharwad institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (DIMHANS) during a legislative assembly session in 2009. In 2011, several proposals were sent to state government to upgrade DIMHANS's ageing infrastructure. In 2020, a Covid-19 testing center was started at DIMHANS. DIMHANS has emerged as a major testing facility in North Karnataka for Covid-19. In November 2021, Karnataka High Court gave ultimatum to state government to upgrade DIMHANS as a higher center for psychiatry and to provide MRI machines by March 1, 2022. In the same month, a new building "Bendre Block", CT Scan facilities were inaugurated. Organization and administration Departments DIMHANS has following departments: Psychiatry Clinical Psychology Psychiatric Social Work Psychiatric Nursing Neuroanaesthesia Centres Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Addiction Psychiatry Cognitive Neurosciences Academics Programmes DIMHANS offers following courses MD in Psychiatry M.Phil in Clinical Psychology M.Phil in Psychiatric Social Work MSc in Psychiatric Nursing Post Basic Diploma in Psychiatric Nursing Services and facilities DIMHANS provides Day-care and Psychiatric Rehabilitation services. Day-care and psychiatric
institute and renamed as Dharwad institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (DIMHANS) during a legislative assembly session in 2009. In 2011, several proposals were sent to state government to upgrade DIMHANS's ageing infrastructure. In 2020, a Covid-19 testing center was started at DIMHANS. DIMHANS has emerged as a major testing facility in North Karnataka for Covid-19. In November 2021, Karnataka High Court gave ultimatum to state government to upgrade DIMHANS as a higher center for psychiatry and to provide MRI machines by March 1, 2022. In the same month, a new building "Bendre Block", CT Scan facilities were inaugurated. Organization and administration Departments DIMHANS has following departments: Psychiatry Clinical Psychology Psychiatric Social Work Psychiatric Nursing Neuroanaesthesia Centres Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Addiction Psychiatry Cognitive Neurosciences Academics Programmes DIMHANS offers following courses MD in Psychiatry M.Phil in Clinical Psychology M.Phil in Psychiatric Social Work MSc in Psychiatric Nursing Post Basic Diploma in Psychiatric Nursing Services
people with the surname include: Ayrat Zakiev, Russian Paralympic powerlifter Mirfatyh
Mirfatyh Zakiev (born 1928), scholar of Türkology Radik Zakiev
Burrito Brothers." The Columbus Dispatch deemed Little Apocalypse "a country-inflected folk album featuring terrific originals." AllMusic wrote that "Dave Schramm's guitar playing has, if anything, grown even more striking and inventive, confirming his status as one of America's greatest unsung guitarists." MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide called "Little American Hymn" "one of the most gorgeously introspective instrumentals this side of John Hartford's 'Presbyterian Guitar'." Track listing References
Arnold. "Side of the Road" is a cover of the Lucinda Williams song. "A Woman's Name" begins with a line from an Emily Dickinson poem. Critical reception Trouser Press wrote that "a pair of instrumentals—the slide-driven 'Duck Hunting in Hell' and the acoustic 'Little American Hymn'—stand out for their stylistic variance, an attribute that doesn’t flatter the rest of the album." The Chicago Reader thought that Schramm's "guitar playing soars: complex, often knotty excursions that maintain a balance between the songs' exquisite tunefulness and their tender emotional outlay." The Hartford Courant determined that "this is about as close as it comes to country in New York City,
physicist Luigi Galvani born in this city in 1737. A statue of the scientist adorns the centre of the squarewhich opens in the apse of the Basilica of San Petronio. The Archiginnasio Palace overlooks the square. History Since 1449, the area where the square is today was used for the silk market, a production that characterised the Bolognese territory until the 17th
1737. A statue of the scientist adorns the centre of the squarewhich opens in the apse of the Basilica of San Petronio. The Archiginnasio Palace overlooks the square. History Since 1449, the area where the square is today was used for the silk market, a production that characterised the Bolognese territory until the 17th century. In 1563, with the construction of the
Shield Building is an office building in Chicago, Illinois. The building is located at 55 W Wacker Drive in the Loop in Downtown Chicago. It
Wacker Drive in the Loop in Downtown Chicago. It was designed in a Brutalist style by C.F. Murphy
and "difficult to control, both because of the supremacy of her birth and no less because of the weakness of her sex". Her marriage was described as an unhappy one, and she reportedly had a relationship with Francesco Maria Santinelli (1627-1697). In June 1657, her spouse died unexpectedly. Her family had her locked up as a widow to prevent her from marrying her lover Francesco Maria Santinelli, since he was of lower rank and the marriage would be unequal and thus regarded as shameful to the family. On 31 January 1659, Giovanna De Grandis was arrested in Rome and imprisoned in the Papal prison at Tor di Nona, which was the beginning of the infamous Spana Prosecution, exposing a net work of poison dealers in Rome. When De Grandis started to name accomplices
She was described as a beauty, and "difficult to control, both because of the supremacy of her birth and no less because of the weakness of her sex". Her marriage was described as an unhappy one, and she reportedly had a relationship with Francesco Maria Santinelli (1627-1697). In June 1657, her spouse died unexpectedly. Her family had her locked up as a widow to prevent her from marrying her lover Francesco Maria Santinelli, since he was of lower rank and the marriage would be unequal and thus regarded as shameful to the family. On 31 January 1659, Giovanna De Grandis was arrested
The film had selected theatrical screenings, but due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic it was distributed primarily on streaming platforms and with a television broadcast on TVOntario. The film received a Canadian Screen Award
their experiences in part to her own past experience having been abducted by armed bandits in 2008 while covering the War in Afghanistan. The film had selected theatrical screenings, but due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic it was distributed primarily on streaming platforms and with a television broadcast on TVOntario. The film received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Feature
They stopped competing after the 1962 World Championships due to the International Gymnastics Federation accepting Taiwan as a member nation. They returned in 1979 where Ma Yanhong won China's first gold medal. The Chinese women originally won the bronze medal in the team event at the 1999 World Championships; however their medal was stripped in
won the bronze medal in the team event at the 1999 World Championships; however their medal was stripped in 2010 after it was discovered that Dong Fangxiao's age was falsified at the time of
New Space India Limited. The entire capacity onboard CMS-02 satellite will be leased to Tata Sky. The satellite will be put into orbit by using Ariane 5 rocket. CMS-02 is the ''1st demand driven mission'' undertaken by NSIL.
leased to Tata Sky. The satellite will be put into orbit by using Ariane 5 rocket. CMS-02 is the ''1st demand driven mission'' undertaken by NSIL. Launch CMS-02 will be launched in 1st quarter of 2022 along with Measat-3d using Ariane 5 Rocket. See
executive of Akyemansa District in the Eastern region of Ghana. References Ghanaian politicians Ghanaian sportspeople Living people Year of birth missing (living people)
the chairman for faithful club of Kumasi Asante kotoko. He is the district chief executive of Akyemansa District in the Eastern region
Bohemia's second game, starting in a 1–1 draw against Hungary. It was Rosmaisl's only cap for Bohemia. Notes References 1884 births 1945 deaths People from Uhlířské Janovice Association football forwards Czech footballers Czechoslovak footballers SK Slavia Prague players Bohemia international
Czech footballer who played as a striker. Club career Rosmaisl began his career with Smíchov in 1904, before moving to Slavia Prague in 1906. Rosmaisl played for Slavia Prague until 1914. International career On 1 April 1906, Rosmaisl made his debut
micro four-thirds system. It is the first high-end digital camera made by OM Digital Solutions after its acquisition of the imaging divisions of the camera manufacturer Olympus. The OM-1
OM System OM-1 is the flagship mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera produced by OM Digital Solutions on the micro four-thirds system. It is the first high-end digital camera made by OM Digital Solutions after its acquisition of the imaging divisions of the camera manufacturer Olympus. The OM-1 was announced on February 15, 2022. Despite no longer
(B.Ed.) degree in Mathematics and Chemistry, awarded by Kenyatta University in 1994. She is a certified public accountant and is a member of the Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Kenya (ICPAK), the Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Uganda (ICPAU) and Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Rwanda (ICPAR). Career In 1994, Muraya joined Deloitte as an auditor, in their office in Nairobi, Kenya's capital city. Over the years, she rose through the ranks and was in 2017, appointed the first female "audit leader", in Deloitte's East African region. Later, she was appointed as Managing Partner for Responsible Business and Public Policy for Deloitte's Africa region. There too, she was the first female to serve in that role. Other considerations Muraya is a member of Deloitte Africa Audit Executive
serve in that position, in the history of the firm. Background and education Anne Muraya is a Kenyan national. She holds a Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.) degree in Mathematics and Chemistry, awarded by Kenyatta University in 1994. She is a certified public accountant and is a member of the Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Kenya (ICPAK), the Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Uganda (ICPAU) and Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Rwanda (ICPAR). Career In 1994, Muraya joined Deloitte as an auditor, in their office in Nairobi, Kenya's capital city. Over the years, she rose through the ranks and was in 2017, appointed the first female "audit leader", in Deloitte's East African region. Later, she was appointed as Managing Partner for Responsible Business and Public Policy for Deloitte's Africa region. There too, she was the first female
around the city, the first being a former mosque in December 1488, shortly after the Catholic Monarchs took the city in the Reconquista. In the following century, it moved to the Plaza de las Cuatro Calles (now Plaza de la Constitución), remaining there until demolition in the 1860s. After that, it rented several historic buildings in the city centre, moving frequently due to problems with paying the bills. In January 2010, the City Hall was declared a Bien de Interés Cultural. The designation also covers the Jardines de Pedro Luis Alonso, gardens behind the building. In December 2021, refurbishment plans were announced to make the building more akin to its initial design. These would
seat of the city council of Málaga, Spain. A Baroque Revival building with modernist elements, it was designed by the architects Fernando Guerrero Strachan and Manuel Rivera Vera. The first stone was laid by mayor Ricardo Albert on the last day of 1911, and the building was inaugurated on 11 April 1919 by mayor Manuel Romero Raggio. The cost was 1.5 million Spanish pesetas. The Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Telmo was an advisor for the project, and the building was initially also going to hold the Provincial Deputation of Málaga and the Court of Investigation. The city council had previously been seated in several sites around the city, the first being a former
the people of Pakistan. The SBP said the launch of Raast P2P service will not only provide a convenient and hassle-free digital fund transfer service to customers but will also provide an efficient and enabling payments infrastructure that would pave the way for digitisation of the economy and promotion of digital financial services in the country. For customers’ facilitation, they can set their registered mobile phone number as their "Raast ID" and link it to their preferred International Bank Account Number (IBAN) using the bank’s mobile application, internet banking, or visiting their bank branch. Raast is not an online application nor is it a consumer product. It is the “backend infrastructure” connected to banks, fintech etc, and service providers would be able to build a business service on top of it. References External links State Bank of
and zero-cost digital payment services to the people of Pakistan with the objective of promoting the adoption of digital financial services in the country. The Raast System is fully owned, developed and operated by State Bank of Pakistan.Under Raast Person-to-Person (P2P) fund transfers and settlement services, bank customers would be able to send and receive funds in their accounts using their bank’s mobile application, internet banking or over the counter services. Raast aims to facilitate the common man to do their transactions through cell phones, besides it will also help improve the saving rates. Raast — an Urdu word(راست) that means correct and direct — offers an instant, reliable and zero-cost digital payment system to the people of Pakistan. The SBP said the launch of Raast P2P service will not only provide a convenient
and husband to Princess Wongduen (Nattasha Bunprachom). In the present Kalin, a famous model who got herself caught in a scandal. At the same time, Kalin receives a mystery golden hairpin that takes her back to the past as Tiankhum to get her revenge. Cast Main as In Wiangraming (Present) / Prince Taywarit (Past) Nuttanicha Dungwattanawanich as Kalin Raweerampa (Present) / Kaew / Tiankhum (Past) Supapat Phoncharoenrat as Kalin (Young) / Tiankhum (Young) Nattasha Bunprachom as Patima (Present) / Princess Wongduen (Past) Nawasch Phupantachsee as Benjamin Henry (Present) / Louis (Past) Supporting Maneerat Sricharoon as Saiparn (Present) / Ounhuan (Past) Nisachon Tuamsoongnuen as Pam (Present) / Paika (Past) Chanon Rikulsurakan as Nao New Narissan Kin Karun Aramsri as Max Sutthatip Wutichaipradit as Pangrum Chamaiporn Jaturaput as Dutsadee (Present) / Lady Choreuang (Past) as Tharnthong (Present) / Khampor (Past) as Lord Wiangsawan (Past) Thanayong
14, 2019. Synopsis The past tragic love story of Tiankhum (Nuttanicha Dungwattanawanich), an innocent girl who falls in love with Prince Taywarit (), a playboy and husband to Princess Wongduen (Nattasha Bunprachom). In the present Kalin, a famous model who got herself caught in a scandal. At the same time, Kalin receives a mystery golden hairpin that takes her back to the past as Tiankhum to get her revenge. Cast Main as In Wiangraming (Present) / Prince Taywarit (Past) Nuttanicha Dungwattanawanich as Kalin Raweerampa (Present) / Kaew / Tiankhum (Past) Supapat Phoncharoenrat as Kalin (Young) / Tiankhum (Young) Nattasha Bunprachom as Patima (Present) / Princess Wongduen (Past) Nawasch Phupantachsee as Benjamin Henry (Present) / Louis (Past) Supporting Maneerat Sricharoon as Saiparn (Present) / Ounhuan (Past) Nisachon Tuamsoongnuen as Pam (Present) / Paika (Past) Chanon Rikulsurakan as Nao New Narissan Kin Karun Aramsri as Max Sutthatip Wutichaipradit as Pangrum Chamaiporn Jaturaput as Dutsadee (Present) / Lady Choreuang (Past) as Tharnthong (Present) / Khampor (Past) as Lord Wiangsawan (Past) Thanayong Wongtrakul as Nankaew Natha Lloyd as Soisangwan Jack Chakapan as Kampaeng Lorena Schuett as Nim (Nao's girlfriend) Thongthong Mokjok as Meesua Guests as Kalin's father
Hierta family (, lit. "Heart"; ; ), also Hjerta and Järta is a Swedish-Finnish-Russian noble family – uradel – of Swedish origin. The Finnish branch of the Hierta family was naturalized as a Finnish noble
Lars Johan Hierta (1801–1872), Newspaper publisher Anna Hierta-Retzius (1841–1924), Women's rights activist and philanthropist Hans Hierta (1774–1847), Swedish administrator and revolutionary References Hierta family Swedish noble families Russian noble families Finnish
from Lan Nai Wan Village, Sha Tsui Village, together with several households returning from overseas moved into Sai Kung Town, where the government had built 10 five-storey buildings on reclaimed land to accommodate them. The relocated village was called Man Yee Wan. Streets The streets of Man Yee Wan New Village are Man Nin Street (), Yi Chun Street (), Wan King
In 1975, 57 households from Lan Nai Wan Village, Sha Tsui Village, together with several households returning from overseas moved into Sai Kung Town, where the government had built 10 five-storey buildings on reclaimed land to accommodate them. The relocated village was called Man Yee Wan. Streets The streets of Man Yee Wan
born September 09, 1967, Kazan, Tatarstan) is a Russian political figure, deputy of the 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th State Dumas. In 1991 Boguslavsky graduated from the Kazan State Finance and Economics Institute. From 1999 to 2005, he was engaged in various businesses, including selling cars and tailoring. Also, he
Economics Institute. From 1999 to 2005, he was engaged in various businesses, including selling cars and tailoring. Also, he was one of the founders of the Real Trans Hair clinic that specializes in hair transplantation. Boguslavsky started his political career in 2007 when he was elected deputy of 5th State Duma. Later he was re-elected for the 6th (2011-2016),
5 February 1997), simply known as Ronald, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a forward for Botafogo. Club career Born in Bom Jesus do Itabapoana, Rio de Janeiro, Ronald was an Internacional youth graduate. He made his first team debut on 27 January 2018, coming on as a late substitute for Marcinho in a 3–0 Campeonato Gaúcho home win over Avenida. On 31 August 2018, Ronald moved abroad and joined Portuguese side Boavista. However, he only featured for
for Botafogo. Club career Born in Bom Jesus do Itabapoana, Rio de Janeiro, Ronald was an Internacional youth graduate. He made his first team debut on 27 January 2018, coming on as a late substitute for Marcinho in a 3–0 Campeonato Gaúcho home win over Avenida. On 31 August 2018, Ronald moved abroad and joined Portuguese side Boavista. However, he only featured for the B-side before returning to his home country on 20 May 2019, after signing for Botafogo-SP. A regular starter for the Pantera,
was the head coach for Ohio. The Bobcats played their home games at the Men's Gymnasium. They finished the season 11–9 and 5–5 in the Buckeye Athletic
Buckeye Athletic Association. Schedule |- !colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| Regular Season Source: References Ohio Bobcats men's basketball seasons Ohio Ohio Bobcats Ohio
the halfpipe event at the Aspen 2021 World Championships. In 2019 he won the Halfpipe Europa Cup in Crans Montana. References
births Living people Italian male snowboarders Olympic snowboarders of Italy Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics Sportspeople from Turin
policy. From 2017 to 2021, he headed the Central Executive Committee of the United Russia. Since September 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma. References 1974 births Living people United Russia politicians 21st-century Russian
2009 to 2017, he was a member of the Federation Council, and in 2013, he was appointed Deputy Chairman of the committee on social policy. From 2017 to 2021, he headed the Central Executive Committee of the United Russia. Since September 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma. References 1974 births Living people United
into multiple devices are combined into a single
devices are combined into a single device, a 'box'.
1981, he was appointed Director of the Cannery Lebedyansky. In 1992, together with his son Yuri, they acquired a controlling interest in Lebedyansky. By 2003, the factory ranked third in Russia in juice production. In 2008, Lebedyansky was sold to PepsiCo and The Pepsi Bottling Group. In 2004 together with his son, they founded a charitable foundation that shares their second name. The fond specializes in the restoration of the Russian Orthodox Church temples, also assists war veterans and allocates funds to support science and education. Since 2003, Nikolay Bortsov has been a deputy of the State Duma, running with the United Russia. Since September 2021,
he got a job as a mechanic at a winery in Lebedyan. In 1981, he was appointed Director of the Cannery Lebedyansky. In 1992, together with his son Yuri, they acquired a controlling interest in Lebedyansky. By 2003, the factory ranked third in Russia in juice production. In 2008, Lebedyansky was sold to PepsiCo and The Pepsi Bottling Group. In 2004 together with his son, they founded a charitable foundation that shares their second name. The fond specializes in the restoration
Angeles in the 1991 NCAA Division I softball season. The Bruins were coached by Sharron Backus, who led her seventeenth season and Sue Enquist, in her third season, in an uncommonly used co-head coach system. The Bruins played their home games at Sunset Field and finished with a record of 56–7.
in the 1991 NCAA Division I softball season. The Bruins were coached by Sharron Backus, who led her seventeenth season and Sue Enquist, in her third season, in an uncommonly used co-head coach system. The Bruins played their home games at Sunset Field and finished with a record of 56–7.
From 2012 to 2016, he was also the head of the TV-channel Saint Petersburg. In December 2021, he headed the Saint Petersburg branch of the United Russia. In 2016 Sergey Boyarsky was elected deputy of the 7th State Duma. In 2021, he was re-elected for the 8th State Duma. Both times he ran from the United Russia. References 1980 births Living people United Russia
Saint Petersburg, Georgy Poltavchenko. From 2012 to 2016, he was also the head of the TV-channel Saint Petersburg. In December 2021, he headed the Saint Petersburg branch of the United Russia. In 2016 Sergey Boyarsky was elected deputy of the 7th State Duma. In 2021, he was re-elected for the 8th State Duma. Both times
is a Bulgarian footballer who plays as a full back for Hapoel Kfar Saba. Career Stoyanov grow up in Herzliya, Israel and started his career in the local Hapoel. In 2020 he moved to Hapoel Kfar Saba. International career On 2 November 2021, Stoyanov received his first call-up to the Bulgarian under-21 side for 2023 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification matches
In 2020 he moved to Hapoel Kfar Saba. International career On 2 November 2021, Stoyanov received his first call-up to the Bulgarian under-21 side for 2023 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification matches against the Netherlands under-21 and Moldova under-21 sides. He made his debut for
Jacob Boel, mayor from 1420 to 1421, and Claes Jansz Boel, mayor from 1431 and 1434. At the beginning of the further development was Dirck Boelens, who was able to give it space with his appointments as governing mayor in 1447, 1453, 1454 and 1457. On his death he left his family large estates in the Amsterdam area, three houses in the city and a considerable fortune. His son Boel Dirck Boelens continued this development with his appointment as mayor from 1470 to 1478. His son Andries Boelens, who was at the head of the city government in 1496–1497, 1499, 1501–1502, 1504–1505, 1507–1510, 1512, 1514-1515 and 1517, is considered to be an outstanding member of his family. Due to his long tenure and the resulting concentration and development of power, Boelens is considered the progenitor of the Amsterdam regents of the Dutch Golden Age, who largely claimed descent from him. In addition to
for the loss of their prominent position was also due to the family's religious attitude, including in the Baptist rebellion. The first mayors from the Boelen family in the 15th century were Jacob Boel, mayor from 1420 to 1421, and Claes Jansz Boel, mayor from 1431 and 1434. At the beginning of the further development was Dirck Boelens, who was able to give it space with his appointments as governing mayor in 1447, 1453, 1454 and 1457. On his death he left his family large estates in the Amsterdam area, three houses in the city and a considerable fortune. His son Boel Dirck Boelens continued this development with his appointment as mayor from 1470 to 1478. His son Andries Boelens, who was at the head of the city government in 1496–1497, 1499, 1501–1502, 1504–1505, 1507–1510, 1512, 1514-1515 and 1517, is considered to be an outstanding member of his family. Due to his long tenure and the resulting concentration and development of power, Boelens is considered the progenitor of the Amsterdam regents of the Dutch Golden Age, who largely claimed descent from him. In addition to Andries Boelens, Andries Dircksz Boelens also worked as mayor in the city government from 1501 to 1510. Andries Boelen's son Albert Andriesz Boelens inherited a fortune of 14,355 guilders, estates, ships and a magnificent town house in Amsterdam from his father. He was able to continue the political legacy without gaps and was elected governing mayor nine times between 1520 and 1537. Albert Andriesz Boelen's grandson (and great-grandson of Andries Boelens) Jacob Andriesz Boelens stands out from the Boelens Loen family line. In addition to his work as mayor of Amsterdam 13 times, he was also State Councilor of Holland, deputy of the Dutch
Olympic Games: Olympic Dreams (film), a 2019 American film directed by Jeremy Teicher Olympic Dreams
Jeremy Teicher Olympic Dreams (TV Series), a 2007–08 British television show on