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a permanent deal 2015, but after White Star filed for bankruptcy in 2016 after winning the title, Vandermeulen moved to Couvin-Mariembourg competing in the Belgian Second Amateur Division. In 2018, Vandermeulen signed with Francs Borains, also competing in the Belgian Second Amateur Division. During the 2019–20 season, Vandermeulen scored his first goal in a 3–0 win over Meux. His wind-assisted free kick from his own half at Stade Robert Urbain sealed the win. In November 2021, Vandermeulen suffered a hip injury, sidelining him for at least three months. Francs Borains brought in Adrien Saussez as his replacement. Honours White Star Bruxelles | Maxime Vandermeulen (born 11 April 1996) is a Belgian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Belgian National Division 1 club Francs Borains. Career Progressing through the Sporting Charleroi youth academy, Vandermeulen made his professional debut on 20 December 2014 as a starter in a 6–0 home victory in the Belgian Pro League against Lierse. Usually the third goalkeeper in the team, Vandermeulen claimed the starting spot after injuries to Nicolas Penneteau and Parfait Mandanda. On 2 February 2015, Vandermeulen was sent on loan to Belgian Second Division club White Star Bruxelles for the second half of the 2014–15 season. He made his |
Empire, he worked for various publications in Istanbul and founded a magazine-turned-newspaper L'Aurore which was published in Istanbul and then, in Cairo between 1909 and 1941 with five-year hiatus. Early life and education Sciuto was born in Thessaloniki in 1868 into a religious family. He attended the Alliance Israélite Universelle school which he left at age 14. Career and activities Sciuto worked for the newspapers in his hometown, including Journal de Salonique and Le Moniteur Oriental. His literary career began in 1884 when he published a poetry book entitled Poèmes | in Thessaloniki in 1868 into a religious family. He attended the Alliance Israélite Universelle school which he left at age 14. Career and activities Sciuto worked for the newspapers in his hometown, including Journal de Salonique and Le Moniteur Oriental. His literary career began in 1884 when he published a poetry book entitled Poèmes misanthropiques. He published another poetry book in French and in 1894 he published another book in Paris in 1894, Paternité. In 1909 he founded a French language newspaper, L'Aurore, in Istanbul |
of 1891 and 1894, and been a losing finalist in 1892. Wylie was selected once for the Scottish Football League XI against the Irish League XI in April 1893; in the absence of any Rangers or Celtic players who were excused due to their involvement in a pivotal league fixture on the same day, the understrength Scottish team lost 3–2. Wylie had to leave the field in the first half due to injury, with clubmate Andrew Brown allowed to replace him as a substitute (which had to be approved by the host body). Although St Mirren were also in contention for the SFL title, Brown and Wylie were accompanied by Edward McBain for the match in Belfast, and their club met | of 1891 and 1894, and been a losing finalist in 1892. Wylie was selected once for the Scottish Football League XI against the Irish League XI in April 1893; in the absence of any Rangers or Celtic players who were excused due to their involvement in a pivotal league fixture on the same day, the understrength Scottish team lost 3–2. Wylie had to leave the field in the first half due to injury, with clubmate Andrew Brown allowed to replace him as a substitute (which had to be approved by the host body). Although St Mirren were also in contention for the SFL title, Brown and Wylie were accompanied by Edward McBain for the match in Belfast, and their club met Third Lanark without them, losing 6–1. Personal life Wylie was born in the village of Crosslee in Renfrewshire; his father died in 1875 and the family moved within the county, first to Lochwinnoch then to Paisley. Having found a trade as |
was a very short-lived station, being open for six months before closing on 1 December 1844. References Disused railway stations in London Former London and North Western Railway stations Former West London Railway stations Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1844 Railway stations | December 1844. References Disused railway stations in London Former London and North Western Railway stations Former West London Railway stations Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1844 Railway stations in Great Britain closed |
leading them to conduct an array of arrests. In order to proceed with their plan, they summoned the Archbishops to a fraudulent meeting in Tripolitsa. Germanos was amongst those arrested, reaching the city on the March 8th having left Kyparissia on March 5th. He died as a result of the hardships of his captivity on September 21st 1821. References Sources Atesis, Vasilios (1971). «Εθνομάρτυρες αρχιερείς της Εκκλησίας της Ελλάδος από του 1821-1869». Θεολογία 42: 1–29. Veis, Nikos (1939). «Γερμανού Μητροπολίτου Χριστιανουπόλεως γράμμα προς τους ιερείς της επαρχίας αυτού». Πρακτικά της Χριστιανικής Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας των ετών 1936-1938 (Εν Αθήναις) περίοδος 3η, 4: 118–125. Greek people of the Greek War of Independence 1821 deaths 1760 births Filiki Eteria People from Akrata Prisoners and detainees of the Ottoman Empire Bishops of the Ecumenical | very young. At the age of nine he entered as a novice in Mega Spilaio monastery, later becoming a monk and being given the name Germanos. He was later ordained a deacon and a presbyter. At around 1800 he found himself in Thessaloniki where he worked for two years as a teacher. He later went to Belgrade where he worked as a teacher while promoting the Greek uprising. The Ottoman authorities expelled him from the city and, subsequently, he went to the Danubian Principalities. He remained there for two years where he learnt the Aromanian language. In the end, he was also expelled from there by the Turkish authorities due to his nationalistic action. He returned to Mega Spilaio and, subsequently, departed for pilgrimage to Jerusalem. At a later date, he travelled to Constantinople, where he was already known for his wisdom. The Holy Synod of the Patriarchate first elected him Bishop of Sebasteia and later, under Patriarch Gregory V (1806-1808), in March 1807, elected him successor of Germanos of Christianopolis (1793-1807). Because of his fame, Alexander Ypsilantis appointed him as one of the 4-5 registrars of the Filiki Eteria, where he had been initiated since |
Beitar Tel Aviv Bat Yam F.C. players Hapoel Ironi Kiryat Shmona F.C. players Liga Leumit players Israeli Premier League players Israel youth international footballers Israeli people of English-Jewish descent | Ironi Kiryat Shmona on loan from Maccabi Tel Aviv. Club career After coming through the academy, Nidam made his professional league debut for Maccabi Tel Aviv in April 2019 as a late substitute in a 4–1 win over Maccabi Netanya. International career Nidam has represented Israel at various youth international levels. References External links Living |
a landing area (water runway) 10,000 feet long on Cayuga Lake. The lake has an elevation of 382 feet above sea level. In the mid 20th century it was a full time business with a dock and hangar located on the western side of Cayuga Lake, just | time business with a dock and hangar located on the western side of Cayuga Lake, just south of Crowbar Point. It was attended with regular business hours. At some point in the 1980s, it became an unattended seaplane landing area. At some point in the early 2000s, the seaplane base symbol disappeared from FAA sectional charts, and the FAA identifier |
Life and career Walther won the bronze medal in the women's dual banked slalom SB-LL1 event at the 2021 World Para Snow | 2021 World Para Snow Sports Championships held in Lillehammer, Norway. She also won the bronze medal in the women's snowboard cross SB-LL1 event. Along with Romy Tschopp, Walther won the bronze medal in the |
idol group from Tokyo which is signed to Lantis and affiliated with Dear Stage. Consisting of Waka Kirishima, Fūri Uebana, and Risuko Sasakama, the group began its activities in 2016, and has released 10 singles and three albums as of 2022. Its music has been featured in anime series such as Hensuki, Appare-Ranman!, and The Aquatope on White Sand. History The group began its activities in 2016. Its members include Waka Kirishima, Fūri Uebana, and Risuko Sasakama, all of whom were also members of the Star Anis idol group associated with the anime series Aikatsu Stars!. Their first single was released on August 24, 2016; the title | respectively to the anime series Seven Mortal Sins. This was followed by the release of the single "Dear Teardrop" on February 28, 2018; the title song was used as the ending theme to the anime series Citrus. They released the single on August 21, 2019; the title song was used as the ending theme to the anime series Hensuki. In 2021 they released the single ; the title track was used as the first ending theme to the anime series The Aquatope on White Sand. References External links Official website Anime musical groups Japanese idol groups Lantis (company) artists Musical groups |
the second part of the XIX century the building was restored and consecrated in the name of the Holy Trinity. Since 1912 the church is a filial of the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. After the World War II the church was active for several years but then closed by order of the Soviet authorities in the 1960s. The building was repurposed as a concert hall for pipe organ. Architecture The church is an example of baroque style combined with the castle architecture. It has one nave without apse, massive walls up to 2 m thick and a small | with the death of the last abbot Isidor Kontonovich the church was abandoned. In the second part of the XIX century the building was restored and consecrated in the name of the Holy Trinity. Since 1912 the church is a filial of the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. After the World War II the church was active for several years but then closed by order of the Soviet authorities in the 1960s. The building was repurposed as a concert hall for pipe organ. Architecture The church is an example of baroque style combined with the castle architecture. It has one nave without apse, massive walls up to 2 m thick and a small transept. The nave is divided by three bays. The original interiors were destroyed in the 1960s. In the 1990s new window panes and an electric organ were installed in the church. New restoration of the church was completed in |
(FPÖ) and serves the "right boulevard". The content is disproportionatel and often identified as factually incorrect. History Wochenblick was founded in March 2016. Media owner (publisher) and manufacturer is Medien24 GmbH based in Brunnenthal. Emotion Media GmbH is the 100% shareholder. The first editor-in-chief was Kurt Guggenbichler, which had worked for 25 years for Oberösterreichischen Nachrichten. Christian Seibert replaced him on May 4, 2018. The position he held until March 2020. The than editor-in-chief | factually incorrect. History Wochenblick was founded in March 2016. Media owner (publisher) and manufacturer is Medien24 GmbH based in Brunnenthal. Emotion Media GmbH is the 100% shareholder. The first editor-in-chief was Kurt Guggenbichler, which had worked for 25 years for Oberösterreichischen Nachrichten. Christian Seibert replaced him on May 4, 2018. The position he held until March 2020. The than editor-in-chief is Elsa Mittmannsgruber announced in late January 2022 to fully switch to "Auf1" YouTube-TV. Her Succeder is Berandette Conrads. Managing Director is Norbert Geroldinger. In the first few weeks, the newspaper was distributed free of charge on the streets in Linz and |
politician, administrator and diplomat in Papua New Guinea (PNG). He played an important role in events leading up to PNG's independence in 1975 and later became the country's ambassador in Tokyo. Early life and education Joseph Karl Nombri was born on 25 September 1940 in Wagl village, Pari, near Kundiawa in the Simbu Province in the Highlands of PNG. He was an only child, with his parents being from the Kamanuku and Kengaku tribes. After schooling in Kundiawa he went to Goroka High School, a provincial school, before transferring to Sogeri High School, one of the country's four (now six) national high schools that prepared students for tertiary education. One of his fellow students at Sogeri was Michael Somare, the future prime minister of PNG. Nombri received a scholarship to study in Australia, after which he joined the new Administrative College in Port Moresby, capital of what was then the Territory of Papua and New Guinea. Political life In the mid-1960s, Nombri was a member of the Bully Beef Club, which was a political discussion group made up of students at the Administrative College and others. Somare was a member, as was Albert Maori Kiki, in whose home the meetings were usually held. The Bully Beef Club led to the founding of the Pangu Pati in 1967, with Nombri as its first chairman. Pangu took part in elections for the House of Assembly of Papua and New Guinea in 1968 and 1972 and, in 1975, formed the government of the independent state of Papua New Guinea. Career On graduating from the Administrative College, Nombri became a kiap, a district officer or patrol officer who representated the Australian government in the Territory. This was a job that had previously been done mainly by young Australian men. Having been earmarked by the administration as a troublemaker, he was sent to one of | Province in the Highlands of PNG. He was an only child, with his parents being from the Kamanuku and Kengaku tribes. After schooling in Kundiawa he went to Goroka High School, a provincial school, before transferring to Sogeri High School, one of the country's four (now six) national high schools that prepared students for tertiary education. One of his fellow students at Sogeri was Michael Somare, the future prime minister of PNG. Nombri received a scholarship to study in Australia, after which he joined the new Administrative College in Port Moresby, capital of what was then the Territory of Papua and New Guinea. Political life In the mid-1960s, Nombri was a member of the Bully Beef Club, which was a political discussion group made up of students at the Administrative College and others. Somare was a member, as was Albert Maori Kiki, in whose home the meetings were usually held. The Bully Beef Club led to the founding of the Pangu Pati in 1967, with Nombri as its first chairman. Pangu took part in elections for the House of Assembly of Papua and New Guinea in 1968 and 1972 |
School as a teacher's institute. History In 1931, the Lipetsk Pedagogical Vocational School was established, which trained primary school teachers. In 1949, a teacher's institute was formed on the basis of the Lipetsk Pedagogical Vocational School. At that time, the institute had about 200 students and 2 faculties: historical-philological and physical-mathematical. In 1954, in connection with the acquisition of the status of a regional center by Lipetsk, by order of | Lipetsk Pedagogical Vocational School. At that time, the institute had about 200 students and 2 faculties: historical-philological and physical-mathematical. In 1954, in connection with the acquisition of the status of a regional center by Lipetsk, by order of the Ministry of Education of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic dated 8 June 1954, the teacher's institute was transformed into the Lipetsk State Pedagogical Institute. Since 1975, foreign students began to study at the institute. On 10 October 2000, the institute was transformed into the Lipetsk State Pedagogical University. In 2016, the university was named after |
she was regarded as uneducatable, and was nicknamed "Die wilde Laja" (The wild Laja). She was a good dancer and singer. She was engaged with a Hungarian baron, who tragically died. She then decided to remain single and work as a nurse. Her future husband, Eberhard Harnoncourt (1896–1970), born Graf de la Fontaine und d'Harnoncourt-Unverzagt, was an Austrian engineer working in Berlin. He was a widower with two small children, Alice and Renatus (René). He thought of her as a possible mother for his children, and requested her mother to grant him a talk with the young woman. He travelled to Austria for the meeting in October 1928, and they were married on 29 December that year in the bishop's chapel in Graz. Their son Nikolaus was born in 1929, his brother Philipp two years later. In 1931, her husband's company went bankrupt. The family moved to Graz where he obtained a post in the state government (Landesregierung) of Styria. | single and work as a nurse. Her future husband, Eberhard Harnoncourt (1896–1970), born Graf de la Fontaine und d'Harnoncourt-Unverzagt, was an Austrian engineer working in Berlin. He was a widower with two small children, Alice and Renatus (René). He thought of her as a possible mother for his children, and requested her mother to grant him a talk with the young woman. He travelled to Austria for the meeting in October 1928, and they were married on 29 December that year in the bishop's chapel in Graz. Their son Nikolaus was born in 1929, his brother Philipp two years later. In 1931, her husband's company went bankrupt. The family moved to Graz where he obtained a post in the state government (Landesregierung) of Styria. Their children Juliana, Karl and Franz were born there. The family also spent time in Grundlsee and the Brandhof estate. Of her her children, Nikolaus Harnoncourt became a cellist, conductor and pioneer of historically informed performance Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Philipp Harnoncourt was a priest and patron of the arts, Karl Harnoncourt a physician, and Franz Harnoncourt CEO of the wharehouse Kastner & Öhler. Nikolaus Harnoncourt wrote a memoir |
a Finnish racing driver. He has won the title of Ferrari Challenge World Championship as well as the Porsche Sprint Challenge NEZ Series. He won the both championship series as the youngest competitor. In addition, in early seasons of his career he won many medals in Karting Finnish Championship series and in other international series. He has also won the Championship in Finland's most popular circuit racing series, Legends - also as the youngest driver in its history. Since karting he has determinately developed his career towards top speed in international GT-series. Career Karting 2009–2018 Born in Tampere, Finland, at age of five Nurmi started competing in karting as he became interested in the thrilling and fast-paced world of motorsport. Determined work in the junior karting groups delivered silver medal in the Rotax Max Finland series, bronze medal in BNL series and bronze medal in Rotax MAX Challenge World Championships. In season 2017 he won silver medal in OKj-group of Karting Finnish Championship series. He was also awarded with title of Finnish Newcomer driver. In season 2018 he continued in Finnish Karting Championship series and won bronze medal in OK-group before making a decision to continue his career in faster cars. RX Academy 2019 The RX Academy, which was run by Jussi | and won bronze medal in OK-group before making a decision to continue his career in faster cars. RX Academy 2019 The RX Academy, which was run by Jussi and Kalle Pinomäki (SET Promotion), was driven by Renault Clio RS cars in the Nordic and the Baltic countries. In addition to driving, the academy included physics, mental as well as media coaching. For Nurmi the racing season, which ended in fifth place in the series, was very developing in all those sectors and provided a good foundation for his motorsport career. Porsche Sprint Challenge NEZ 2020–2021 Finnish Relaa Racing team chose Nurmi for its' junior driver to Porsche Sprint Challenge NEZ Racing series for seasons 2020 and 2021. Nurmi thanked the team manager Raimo Niemi for the trust he had give as in his first GT year Nurmi won the bronze medal of the series. After fierceful driving in next year he improved two positions and won the Championship title as the youngest driver to |
and later commanded XXXIX Reserve Corps. Life Lauenstein was born on 1 February 1857 in Lüneburg. Until 1875, he attended Gymnasium Lüneburg. And in 1876, he was appointed as a Second Lieutenant. He was deployed in 18th Field Artillery Regiment. From 1892 to 1900 he was military attaché in St. Petersburg. In 1901, he was sent to China as general staff officer of Alfred von Waldersee. The same year, he returned to Germany and commanded the 38th Field Artillery Regiment. On 24 April 1904, as a German officer, he was sent to Russia as Prussian Military envoy with Russian Army in Manchuria. He observed the Russo-Japanese War. For Alfred von Schlieffen, Lauenstein was important. Lauenstein reported that the Russian officers are not responsibly but | Russia is not able to counterattack the Prussian forces. In 1905, he was a section chief of General Staff. On 13 February 1906, Lauenstein was promoted to Oberst. The same year, he became Orderly aide-de-Camp of Wilhelm II. On 27 January 1908, Lauestein was ennobled. On 22 March 1910, Lauenstein became Generalmajor. On 3 May 1910, Lauenstein became the commander of 38th Infantry Brigade. In 1911, he was sent to Russia again as Prussian Military envoy. Same year, he returned to Germany and became chief of staff of VI Corps commanded by Karl von Pritzelwitz. On 1 October 1912, he was promoted to Generalleutnant and commanded the 14th Division. During the World War I, he first was the chief of staff of 2nd Army, which played a big role in Schlieffen Plan. In December 1914, Lauenstein received command of XXXIX Reserve |
placed team from the regular season plays with fourth, the second placed team plays with third. The playoffs are played in best-of-three format. Teams Teams in 2021/22 season: Champions List of champions in seasons of the league: 1998 – Dajar's Team Warszawa 1999 – Podhale Nowy Targ 2000 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2001 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2002 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2003 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2004 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2005 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2006 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2007 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2008 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2009 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2010 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2011 – KS Górale Nowy Targ 2012 – KS Górale Nowy Targ 2013 – KS Górale Nowy Targ 2014 – UKS Bankówka Zielonka 2015 – KS Górale Nowy Targ 2016 – | The total number of regular season games is 56. The four teams that finish the regular season at the top of the standings qualify for the playoffs in the spring. Playoffs The top eight teams from the regular season play for the Polish Champion. The first placed team from the regular season plays with fourth, the second placed team plays with third. The playoffs are played in best-of-three format. Teams Teams in 2021/22 season: Champions List of champions in seasons of the league: 1998 – Dajar's Team Warszawa 1999 – Podhale Nowy Targ 2000 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2001 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2002 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2003 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2004 – KS Szarotka Nowy Targ 2005 |
also the director of the Marsh Botanical Garden. Education and career Edwards has a B.S. from Stanford University (1998) and earned her Ph.D. from Yale University where she worked on the evolution of the Pereskia, a genus of cactus. Following her Ph.D. she was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California at Santa Barbara before accepting a position at Brown University as an assistant professor in 2007. In 2017 she moved to Yale University as a professor and director of the Marsh Botanical Garden. In 2020 she began her term as president of the Society of Systematic Biologists. Research Edwards research focuses on succulents and the evolution of C4 carbon fixation in plants. Her early research centered on Pereskia where she examined its physiology and the its place in the evolutionary history of cactus plants. Her research into C4 carbon fixation has examined how climate change | grasses with increases in tropical woodlands and savannas. Edwards led the working group which established the phylogeny of C4 grasses and defined the genetic differences across different types of grass. She uses changes in leaf shape to define how plants expend their resources during growth, examines plants' responses to changes in biome. and compares the parallel evolution of C4 photosynthesis and crassulacean acid metabolism. Selected publications Awards and honors In 2016, Edwards received a Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE). References External links Stanford University alumni Yale University alumni Yale University faculty Women |
is an immunostimulant. It is a combination of molecules extracted from the walls of bacteria that commonly cause respiratory infections. Uses It has been sold, as Broncho-Vaxom, in Europe and some South American countries. It is used for children with asthma or | been sold, as Broncho-Vaxom, in Europe and some South American countries. It is used for children with asthma or recurrent respiratory infections. Potential uses It may help prevent Covid-19. It may prevent babies from developing |
goods yard to the south. The station closed on 13 June 1960. The station House still stands. References Disused railway stations in Highland (council area) Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1871 Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1960 1871 establishments in | 1871 by the Duke of Sutherland's Railway. It had a signal box and a goods yard to the south. The station closed on 13 June 1960. The station House still stands. References Disused railway stations in Highland (council area) Railway stations in |
personal account of her struggles with self-harm and how it has impacted her life. The special aired on 16 February 2022 on Channel 4. The documentary received mostly positive reviews from critics writing for newspapers including The Guardian, The Independent and The Daily Telegraph, who praised the different side that Collins had shown to her personality and accredited her with raising awareness for self-harm. Production The commissioning of the documentary was announced by Channel 4 in July 2021 and was described as a raw and candid documentary revealing Gemma Collins' "painful experience" with self-harm. The film was produced by Definitely, which is part of the production company Banijay UK who worked with Collins alongside mental health charity Mind to investigate what is behind the rise in cases of self-harm in the United Kingdom. Upon the announcement, Lee McMurray, the commissioning editor for Channel 4, said: "Gemma Collins has taken the brave decision to open up about her own experience with self-harm. As an instantly recognisable and relatable figure we applaud her courage in revealing her own struggles, and hope this film and her insight will spark vitally important conversations around young people and self-harm." Collins described the documentary as the "best television [she's] ever made", because she is "not [her alter ego] the GC on there – she is very much herself". She also added that she was keen to tackle the subject of self-harm following the suicide of her friend Rhys the previous year. Content Gemma sits down with therapist Mandy Saligari, whom she first met when she appeared on In Therapy in 2016; and tells her that she began self-harming at the age of 13, confessing that she felt scared and ashamed and never told anybody due to the fear of being admitted to a mental health hospital. She admits that the first time she self-harmed was in front of her parents, who were shocked but continued as normal and the incident wasn't spoken about again. Gemma meets her school friend Vicky, who tells her she knew "something | her insight will spark vitally important conversations around young people and self-harm." Collins described the documentary as the "best television [she's] ever made", because she is "not [her alter ego] the GC on there – she is very much herself". She also added that she was keen to tackle the subject of self-harm following the suicide of her friend Rhys the previous year. Content Gemma sits down with therapist Mandy Saligari, whom she first met when she appeared on In Therapy in 2016; and tells her that she began self-harming at the age of 13, confessing that she felt scared and ashamed and never told anybody due to the fear of being admitted to a mental health hospital. She admits that the first time she self-harmed was in front of her parents, who were shocked but continued as normal and the incident wasn't spoken about again. Gemma meets her school friend Vicky, who tells her she knew "something wasn't right" and that [Gemma] never opens up about how she is feeling. Gemma then visits a pharmacy and demonstrates the type of plasters she would use to hide her scars before attending a self-harm support group in Essex, where she speaks to three women about their experiences. Her fiancé Rami recalls the time he had caught Gemma self-harming and her subsequent reaction of reassuring him that it wouldn't happen again. She discusses her future plans to have a baby with him and reveals her fears about revisiting self-harm once she's a mother. Gemma tells Mandy she feels very "settled" with Rami, that he loves her for her and showed her compassion throughout her struggle with self-harm. She also discusses how her mother's upbringing contributed to the way she herself was raised, stating that because her mother was adopted and felt abandoned, she grew up with no confidence and therefore pushed [Gemma] to always be confident and perform. Gemma says as a result of this she struggled to open up about her emotions but says she doesn't blame her mother. Gemma speaks to her mother Joan who struggles to understand what was behind the reason for her self-harming, because she didn't have any stress in her life at a young age. When Gemma asks her why she didn't opt to seek help, her mum says that she didn't feel the need to because she always kept her eye on her. Gemma visits Harmless, a self-harm prevention centre in Nottingham where she speaks to its founder Caroline Harroe about the support they provide and the statistics of self-harm and suicide. She gets emotional when discussing her friend Rhys' suicide and attends the weekly drop-in session at the centre, where she meets two people who have self-harmed. Mandy suggests that the reason Gemma has struggled to open up about how she feels, may be because she has put her parents' feelings first in fear of upsetting them by talking about her own emotions. In the concluding scenes, Gemma and Joan reminisce watching her old stage productions and have an honest and frank discussion about why she self-harmed. Gemma shuts down her mother when she suggests that her self-harming was influenced by something she saw on television. Joan adds that her way of dealing with things was to "carry on and keep everything happy" and that she never thought [Gemma] was depressed, to |
marched against Balram but Balram managed to evade him using stratagem with the help of Marathas. Mughal king Ahmad Shah Bahadur replaced Safdar Jung with Gaziuddin Khan ("Intizam-Ud-Daullahas" or "lmad-ul-Mulk", the imperial Mir Bakhshi) as new wizir. Safdar Jung, supported by Balram Jat and Surajmal Jat, revolted against the Mughal king. Murtija Khan's son Aqaibet Mahmud Khan was the chief diwan of Gaziuddin Khan, he and Balram agreed to meet to negotiate the terms of truce. Balram arrived with his son, diwan and 250 men, angry words flew, Balram put his hand on his sword, Aquibat's guard suddenly fell upon Balram and killed him, his son, diwan and 9 other escorts. Maharaja Suraj Mal Jat retaliated by capturing Palwal from Mughals on 27 September 1754. He also caught the qazi there and slayed the qanungo Santokh Rai for scheming Balram's murder. In November 1755, Jats under Suraj Mal also recaptured Ballabgarh and Ghasira from Mughals. Suraj Mal appointed sons of Balram, Bishan Singh as Nazim and Kishan Singh as kiledar, who stayed in these roles till 1774 under Suraj Mal. From 1757 to 1760, Ahmad Shah Abdali waged war against Jats and Marathas. After the defeat of Maratha Empire in the Third Battle of Panipat on 12 June 1761, Suraj Mal recaptured Ballabhgarh from Abdali's forced in 1762 and reinstated Balram's sons Kishan Singh and Bishan Singh in their roles under Bharatpur State. On 20 April 1774, Ajit Singh with title of "Raja" and Hira Singh with titles of "Raja" and "Salar Jang" were restored to Ballabhgarh as descendant of Balram by Mughal king after they were removed by Bharatpur king. In 1775, Ajit Singh was formally appointed Raja of Ballabhgarh under Mughal authority. In 1793, Ajit Singh was killed by his brother Zalim Singh, and Ajit's son Bahadur Singh became the king. Till 1803 Ballabhgarh rulers remained under Marathas .In 1785 mahadji capture deeg but not capture bharatpur after 1787 to keep peace with Jats gave 11 paragana to ranjit singh and make friendly relation with bharatpur to make peace ref agra province. Jat rule during British era In 1803, after the Treaty of Surji-Anjangaon Haryana was transferred to British by Maratha Empire. British confirmed Ajit Singh's son Bahadur Singh as independent ruler of Ballabhgarh jagir, as a buffer state between British border and Sikhs rulers, and it remained an independent princely state until the Indian Rebellion of 1857. Bahadur Singh killed in 1806. His son Narain | but Balram managed to evade him using stratagem with the help of Marathas. Mughal king Ahmad Shah Bahadur replaced Safdar Jung with Gaziuddin Khan ("Intizam-Ud-Daullahas" or "lmad-ul-Mulk", the imperial Mir Bakhshi) as new wizir. Safdar Jung, supported by Balram Jat and Surajmal Jat, revolted against the Mughal king. Murtija Khan's son Aqaibet Mahmud Khan was the chief diwan of Gaziuddin Khan, he and Balram agreed to meet to negotiate the terms of truce. Balram arrived with his son, diwan and 250 men, angry words flew, Balram put his hand on his sword, Aquibat's guard suddenly fell upon Balram and killed him, his son, diwan and 9 other escorts. Maharaja Suraj Mal Jat retaliated by capturing Palwal from Mughals on 27 September 1754. He also caught the qazi there and slayed the qanungo Santokh Rai for scheming Balram's murder. In November 1755, Jats under Suraj Mal also recaptured Ballabgarh and Ghasira from Mughals. Suraj Mal appointed sons of Balram, Bishan Singh as Nazim and Kishan Singh as kiledar, who stayed in these roles till 1774 under Suraj Mal. From 1757 to 1760, Ahmad Shah Abdali waged war against Jats and Marathas. After the defeat of Maratha Empire in the Third Battle of Panipat on 12 June 1761, Suraj Mal recaptured Ballabhgarh from Abdali's forced in 1762 and reinstated Balram's sons Kishan Singh and Bishan Singh in their roles under Bharatpur State. On 20 April 1774, Ajit Singh with title of "Raja" and Hira Singh with titles of "Raja" and "Salar Jang" were restored to Ballabhgarh as descendant of Balram by Mughal king after they were removed by Bharatpur king. In 1775, Ajit Singh was formally appointed Raja of Ballabhgarh under Mughal authority. In 1793, Ajit Singh was killed by his brother Zalim Singh, and Ajit's son Bahadur Singh became the king. Till 1803 Ballabhgarh rulers |
The door of the tower is known as the "Bride's Entrance" due to its use during weddings today. References 15th-century Scottish architects | Scottish architect prominent in the 15th century. In the 1460s, he worked on the ancient St John's Kirk, whose northwest porch is |
the British northern whale fishery. She made two voyages to Greenland and one to Davis Strait. New owners returned Molly to merchant trade. Captain John Jordan acquired a letter of marque on 7 August 1779. In March 1780 Lloyd's List reported that Molly, Jordan, master, had arrived at Antigua with a Prize. From Jamaica Molly sailed to Georgia, and Charleston, South Carolina. Lloyd's List reported in January 1782 that Molly, Jordain, master had been on her way to Liverpool from Jamaica when she encountered the privateer Terror of England, of 22 guns, off the | she encountered the privateer Terror of England, of 22 guns, off the Tuskar Rock, Ireland. After an engagement of three hours Molly struck. Captain Jordain and four more of his crew had been killed, and several men had been wounded. However, a gale came up and Terror of England gave Molly up. Molly then sailed into Greenock, and on to Liverpool. Fate Molly was last listed in 1783. Notes and citations Notes Citations |
Pola is a feminine given name of Greek origin, a Polish and Spanish form of the name Apolonia, | and Spanish form of the name Apolonia, a feminine form of the ancient Greek name Apollinaris, a name derived from the Greek god Apollo. Saint Apollonia was an early Christian martyr venerated in the Catholic |
short track speed skater representing Hong Kong. Chu was Hong Kong's flag-bearer at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China. Career In February 2022 Chu participated his first Olympic Games in Beijing, China. Finishing with the time of 44.857 seconds, he ranked 24th out of | 44.857 seconds, he ranked 24th out of 32 competitors in the men's 500m short track speed skating at that Olympics. References External links 1999 births Living |
of branch libraries The names and locations of the branch libraries: 1.Ikeja Secretariat Library, Oba Akinjobi Street, Old Secretariat, Ikeja 2. Herbert Macaulay Library, 338, Herbert Macaulay Road, Yaba 3. Ikorodu Divisional Library, T.O.S. Benson Road, Ikorodu 4. Tolu Public Library, Temidire Street, Tolu School Complex, Ajegunle 5. Isolo Public Library, Holy Saviour College Road, Off Osolo Way, Isolo 6. Epe Divisional Library, Recreation Field, Epe 7. Badagry Divisional Library, Marine Road, Badagry 8. Borno House Library, Block 130, Jakande Estate, Amuwo-Odofin, Mile 2 9. Ipaja Public Library, No. 24, Akinogun Street, Shagari Estate, Pako Bus/Stop, Ipaja 10. Ilupeju Public Library, No. 3, Ade Akinsanya Street, Opposite LSDPC, Ilupeju 11. Henry Carr Public Library, Behind Conoil Petrol Station, Cement B/Stop, Agege 12. Meiran Public Library, Meiran. Library Collections The branch libraries of the board have collections of current books, journals, periodicals and reports. In 2019, officials of | ra nge of quality books and learning materials in stock. The Headquarters of the board is located within the Old Secretariat, Oba Akinjobi Way, GRA, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria.Presently, the Lagos State Library Board manages 12 functional libraries across the state. The core responsibility of the board is to serve as consultant to our Libraries, maintain standard in them and ensure that reading culture is promoted among students. Vision Statement. Our vision is to provide information at the shortest possible time to the users by Professional Librarian Mission statement. The Library Board was established to provide a first class 21st Century Library and Information Services to the citizen of Lagos State. List of branch libraries The names and locations of the branch libraries: 1.Ikeja Secretariat Library, Oba Akinjobi Street, Old Secretariat, Ikeja 2. Herbert Macaulay Library, 338, Herbert Macaulay Road, Yaba 3. Ikorodu Divisional Library, T.O.S. Benson Road, Ikorodu 4. Tolu Public Library, Temidire Street, Tolu |
Anthony Fantano of The Needle Drop felt that the album was more pessimistic than the duo's previous albums and thought that it seemed to continue past themes to a "very strong explosive finishing point". Overall, he opined that it contained "some of the duo's most explosive and imperative material to date". Hal Kitchen of 25YL argued that the chemistry between Rook and McCallion on the album gave it "emotional expressiveness" and a sense of genuineness, and praised their use of uncoventional song structure and the catchiness of their lyrics. He concluded "Black Dresses is the best band in the world right now. Their aesthetic and perspective are one of a kind, their performances utterly committed, | The album is dark and angry in tone, featuring criticism of cultural appropriation, backlash against trans people and contemporary pop culture, as well as disses towards RuPaul and Travis Barker. According to Hannah Jocelyn of Pitchfork, Black Dresses' antagonism towards Barker is fueled by a fear of the commodification of hyperpop pushing the progenitors of the genre offline. Reception Hannah Jocelyn of Pitchfork felt that the album was "lighter" and "less introspective" than their previous emotionally heavy and personal albums, and praised the camaraderie between band members Ada Rook and Devi McCallion. James Rettig of Stereogum described the album as "brief and explosive" and said that it is "deliriously fun while also being a little |
a Master's degree in International Education from the University of Sunderland. In 2015 She retired from playing sevens rugby. References Living people Hong Kong people Hong Kong rugby union players Hong | has a Master's degree in International Education from the University of Sunderland. In 2015 She retired from playing sevens rugby. References Living |
as well as most of its member churches. Members In 2008, they were members of the Fraternity: Reformed Community Church of Myanmar Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Myanmar Christian Reformed Church in Myanmar Reformed Evangelical Church of Myanmar Biblical Presbyterian Church of Myanmar Reformed Presbyterian Church in Myanmar Covenant Reformed Presbyterian Church of Myanmar Reformed Church in Myanmar United Reformed Churches | to join International Conference of Reformed Churches. In addition, the organization has established contact with the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated). By 2013, the organization became a member of World Reformed Fellowship, as well as most of its member churches. Members In 2008, they were members of the Fraternity: Reformed Community Church |
Machine Components" in 1956. In 1971, it took the name of "Department of Mechanics of Friction and Lubrication". 27 years later, in 1998, its name changed to "Department of Rotor Dynamics and Slide Bearings". The department took its present name in 2014. Heads of department Prof. Tadeusz Gerlach (from 1956 to 1991) Prof. Jan Kiciński (from 1991 to 2014) Dr Grzegorz Żywica, Associate Professor of IMP PAN (since 2014) Research and development activities Modelling and analysis of dynamic phenomena that occur in rotor-bearing systems | of innovative bearing systems Modelling and testing of gas foil bearings Use of 3D printing for design and construction of machinery Design and testing of cogeneration systems (e.g. ORC systems) Department staff participate in research and development projects and publish their research results in international scientific journals. Research infrastructure The Department of Turbine Dynamics and Diagnostics has four laboratories: Machine Vibrodiagnostics Laboratory Micro CHP Power Plant Laboratory Rapid Prototyping Laboratory A set of test rigs in the Research Centre for Energy Conversion and Renewable Resources (KEZO) of the Polish Academy of Sciences, in Jabłonna near Warsaw References Bibliography Pietraszkiewicz, Wojciech; Burka, Eustachy S.; Kiciński, Jan; Mikielewicz, Jarosław (2006). 50 lat Instytutu Maszyn Przepływowych im R. Szewalskiego Polskiej Akademii Nauk w Gdańsku. Gdańsk, Wydawnictwo IMP PAN. ISBN 83-88237-21-7. External links Department of Turbine Dynamics and Diagnostics IMP PAN Polish Academy of Sciences 1956 establishments in Poland Scientific organizations established in 1956 Organisations |
documents from Ur from the Ur III period, šu-u-wa-a-la, šu-u-wa-la, šu-u-wa-u-la, šu-wa-a-la and šu-wa-la in Hurro-Hittite documents from Hattusa; and ṯwl in a Hurrian text from Ugarit written in the local alphabetic script. The variety of spelling in the Hittite sources in particular is regarded by researchers such as Marie-Claude Trémouille as evidence that the name did not originate in an Anatolian language. Reference works classify her as Hurrian in origin. However, Piotr Taracha regards her as one of the so-called "Syrian substratum" deities, similar to Ishara, Kubaba and Astabi. Identification of Shuwala with Shala, wife of the Mesopotamian weather god Ishkur (Adad), proposed by Edward Lipiński based on the similarity of the names, is regarded as unsubstantiated. The similarity between names of the Hittite god Shuwaliyat and Shuwala is also regarded as accidental due to distinct areas of origin of these two deities. The view that Shuwala was merely an abbreviated form of Shuwaliyat, present in a number of older scholarly publications, is regarded as unsubstantiated. Association with other deities Hurro-Hittite ritual texts from Hattusa indicate that Shuwala was regarded as one of the goddesses belonging to the circle of Hebat, which consisted of Hurrian and Syrian deities. She was associated with the goddess Nabarbi in Hurrian sources, though she sometimes occurs in the proximity of the underworld goddess Allani (Allatum), the war god Astabi, and an otherwise unknown deity named Alḫe as well. In Ugarit, she occurs together with Kumarbi and Nupatik. It has been proposed that the connection between Shuwala and Nabarbi, which is particularly common in known sources, relied on the accidental similarity between the names of Shuwala and Shuwaliyat, Nabarbi's husband in Hurro-Hittite tradition. However, it is also possible that it indicates both of these goddesses originated in the proximity of the Habur river. Worship of pairs of goddesses (for example Ishara and Allani, Hutena and Hutellura, Ninatta and Kulitta) as dyads was a common feature of Hurrian religion. In Emar Shuwala appears in rituals alongside dU.GUR. dU.GUR has been interpreted as the logographic writing of either the name of Nergal or Resheph, though it is also possible it is meant to be read as Ugur, as a syllabic spelling of this name is known from Hurrian texts from both Emar and Nuzi. Ugur was in origin a sukkal of Nergal, replaced in this role by Ishum in later periods. In Mesopotamian sources his name was used to logographically represent the name of Nergal from the Middle Babylonian period onward. Character and worship Oldest presently known mentions of Shuwala come from documents from Ur from the Ur III period, one of which mentions the staff of temples of this deity, as well as Allatum (Allani) and Annunitum. Shuwala was the tutelary goddess of Mardaman (modern Bassetki), a city in northern Mesopotamia assumed to be culturally Hurrian based on personal names of its inhabitants (for example Nakdam-atal and Nerish-atal). Shuwala was venerated there especially in the Old Babylonian and Mitanni periods. There is currently no older evidence from the | the documented times. The city already existed during the reign of Naram-Sin of Akkad. No evidence regarding the worship of Shuwala postdating the Assyrian conquest of Mardaman is presently available. A temple of the Mesopotamian medicine goddess Gula is attested in the city in documents from the reign of Tukulti-Ninurta I, but it cannot be established whether it replaced a preexisting temple of Shuwala. While a terracotta relief of a naked woman which most likely had a cultic function, either as part of a ritual or as a depiction of a goddess, has been excavated in Mardaman, there is no evidence that it was a depiction of Shuwala. Shuwala, directly labeled as "of Mardman," is present in the description of a Hurro-Hittite festival of Shaushka of Tameninga (a city assumed to be located in the upper Euphrates area) found in Hattusa. She was celebrated by cultic performers labeled as "Hurrian singers" in Hittite texts. In offering lists (kaluti) of Hebat and her circle she appears between Nabarbi and Aya. She was also worshiped in Emar. While no evidence for the existence of a temple dedicated to her in this city is known, she is present in an offering list and two descriptions of rituals, all of them written in Akkadian, even though the goddess is agreed to belong to the Hurrian part of the pantheon of the city. She is mentioned in instructions for the kissu festival of Dagan, which most likely took place in Šatappi, a city possibly located further south. During this celebration, songs dedicated to her and dU.GUR were sung. The precise meaning of the term kissu remains uncertain, making the nature of these celebrations, and roles of specific deities in them, difficult to ascertain. It has been proposed that the presence of underworld deities - Shuwala and dU.GUR - indicates that it represented the periodic death and return to life of a deity, possibly Dagan's spouse, but this remains speculative. It is also possible that it involved abi, offering pits connected to the cult of underworld deities. Shuwala also played a role in the kissu festival of Ishara and Emar's city god, dNIN.URTA. She is attested in Hurrian theophoric names from Alalakh, Nuzi and Chagar Bazar. Later relevance In Biblical studies, the term Sheol is sometimes assumed to be a Hebrew derivative of Shuwala's name. According to assyriologist Lluis Feliu, a connection between Sheol and Shuwala is "possible, but not certain." Edward Lipiński regards the connection as proven, but relies on the assumption that Shuwala is one and the same as Allani, which |
losing her sight in a case of police brutality in the 2019–2020 Chilean protests. She is a former worker and firefighter. On November 26, 2019, she was hit by a tear gas grenade permanently losing the sight in both eyes and the senses of olfaction and taste. Campillai was going to her nighttime work when she was hit by the grenade. She was accompanied by her sister, Ana María, when the incident happened. Ana María immediately confronted the police squad who shot the grenade, but had a grenade shot next to her causing her dress to catch fire. As the police denied Fabiola aid, | going to her nighttime work when she was hit by the grenade. She was accompanied by her sister, Ana María, when the incident happened. Ana María immediately confronted the police squad who shot the grenade, but had a grenade shot next to her causing her dress to catch fire. As the police denied Fabiola aid, Ana María shouted for help to which a neighbour reacted and brought Fabiola to hospital in his car. The next day police showed up outside Ana Marías house aiming to bring her to the police station, without showing any valid arrest warrant, which Ana María rejected after consulting with her lawyer. As of June 19, 2020, no suspect had been identified, but then on August 14, |
Marjanović of Index.hr criticized the Croatian media for trying to censor mainstream music from other former Yugoslav republics due to its alleged lack of quality, and praised the chart for showcasing what people of Croatia actually listen to. He further praised the death of genre boundaries, claiming that, "on the same IG story of the same person, probably in the same day, you will come across songs by Arctic Monkeys, Drake and Senidah", as well as the death of the "cajka problem". Croatian music journalists generally reacted positively to the introduction of such a music chart but criticized the local music industry managers for trying to cover up the popularity of trap music. Tena Šarčević of Jutarnji list explained how the lack of Croatian artists might shock some people, but that the Balkan trap genre has been ruling on-demand streaming for quite some time. She further noted how there's a big difference in the Croatian airplay-based HR Top 40 chart with the streaming chart. Ravno Do Dnas Zoran Stajčić commented how the newly introduced Billboard chart is "real" and how it gives real insight into popularity of a song, comparing it to "waking up from the matrix". Goran Komerički, one of the Croatian Airplay Radio Chart editors, reacted positively to the introduction of the chart and compared the situation with Balkan artists not getting airplay with the song "We Don't Talk About Bruno" not being fully embraced by US radio. Croatian music managers did not comment on the small amount of Croatian acts charting on the Croatia Songs chart and explained how the chart | non-Croatian musicians, apart from "Trebaš li me" by Eni Jurišić and Matija Cvek, "Debili" by 30zona and Kuku$ Klan, "Ti i ja" by Jelena Rozga (in collaboration with Serbian singer Saša Matić), and "Highlife" by Grše, alongside "Heat Waves" by Glass Animals and "Black Summer" by Red Hot Chili Peppers. Hrvoje Marjanović of Index.hr criticized the Croatian media for trying to censor mainstream music from other former Yugoslav republics due to its alleged lack of quality, and praised the chart for showcasing what people of Croatia actually listen to. He further praised the death of genre boundaries, claiming that, "on the same IG story of the same person, probably in the same day, you will come across songs by Arctic Monkeys, Drake and Senidah", as well as the death of the "cajka problem". Croatian music journalists generally reacted positively to the introduction of such a music chart but criticized the local music industry managers for trying to cover up the popularity of trap music. Tena Šarčević of Jutarnji list explained how the lack of Croatian artists might shock some people, but that the Balkan trap genre has been ruling on-demand streaming for quite some time. She further noted how there's a big difference in the Croatian airplay-based HR Top 40 chart with the streaming chart. Ravno Do Dnas Zoran Stajčić commented how the newly introduced Billboard chart is "real" and how it gives real insight into popularity of a song, comparing it to "waking up from the matrix". Goran Komerički, one of the |
Roman Catholic Diocese of Valence, France from 1978 until his retirement in 2001. Marchand died on 16 February 2022, at the age of 96. References 1925 | Marchard was born in France and was ordained to the priesthood in 1951. He served as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese |
and the Durand Cup thrice while representing East Bengal FC. He received the lifetime achievement award from East Bengal in 2018. Early life Sengupta was born on 30 August 1951, in Chakbazar in the Hooghly district of West Bengal. His father, Suhas Sengupta, was a football and cricket player who worked for Dunlop India. Sengupta studied at the Hooghly Branch School where he was spotted by coach Ashwini Bharat. He went on to study at the Hooghly Mohsin College and made his second division debut for Robert Hudson FC. Club career Sengupta made his domestic debut playing for the Kidderpore club in 1971 before moving to Mohun Bagan AC and playing for the club between 1972 and 1974. He later moved to East Bengal FC for six seasons between 1974 and 1980. He represented Mohammedan SC between 1980 and 1981 before returning to Mohan Bagan between 1981 and 1983. Amongst his best experiences was a 1975 IFA Shield Final where he led East Bengal's 5–0 win against their Kolkata rivals Mohun Bagan. Most of his victories | he represented all three of Calcutta's football clubs and had won the IFA Shield and the Calcutta Football League six times each and the Durand Cup thrice for East Bengal FC. Sengupta received the lifetime achievement award from East Bengal in 2018. International career Sengupta made his debut for the India national team in 1974 in a game against Thailand in the Merdeka Cup in Kuala Lumpur. He represented the country in 14 games including the 1974 Asian Games in Tehran and the 1978 Asian Games in Bangkok. He also represented the country in the 1974 Merdeka Cup and the 1977 President's Cup in Seoul. Style of play Sengupta played as winger and was known for his playing speed and passing range. Per an article in the Indian newspaper The Hindu, he was considered one of the finest and creative forwards of his time. Personal life and death Sengupta was married to Shyamali Sengupta, with whom he had a son. After his retirement he was involved with the game as a sports editor with a Bengali language magazine writing their football columns. He learnt singing and would play the Tabla with his son. East Bengal coach and former Indian footballer P. K. Banerjee had named him Sócrates after the Brazilian footballer, given his sporting a beard and his varied interests. Sengupta died from COVID-19 related complications on 17 February 2022, at the age of 70. See also List of SC East Bengal captains References External links News on Surajit Sengupta at The Telegraph 1951 births 2022 deaths Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in India Indian footballers Footballers |
on those planets Exoplanet naming convention, for planets outside the Solar System Minor-planet designation, for initial designations | planets Exoplanet naming convention, for planets outside the Solar System Minor-planet designation, for initial |
surname include: Diane Lipscombe (born 1960), British neuroscientist Edward Hart Lipscombe (born 1858), American educator and religious leader Jesse Lipscombe (born | and religious leader Jesse Lipscombe (born 1980), Canadian actor Lorraine Lipscombe, Canadian endocrinologist Lydia Lipscombe (born 1979), New Zealand |
where it moved westwards over the open waters in the Indian Ocean. Environmental conditions were assessed as being marginally conducive for tropical cyclogenesis, with warm sea surface temperatures near and low vertical wind with the disturbance located about to Diego Garcia south. On the same day, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert on the system and by 21:00 UTC JTWC subsequently initiated advisories on the system and classified it Tropical Cyclone 13S. The next day, the system organized into a tropical disturbance. The system continued organizing, and at 12:00 UTC, MFR upgraded the system to a tropical depression. By the 17th of February, the Météo-France La Réunion (MFR) reported that the system had become a moderate tropical storm and the Sub-Regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Center in Mauritius named it Emnati. On February 18, at 00:00 UTC the MFR marked Cyclone Emnati as a Severe Tropical Storm. Just three hours later, the JTWC upgraded Emnati to a Category 1 tropical cyclone on the Saffir–Simpson scale (SSHWS). Due to more favorable conditions, the Emnati intensified to a tropical cyclone. One day later, classified by JTWC as a category 2 tropical cyclone. Preparations Mauritius A Class 4 warning was issued after gusts exceeding 120 km/h were recorded. Réunion An Red alert has been declared in Réunion Island, but no deaths have been reported. Madagascar Red, yellow, and green alerts were issued as the cyclone neared the island. Saturated grounds from Batsirai's effects earlier were expected to worsen potential rainfall damages. Very heavy rain was forecasted, with over 400–500 mm (15.7 - 19.6 in) falling in the projected landfall area. Flash flooding, and mudslides were warned. A dire humanitarian situation in Madagascar was feared to worsen with Emnati's arrival. In response to the cyclone's passing, the IFRC had sought additional funds for relief efforts. The Secretary General of Malagasy Red Cross said the storm was a "double tragedy". Humanitarian partners and other response teams were placed on Madagascar to help after the storm's landfall. Stocks of food and non-food items were also saved for those affected, mostly pre-positioned in Mananjary and Manakara. Planes and boats were also identified to help facilitate rapid damage assessments. Floodwaters from various areas of 4-8 inch rainfall were expected to be accentuated by Madagascar's mountainous terrain as well, and storm surge and wind impacts were feared to be widespread. More than 30,000 people were moved | a tropical depression. By the 17th of February, the Météo-France La Réunion (MFR) reported that the system had become a moderate tropical storm and the Sub-Regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Center in Mauritius named it Emnati. On February 18, at 00:00 UTC the MFR marked Cyclone Emnati as a Severe Tropical Storm. Just three hours later, the JTWC upgraded Emnati to a Category 1 tropical cyclone on the Saffir–Simpson scale (SSHWS). Due to more favorable conditions, the Emnati intensified to a tropical cyclone. One day later, classified by JTWC as a category 2 tropical cyclone. Preparations Mauritius A Class 4 warning was issued after gusts exceeding 120 km/h were recorded. Réunion An Red alert has been declared in Réunion Island, but no deaths have been reported. Madagascar Red, yellow, and green alerts were issued as the cyclone neared the island. Saturated grounds from Batsirai's effects earlier were expected to worsen potential rainfall damages. Very heavy rain was forecasted, with over 400–500 mm (15.7 - 19.6 in) falling in the projected landfall area. Flash flooding, and mudslides were warned. A dire humanitarian situation in Madagascar was feared to worsen with Emnati's arrival. In response to the cyclone's passing, the IFRC had sought additional funds for relief efforts. The Secretary General of Malagasy Red Cross said the storm was a "double tragedy". Humanitarian partners and other response teams were placed on Madagascar to help after the storm's landfall. Stocks of food and non-food items were also saved for those affected, mostly pre-positioned in Mananjary and Manakara. Planes and boats were also identified to help facilitate rapid damage assessments. Floodwaters from various areas of 4-8 inch rainfall were expected to be accentuated by Madagascar's mountainous terrain as well, and storm surge and wind impacts were feared to be widespread. More than 30,000 people were moved to safety areas prior to landfall. Impact Réunion Heavy rain caused flooding in many coastal areas. Madagascar The storm had struck the country only 18 days after Batsirai. Emnati made landfall in the country on midnight, 22 February, with winds of 84 mph (135 km/h). Just after landfall, in |
of his uncle Peter I of Lusignan and second wife Eleanor of Aragon, and paternal grandson of John of Lusignan and his second wife Alice of Ibelin. He was a member of the House of Lusignan. Life Besides being Regent of Cyprus and titular Count of Tripoli, he was also titular Constable and titular Seneschal of Jerusalem. Marriage | of Tripoli, he was also titular Constable and titular Seneschal of Jerusalem. Marriage and issue He married c. 1415 his cousin Isabella of Lusignan, Princess of Cyprus, daughter of James I of Lusignan, King of Cyprus, and wife Helvis or Helisia of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, without issue. He had one illegitimate son: Phoebus of Lusignan, Titular Marshal of Armenia and Titular Lord |
to various locations with whom he would ride. Along the way, he would stop at a gas station and order coffee, which he would then poison it with pesticide. After the victim was either incapacitated or dead, Sonkhanham would dump their body by the roadside and then sell the vehicle to a gang of car thieves in the Hat Yai district. On January 11, 2011, the body of the first victim, 67-year-old Yupin Jeonkhem, was found floating in the Lampao Dam, having been weighed down with cement blocks. By examining fingerprints imprinted in front of the victim's house, police determined that the perpetrator was Sonkhamhan, and an arrest warrant was subsequently issued for his arrest. The next attack came in March when Sonkhamhan poisoned Montree Kalam in Prachuap Khiri Khan, who survived through his injury. After that, he poisoned Nairob Prathon in Surat Thani and dumped his body in a palm plantation, before selling his Toyota Hilux to the car thieves. On January 3, 2012, Sonkhamhan supposedly poisoned and robbed a man named Watchara Suebchuea, whose body he dumped off a bridge between the Sawi and Thung Tako districts, but the body was never located. Later that month, Sonkhamhan attempted to do the same to a taxi driver named Charoen Daranoi, who realized that he was being poisoned and kicked him out of the car before speeding away. At the very end of January, he poisoned his sixth victim, Paitoon Pattalapho, whom he dumped at a sugarcane plantation in the Cha-am district, unaware that he had survived. For the following three months, Sonkhamhan successfully poisoned three additional victims: the first was Julsil Salangsing, whose body was found in the Tha Sae district. For the fifth murder, during which Sonkhamhan reportedly brought along his wife, he killed Chamnong Srirachat, whose body was dumped in a grove near a canal in the Mueang Chumphon district | in the Nong Kung Si district. When he was ten years old, he moved with his father moved to Songkhla, where Sonkhamhan remained until the age of 25 when he moved to the village of Khok Krua. There, he married and started a family, and found a job as a taxi driver, but experienced financial difficulties due to his gambling habits. Murders As part of his modus operandi, Sonkhamhan would hire taxi drivers to help him move things to various locations with whom he would ride. Along the way, he would stop at a gas station and order coffee, which he would then poison it with pesticide. After the victim was either incapacitated or dead, Sonkhanham would dump their body by the roadside and then sell the vehicle to a gang of car thieves in the Hat Yai district. On January 11, 2011, the body of the first victim, 67-year-old Yupin Jeonkhem, was found floating in the Lampao Dam, having been weighed down with cement blocks. By examining fingerprints imprinted in front of the victim's house, police determined that the perpetrator was Sonkhamhan, and an arrest warrant was subsequently issued for his arrest. The next attack came in March when Sonkhamhan poisoned Montree Kalam in Prachuap Khiri Khan, who survived through his injury. After that, he poisoned Nairob Prathon in Surat Thani and dumped his body in a palm plantation, before selling his Toyota Hilux to the car thieves. On January 3, 2012, Sonkhamhan supposedly poisoned and robbed a man named Watchara Suebchuea, whose body he dumped off a bridge between the Sawi and Thung Tako districts, but the body was never located. Later that month, Sonkhamhan attempted to |
stands a few yards southeast of the present church building. The church's burial ground, which features a ha-ha at the seaward boundary, is Category B listed. According to Historic Environment Scotland, it contains an "exceptional collection of 19th-century finely inscribed" tomb stones. The church's nave was added in 1842, followed forty years later by its chancel. The | Category C listed, and stands a few yards southeast of the present church building. The church's burial ground, which features a ha-ha at the seaward boundary, is Category B listed. According to Historic Environment Scotland, it contains an "exceptional |
8 to 10 December 2000. Medal summary Medal table Men's events Women's events Source Results References External links European | Judo Federation. It was held in Nicosia, Cyprus from 8 to 10 December 2000. Medal summary Medal table Men's events Women's |
at University of Linz. Her diploma thesis she wrote in 2014 about the compatibility of family and work (Baby and/or toddler? Contradictions and ambivalences in the curriculum vitae and everyday life of female academics in university administration) in the group of Brigitte Aulenbacher (de). In In March 2020 Mittmannsgruber | the group of Brigitte Aulenbacher (de). In In March 2020 Mittmannsgruber became editor-in-chief of right-wing boulevard weekly newspaper Wochenblick. End of January 2022 she announced that she will leave the position as editor-in-chief and working full time at YouTube-TV Station "Auf1" from Stefan Magnet. Successor editor-in-chief is Bernadette Conrads. Mittmansgruber announced that she will still write content for Wochenblick. Positions Elsa Mittmannsgruber denies the existence of the |
1870 by the Duke of Sutherland's Railway. It was a short-lived terminus, being replaced by on 19 June 1871. Nothing remains. References Disused railway | 1871. Nothing remains. References Disused railway stations in Highland (council area) Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1870 Railway stations in Great Britain closed |
is a Hong Kong rugby union player. She competed for Hong Kong at the 2017 Women's Rugby World Cup in Ireland. Hong Kong were making their first Rugby World Cup appearance. Poon has | international level. She played 13 games for Hong Kong before she was made to retire, due to an injured knee. She took up refereeing after her |
the Waldau neighborhood of Stuttgart, Germany. It is home to the Stuttgart Rebels ice hockey team of the Regionalliga Süd-West. History The Eissportzentrum Waldau was built in 1961 by the TEC Waldau hockey club as an open-air rink and was taken over by the city of Stuttgart on December | the city of Stuttgart on December 6, 1962. It was roofed over in 1977 and extensively renovated in 2011. The arena has a capacity of 3,000 spectators since the renovation in 2011. Gallery References External links Eiswelt Stuttgart at stuttgart.de Eissport-Zentrum Waldau at hockeyarenas.net Sports |
had music by Pratibha Dutt, lyrics by Ramnath Roy and songs sung by Usha Mangeshkar, Mahendra Kapoor, Anuradha Paudwal and Dilbar Khan. Plot It is a romantic cum drama-based film, which is the story about a girl named Parbatia (played by Girija Mitra) who falls in love with Kishan Pandit, a police officer, played by Shiv Agrahari, but they both belong to a different section of society. Kishan fights for his love and gets married to her (Parbatia). The | and gets married to her (Parbatia). The climax of the film deals with a twist related to the hidden truth of Parbatia's past life. Cast Girija Mitra Shiv Agrahari Laxmi Chhaya Chandrakala Liaqat Ali Kalpana Pandit Sheetla Prasad Agrahari Naseem Banu Vandna Shashtri Hari Shukla Soundtrack Parbatiya Banal Panditayan has music by Prativa Dutta, with lyrics by Ramnath Roy. The songs were sung by Usha Mangeshkar, Mahendra Kapoor, Dilbar Khan, Anuradha Paudwal and Prativa Dutta. See also |
a bus operator based in Diss, UK. History The firm started in 1927 as a car repair workshop. In 2014, the firm had a fleet of 47 vehicles, including | COVID-19 pandemic, the company received grants from the British Government to allow it to continue operating bus services. References External links Official website Bus operators in Norfolk |
name) Maisie (Meusaidh), a character from the British animated series Meeow! (Gaelic: Meusaidh) "Maisie" (song), a song by Syd Barrett | and radio show character from the 1930s–1950s. Maisie may also refer to: Maisie (film), a 1939 American comedy film Maisie (given name) Maisie (Meusaidh), a character from the |
on a one-year loan deal. However, he only featured for the under-20s, and returned to Criciúma for the 2018 campaign, where he became a starter. On 13 January 2022, Eduardo signed a two-year contract with Avaí, newly promoted to the Série A. Personal life Eduardo's older brother Ezequiel is also a footballer. A right back, he too was groomed at Criciúma. Career statistics References External | Eduardo joined Criciúma's youth setup in 2014, after a recommendation from his brother, who was already in the club's first team. He made his senior debut on 12 April 2015, coming on as a late substitute in a 1–0 Campeonato Catarinense home win over Metropolitano. Mainly used in the under-20 squad afterwards, Eduardo moved to Cruzeiro on a one-year loan deal. However, he |
September 29, 1864. By the end of the war, Johnson had reached the rank of brevet major. His medal was issued on April 1, 1898. Johnson died on April 30, 1911, and is now buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia. Medal of Honor Citation For extraordinary heroism on 29 September 1864, in | - April 30, 1911) was an American soldier and recipient of the Medal of Honor who earned the award for his actions in the American Civil War. Biography Johnson was born in Lower Merion, Pennsylvania on February 5, 1843. He served as a first lieutenant with Company A of the 58th Pennsylvania Infantry. He earned his medal in action at Fort Harrison, Virginia on September 29, 1864. By the end of the war, Johnson had reached the rank of brevet major. His medal was issued on |
church building in Lochwinnoch, Renfrewshire, Scotland. It dates 1729, and is now Category B listed. Only the southwest gable and a single bay of the structure remains, the rest likely torn down around the date the | listing. Detail See also List of listed buildings in Lochwinnoch, Renfrewshire References Category B listed buildings in Scotland Churches completed in 1729 Churches in Renfrewshire Listed churches in Scotland Former churches in |
it is supplemented with Tesson's account of a sailing trip inspired by Victor Bérard's theories about the geography of the Odyssey. The book includes original paintings by Tesson's travelling partner Laurence Bost and historical photographs by Frédéric Boissonnas who travelled in the Mediterranean Sea with Bérard in 1912. Reception Le Parisiens Yves Jaeglé wrote that Tesson makes Homer's characters palpable. He stressed how different Un été avec Homère is from a schoolbook and said it will give "hours of happiness" to readers. Mazarine Pingeot of L'Express called the book's analyses "more Nietzschean than Hegelian". She stressed Tesson's cultural criticism, for example how he compares the world and values of Homer to those of Mark Zuckerberg and argues for the enduring relevance of the former, referring to Facebook as a digital version of "Narcissus' puddle". Zoé Petropoulou wrote in The French Review that Un été avec Homère discusses both Homer's writings and physical environment and creates analogies between the ancient epics and contemporary issues, such as armed conflicts and ecology. Petropoulou wrote that Tesson highlights the human side of the Homeric gods and how human and divine matters reflect each other. Laurent Ruquier was annoyed by Un été avec Homère which he said contains subtle reactionary views that people fail to pick up. Un été avec Homère was a commercial success and topped France's bestseller charts for non-fiction in the spring of 2018. The first print run of 30,000 copies sold out in three days. By July 2018, the French edition had sold 70,000 copies and in August it passed 150,000 copies. As of 2021, it had | of the Mediterranean light, the danger of the sea and how each island is its own world. He outlines the plots of the Iliad and then the Odyssey, stressing the roles of fate, hubris, walls and talent in the former, and homecoming, lineage and restoration of order in the latter. Tesson discusses Homer's conception of heroic qualities and the various aspects of the Homeric gods, including their weaknesses and how human action can be meaningful despite the absence of free will. Tesson covers the ambivalent view of war in the poems: it is varyingly viewed as terrible, unavoidable and irresistible. Un été avec Homère goes through the various aspects of hubris, which is the fatal error of lacking moderation and something humans never cease to do. Tesson discusses Homer's style and how it creates a vertical worldview where gods can deride humans for behaving like animals. In the unceremonious portrayals of death and many references to birth and breeding, Tesson sees the core of Homeric religion: "Perhaps we should see this appetite to describe the fertile verve as a definition of paganism: being pagan is to greet all faces of life and to venerate the womb from which they proceed without worrying about their end". Publication France Inter aired the radio version of Un été avec Homère in nine weekly episodes from 1 July to 26 August 2017. The book was published by France Inter and Éditions des Équateurs on 26 April 2018. Tesson was more active in the marketing than he had been for previous books. He appeared on the television programme On n'est pas couché and the radio station France Culture. Translations of Un été avec Homère have been published in Dutch (2018), |
politician from Bharatiya Janata Party, Bihar and a five term Member of Bihar Legislative Assembly. Mandal won the Sikti on BJP ticket in the 2015 election as well as | and won from Araria in 1995 as Bihar People's Party candidate, 2000 as an Independent and 2009 by-poll as Lok Janshakti Party candidate after the seat fell vacant following the election |
Pla the owner of Tristar Gym became too busy to run the gym so it handed over to Zahabi to run. In 2008, the gym was sold to Zahabi and he became the new owner. Zahabi has since then trained many different fighters under Tristar Gym. His coaching style is focused on technique in a very controlled manner. Fighters will not go all-out during training sessions as he considers it not an effective way to train as recovery is considered important. Zahabi's most notable student is Georges St-Pierre.The two of them met when they were amateur fighters. After becoming champion, Zahabi decided to become a coach to St-Pierre. After UFC 69 where St-Pierre lost the UFC Welterweight title to Matt Serra, Zahabi became St-Pierre's main coach for the rest of his career. In April 2021, Zahabi was involved in an incident involving the Montreal police. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the police would regularly visit Tristar Gym to verify it was conforming to public health regulations. After sixteen visits in the past year, on April 9, Zahabi refused to allow the police to come in for the third time on that day. As a result the police waited outside the gym causing a disturbance for hours until the issue was eventually resolve between the two parties. MMA commentary and television Zahabi and UFC hall of famer Stephan Bonnar provided the commentary for all Titan FC events broadcast by CBS Sports in 2014. Zahabi was the MMA coach on The Ultimate Fighter: Team GSP vs. Team Koscheck, of the UFC‐produced reality television series The Ultimate Fighter. Personal life Zahabi is the older brother of UFC bantamweight fighter Aiemann Zahabi. Zahabi is married to Melissa Gendron who he met during university. They have three children which include two sons and one daughter. Instructor lineage Kano Jigoro → Tomita Tsunejiro → Mitsuyo Maeda → Carlos Gracie, Sr. → Helio Gracie → Rolls Gracie → | series The Ultimate Fighter. Personal life Zahabi is the older brother of UFC bantamweight fighter Aiemann Zahabi. Zahabi is married to Melissa Gendron who he met during university. They have three children which include two sons and one daughter. Instructor lineage Kano Jigoro → Tomita Tsunejiro → Mitsuyo Maeda → Carlos Gracie, Sr. → Helio Gracie → Rolls Gracie → Carlos Gracie, Jr. → Renzo Gracie → John Danaher → Firas Zahabi Notable fighters trained Georges St-Pierre - Former UFC Middleweight Champion, Former UFC Welterweight Champion, UFC Hall of Frame Robert Whittaker - Former UFC Middleweight Champion Vitor Belfort - Former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Rory MacDonald - Former Bellator Welterweight champion, Former UFC Welterweight Title Challenger Miguel Torres - Former WEC Bantamweight Champion Kenny Florian - Former UFC 2-Time Lightweight and Featherweight Title Challenger David Loiseau - Former UFC Middleweight Title Contender Denis Kang - 2006 Pride Welterweight Grand Prix Runner-Up See also Tristar Gym References 1980 births Living people Canadian male mixed martial artists Canadian practitioners of Brazilian jiu-jitsu People awarded a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu Sportspeople from |
Further reading BOUČKOVÁ, Jitka: Jaroslav Panuska. East Bohemian Gallery Pardubice, 1978. HANEL, Olaf: Jaroslav Panuska (1872-1958). Museo Checo de Bellas Artes de Praga, 1994. STEJSKAL, Vladimír: Palette with wine: reading about Jaroslav Panuška. Havlíčkův Brod: Krajské nakladatelství, 1953. SCNEIDEROVÁ, Martina, ODEHNALOVÁ, Markéta: Jaroslav Panuška (1872-1958). Havlíčková Brod Fine Arts Gallery, 2012. VALEČKA, Jaroslav st: Jaroslav Panuška (1872-1958): A guide to his life and work. Hradec Králové: Milan Hodek | Prague under Julius Mařák, becoming one of the leading representatives of his school. During the 1890's he was particularly prominent among Prague artists, and is mostly known for his disturbing treatment of themes related to death, loneliness and the supernatural. Legacy Panuška's paintings are part of private collections and public museums such |
debutant Rajaji and Janani in the lead roles. The film's music is composed by Tony Britto, with cinematography handled by Shakthi Aravind and editing done by S. Devaraj. The film released in theatres on 11 February 2022. Cast Rajaji as Dhanasekar Janani as Stella Bala Saravanan as Murugan Aadukalam Naren Praveen Reception The film released in theatres on 11 February 2022 and opened to | and opened to mixed reviews. Suganth of The Times of India gave a rating of 2 out on 5 and called the film as an amateurish crime thriller. Vignesh Madhu of Cinema Express rated the film with 2/5 stars, |
the latter part of the 20th century. As reported in the 7 November, 1893, edition of The Edinburgh Gazette, a petition was presented to the Lord Ordinary officiating on the Bills, "at the insistence if John Macnab, residing at No. 9 Harrington Gardens, South Kensington, London, for sequestration of the estates of the deceased Peter Macnab, builder, Oban". Presumed to be Peter's son, John died on 24 April, 1895, aged 69. He is buried in Brompton Cemetery, Kensington. Personal life Macnab was married to Catherine Ferguson, with whom she had at least one child (John, born ). Macnab died in 1892, aged about 80. His wife survived | in the 19th century. Notable for his church designs, several of his works are now listed structures. His offices were in Rangatira Place in Oban, Argyll and Bute. Rangatira Place no longer exists, but it did appear on valuation rolls prior to World War I. It was formerly the stretch of today's road that runs down to the esplanade from the A85 Dunollie Road. He spent a period in "the Colonies", returning to Oban in the latter part of the 20th century. As reported in the 7 November, 1893, edition of The Edinburgh Gazette, a petition was presented to the Lord Ordinary officiating on the Bills, "at the insistence if John Macnab, residing at No. 9 Harrington Gardens, South Kensington, London, for sequestration of the estates of the deceased Peter Macnab, builder, Oban". Presumed to be Peter's son, John died on 24 April, 1895, aged |
the preseason all-SEC teams. First Team Trendon Watford Second Team Javonte Smart Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=12 style=|Regular season |- !colspan=12 style=| SEC Tournament |- !colspan=12 style=| NCAA Tournament Schedule Source Rankings *AP does not release post-NCAA Tournament rankings^Coaches did not release a Week 2 poll References | Conference. Previous season The Tigers finished the season 21–10, 12–6 in SEC play to finish in a tie for second place. They were set to be the No. 3 seed in the SEC Tournament with a bye to the quarterfinals. However, the SEC Tournament and all other postseason tournaments were cancelled amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Offseason Departures Incoming transfers 2020 recruiting class Preseason SEC media poll The SEC media poll was released on November 13, 2020. Preseason All-SEC teams |
heavily layered approach to his sixties psychedelia, punk and pop roots [allow] the band to put all sorts of new twists on old sounds." The Orlando Sentinel stated that "two things dominate from beginning to end—jangling rock 'n' roll guitar and sharp, witty writing." The Omaha World-Herald opined that "Easter's trademark, nasal singing occasionally can be irritating, but that is easily overshadowed by the band's high-energy guitars." AllMusic wrote that the album "features an overall heavier vibe, with | Tracks chart. The band promoted the album by touring with Velvet Elvis. Production Recorded in Wales, the album was produced by John Leckie and frontman Mitch Easter. It was mixed at Abbey Road Studios. Determined that the album be more of a band effort, Let's Active also worked to create a heavier sound. New member John Heames played bass on Every Dog Has His Day. Critical receptionTrouser Press wrote that "the best songs ... are classic Easter: unsettled emotional lyrics and eccentric pop melodies that have him straining on vocal tiptoes to reach the hard bits." The Chicago Reader |
2019, at the Miguel Grau Coliseum, Lima, Peru. This championships was a qualifier for the 2020 Paralympic Games. There were six women's teams: Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Mexico, Peru, USA. The team was composed of Milagros N. Cortina, Diana E. Flores, Erika J. Inuma, Jenniffer A. Mamani, Nicolle M. Pelayo, and Nicole B. Perez, with coaches Luis A. Cabanillas Salinas and Jannette Sandy Canahuire. The team was mercied 10:0 by USA, mercied 13:3 by Canada, beaten by Mexico 10:3, mercied 10:0 by Brazil, but beat Costa Rica 7:0. 2022 São Paulo Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the IBSA America championship moved from 6 to 13 November 2021, to 18 to 22 February 2022. The event is being held at the Centro de Treinamento Paralímpico (Paralympic Training Center) in São Paulo. This championships is a qualifier for the 2022 World Championships. There are twelve | Pelayo, and Nicole B. Perez, with coaches Luis A. Cabanillas Salinas and Jannette Sandy Canahuire. The team was mercied 10:0 by USA, mercied 13:3 by Canada, beaten by Mexico 10:3, mercied 10:0 by Brazil, but beat Costa Rica 7:0. 2022 São Paulo Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the IBSA America championship moved from 6 to 13 November 2021, to 18 to 22 February 2022. The event is being held at the Centro de Treinamento Paralímpico (Paralympic Training Center) in São Paulo. This championships is a qualifier for the 2022 World Championships. There are twelve women's teams: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, USA, Venezuela. The team is Nicole Pérez Baldeón, Milagros Cotrina, Diana Flores, Jennifer Mamani, Nicole Ochavaron, and Margarita Pelayo, with coach Jeanette Canahuire. Other competitions In preparation for the 2019 Parapan American |
the fortress, as Taavetti still is. Taavetti also has the Taavetti railway station on the Kouvola-Lappeenranta railway section, but passenger traffic at Taavetti station ended on 2 September 2006 due to low traffic. References External links Taavetti at | of the main roads was once chosen as the location for the fortress, as Taavetti still is. Taavetti also has the Taavetti railway station on the Kouvola-Lappeenranta railway section, but passenger traffic at Taavetti station ended on 2 September 2006 due to low traffic. References External links Taavetti at Fonecta Luumäki Villages |
the other hand, SI and Sr are applicable for all compounds. A positive value for each SI and LSI indicates that scaling may occur in RO, whereas a negative value implies that scaling will not occur. Similarly, scaling may occur when Sr>1, but not when Sr<1. Scaling control in RO applications There are several methods for preventing scaling in RO applications, including acidification of RO feed, lowering RO system recovery, and antiscalant addition. Acidification of RO feedwater was one of the first methods for tackling calcium carbonate scaling in RO processes. However, due to the risks associated with the use of acid, this method is becoming less common. Furthermore, acidification may not be effective for all types of scales; for example, it is very effective in preventing calcium carbonate scaling but not calcium sulphate scaling. Another method of preventing scaling is to operate RO at low recovery (ratio of permeate water to the feedwater). The recovery of the RO application is reduced in this approach to reduce the supersaturation level of the concentrate water to undersaturated conditions. Low recovery reduces the adverse effect of concentration polarization because there is less solute concentration on the membrane surface, reducing the potential for scale formation. This approach, however, is not very appealing or economical because it results in high specific energy consumption. Furthermore, the large amount of concentrate disposal is a problem. Antiscalants addition to the RO feed is one of the most widely applied strategies in term of scale control. Antiscalants are primarily organic compounds containing sulphonate, phosphonate, or carboxylic acid functional groups that hinder the crystallization process, i.e., nucleation and/or growth phase of scaling compounds. Antiscalant prevent scale formation by three mechanisms, namely threshold inhibition, crystal modification and dispersion. Threshold inhibition is when antiscalant molecules adsorb on crystal nuclei and halt their nucleation process, whereas crystal modification and dispersion are the ability of antiscalants to stop the growth and/or agglomeration of crystals and particles. There are several commercial antiscalants on the market. In RO applications, | Scaling does not occur when a compound is undersaturated, while it will take place sooner or later when a compound is supersaturated. The most commonly used indices to predict scaling in RO applications are: Saturation index (SI) where, IAP and Ksp are ion activity product and solubility product of the sparingly soluble salt, respectively. For instance, SI for calcium sulphate can be calculated as follows: where, γ is activity coefficient. [Ca2+] and [SO42−] are calcium and sulphate concentrations in mol/L, respectively. Supersaturation ratio (Sr) where IAP and Ksp are ion activity product and solubility product of the sparingly soluble salt, respectively. For instance, Sr for calcium sulphate can be calculated as follows: where, γ is activity coefficient. [Ca2+] and [SO42−] are calcium and sulphate concentrations in mol/L, respectively. Langelier saturation index (LSI) LSI is used only for calcium carbonate scaling. On the other hand, SI and Sr are applicable for all compounds. A positive value for each SI and LSI indicates that scaling may occur in RO, whereas a negative value implies that scaling will not occur. Similarly, scaling may occur when Sr>1, but not when Sr<1. Scaling control in RO applications There are several methods for preventing scaling in RO applications, including acidification of RO feed, lowering RO system recovery, and antiscalant addition. Acidification of RO feedwater was one of the first methods for tackling calcium carbonate scaling in RO processes. However, due to the risks associated with the use of acid, this method is becoming less common. Furthermore, acidification may not be effective for all types of scales; for example, it is very effective in preventing calcium carbonate scaling but not calcium sulphate scaling. Another method of preventing scaling is to operate RO at low recovery (ratio of permeate water to the feedwater). The recovery of the RO application is reduced in this approach to reduce the supersaturation level of the concentrate water to undersaturated conditions. Low recovery reduces the adverse effect of concentration polarization because there is less solute concentration on the membrane surface, reducing the potential for scale formation. This approach, however, is not very appealing or economical because it results in high specific energy consumption. Furthermore, the large amount of concentrate disposal is a problem. Antiscalants addition to the RO feed is one of the most widely applied strategies in term of scale control. Antiscalants are primarily organic compounds containing sulphonate, phosphonate, or carboxylic acid functional groups that hinder the crystallization process, i.e., nucleation and/or growth phase of scaling compounds. Antiscalant prevent scale formation by three mechanisms, namely threshold inhibition, crystal modification and |
the 2015 Asia Rugby Women's Sevens Series. She was part of the Hong Kong sevens team that competed at the repechage tournament in Monaco in 2021. References 1993 births Living people Hong Kong people Hong Kong rugby union players Hong Kong female | the 2017 Women's Rugby World Cup for Hong Kong as they made their debut. Biography Chong made her sevens debut for Hong Kong at |
States, the song debuted at position 14 on the Billboard World Digital Song Sales in the chart issue dated February 26, 2022. Promotion Following the release of the album, Apink held a live showcase on YouTube to introduce the album and communicate with their fans. The group subsequently performed "Dilemma" on two music programs on the first week: Mnet's M Countdown on February 17, and SBS's Inkigayo on February 20, On the second week, the group performed on three music programs: SBS MTV's The Show on February 22 where they won first place, Mnet's | by Rado. Background and release On December 22, 2021, IST Entertainment announced Apink would be releasing a new album in February 2022. On January 22, it was announced that Apink would be releasing Horn on February 14. Four days later, the track listing was released with "Dilemma" announced as the lead single. On February 7, the highlight medley teaser video was released. The music video was released on February 11 and 13. Composition "Dilemma" was written and composed by B.E.P with Jeon Goon, and arranged by Rado. The song was described a dance song |
Ferroviário Campeonato Brasileiro Série D: 2017 Campeonato Paranaense Segunda Divisão: 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro Série C: 2018 Ypiranga-RS Campeonato Gaúcho Série A2: 2019 References External links 1993 births Living people People from Paraná (state) Brazilian footballers Association football forwards Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players Londrina Esporte Clube players Iraty Sport Club players Foz do Iguaçu Futebol Clube players | being more utilized in the 2015 season. Quirino was again loaned in 2016 and 2017, moving to J. Malucelli, Sergipe and Operário Ferroviário. He signed a permanent deal with the latter club on 22 January 2018, but moved on loan to Ypiranga-RS on 15 April 2019. Quirino terminated his link with Operário on 3 October 2019, and was announced at Taubaté in December. He returned to Ypiranga the following October, and became the top scorer of the 2021 Série C while at the club. On 18 January 2022, Quirino signed a |
a species of flowering plant in the genus Epipremnum and the | genus Epipremnum and the family Araceae. It is native to the Indian |
his wife; after his schoolteacher daughter Loretta (Caitlyn Sponheimer) learns that her student Heba (Melody Mokhtari), a Syrian refugee who came to Canada with her mother Layla (Aixa Kay) and uncle Salem (Ahmed Muslimani), needs to find a new place to live, she invites the family to stay at the ranch, with Mac's initial resistance to the idea giving way to acceptance and a new lease on life as he gets to know them. The film premiered at the 2020 Calgary International Film Festival, and was subsequently screened as the opening gala of the 2020 Edmonton International Film Festival. Production According to Sulatycky, the film was originally conceived as two separate ideas, one for a film about a grieving rancher and another for a film about what happens to refugee families after | as Mac Bagley, a rancher in rural southern Alberta who has been emotionally closed off since the death of his wife; after his schoolteacher daughter Loretta (Caitlyn Sponheimer) learns that her student Heba (Melody Mokhtari), a Syrian refugee who came to Canada with her mother Layla (Aixa Kay) and uncle Salem (Ahmed Muslimani), needs to find a new place to live, she invites the family to stay at the ranch, with Mac's initial resistance to the idea giving way to acceptance and a new lease on life as he gets to know them. The film premiered |
based on the novel of the same name by Sarah Alderson. Its story follows a woman named Beth, who goes to Croatia for a weekend getaway with her best friend Kate, however | Netflix original thriller film directed by Kim Farrant and based on the novel of the same name by Sarah Alderson. Its story follows a woman named Beth, who goes to Croatia for a weekend getaway with her best friend Kate, however |
leg pairs, a clypeus rather longer than wide, filiform antennae, central part of the labrum with 8 teeth, maxilla completely fused without median suture, tergite bifurcate, final leg tarsus bipartite, and a | in the family Geophilidae found in North Korea. It's yellow in color and grows up to 30 millimeters long, with 69 leg pairs, a clypeus rather longer than wide, filiform antennae, central part of the labrum |
la Prairie, Caen. The race was run in very wet conditions over 70 laps of the circuit, and was won by over a minute by American driver Harry Schell in a | minute by American driver Harry Schell in a Maserati 250F. British driver Roy Salvadori set pole and fastest lap. Classification |
in Canada Judaism in Mexico Judaism in the United States | in Mexico Judaism in the United States See also Index of |
their sexual/political stance". Track listing 7": London / LON 110 "So Cold the Night" – 4:39 "When the Walls Come Tumbling Down" – 4:20 7": London / LONDJ 110 (promo) "So Cold the Night" – 3:45 "So Cold the Night" (Full Length) – 4:40 12": London / LONX 110 "So Cold the Night" – 9:12 "When the Walls Come Tumbling Down" – 4:22 "Never No More" – 2:58 12": London / LONXR 110 "So Cold the Night" – 8:34 "The Multimix" – 8:00 "When the Walls Come Tumbling Down" – 4:21 12": London / LONX 110 (promo) "So Cold the Night" – 9:12 "So Cold the Night" (Instrumental) – 9:12 12": London / LDSX 235 (Canada) "So Cold the Night" (Remixed Club Version) – 8:45 "So Cold the Night" (7" Version) – 3:45 "So Cold the Night" (Instrumental) – 9:45 Cassette: | Mandela. The 12-inch single was released with the additional B-side "Never No More". A remix of "So Cold the Night" was released as a 12-inch single in December 1986. It was a double A-side single with "When the Walls Come Tumbling Down" and "The Multimix", a medley remix of "Don't Leave Me This Way", "So Cold the Night" and "Disenchanted". Reviewing for Record Mirror, Jane Wilkes wrote "clandestine meetings and hi-NRG Balkan folk music engage for this Somerville/Coles composition. Their cover versions have always maintained an ambiguity, whereas their own songs place you right in the picture regarding their sexual/political stance". Track listing 7": London / LON 110 "So Cold the Night" – 4:39 "When the Walls Come Tumbling Down" – 4:20 7": |
Oban, Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It was established in the 19th century. The cemetery contains 23 graves from the First World War and 58 from the Second World War. Four of the Second World War graves are of airmen who died in the same crash that killed Prince George, Duke of Kent, on 25 August 1942. In the | The cemetery contains 23 graves from the First World War and 58 from the Second World War. Four of the Second World War graves are of airmen who died in the same |
old man on a darkened residential street. They manage to conceal their crime but when others start to suspect, the brothers’ lives start falling apart. They soon find they can trust no-one; Not even each other. Cast Jaideep Ahlawat as Jaggi Grover | and Daljeet accidentally kill an old man on a darkened residential street. They manage to conceal their crime but when others start to suspect, the brothers’ lives start falling apart. They soon find they can trust no-one; Not even each other. Cast Jaideep Ahlawat as Jaggi Grover Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub as Daljit Grover Tina Desai as Sophie Shruti Seth as Priya Grover Jitendra Joshi as Dushyant Maya Alagh as Shiela Satish Kaushik |
family Araceae. it is native to the Bismarck archipelago. References | belonging to the genus Epipremnum and family Araceae. it |
National Division 1 club Francs Borains. Career Starting his career with Mouscron, Lai made his professional debut on 21 December 2002, coming on as a substitute in the 60th minute for Paul Alo'o in the 3–1 home win in the Belgian Pro League against Mechelen. In 2005, he moved to hometown club Mons where he made 10 appearances in his sole season at the club. Three seasons with La Louvière followed, before Lai signed with Boussu Dour Borinage in 2009, the club that would later become Francs Borains. He made more than 70 appearances for the club the next three seasons in the second and third tiers. Between 2012 and 2014, Lai played in the lower tiers of | 1985) is a Belgian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Belgian National Division 1 club Francs Borains. Career Starting his career with Mouscron, Lai made his professional debut on 21 December 2002, coming on as a substitute in the 60th minute for Paul Alo'o in the 3–1 home win in the Belgian Pro League against Mechelen. In 2005, he moved to hometown club Mons where he made 10 appearances in his sole season at the club. Three seasons with La Louvière followed, before |
known for her work on Strangerland, Angel of Mine and The Weekend Away. References | for her work on Strangerland, Angel of Mine and The Weekend Away. References |
in December 1986. In January 1991, he was despatched to Aktao County Labor and Personnel Bureau as deputy head. He was promoted to be deputy mayor of the Finance Bureau of Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture in May 1993, concurrently holding the party branch secretary position since February 1998. In February 2000, he was transferred to Akqi County and appointed deputy party secretary and magistrate. In January 2002, he became assistant governor of Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture. He rose to become deputy governor in January 2003, rising to governor in January | of Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture in May 1993, concurrently holding the party branch secretary position since February 1998. In February 2000, he was transferred to Akqi County and appointed deputy party secretary and magistrate. In January 2002, he became assistant governor of Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture. He rose to become deputy governor in January 2003, rising to governor in January 2007. In June 2016, he took office as chairman of the People's Congress of Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture, |
recipient of fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the Mass Cultural Council. Publications Poetry collections Blue on Blue Ground, Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005) Appetite (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2012) Primer (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2016) The Book of Daniel (University of Pittsburgh Press, | His poetry often covers "what it means to be a gay man from a rural, working class environment." Education and career Smith received a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Pittsburgh. He previously taught at West Virginia Wesleyan College and currently serves as an associate professor of Creative Writing at Lesley University. He has also been the recipient of fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts and |
of Education Sciences Affiliated Experimental School (龙华区教育科学研究院附属实验学校) - Minzhi Subdistrict Longhua Qingquan Foreign Languages School (龙华区清泉外国语学校) - Longhua Subdistrict Longteng School (深圳市龙华区龙腾学校) - Minzhi Subdistrict Niulanqian School (牛栏前学校) - Niulanqian Village, Minzhi Subdistrict Qianlong School (潜龙学校) - Minzhi Subdistrict Sanlian Yongheng School (三联永恒学校) - Longhua Subdistrict Shenzhen Foreign Languages School Longhua Campus (深圳外国语学校龙华校区) - Shenzhen North Railway Station Area, Minzhi Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Hanwen Experimental School (深圳市龙华区翰文实验学校) - Building 8 Qilin Industrial Zone, Xintian Community, Guanhu Sub-district Shenzhen Longhua Minzhi Middle School Education Group (深圳市龙华区民治中学教育集团) - Minzhi Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Minzhi Middle School Education Group Minxin School (深圳市龙华区民治中学教育集团民新学校) Shenzhen Longhua Nord Bilingual School (深圳市龙华区诺德双语学校) - Guanlan Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Second Foreign Languages School (深圳市龙华区第二外国语学校) - Dalang Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Vanke Bilingual School (深圳市龙华区万科双语学校) - Minzhi Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Xingzhi School (深圳市龙华区行知学校) - Fucheng Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Zhenneng School (深圳市龙华区振能学校) -Songyuanxia Community, Guanlan Subdistrict South China Experimental School (华南实验学校) - Minzhi Subdistrict Tongsheng School (同胜学校) - Shanghenglang Village, Dalang Subdistrict Wan'an School (万安学校) - Guanlan Subdistrict Xinyuan School (新园学校) - Mali Village, Guanlan Sub-district Xinzhi School (新智学校) - Tangqian Village, Zhangge Community, Guanlan Subdistrict Yulong School (玉龙学校) Primary schools The Affiliated Primary School of Educational Science Research Institute of Shenzhen (教科院附属小学) - Innovation Industrial Park, Guanhu Subdistrict, Longhua District Bilan Foreign Language Primary School (碧澜外国语小学) - Guanlan Subdistrict Dandi Experimental School (丹堤实验学校) - Fengzehu Mountain Villa Defeng Primary School (德风小学) - Junzibu Community, Guanlan Sub-district Dongxing Primary School (东星小学) - Baishilong Village, Minzhi Subdistrict Dunbei Primary School (墩背小学) - Dunbei Community, Longhua Subdistrict Guangpei Primary School (广培小学) - Niuhu Community, Guanlan Subdistrict Guanlan No. 2 Primary School (观澜第二小学) Guihua Primary School (桂花小学) - Guanlan Subdistrict Heping Experimental Primary School (和平实验小学) Longhua No. 2 Primary School (龙华第二小学) - Gong Village | Group Minxin School (深圳市龙华区民治中学教育集团民新学校) Shenzhen Longhua Nord Bilingual School (深圳市龙华区诺德双语学校) - Guanlan Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Second Foreign Languages School (深圳市龙华区第二外国语学校) - Dalang Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Vanke Bilingual School (深圳市龙华区万科双语学校) - Minzhi Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Xingzhi School (深圳市龙华区行知学校) - Fucheng Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Zhenneng School (深圳市龙华区振能学校) -Songyuanxia Community, Guanlan Subdistrict South China Experimental School (华南实验学校) - Minzhi Subdistrict Tongsheng School (同胜学校) - Shanghenglang Village, Dalang Subdistrict Wan'an School (万安学校) - Guanlan Subdistrict Xinyuan School (新园学校) - Mali Village, Guanlan Sub-district Xinzhi School (新智学校) - Tangqian Village, Zhangge Community, Guanlan Subdistrict Yulong School (玉龙学校) Primary schools The Affiliated Primary School of Educational Science Research Institute of Shenzhen (教科院附属小学) - Innovation Industrial Park, Guanhu Subdistrict, Longhua District Bilan Foreign Language Primary School (碧澜外国语小学) - Guanlan Subdistrict Dandi Experimental School (丹堤实验学校) - Fengzehu Mountain Villa Defeng Primary School (德风小学) - Junzibu Community, Guanlan Sub-district Dongxing Primary School (东星小学) - Baishilong Village, Minzhi Subdistrict Dunbei Primary School (墩背小学) - Dunbei Community, Longhua Subdistrict Guangpei Primary School (广培小学) - Niuhu Community, Guanlan Subdistrict Guanlan No. 2 Primary School (观澜第二小学) Guihua Primary School (桂花小学) - Guanlan Subdistrict Heping Experimental Primary School (和平实验小学) Longhua No. 2 Primary School (龙华第二小学) - Gong Village Longhua Central Primary School (龙华中心小学) - Longhua Subdistrict Longlan Primary School (龙澜学校) - Dashuikeng Community, Guanlan Subdistrict Longwei Primary School (龙为小学) - Longhua Subdistrict Luhu Foreign Language Primary School (鹭湖外国语小学) - Guanhu Subdistrict Minle Primary School (民乐小学) - Block 1, Minle Village, Minzhi Subdistrict Minzhi Primary School (民治小学) Qinghu Primary School (清湖小学) Shenzhen Longhua Huayu Primary School (华育小学) - Longhua Subdistrict Shenzhen Longhua Minshun Primary School (民顺小学) - Minzhi Subdistrict Shuxiang Primary School (书香小学) - Minzhi Subdistrict Songhe Primary School (松和小学) - Longhua Subdistrict Weilai Primary |
rapper Kanye West also gave Harlow a cosign for the song through an Instagram post, in which he posted a screenshot of the music video and wrote: "This nigga can raaaaaaap bro. And I'm saying nigga as a compliment Top 5 out right now". Harlow also reacted to the cosign by posting a screenshot of West's post and saying: "This right here...is one of the greatest moments of my entire life. Glad yvall all get front row seats to it...suddenly all the hate means nothing...imagine your hero saying this about you...I could cry". On the same day, Harlow also sat down for an interview with New Zealand DJ and music host Zane Lowe from Apple Music, in which he described "Nail Tech" as the start. He recalled producer Boi-1da playing the instrumental for him and told Lowe: "This is one of these ones. As soon as I heard it, these horns have something epic about them, but as soon as those kicks come in...", and "I went in the booth and I just laid a verse. And I remember, I went back to Atlanta a little while later and I played Don Cannon a bunch of my music just to show him where I was | Fierce, and was additionally produced by American singer-songwriter John Mayer. Background Jack Harlow teased his new single, "Nail Tech", on February 10, 2022, followed by a clip of the music video for the track the day before its release. Lyrically, on this song, Harlow talks about the people who have doubted him before fame and also boasts about how he has achieved the position as a successful young artist. Jason Lipshutz of Billboard said that it "finds a similar balance of horn-inflected bravado and bass-heavy beats while Harlow never stumbles once while rapping about his material glow-up". American rapper Kanye West also gave Harlow a cosign for the song through an Instagram post, in which he posted a screenshot of the music video and wrote: "This nigga can raaaaaaap bro. And I'm saying nigga as a compliment Top 5 out right now". Harlow also reacted to the cosign by posting a screenshot of West's post and saying: "This right here...is one of the greatest moments of my entire life. Glad yvall all get front row seats to it...suddenly all the hate means nothing...imagine your hero saying this about you...I could cry". On the same day, Harlow also sat down for an interview with New Zealand DJ and music host Zane Lowe from Apple Music, in which he described "Nail Tech" as the start. He recalled producer Boi-1da playing the instrumental for |
was elected to the Assam Legislative Assembly from Titabar in the 2021 Assam Legislative Assembly election as a member of the Indian | an Indian politician. He was elected to the Assam Legislative Assembly from Titabar in |
was dumped there, but none of them came forward either. The records of 28,000 criminals were checked and 76,000 leads were looked into. Mayo was known to have caught the Tube from Hammersmith to Hendon and then had thumbed for a lift on the M1. It is believed 250,000 motorists were using the northbound carriageway on the M1 between the time Mayo left London and 14 October. At that time Mayo's murder inquiry was the largest investigation ever mounted by one police force in Britain. Media reports soon suggested a link between the murders of Ansell-Lamb and Mayo, noting their clear similarities. Investigators confirmed they were looking into the links. During the investigations a man claiming to be the killer sent a note to detectives saying that the Mayo murder would not be the last. "Yorkshire Ripper" theory investigated When "Yorkshire Ripper" Peter Sutcliffe began his murder spree in the 1970s, Derbyshire Constabulary investigated whether the killings could be linked to Mayo's murder. Upon being convicted of the Ripper murders in 1981 he was formally questioned in connection with her death. It was known he had owned a Morris Traveller and had travelled to and from London around October 1970. Sutcliffe was finally eliminated from the investigation in December 1997. Murder investigations linked By 1990, Cheshire Police and Derbyshire Police increasingly suspected that the murders of Ansell-Lamb and Mayo could be linked. In January 1991 the lead investigators on each murder case from the two forces appeared on a joint appeal on Crimewatch, saying that although they were by no means certain they were looking for one man, there were "striking similarities" between the cases. It was announced that Cheshire and Derbyshire Police had decided to combine forces in an attempt to solve the two cases. A number of women came forward after the appeals to say they had been sexually assaulted in the same area where Mayo was last seen shortly before or after her murder. The lead investigator on the Ansell-Lamb murder case revealed on Crimewatch that forensic scientists had recovered several pieces of carpet fibre from Ansell-Lamb's body, believed to have come from a carpet roll or a carpet sample. On the weekend she was murdered there had been a carpet exhibition at Earl's Court in London. It was also noted that the man she was last seen with was described as a rep or a salesman, and that it was the investigator's belief that the murderer had some connections to the carpet industry. DNA profile isolated from Mayo's clothing In 1997, Derbyshire Police obtained a DNA profile of the killer of Mayo from her clothing. Police attempted to trace all of the 250 original suspects for DNA testing, in order to see if their profiles matched. By 2009 all but a 'handful' had been located and eliminated. It was this DNA testing that also allowed detectives to eliminate Peter Sutcliffe from the investigation. 200,000 DNA profiles then on the national DNA database were quickly eliminated from the inquiry, and 9,000 samples taken from serving prisoners were also examined, but none matched the killer's profile. Police were hopeful that the recent DNA developments would soon help them solve Mayo's murder. Detectives were also hopeful of DNA advances assisting the Ansell-Lamb inquiry and in determining whether the two women had been killed by the same man. A Derbyshire Police spokesperson stated: "Should a test be successful and find matching DNA, we would have a serial killer investigation that would get huge". However, in 1997 Cheshire Police revealed they had not at that point been able to isolate a DNA profile from Ansell-Lamb's garments. In August 2001 detectives from Derbyshire Police made a televised appeal for information on a 90-minute programme titled Britain's Ten Most Wanted Murderers. Multiple sources state that Ansell-Lamb and Mayo's murder were conclusively linked through DNA in 1990. However, this is inaccurate, as although detectives concluded the two murders were likely (although not certainly) linked in 1990, no DNA profiles were isolated in the murder investigations until 1997, when the DNA profile was isolated from Mayo's clothing. Cheshire Police revealed at that time that they had not at that point managed to discover any DNA on Ansell-Lamb's clothing. In 2020, the former boyfriend of Mayo revealed that, despite the reports, investigators never extracted a DNA profile in the Ansell-Lamb case. He said that the claims that one had been originally came from a Reuters report that erroneously assumed that a DNA match had been made when police announced in 1990 that they believed the murders were likely linked. However, he added that while the 1990 reinvestigation did not prove a DNA link between the two women's murders, it did establish that other forensic evidence linked the murders. Subsequent developments and theories In the late 2000s, police investigated whether serial killer Peter Tobin could have committed the murders, as he had just been convicted of the murders of three young women, including that of a hitch-hiking girl he had picked up and killed in 1991. However, police eliminated him from their enquiries. Criminologist David Wilson stated in a book on Tobin in 2010 that he was unlikely to be responsible and could be ruled out as a suspect by DNA, and that the DNA samples from the two murders had already been cross-referenced to Tobin's profile. In 2008, a reclusive man who had just died was found to have newspaper clippings regarding Ansell-Lamb's murder hidden in his house alongside a confession to the murder of another woman, 19-year-old Lorraine Jacob, who had been killed in Liverpool in September 1970. The man had previously lived in London, Manchester, Bolton and Wigan before he had died of cancer. Investigators said there was no evidence linking him to Ansell-Lamb or Mayo's murder. They pointed out that the man had no access to a car and never had a driving licence. In 2009, crime writer Scott Lomax revealed in a book he published about unsolved murders that Manchester City were playing in London at the time of Mayo's murder, just as in Ansell-Lamb's case, and that police had never investigated whether the killer could again have been returning from the football match in London when he came across Mayo on the M1. In 2015, crime writers Chris Clark and Tim Tate published a book in which they claimed that Ansell-Lamb and Mayo's murders could be linked to Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe. However, he had previously been ruled out by investigators in 1997 through DNA. In 2019, Don Hale, the journalist behind a campaign to free a man he believed to be wrongly imprisoned for the 1973 murder of Wendy Sewell, claimed in a book that Sewell's murder could be linked to Mayo's. He claimed that Mayo and Sewell looked similar and said their murders had been committed nearby. However, other writers have said there is very little evidence to suggest the murders are linked. The man whose release Hale successfully campaigned for in the Sewell case, Stephen Downing, remains the police's only suspect in the murder of Wendy Sewell. In 2003 Derbyshire Police stated after a reinvestigation of the murder that had the rules on double jeopardy been different, they would have re-charged Downing. Both Hale and Clark continue to regularly make claims in the media that either Sutcliffe or the killer of Wendy Sewell was responsible for Ansell-Lamb and Mayo's deaths, or that that they are one and the same. Investigators continue to regularly appeal for information on the murders of Ansell-Lamb and Mayo. The building where Ansell-Lamb was last seen is now Lymm Truckstop. See also Cold | to be the killer sent a note to detectives saying that the Mayo murder would not be the last. "Yorkshire Ripper" theory investigated When "Yorkshire Ripper" Peter Sutcliffe began his murder spree in the 1970s, Derbyshire Constabulary investigated whether the killings could be linked to Mayo's murder. Upon being convicted of the Ripper murders in 1981 he was formally questioned in connection with her death. It was known he had owned a Morris Traveller and had travelled to and from London around October 1970. Sutcliffe was finally eliminated from the investigation in December 1997. Murder investigations linked By 1990, Cheshire Police and Derbyshire Police increasingly suspected that the murders of Ansell-Lamb and Mayo could be linked. In January 1991 the lead investigators on each murder case from the two forces appeared on a joint appeal on Crimewatch, saying that although they were by no means certain they were looking for one man, there were "striking similarities" between the cases. It was announced that Cheshire and Derbyshire Police had decided to combine forces in an attempt to solve the two cases. A number of women came forward after the appeals to say they had been sexually assaulted in the same area where Mayo was last seen shortly before or after her murder. The lead investigator on the Ansell-Lamb murder case revealed on Crimewatch that forensic scientists had recovered several pieces of carpet fibre from Ansell-Lamb's body, believed to have come from a carpet roll or a carpet sample. On the weekend she was murdered there had been a carpet exhibition at Earl's Court in London. It was also noted that the man she was last seen with was described as a rep or a salesman, and that it was the investigator's belief that the murderer had some connections to the carpet industry. DNA profile isolated from Mayo's clothing In 1997, Derbyshire Police obtained a DNA profile of the killer of Mayo from her clothing. Police attempted to trace all of the 250 original suspects for DNA testing, in order to see if their profiles matched. By 2009 all but a 'handful' had been located and eliminated. It was this DNA testing that also allowed detectives to eliminate Peter Sutcliffe from the investigation. 200,000 DNA profiles then on the national DNA database were quickly eliminated from the inquiry, and 9,000 samples taken from serving prisoners were also examined, but none matched the killer's profile. Police were hopeful that the recent DNA developments would soon help them solve Mayo's murder. Detectives were also hopeful of DNA advances assisting the Ansell-Lamb inquiry and in determining whether the two women had been killed by the same man. A Derbyshire Police spokesperson stated: "Should a test be successful and find matching DNA, we would have a serial killer investigation that would get huge". However, in 1997 Cheshire Police revealed they had not at that point been able to isolate a DNA profile from Ansell-Lamb's garments. In August 2001 detectives from Derbyshire Police made a televised appeal for information on a 90-minute programme titled Britain's Ten Most Wanted Murderers. Multiple sources state that Ansell-Lamb and Mayo's murder were conclusively linked through DNA in 1990. However, this is inaccurate, as although detectives concluded the two murders were likely (although not certainly) linked in 1990, no DNA profiles were isolated in the murder investigations until 1997, when the DNA profile was isolated from Mayo's clothing. Cheshire Police revealed at that time that they had not at that point managed to discover any DNA on Ansell-Lamb's clothing. In 2020, the former boyfriend of Mayo revealed that, despite the reports, investigators never extracted a DNA profile in the Ansell-Lamb case. He said that the claims that one had been originally came from a Reuters report that erroneously assumed that a DNA match had been made when police announced in 1990 that they believed the murders were likely linked. However, he added that while the 1990 reinvestigation did not prove a DNA link between the two women's murders, it did establish that other forensic evidence linked the murders. Subsequent developments and theories In the late 2000s, police investigated whether serial killer Peter Tobin could have committed the murders, as he had just been convicted of the murders of three young women, including that of a hitch-hiking girl he had picked up and killed in 1991. However, police eliminated him from their enquiries. Criminologist David Wilson stated in a book on Tobin in 2010 that he was unlikely to be responsible and could be ruled out as a suspect by DNA, and that the DNA samples from the two murders had already been cross-referenced to Tobin's profile. In 2008, a reclusive man who had just died was found to have newspaper clippings regarding Ansell-Lamb's murder hidden in his house alongside a confession to the murder of another woman, 19-year-old Lorraine Jacob, who had been killed in Liverpool in September 1970. The man had previously lived in London, Manchester, Bolton and Wigan before he had died of cancer. Investigators said there was no evidence linking him to Ansell-Lamb or Mayo's murder. They pointed out that the man had no access to a car and never had a driving licence. In 2009, crime writer Scott Lomax revealed in a book he published about unsolved murders that Manchester City were playing in London at the time of Mayo's murder, just as in Ansell-Lamb's case, and that police had never investigated whether the killer could again have been returning from the football match in London when he came across Mayo on the M1. In 2015, crime writers Chris Clark and Tim Tate published a book in which they claimed that Ansell-Lamb and Mayo's murders could be linked to Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe. However, he had previously been ruled out by investigators in 1997 through DNA. In 2019, Don Hale, the journalist behind a campaign to free a man he believed to be wrongly imprisoned for the 1973 murder of Wendy Sewell, claimed in a book that Sewell's murder could be linked to Mayo's. He claimed that Mayo and Sewell looked similar and said their murders had been committed nearby. However, other writers have said there is very little evidence to suggest the murders are linked. The man whose release Hale successfully campaigned for in the |
Cup squad. References 1988 births Living people Hong Kong people Hong Kong rugby union players Hong Kong female | Rugby World Cup squad. References 1988 births Living people Hong Kong people Hong Kong rugby |
hull molds, with a new deck design. Production The design was built by Sovereign Yachts in Port Richey, Florida, United States, starting in 1981, but it is now out of production. Design The Sovereign Princess 24 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim. It has a masthead sloop rig with a bowsprit, a raked stem, a plumb transom, a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller or optional wheel and a fixed fin shoal draft keel or optional deeper keel. It displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the standard keel and with the optional deeper draft keel. The boat is normally fitted with a small outboard motor for docking and maneuvering. The design has sleeping accommodation for four people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin and two straight settee berths in the main cabin. | a bowsprit, a raked stem, a plumb transom, a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller or optional wheel and a fixed fin shoal draft keel or optional deeper keel. It displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the standard keel and with the optional deeper draft keel. The boat is normally fitted with a small outboard motor for docking and maneuvering. The design has sleeping accommodation for four people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin and two straight settee berths in the main |
recruit and committed to play college football at Memphis. College career Parham redshirted his true freshman season at Memphis and moved from tight end to the offensive line. He was named the Tigers' starting left guard going into his redshirt freshman season. Parham started all 14 of Memphis' games in both his redshirt freshman and sophomore seasons. He was moved to the center position during spring practice after his redshirt sophomore year, but was moved again to right tackle prior to the start of the 2020 season. Parham started all 11 of the Tigers' games in 2020. He was moved to right guard going into his redshirt senior season and was named first team All-American Athletic Conference (AAC). References External links | and track and field teams. He originally played linebacker before moving to tight end before his senior season. Parham was used mostly in a blocking capacity as a senior and was named first team All-Area after nine passes for 96 yards and one touchdown and the Carrollton Trojans gained 4,200 yards of total offense. Parham was rated a two-star recruit and committed to play college football at Memphis. College career Parham redshirted his true freshman season at Memphis and moved from tight end to the offensive line. He was named the Tigers' starting left guard going into his redshirt freshman season. Parham started all 14 of Memphis' games in both his redshirt freshman and sophomore seasons. He was moved |
it has a liana growth style. It can be found in Sumatra. root-climber to 6 meters. the adult plant's stem has a thickness | be found in Sumatra. root-climber to 6 meters. the adult plant's stem has a thickness of 5–10 mm with internodes |
as a member of the Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC) during the 1913 college football season. Led by first-year head coach M. B. Banks, the Green and White compiled an overall record | conference play, placing tenth in the OAC. Schedule References Ohio Ohio Bobcats football seasons Ohio Green and |
particularly light aircraft. It stands for: Fuel - is there sufficient fuel and is the correct tank selected? Does the tank need to be changed or the fuel balanced? Radios - is the correct frequency | are the temperatures and pressures OK? Direction Indicator - is it aligned with the compass? Altitude - is the altitude correct and is the correct pressure set |
the Alpha Ethniki in 1998 when contracted by Athens club Panionios. He played regularly there, and featured in all six matches of Panionios's 1998-99 UEFA Cup | Cup campaign. In 1999 he nonetheless went on to Trikala. References 1975 births Living people Greek footballers Aris Thessaloniki F.C. players Panionios F.C. players Trikala F.C. players |
She first garnered attention when she appeared on the rap competition TV show Show Me the Money 10 in 2021. Her debut studio album, Since '16, was met with critical acclaim. Early life and education Shin Sujin was born in December 1992 in Daejeon. She graduated from Chungnam National University with a bachelor's degree in public administration. Career 2020-2021: Since '16 and Show Me the Money 10 In February 2020, Since released her debut single "New Shit". In October 2020, she appeared | "New Shit". In October 2020, she appeared on the rap competition TV show Show Me the Money 9 and was eliminated in round two. In July 2021, she released her debut studio album Since '16 which was met with critical acclaim. Its lead single "Spring Rain" was nominated for Best Rap Song at the Korean Music Awards. In October 2021, she appeared on the rap competition |
the ceremony was Japanese filmmaker Masahiro Kobayashi. The film festival showed 185 films from 20 countries from 20 December to 27 December. Prabhu Deva was feted at the 5th Bengaluru | film festival showed 185 films from 20 countries from 20 December to 27 December. Prabhu Deva was feted at the 5th Bengaluru International Film Festival organized by Karnataka Chalanachitra Academy in Bangalore on 27 December 2012. Srinagar Kitty and Soundarya Jayamala were present during the valedictory function. Asian cinema competition Indian |
12th Battalion was billeted at Wool. For some time no uniforms were available for the men, and even blankets were scarce in the improvised billets and in the tented camps erected in October. That month some old uniforms were supplied, and the men paraded in peacetime red coats with civilian headgear and overcoats. For months there were only a few drill-pattern rifles with which to train, and machine guns had to be represented by dummy guns. The onset of winter weather in November drove the brigade into hastily erected huts at Bovington Camp outside Wool. However, before the end of 1914 the infantry were equipped with old pattern magazine Lee–Enfield rifles and a 'generous' supply of ammunition allowed elementary musketry training to begin. In December 52nd Bde moved to Wimborne, then back to Wool in March 1915. In that month the division received a limited issue of Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk III service rifles and new leather equipment. Between 27 May and 1 June the division marched to Flowerdown outside Winchester, with 12th Manchesters at Hursley Park. The division underwent final intensive battle training at Flowerdown. On 5 July the division was informed that it would be retained in England for some time on home defence. However, this was rescinded at midnight the same day and it was ordered to embark for the Western Front from 12 July. Mobilisation was completed and the advance parties left for the front. 12th Manchesters entrained at Winchester on 15 July and embarked at Folkestone at midnight. It landed at Boulogne next day with a strength of 30 officers and 945 other ranks (ORs) under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel E.G. Harrison, and marched to join the division, which was concentrating south of Saint-Omer. Ypres 17th (Northern) Division moved up to the front on 19 July and joined V Corps under Second Army in the Ypres Salient. The battalions were then sent into the line for instruction in Trench warfare. On 23 July 12th Manchesters was attached by platoons to the Liverpool Scottish serving with 3rd Division. On 30 July the battalion marched to White Chateau and bivouacked before taking over its own section of the line near Hooge on the night of 1/2 August. Sporadic fighting had been going on for some weeks round the ruins of Hooge Chateau. After a few quiet days the battalion began digging a trench in front of its parapet and its own barbed wire. This was part of a diversion by 17th (N) Division created a diversion for an attack by 6th Division on 9 August. The new trenches in front and behind the line looked like jumping-off trenches and assembly trenches. These obvious preparations drew German artillery fire onto the division's own front and communication trenches. 6th Division's limited attack was notably well planned and executed, recapturing the big Hooge Crater and the stables of the chateau. The battalion settled down to the routine of spells in the front line alternating with reserve positions, providing working parties, and occasional trench raids, such as one carried out by 12th Manchesters n 'Gravel Farm' on 17 September. 17th (N) Division was not engaged in any major actions for the rest of the year. On 14 February 1916 the division was holding the line astride the Ypres–Comines Canal including 'The Bluff', a spoilheap left after the construction of the canal that provided the best observation post in the area. A German attack captured the Bluff, while 12th Manchesters south of the canal came under heavy bombardment, leading to the cancellation of a planned relief that night. Next day A Company moved into a redoubt in the British line, where they suffered heavy casualties from shellfire. The battalion was finally relieved on 20/21 February; it was still in the rest camp when the rest of the division took part in a set-piece attack that recovered the Bluff. In late March the division moved south to the Armentières sector, with 12th Mancehsters moving into the front line on 22 March. The German artillery was very active in this area. In mid-May 12 Manchesters introduced the 2nd Battalion Otago Regiment of the newly arrived New Zealand Division to the sector before handing over to them. On 15 May 12th Manchesters marched out to the Zudausques training area behind the lines, where it spent the next month. Somme The British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was preparing for that summer's 'Big Push' (the Battle of the Somme), and 17th (N) Division was sent to join the newly formed XV Corps for this offensive. 12th Manchesters entrained at Saint-Omer for Amiens on 12 June and then marched to Poulainville where it resumed training. On 27 June the battalion left its billets and marched to Heilly, moving into the Bois des Tailles on the night of 30 June. When the assault was launched next day 17th (N) Division was in reserve and 52nd Bde was not involved in the disastrous First day on the Somme. Next day the battalion 'stood to' at 15 minutes' notice, while 17th (N) Division occupied Fricourt without fighting. On the night of 3/4 July the battalion took over captured German trenches beyond the village and next morning supported the brigades' successful attack on Quadrangle Trench. On 7 July the division was ordered to advance about over open ground to take Quadrangle Support Trench. The attack was launched in the dark, but the Germans were ready and the leading battalions of 52nd Bde were thrown back. At 07.25 the 12th Manchesters and 9th Bn Duke of Wellington's Regiment were ordered to make a second attempt at 08.00 when the neighbouring formations made their main attack. With so little warning the attack began late and the protective artillery barrage lifted before the troops reached the enemy line. Machine gun fire from Mametz Wood cut down most of the first (B and D Companies) and second wave (C Company). As the Official History relates, 'in broad daylight the two battalions had no chance of reaching Quadrangle Support over bare and open ground'. Lieutenant-Col Harrison was wounded while superintending the withdrawal of the survivors. The battalion lost 15 officers and 539 ORs killed, wounded and missing (many of the wounded being captured). 12th Manchesters were relieved and sent by rail to Oissy to reorganise and refit. Major P.M. Magnay arrived to take command, together with large drafts of reinforcements. On 23 July the battalion moved back to bivouac near Albert as part of XV Corps' reserve. It rejoined 52nd Bde on 1 August, moving into brigade support in the old German second line trenches between Longueval and Bazentin-le-Petit. As part of the Battle of Delville Wood, 52nd Bde was ordered to attack Orchard Trench (running into the wood) at 00.40 on 4 August. 12th Manchesters and 9th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers led. The field artillery laid down an intense 5-minute barrage before Zero hour, but the German artillery caught the attackers with high explosive and gas shells and their machine guns opened up. Communications were cut, and it was not until 04.35 that Divisional HQ learned of the failure of the attack and the heavy casualties incurred. (The battalion's casualties for August were five officers and 169 ORs.) Once again the battalion was withdrawn into reserve and went to Carnoy to reorganise. It provided some working parties and did some trench holding, but on 11 August was pulled out and sent to Souastre. By the end of the month it was trench-holding in a quiet sector. At the end of September it began intensive training and returned to the frontline trenches near Le Transloy on 30 October, where part of the division captured Zenith Trench on 2 November. In places the trenches were waist-deep in mud and suffered from sporadic German shelling. The offensive came to an end and 17th (N) Division was relieved in mid-November. 12th Manchesters went to Saisseval for rest and training. 12th Manchesters returned to the front in December, first in reserve at Guillemont, then holding the frontline trenches on the Ancre Heights from 25 December. There were some operations along the Ancre in early 1917, and 8 February 52nd Bde captured a trench overlooking Sailly-Saillisel. 12th Manchesters provided carrying parties (A Company) and garrisons for captured strongpoints (B Company) as counter-attacks were beaten off. The battalion suffered 54 casualties. Arras 17th (N) Division spent the whole of March in reserve and training. It was transferred to Third Army for the forthcoming Battle of Arras, assigned to the Cavalry Corps for exploitation of any success. The battle began on 9 April and 12th Manchesters marched into billets in Arras that evening. As the fighting continued, 17th (N) Division was released to VI Corps on 11 April and it moved into the line, 12th Manchesters being in the divisional support trenches. On 13 April the battalion's trenches were heavily shelled and Lt-Col Magnay, the adjutant, the medical officer, and 14 other officers and ORs were wounded; Captain A.J. Moorhouse assumed command. The battalion remained in brigade reserve and constructing trenches on Orange Hill while the division waited to play its part in the fighting. The offensive was renewed on 23 April (the Second Battle of the Scarpe) and on the evening of 24 April 12th Manchesters took over the line north of Monchy Chateau Wood. At 03.30 next morning the battalion made a surprise attack on Rifle Trench, | relieved in 16 May when the Germans put in a major attack from the chemical works at Rœux and it was called forward again. However, the attack was beaten off, and the battalion was not needed. The Arras offensive was now effectively over. The battalion settled into the routine of trench-holding, patrolling, and providing working parties for the Royal Engineers (RE). There was a steady trickle of casualties from shellfire: on 26 June Maj A.J. Moorhouse, temporarily commanding the battalion again, was wounded and replaced by Maj G.L. Torrens of 10th Lancashire Fusiliers until Lt-Col Truell returned. Later Lt-Col T.W. Bullock took command. After several practices behind the lines, 12th Manchesters put in a large raid on 8 September against two opposing German trenches south of Gavrelle. Each company contributed 2 officers and 50 ORs. The divisional artillery provided a Box barrage and in conjunction with 93rd Field Company, RE, the raiders destroyed dugouts, machine guns and trench mortars. Although the raid was only partially successful (one trench could not be entered), it secured some prisoners as well. On 22 September the battalion marched to XVII Corps' rest camp at Hauteville. 12th (Duke of Lancaster's Own Yeomanry) Battalion At Hauteville the battalion was reorganised. During the summer a number of Corps Cavalry Regiments had been disbanded and their men sent for infantry training. On 24 September a draft of 7 officers and 125 ORs from Regimental Headquarters, C and D Squadrons, 1/1st Duke of Lancaster's Own Yeomanry (DLOY) joined 12th (Service) Bn, which was redesignated 12th (Duke of Lancaster's Own Yeomanry) Battalion, Manchester Regiment. (Shortly after the outbreak of war the Manchester-based 1/1st DLOY of the Territorial Force had been broken up to form divisional cavalry squadrons. In 1916 those squadrons serving on the Western Front had rejoined in III Corps Cavalry Regiment). After absorbing this draft, the battalion moved to Brévillers and began training for its next operation. 17th (N) Division was sent to take part in the Third Ypres Offensive and on 4 October 12 (DLOY) Battalion entrained for the Salient, where it resumed training. Passchendaele The Ypres offensive had already been in progress for two-and-a-half months when 17th (N) Division joined XIV Corps for the Second Battle of Passchendaele on 12 October. By now the mud was very bad, resulting in ragged artillery barrages fired from unsteady platforms, and painfully slow infantry advances. However, on this occasion 17th (N) Division was lucky: the supporting barrage was effective and the opposing Germans 'were in no mood' to face it. The division gained much of its objective despite the mud and casualties from snipers; 12th (DLOY) Bn spent most of the day in reserve. On 16/17 October it was relieved and went to Parroy Camp. The rear areas were raided nightly by German bombers, and the battalion suffered some casualties. On 9 November, during the Second Battle of Passchendaele, the battalion re-entered the front line between 'Turenne Crossing' and 'Gravel Farm' at the Watervlietbeek stream. There were numerous casualties during the evening relief, with a heavy shell hitting C Company HQ and all the officers and HQ staff becoming casualties. Shortly after midnight the enemy put down a heavy barrage on Gravel Farm and rushed it: the whole of No 9 Platoon were killed or captured. A sergeant led No 12 Platoon in a counter-attack, but it failed to retake the farm. There was heavy enemy shelling at intervals during the day, with numerous German aircraft over the battlefield signalling the British positions with flares. At midnight a platoon each from A and D Companies attacked Gravel Farm with help from additional Lewis guns which were used to stiffen C Company's fire (many of the rifles were choked with mud) and to act as a feint. By mistake the covering artillery barrage was fired an hour early, and the attack failed. Enemy observation aircraft were active again on 11 November and the shelling continued. That night the battalion was moved back to the support positions, with two companies of 9th West Ridings attached in case a counter-attack was required, but the support line was heavily shelled with gas. During 12 and 13 November the German aircraft were again active, calling down shellfire, dropping bombs and machine-gunning the narrow duckboard tracks which were the only routes across the mud. On 14 November the battalion was pulled out to Dragon Camp, where numerous case of Trench foot were reported as a consequence of the men having been standing for days in waterlogged trenches. The offensive had ended. 12th (DLOY) Battalion resumed training at the camps behind the line, providing working parties for the artillery, and the battalion did one short spell in the support line. However, the camps were still under intermittent shellfire and air attack: on 29 November a lance-corporal on anti-aircraft duty shot down a German aircraft. On 28 November Lt-Col Truell returned to command the battalion. On 3 December 17 (N) Division moved further back to Louches, but was still at 12 hours' notice to move it required. Then on 15 December it entrained for Third Army, going first into camp near Achiet-le-Petit, then at Rocquigny. On 21 December it relieved 59th (2nd North Midland) Division in V Corps' line in the Flesquières Salient, where the Battle of Cambrai had recently ended. 12th (DLOY) Battalion was in the captured Hindenburg Line support trenches, where it spent time reversing the firesteps, moving the barbed wire to the side facing the enemy and providing working parties for 256th Tunnelling Company, RE, which was re-opening deep German dugouts. Spring Offensive It was recognised that the Flesquières Salient would be vulnerable when the Germans launched their anticipated Spring Offensive, so most of the salient was in the lightly defended 'Forward Zone' while the main defences of the 'Battle Zone' were drawn across its base. 17th (N) Division continued working on its defences and protective patrols were placed in No man's land every night. In fact the Germans had no intention of attacking this sector head-on; rather they would 'pinch out' the salient by attacking its 'shoulders'. For several days German artillery had shelled the salient with Mustard gas, but when the offensive began on 21 March the attacks against 17th (N) Division were restricted to heavy artillery fire and large raids, which were driven off. However, the German attacks further north had been successful and during the night 12th (DLOY) Bn was ordered to abandon the outposts and fall back on the defended village of Havrincourt. Before leaving, the CO and adjutant burned their HQ dugout with a tin of rum, and the battalion fell back as ordered. On 22 March the Germans launched a series of four attacks against the village from 18.35 to 20.30. The first attempt employed many grenades, but all the attacks were halted, the last when a field artillery brigade assisted the shooting of the defenders by laying a barrage on the attackers as they rose from the ground. German losses in this sector were heavy and they feared a counter-attack. The battalion's casualties during the day were 1 officer and about 30 ORs. However, breakthroughs to the north and south made the situation at Flesquières precarious. That night 17th (N) Division fell back through its Battle Zone: 12th (DLOY) Bn was ordered back to 'Yorkshire Spoil Heap' in the old British front line north of Havrincourt Wood. Next day the division was withdrawn to the 'Red Line' as V Corps retired to avoid the German 'pincers'. 12th (DLOY) Battalion was ordered back to Rocquigny and together with the rest of 52nd Bde it got away cleanly, covered by B Company and the 10th Lancashire Fusiliers, but the rest of the division had some hard fighting. The battalion occupied an old German trench running across the Bus–Rocquigny road, but was able to return to camp that night before manning the trench at 04.00. On 24 March, supported by some tanks, 52nd Bde held onto its positions at Rocquigny until 15.00 when the troops on either flank had retired, after which it fell back rapidly under shrapnel fire and joined up with 63rd (Royal Naval) Division at Martinpuich, having lost touch with 17th (N) Divisional HQ. Next morning the 'Great Retreat' continued across the old Somme battlefields: at one point just before dawn 12th (DLOY) Bn, led by the brigade commander, was marching down the Martinpuich–Courcelette with German troops marching in parallel about away on either flank. Thinking that V Corps was fleeing the Germans attacked in masses without artillery support and were shot down. However, this attack did not develop on 12th (DLOY) Bn's front, and the battalion was able to spend a quiet night at Fricourt. Early in the morning it was ordered to Henencourt, where 17th (N) Division was assembling in corps reserve. After arriving there, the battalion was loaned to 9th (Scottish) Division and twice (that evening and the following morning) was sent up to deal with reported enemy breakthroughs, but each time its patrols found the 9th in position and untroubled, so the battalion returned to billets at Henencourt. Later on 27 March the frontline divisions were relieved by fresh Australian troops and V Corps' retreat ended. It established a defence line along the River Ancre. From 21 to 31 March 12th (DLOY) Bn had lost 17 ORs killed, 10 officers and 102 ORs wounded, and 108 ORs missing. The battalion spent the next few weeks mainly in divisional reserve and training, occasionally being subjected to gas shelling. In April it received a draft of reinforcements, mainly from the 1/5th and 2/6th Manchesters from 66th (2nd East Lancashire) Division, which had been reduced to cadres. By June it was taking turns in the front line or supplying working parties to the front line battalions. Night raids were common along the line: on the night of 3/4 June B Company was shelled and a German raiding party approached but were driven off by artillery and machine gun fire responding to B Company's SOS flare. Hundred Days Offensive When the Allied Hundred Days Offensive was launched at the Battle of Amiens on 8 August, 17th (N) Division stood by in reserve behind the attacking Australian Corps but was not required. On 20 August it was transferred back to V Corps and was back in action from 23 August during the Second Battle of the Somme. On 24 August 52nd Brigade found that the brigade it was supporting had gone astray, and discovered the enemy still in place, so its attack on Courcelette had to be cancelled. Next day the brigade captured Martinpuich after 12th (DLOY) Bn encircled it from the south and 10th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers from the north. On 26 August the brigade was held up in front of High Wood until 12th (DLOY) Bn initiated another outflanking move from the south. The battalion's casualties over the two days were 5 officers and 47 ORs killed, 7 officers and 194 ORs wounded, one OR missing. Another attempt by the battalion at an outflanking move, against Le Transloy on 1 September, however, came to nothing when it was stopped by machine gun fire from the sugar factory, which another division had failed to capture. The village was heavily shelled overnight and 12th (DLOY) Bn, attacking at 05.00, worked round the flank across the Sailly-Saillisel road by 07.00, after which the Germans evacuated Le Transloy. The brigade then advanced behind a barrage to its second objective against little opposition, and continued on to Rocquigny by 22.00. The casualties had been a further 5 officers and 70 ORs, leaving only one fit officer per company. The advance continued, with Third Army closing up to the Germans' Hindenburg Line defences. It then halted to organise a formal attack on the Hindenburg outposts, the Battle of Épehy on 18 September. 52nd Brigade led the attack for 17th (N) Division at 05.20: 12th (DLOY) and the other two battalions met considerable opposition from machine guns on the first objective, Chapel Hill, but had taken it by 05.50. The other brigades then passed through to complete the advance to the final objective. The battalion lost 4 officers and 114 ORs, but 31 ORs posted 'missing' later turned up. It received a large draft of reinforcements at the end of the month. After Third and Fourth Armies had broken through the Hindenburg Line, 17th (N) Division came back into the line on 9 October during the Second Battle of Cambrai. It advanced quickly without an artillery barrage, gaining in the day. Next day it found the enemy strongly posted behind the River Selle. On the night of 11/12 October the divisional engineers built footbridges over the river and next morning |
by Delibes, and the title role in Massé's Les noces de Jeannette. In January 1885, she appeared as Micaela in the 200th presentation of Bizet's Carmen alongside Célestine Galli-Marié in the title role. In 1886, she left the Opera-Comique to perform at the Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux and at the Opéra de Monte-Carlo where she appeared as Coralian in Adolphe Adam's Le toréador. She continued to perform in operas in France's major provincial theatres and even ventured as far as Cairo. Back in Paris, in September 1892 she appeared at the Théâtre de la Gaîté as Serpolette in Robert Planquette's Les Cloches de Corneville. The date of Rose Delaunay's death is not known but in April 1937 she celebrated her diamond wedding with her husband . References 1857 births People from Reims French operatic sopranos 19th-century French women opera singers 20th-century French women opera | of three children. After training with her father, she attended the Conservatoire de Paris. In addition to voice, she studied piano under Félix Le Couppey. She made her stage debut in 1882 at the Opéra-Comique as Isabella in Ferdinand Hérold's Le pré aux clercs. Over the next four years, her roles there included Anna in Boieldieu's La dame blanche, Javotte in Le roi l'a dit by Delibes, and the title role in Massé's Les noces de Jeannette. In January 1885, she appeared as Micaela in the 200th presentation of Bizet's Carmen alongside Célestine Galli-Marié in the title role. In 1886, she left the Opera-Comique to perform at the Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux and at the Opéra de Monte-Carlo where she appeared as Coralian in Adolphe Adam's Le toréador. She continued to perform in operas |
founded in 1999. The OCG is classified as a sect and has between 2000 and 3000 German-speaking members. In 2008, Sasek founded the "Anti-Censorship Coalition" (AZK), a forum for right-wing esotericism, conspiracy theories, anti-Semitism, xenophobia and historical revisionism, including Holocaust denial. These organizations and their numerous media are managed from Sasek's so called Panorama Center in | founded the "Anti-Censorship Coalition" (AZK), a forum for right-wing esotericism, conspiracy theories, anti-Semitism, xenophobia and historical revisionism, including Holocaust denial. These organizations and their numerous media are managed from Sasek's so called Panorama Center in Walzenhausen in Appenzell (Switzerland). In a network of various camouflaged media in German-speaking countries, the new online |
Series. It was first played in 2018 and is held in Burgos, Spain. Winners References External links LET Access Series events Golf tournaments in | was first played in 2018 and is held in Burgos, Spain. Winners References External links LET Access Series events Golf |
on as a substitute in the 78th minute for Jule Brand against Spain. The match finished as a 1–1 draw. Career statistics International References External links 2000 births Living people Sportspeople from Kiel Footballers from Schleswig-Holstein German women's footballers Germany women's | 78th minute for Jule Brand against Spain. The match finished as a 1–1 draw. Career statistics International References External links 2000 births Living people Sportspeople from Kiel Footballers from Schleswig-Holstein German women's footballers Germany women's international footballers Women's association football forwards FC Bayern Munich (women) players SV Werder Bremen (women) players 1. |
rector) as deacon in 1849. He was curate of Panton, Lincolnshire in 1852, vicar of Ranby, Nottinghamshire in 1854, and rector of the united benefices of East Torrington and West Torrington in Lincolnshire in 1859. Mossman was the primary English translator of the extensive biblical commentaries of the Flemish Roman Catholic exegete and priest, Cornelius a Lapide (1567-1637). At West Torrington, Mossman founded the Brotherhood of the Holy Redeemer in 1866 for poor students wishing to study for ordination: "This Religious Order has been instituted with the object of enabling a few Catholic-minded men to form themselves into a Community, wherein they may study and prepare for Holy Orders under the guidance of a Parish Priest." This order collapsed not long after its founding on account of a failure to achieve episcopal approbation. Mossman assumed the title Bishop of Selby in the Order of Corporate Reunion, an organization founded to re-ordain Church of England clergy with unquestionably valid holy orders in order to promote recognition by and reunion with the Roman Catholic Church. For these activities, he was expelled from the Society of the Holy Cross (SSC) in 1879. He was a close associate of OCR rector Frederick George Lee and John Thomas Seccombe. In 1852 Mossman married Mary Jane Ellis, daughter of Captain Dixie Ellis; together, they had seven children, including four sons and three daughters. He received an honorary doctorate from the University of the South in 1881. Mossman became a Roman Catholic during his final illness in 1885, and was received into that communion by his friend Cardinal Henry Edward Manning. Bibliography A Glossary of the Principal Words Used in a Figurative, Typical, or Mystical Sense in the Holy | may study and prepare for Holy Orders under the guidance of a Parish Priest." This order collapsed not long after its founding on account of a failure to achieve episcopal approbation. Mossman assumed the title Bishop of Selby in the Order of Corporate Reunion, an organization founded to re-ordain Church of England clergy with unquestionably valid holy orders in order to promote recognition by and reunion with the Roman Catholic Church. For these activities, he was expelled from the Society of the Holy Cross (SSC) in 1879. He was a close associate of OCR rector Frederick George Lee and John Thomas Seccombe. In 1852 Mossman married Mary Jane Ellis, daughter of Captain Dixie Ellis; together, they had seven children, including four sons and three daughters. He received an honorary doctorate from the University of the South in 1881. Mossman became a Roman Catholic during his final illness in 1885, and was received into that communion by his friend Cardinal Henry Edward Manning. Bibliography A Glossary of the Principal Words Used in a Figurative, Typical, or Mystical Sense in the Holy Scriptures (London: Joseph Masters, 1854) Sermons (1857) The Followers of the Lamb: A Sermon Preached at S. Michael's, Wakefield, on September 30th, 1866, being the Sunday within the Octave of the Dedication Festival of That Church (1867) Ritualism versus Protestantism: A Report of the Public Discussion Recently Held at Torrington, between the Rev. T. Booth, Free Methodist Minister, Louth, and the Rev. T.W. Mossman, B.A., Vicar of West Torrington, Lincolnshire (1867)The Primacy of S. Peter (London: Bull, Simmons and Co., 1870)A History of the Catholic Church of Jesus Christ from the Death of Saint John to the Middle of the Second Century, |
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