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ended with victory. Klassical Dream would go on to win three Grade 1 races in a row in 2019 the Chanelle Pharma Novice Hurdle, the Supreme Novices Hurdle at Cheltenham and the Champion Novice Hurdle at Punchestown a month later. Two defeats would follow in Ireland, including a third place in the Morgiana | had picked up just one victory inn the Prix de Gastines at Sablé-sur-Sarthe. He was sold in 2018 and training switched to Willie Mullins in Ireland. His first race for new owner Mrs Joanne Coleman came at Leopardstown and ended with victory. Klassical Dream would go on to win three Grade 1 races in a row in 2019 the Chanelle Pharma |
Rest on the Flight into Egypt (David, Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga) (c. 1501–1520) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (David, National Gallery of Art) (c. 1510) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (David, Prado) (c. 1515) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (David, Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp) (c. 1515) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Mola) (c. 1640s) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Murillo) (1665) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Parmigianino), or Nativity (1665) | 1510) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (David, Prado) (c. 1515) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (David, Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp) (c. 1515) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Mola) (c. 1640s) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Murillo) (1665) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Parmigianino), or Nativity (1665) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Patinir) (c. 1515) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (Titian) (c. 1512) Rest on the Flight into Egypt (van Dyck) |
with the regular season and postseason set to be played in bubbles in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. However, the start was postponed due to a surge of the Delta variant of COVID-19. Teams All seven teams from the 2020 season returned. The Vietnam national team was added as the eighth team to help | was canceled on 27 August due to a new surge of the COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam. The season was scheduled to start on 4 June, with the regular season and postseason set to be played in bubbles in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. However, the start was postponed |
attack. In 1858, marines were stationed in the fort. During World War II, the fort was put into operation again. In 1955, the marines were moved to , and Plaza Hotel Curaçao, a luxury hotel, was built in the fort. History The earliest fort at the location dated from 1634, but was abandoned. In the 1820s, all existing forts except for Fort Beekenburg were in a neglected state, and governor Paulus Roelof Cantz'laar developed a plan to strengthen the fortifications of Curaçao. In 1825, William I of the Netherlands appointed Lieutenant | stationed in the fort. During World War II, the fort was put into operation again. In 1955, the marines were moved to , and Plaza Hotel Curaçao, a luxury hotel, was built in the fort. History The earliest fort at the location dated from 1634, but was abandoned. In the 1820s, all existing forts except for Fort Beekenburg were in a neglected state, and governor Paulus Roelof Cantz'laar developed a plan to strengthen the fortifications of Curaçao. In 1825, William I of the Netherlands appointed Lieutenant General Krayenhoff to construct new defences. Krayenhoff arrived in Curaçao on 26 June. The plan was to built Waterfort on the |
genus Epipremnum, and family Araceae. This species' native | This species' native range is the Caroline Islands, part of Micronesia and Palau. References |
a railway station on the Riga – Daugavpils Railway. | Riga – Daugavpils Railway. References Railway |
Kengzi Subdistrict Primary schools Shenzhen Pingshan No. 2 Primary School (深圳市坪山区坪山第二小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Biling Primary School (深圳市坪山区碧岭小学) - Biling Community, Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Central Primary School (深圳市坪山区坪山中心小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Dongmen Primary School (深圳市坪山区东门小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Kengzi Central Primary School (深圳市坪山区坑梓中心小学) - Kengzi Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Jinlong Primary School (深圳市坪山区锦龙小学) - Maluan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Jintian Primary School (深圳市坪山区金田小学) - Kengzi Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Liulian Primary School (深圳市坪山区六联小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Longbei Primary School (深圳市坪山区龙背小学) - Longbei Village, Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Longtian Primary School (深圳市坪山区龙田小学) - Longtian Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Maluan Primary School (深圳市坪山区马峦小学) - Maluan Subdistrict | Foreign Language School (深圳市坪山区景园外国语学校) Shenzhen Pingshan Jingzhi Experimental School (深圳市坪山区精致实验学校) - Laokeng Industrial Zone, Laokeng Community, Longtian Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Longshan School (深圳市坪山区龙山学校) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Peiying School (深圳市坪山区培英学校) - Xinhe Village, Liuhe Community Shenzhen Pingshan Qiubao School (深圳市坪山区秋宝学校) - Kengzi Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Special Education School (深圳市坪山区特殊教育学校) - Kengzi Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Tongxin Foreign Language School (深圳市坪山区同心外国语学校) Shenzhen Pingshan Xinghui Experimental School (深圳市坪山区星辉实验学校) - Longtian Community, Longtian Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Xinhe Experimental School (深圳市坪山区新合实验学校) - Maluan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Xiuxin School (深圳市坪山区秀新学校) - Kengzi Subdistrict Primary schools Shenzhen Pingshan No. 2 Primary School (深圳市坪山区坪山第二小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Biling Primary School (深圳市坪山区碧岭小学) - Biling Community, Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Central Primary School (深圳市坪山区坪山中心小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Dongmen Primary School (深圳市坪山区东门小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Kengzi Central Primary School (深圳市坪山区坑梓中心小学) - Kengzi Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Jinlong Primary School (深圳市坪山区锦龙小学) - Maluan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Jintian Primary School (深圳市坪山区金田小学) - Kengzi Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Liulian Primary School (深圳市坪山区六联小学) - Pingshan Subdistrict Shenzhen Pingshan Longbei Primary School (深圳市坪山区龙背小学) - Longbei Village, Pingshan Subdistrict |
& Knebelsberger, 2015) Corrosella tejedoi (Boeters, Girardi & Knebelsberger, 2015) Corrosella valladolensis (Boeters, Girardi & Knebelsberger, 2015) Corrosella wakrimi Boulaassafer, Ghamizi & Delicado, 2021 Synonyms Corrosella anteisensis (Bérenguier, 1882): synonym of Corrosella astierii (Dupuy, 1851) Corrosella hauffei (Delicado & Ramos, 2012): synonym of Corrosella herreroi (Bech, 1993) References Boeters, H. D. (1970). Corrosella n. gen. [Westeuropäische Hydrobiidae, 3] (Prosobranchia, Hydrobiidae]. Journal de Conchyliologie. 108: 63-69 External links Delicado D., Machordom | genus of minute freshwater snails with an operculum, aquatic gastropod molluscs or micromolluscs in the subfamily Pseudamnicolinae of the family Hydrobiidae. Species Corrosella andalusica (Delicado, Machordom & Ramos, 2012) Corrosella astierii (Dupuy, 1851) Corrosella atlasensis Boulaassafer, Ghamizi & Delicado, 2021 Corrosella bareai (Delicado, Machordom & Ramos, 2012) Corrosella collingi (Boeters, Girardi & Knebelsberger, 2015) Corrosella falkneri Boeters, 1970 Corrosella herreroi (Bech, 1993) Corrosella hinzi (Boeters, 1986) Corrosella hydrobiopsis (Boeters, 1999) Corrosella iruritai (Delicado, Machordom & Ramos, 2012) Corrosella luisi (Boeters, 1984) Corrosella mahouchii Boulaassafer, Ghamizi & Delicado, 2021 Corrosella manueli (Delicado, Machordom & Ramos, 2012) Corrosella marisolae (Delicado, Machordom & Ramos, 2012) |
unprepared surface for a precautionary landing PARE - spin recovery technique TMPFFGH - Trim, Mixture, Pitch, Fuel, Flaps, Engine Air Ventilation, Hydraulic Pressure. Avro Lancaster pre-takeoff checks. UPRT - upset | pre-takeoff checks. Fuel, Altimeters, Transponder, Pitot Heat, Landing Light. FREDA - en-route checks GUMPS - pre-landing checks HASELL - checks before aerial manoeuvres IMSAFE - personal wellness checks OWLS - checks to assess an unprepared surface for a precautionary landing |
Don R. Christensen, American animator, comics artist and writer, scriptwriter (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons, DePatie-Freleng, Hanna-Barbera), (d. 2006). July 27: Keenan Wynn, American character actor (voice of the Winter Warlock in Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town), (d. 1986). August August 4: Carlos Ramírez, Colombian singer (opera voice in Tex Avery's Magical Maestro), (d. 1986). August 21: Bill Lee, American playback singer (Walt Disney Animation Studios), (d. 1980). August 24: Hal Smith, American voice actor (voice of Owl in Winnie the Pooh, Goliath in Davey and Goliath, Flintheart Glomgold and Gyro Gearloose in DuckTales, continued the voice of Goofy, Elmer Fudd, Winnie the Pooh), (d. 1994). September September 13: Hal Geer, American producer, film editor and animator (Looney Tunes), (d. 2017). September 25: Jack Boyd, American animator and special effects creator (Walt Disney Company), (d. 1998). October October 4: George Sidney, American film director and producer (Anchors Aweigh, co-founder of Hanna-Barbera), (d. 2002). October 22: Sidney Miller, American actor (voice of The Dungeon Master in Dungeons and Dragons, Hornswoggle in The Gary Coleman Show, Horrg in Monchhichis, Oompe in Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland), (d. 2004). October 31: Phil Monroe, American animator and animated film director (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Walt Disney Company, UPA, Terrytoons), (d. 1988). November November 15: Bill Melendez, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons, UPA), film director (Peanuts animated features) and voice actor (voice of Snoopy and Woodstock), (d. 2008). November 16: Daws Butler, American voice actor (voice of the City Wolf in Tex Avery's Little Rural Riding Hood, Mysto the Magician in Avery's Magical Maestro, Spike the Bulldog in Tom & Jerry, Chilly Willy in Walter Lantz's cartoons, Nasty Canasta in Barbary Coast Bunny, Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear, Snagglepuss, Hokey Wolf, Elroy Jetson in The Jetsons, Wally Gator, Quick Draw McGraw, Loopy De Loop), (d. 1988). November 30: Owen Fitzgerald, American animator and comics artist (Walt Disney Company, Fleischer Studios, Warner Bros. Cartoons, DePatie-Freleng, Hanna-Barbera), (d. 1994). December December 9: Kirk Douglas, American actor (voice of Chester J. Lampwick in The Simpsons episode "The Day the Violence Died"), (d. 2020). December 14: John Freeman, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Peanuts specials, Hanna-Barbera, Ruby-Spears, DePatie-Freleng), (d. 2010). References External links Animated works of the year, | (d. 1995). January 18: Vladimir Degtyaryov, Russian film director and animator (Beloved Beauty), (d. 1974). February February 8: Larz Bourne, American animation writer (Famous Studios, Gene Deitch, Hanna-Barbera, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, Terrytoons), (d. 1993). February 12: Rudy Larriva, American animator and director (Warner Bros. Cartoons, UPA, the opening credits of The Twilight Zone), (d. 2010). February 23: Retta Scott, American artist (Walt Disney Animation Studios), (d. 1990). March March 15: Tom Okamoto, aka Tom Oka, aka Tom Mako, Japanese-American animator and comics artist (Walt Disney Animation Studios), (d. 1978). March 6: Rochelle Hudson, American actress (voice of Honey in the Bosko cartons), (d. 1972). March 31: Lucille Bliss, American actress (voice of Crusader Rabbit, in Crusader Rabbit, Anastasia Tremaine in Cinderella, Nibbles in Tom & Jerry, a sunflower and tulip in Alice in Wonderland, Smurfette in The Smurfs, Mrs. Beth Fitzgibbons in The Secret of NIMH, Ms. Bitters in Invader Zim), (d. 2012). April April 26: Vic Perrin, American actor (voice of Dr. Zin in Jonny Quest), (d. 1989). May May 6: Adriana Caselotti,American actress and singer (voice of Snow White in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs), (d. 1997). May 10: John McLeish, Canadian actor (voice of the Carnival Barker in Pinocchio, narrator in Dumbo and many Goofy cartoons, narrator in The Ducktators and The Dover Boys, voice of John Ployardt in The Wind in the Willows segment of The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad) and animation writer (The Rite of Spring segment in Fantasia), (d. 1968). May 21: Dennis Day, American actor comedian and singer (narrator of the Johnny Appleseed segment in Melody Time), (d. 1988). June June 17: Terry Gilkyson, American lyricist (wrote The Bare Necessities from The Jungle Book), (d. 1999). July July 2: Ken Curtis, American singer and actor (voice of Nutsy the vulture in Robin Hood), (d. 1991). July 3: Al Stahl, American animator and comics artist (Terrytoons, Fleischer Brothers, Stahl's Animated Productions), (d. 1999). July 6: Don R. Christensen, American animator, comics artist and writer, scriptwriter (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons, DePatie-Freleng, Hanna-Barbera), (d. 2006). July 27: Keenan Wynn, American character actor (voice of the Winter Warlock in Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town), (d. 1986). August August 4: Carlos Ramírez, Colombian singer (opera voice in Tex Avery's Magical Maestro), (d. 1986). August 21: Bill Lee, American playback singer (Walt Disney Animation Studios), (d. 1980). August 24: Hal Smith, American voice actor (voice of Owl in Winnie the Pooh, Goliath in Davey and Goliath, Flintheart Glomgold and Gyro Gearloose in DuckTales, continued the voice of Goofy, Elmer Fudd, Winnie the Pooh), (d. 1994). September September 13: Hal Geer, American producer, film editor and animator (Looney Tunes), (d. 2017). September 25: Jack Boyd, American animator and special effects creator (Walt Disney Company), (d. 1998). October October 4: George Sidney, American film director and producer (Anchors Aweigh, co-founder of Hanna-Barbera), (d. 2002). October 22: Sidney Miller, American actor (voice of The Dungeon Master in Dungeons and Dragons, Hornswoggle in The Gary Coleman Show, Horrg in Monchhichis, Oompe in Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland), (d. 2004). October 31: Phil Monroe, American animator and animated film director (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Walt Disney Company, UPA, Terrytoons), (d. 1988). November November 15: Bill Melendez, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons, UPA), film director (Peanuts animated features) and voice actor (voice of Snoopy and Woodstock), (d. 2008). November 16: Daws Butler, American voice actor (voice of the City Wolf in Tex Avery's Little Rural Riding Hood, Mysto the Magician in Avery's Magical Maestro, Spike the Bulldog in Tom & Jerry, Chilly Willy in Walter Lantz's cartoons, Nasty |
railway station on the Riga – Daugavpils Railway, | – Daugavpils Railway, Latvia. References Railway |
Executive of Afram Plains South District in the Eastern Region of Ghana. References Living people New | He is the District Chief Executive of Afram Plains South District in the Eastern Region |
2017 Women's Rugby World Cup squad. She made her ninth cap appearance against New Zealand at Fly-half. Lee studied at Hong Kong Polytechnic University. The 2016 Hong Kong Women's Sevens was her first Hong Kong event. References | made her ninth cap appearance against New Zealand at Fly-half. Lee studied at Hong Kong Polytechnic University. The 2016 Hong Kong Women's Sevens was her first Hong Kong event. References |
on the Riga – Daugavpils Railway. References Railway stations | station on the Riga – Daugavpils Railway. |
of the Royal Prince, a first rate, which carried the flag of Sir Edward Spragge in the battle with the Dutch of 10 August 1673. The Royal Prince was dismasted; many of her guns were dismounted; some four hundred of her men were killed or wounded; Spragge had shifted his flag to the St. George; and a large Dutch ship with two fireships bore down on her, making certain of capturing or of burning her. It is said that Rooke (afterwards Sir George), her first lieutenant and commander, judging further defence impossible, ordered the colours to be struck, and that Leake countermanding the order, and sending Rooke off the quarter-deck, took the command on himself, saying, "The Royal Prince shall never be given up while I am alive to defend her". His two sons, Henry and John, gallantly supported him; the men recovered from their panic; the fireships were sunk, the man-of-war beaten off, and the Royal Prince brought to Chatham, but Henry Leake, the eldest son, was killed. The story is probably founded on fact, but is certainly much exaggerated. The Royal Prince being unserviceable, Leake was moved into the Neptune, and shortly afterwards was given the command of one of the yachts, and appointed also to be master-gunner of Whitehall. By patent, 21 May 1677, he was constituted master-gunner of England and storekeeper of his Majesty's ordnance and stores of war at Woolwich. In 1683 he attended Lord Dartmouth to Tangier to demolish the fortifications. He is described as skilful and ingenious in his art, as the originator of the method of igniting | privateers, and though hard pressed succeeded in beating them off. She then went to Gottenburg, and in the return voyage was attacked by two Danish ships on 17 May. The captain and master were killed, the lieutenant was badly wounded, and the command devolved on Leake, who after a stubborn fight beat them off and brought the ship safely to the Thames. He was given 30l., and by warrant, 13 August 1667, was appointed "one of his majesty's gunners within the Tower of London, in consideration of his good and faithful service to his majesty during the war with the French, Danes, and Dutch". In May 1669 he was promoted to be gunner of the Royal Prince, a first rate, which carried the flag of Sir Edward Spragge in the battle with the Dutch of 10 August 1673. The Royal Prince was dismasted; many of her guns were dismounted; some four hundred of her men were killed or wounded; Spragge had shifted his flag to the St. George; and a large Dutch ship with two fireships bore down on her, making certain of capturing or of burning her. It is said that Rooke (afterwards Sir George), her first lieutenant and commander, judging further defence impossible, ordered the colours to be struck, and that Leake countermanding the order, and sending Rooke off the quarter-deck, took the command on himself, saying, "The Royal Prince shall never be given up while I am alive to defend her". His two sons, Henry and John, gallantly supported him; the men recovered from their panic; the fireships were sunk, the man-of-war beaten off, and the Royal Prince brought to Chatham, but Henry Leake, the eldest son, was killed. The story is probably founded on fact, but is certainly much exaggerated. The Royal Prince being unserviceable, Leake was moved into the Neptune, and shortly afterwards was given the command |
was started. For all the other roles, Sri Lankan artists of foreign origin were selected. The role of Lionel Wendt is played by Dominic Keller. Nimaya Harris as Neruda's liberated girlfriend. Malcolm Machado plays the servant and Rithika Kodithuwakku plays as the Tamil garbage cleaner. The main language of the film is English but also had to use Spanish when reciting poetry because the flow of words with syllables comes exactly from the original language of Neruda. Tamil and Sinhala languages were used when necessary as well as subtitled. The production plan of the film was done by Nimal Dushmantha. Then he built Ranminithenna cinema village as a model of the old Colombo Fort. Nonagama was selected as the scene of the Sakkili community singing. Release The media screening was held at the PVR Cinema Hall under the patronage of the Minister of Mass Media and Information, Dullas Alahapperuma. A special screening of the film | presence as Chilean Consul of Sri Lanka and the experiences he encountered in Sri Lanka was first found by Handagama in Tissa Abeysekera's book "Ayaale Giya Sithak". It was in those days that the idea of making a film based on that incident came to his mind. Even though he started to write the script with a romance-based plot, he later realized that Neruda has raped a Tamil garbage collecting female lady during his visit to Sri Lanka. Meanwhile, women's and student movements are protesting against a proposal in parliament to rename Chile's main airport, Santiago, in 2018, as Pablo Neruda Airport. Due to the strength of the opposition the government has to withdraw the resolution. The script was fully prepared throughout 2019 and it was decided to shoot in 2020 amidst COVID-19 pandemic. The casting of the film was too difficult with searching fresh faces that can speak Spanish and foreign look. Although a Chilean actor was first screened, his dates did not match with COVID situation. Handagama then screened Luis Romero, a young Spanish actor and poet who knew Neruda well and loved him. |
Fort Bliss, Texas to conduct research in radar tracking and communication systems to provide support for the early missile programs at White Sands Missile Range. In 1952, Field Station No. 1 was reorganized to form the White Sands Signal Corps Agency, which sought to improve munition performance by conducting high altitude and upper atmosphere research. In the first ten months of 1958, the Agency provided communication-electronics support for the firing of more than 2,000 missiles. The White Sands Signal Corps Agency also developed the Voice Operated Device for Automatic Transmission (VODAT), a device that made it possible for two-way radiotelephone conversations to occur on a single frequency. By 1959, the White Sands Signal Corps Agency had doubled in size and scope of operations and was redesignated as the U.S. Army Signal Missile Support Agency (SMSA). SMSA was responsible for providing communication-electronic, meteorologic, and other support for the Army's missile and space program as well as conducting research and development in meteorology, electronic warfare, and missile vulnerability. It was involved in the installation of the vast communication network at White Sands Missile Range and developed the Sonic Observation of Trajectory and Impact of Missiles (SOTIM) System, which provided acoustic information on missiles upon re-entry and impact. These stations were installed at 16 different points at WSMR and were also equipped to measure wind speed, temperature, and humidity. SMSA also built meteorological rockets that could carry a 70-pound instrument package as high as 600,000 feet in order to obtain upper atmospheric data. Due to a major Army restructuring effort, SMSA became a part of the Electronics Research and Development Activity under the U.S. Army Electronics Command (ECOM) in 1962. In June 1965, the Army Electronics Laboratories, which supervised the prior Signal Corps research within the U.S. Army Electronics Command, was discontinued. As a result, the Army Electronics Laboratories and its components, including the Electronics Research and Development Activity, were broken up and reshuffled into six separate Army laboratories: the Electronic Components Laboratory (later the Electronics Technology and Devices Laboratory), the Communications/ADP Laboratory, the Atmospheric Sciences Laboratory, the Electronic Warfare Laboratory, the Avionics Laboratory, and the Combat Surveillance and Target Acquisition Laboratory. Within the newly organized Electronic Warfare Laboratory (EWL), the Missile Electronic Warfare Division represented the origin of the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory. The division's name was changed again to the Missile Electronic Warfare Technical Area (MEWTA) before it became the Office of Missile Electronic Warfare (OMEW) in the early 1970s. OMEW was responsible for conducting research on missile electronic warfare and ascertain missile system vulnerabilities while developing appropriate electronic counter-countermeasures at White Sands Missile Range. In 1985, the Office of Missile Electronic Warfare was renamed the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory. The headquarters for VAL were located at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, but major elements of the laboratory were also stationed at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, and Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico. By 1988, the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory consisted of more than 250 personnel, 60 military and 196 civilian. In 1992, the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory was among the seven Army laboratories that was consolidated to form the U.S. | research into electronics, radar, and communication systems at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. In 1946, the Signal Corps Engineering Laboratories sent a small team of researchers to White Sands Missile Range to perform firing tests on the captured German V-2 rockets. On January 1, 1949, the Signal Corps Engineering Laboratories Field Station No. 1 was established at Fort Bliss, Texas to conduct research in radar tracking and communication systems to provide support for the early missile programs at White Sands Missile Range. In 1952, Field Station No. 1 was reorganized to form the White Sands Signal Corps Agency, which sought to improve munition performance by conducting high altitude and upper atmosphere research. In the first ten months of 1958, the Agency provided communication-electronics support for the firing of more than 2,000 missiles. The White Sands Signal Corps Agency also developed the Voice Operated Device for Automatic Transmission (VODAT), a device that made it possible for two-way radiotelephone conversations to occur on a single frequency. By 1959, the White Sands Signal Corps Agency had doubled in size and scope of operations and was redesignated as the U.S. Army Signal Missile Support Agency (SMSA). SMSA was responsible for providing communication-electronic, meteorologic, and other support for the Army's missile and space program as well as conducting research and development in meteorology, electronic warfare, and missile vulnerability. It was involved in the installation of the vast communication network at White Sands Missile Range and developed the Sonic Observation of Trajectory and Impact of Missiles (SOTIM) System, which provided acoustic information on missiles upon re-entry and impact. These stations were installed at 16 different points at WSMR and were also equipped to measure wind speed, temperature, and humidity. SMSA also built meteorological rockets that could carry a 70-pound instrument package as high as 600,000 feet in order to obtain upper atmospheric data. Due to a major Army restructuring effort, SMSA became a part of the Electronics Research and Development Activity under the U.S. Army Electronics Command (ECOM) in 1962. In June 1965, the Army Electronics Laboratories, which supervised the prior Signal Corps research within the U.S. Army Electronics Command, was discontinued. As a result, the Army Electronics Laboratories and its components, including the Electronics Research and Development Activity, were broken up and reshuffled into six separate Army laboratories: the Electronic Components Laboratory (later the Electronics Technology and Devices Laboratory), the Communications/ADP Laboratory, the Atmospheric Sciences Laboratory, the Electronic Warfare Laboratory, the Avionics Laboratory, and the Combat Surveillance and Target Acquisition Laboratory. Within the newly organized Electronic Warfare Laboratory (EWL), the Missile Electronic Warfare Division represented the origin of the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory. The division's name was changed again to the Missile Electronic Warfare Technical Area (MEWTA) before it became the Office of Missile Electronic Warfare (OMEW) in the early 1970s. OMEW was responsible for conducting research on missile electronic warfare and ascertain missile system vulnerabilities while developing appropriate electronic counter-countermeasures at White Sands Missile Range. In 1985, the Office of Missile Electronic Warfare was renamed the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory. The headquarters for VAL were located at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, but major elements of the laboratory were also stationed at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, and Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico. By 1988, the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory consisted of more than 250 personnel, 60 military and 196 civilian. In 1992, the Vulnerability Assessment Laboratory was among |
over 60 laps of the circuit, and was won by Italian driver Alberto Ascari in a Lancia D50. Results References Naples | 8th Naples Grand Prix was a motor race, run to Formula One rules, held on 8 May 1955 at Posillipo Circuit, Naples. The race was |
tracker and the Mark 29 gun sight. They were usually equipped for the control of twin QF 4-inch naval gun Mk XVI and Mk.33 twin 3"/50 cal guns. Overview Conventionally, the US Navy has used Mk.51 GFCS on their gun of medium caliber guns and cannons, but it was based on visual aiming and tracking by human, and it does not have anti-aircraft range measuring means, etc. It was rather limited. For this reason, Mk.63 was developed as a new generation GFCS with a particular focus on attack countermeasures. Mark 29 Gun Sight During development, the Navy Weapons Agency aimed to achieve blind shooting and high-precision interception capabilities for targets that take evasive action within 4,000 yards (3,700 m). Similar to the late model of Mk.51, it is a human-operated GFCS centered on the disturbed-line-of-sight systems Mk.15 (later improved Mk.29) gun sight. Equipped with a radar, the radar spot appears within the field of view of the Mk.29, so blind shooting was also possible. Initially, S-band Mk.28 and later X-band Mk.34 were used as radars, and they were installed on turrets and mounts, but the beam width was too narrow and it was difficult to capture targets. By moving the antenna up and down 20 degrees to make it easier to capture the target by swinging the beam (notting mechanism), measures were taken. The first test was conducted in June 1944, and the deployment started with the installation on | Mark 29 gun sight. They were usually equipped for the control of twin QF 4-inch naval gun Mk XVI and Mk.33 twin 3"/50 cal guns. Overview Conventionally, the US Navy has used Mk.51 GFCS on their gun of medium caliber guns and cannons, but it was based on visual aiming and tracking by human, and it does not have anti-aircraft range measuring means, etc. It was rather limited. For this reason, Mk.63 was developed as a new generation GFCS with a particular focus on attack countermeasures. Mark 29 Gun Sight During development, the Navy Weapons Agency aimed to achieve blind shooting and high-precision interception capabilities for targets that take evasive action within 4,000 yards (3,700 m). Similar to the late model of Mk.51, it is a human-operated GFCS centered on the disturbed-line-of-sight systems Mk.15 (later improved Mk.29) gun sight. Equipped with a radar, the radar spot appears within the field of view of the Mk.29, so blind shooting was also possible. Initially, S-band Mk.28 and later X-band Mk.34 were used as radars, and they were installed on turrets and mounts, but the beam width was too narrow and it was difficult to capture targets. By moving the antenna up and down 20 degrees to make it easier to capture the target by swinging the beam (notting mechanism), measures were taken. The first test was conducted in June 1944, and the deployment started with the installation on an aircraft carrier in November of the same year, and it was put into actual battle in the Battle of Okinawa. AN/SPG-34 Radar Tracker In 1953, the formal name was |
from Kropyvnytskyi Ukrainian footballers Association football defenders FC Oleksandriya players MFC Mykolaiv players FC Kremin Kremenchuk players FC Hirnyk-Sport Horishni Plavni players SC Poltava players Ukrainian First League players Ukrainian | a right-back for Ukrainian club Poltava. References External links 1994 births Living people People from |
1957–58 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University as a member of the Mid-American Conference in the college basketball season of 1957–58. The team was coached by Jim Snyder | games at the Men's Gymnasium. The Bobcats finished the regular season with a record of 16–8 and finished third in the MAC regular season with a conference record of 7–5. Schedule |- !colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| regular season Source: References |
extinct genus of lizards from the Eocene of Wyoming. The type and only species is Blutwurstia oliviae. It | is an extinct genus of lizards from the Eocene of Wyoming. The type and only species is Blutwurstia oliviae. It is |
for the MCSA; she was elected to that position in 2019, succeeding Bishop Ziphorzihle Siwa. The MCSA is the largest mainline Protestant denomination in Southern Africa and includes churches in Swaziland, Lesotho, Namibia, Botswana, Mozambique and South Africa. Biography Nomthandazo Nobuhle Purity Malinga was born in 1958 in Ixopo, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, the eldest child of Siziba Jeffrey and Thenjiwe Emily Malinga. The family lived on a farm, and as a child, Malinga helped with chores and farming tasks, along with her younger brother. Malinga was raised in the Methodist Church of Southern Africa from a young age. The family attended services at Webbstown Methodist Society, and her mother and grandmother were members of the women's manyano (or women's auxiliary). Malinga attended the Indaleni Methodist Institution, where she studied education, and became trained to be a schoolteacher. After graduating in 1976, she returned to Ixopo, where she taught for five years at the Siyakhona Primary school. With encouragement from a local pastor, Reverend Raymond Kumalo, Malinga then decided to pursue ordained ministry in the Methodist church. Women had recently been allowed to present themselves as candidates for ordination. In 1981, she was accepted as a provisional candidate. From 1982 to 1983, she served as a minister-in-training in KaBhokweni. From 1983 to 1986, she studied at the Federal Theological Seminary of Southern Africa, known as FEDSEM. FEDSEM was an ecumenical seminary that prepared students, primarily from Anglican, Congregationalist, Methodist, and Presbyterian | years as the bishop for the Natal Coastal region. She later became director of the MCSA's Education for Ministry and Mission Unit, which holds responsibility for overseeing theological education within the denomination. She is the first woman to become presiding bishop for the MCSA; she was elected to that position in 2019, succeeding Bishop Ziphorzihle Siwa. The MCSA is the largest mainline Protestant denomination in Southern Africa and includes churches in Swaziland, Lesotho, Namibia, Botswana, Mozambique and South Africa. Biography Nomthandazo Nobuhle Purity Malinga was born in 1958 in Ixopo, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, the eldest child of Siziba Jeffrey and Thenjiwe Emily Malinga. The family lived on a farm, and as a child, Malinga helped with chores and farming tasks, along with her younger brother. Malinga was raised in the Methodist Church of Southern Africa from a young age. The family attended services at Webbstown Methodist Society, and her mother and grandmother were members of the women's manyano (or women's auxiliary). Malinga attended the Indaleni Methodist Institution, where she studied education, and became trained to be a schoolteacher. After graduating in 1976, she returned to Ixopo, where she taught for five years at the Siyakhona Primary school. With encouragement from a local pastor, Reverend Raymond Kumalo, Malinga then decided to pursue ordained ministry in the Methodist church. Women had recently been allowed to present themselves as candidates for ordination. In 1981, she was accepted as a provisional candidate. From 1982 to 1983, she served as a minister-in-training in KaBhokweni. From 1983 to 1986, she studied at the Federal Theological Seminary of Southern Africa, known as FEDSEM. FEDSEM was an ecumenical seminary that prepared students, primarily from Anglican, Congregationalist, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches, for the ministry. During the apartheid era, education in South Africa was widely segregated by race, and black students formed the majority |
Francisco Bay Area, where he was employed by a construction company and became involved with the music scene. During this time, he met his future wife and musical partner, the poet Ijeoma Chinue Thomas, who was visiting from Washington, D.C.. Thomas moved to D.C. to join her, and the couple soon married before moving back to the west coast, settling in Oakland, where they currently live. Together, the duo founded a group called Positive Knowledge, performing works inspired by their Baháʼí Faith. Over the years, in addition to releasing a number of albums, they toured the world, and collaborated with a wide range of musicians, including Marshall Allen, Eddie Gale, Henry Grimes, Kidd Jordan, Peter Kowald, Miya Masaoka, Roscoe Mitchell, Sunny Murray, Larry Ochs, William Parker, Wadada Leo Smith, Cecil Taylor, John Tchicai, and Michael Wimberly. Writing for The New York Times, Ben Ratliff stated that the group was responsible for "the best moments" of the opening concert of the 2002 Vision Festival, and commented: "The Thomases practice a mixture of free jazz and poetry, and practice it well. Mr. Thomas played interval-jumping improvisations that recalled bird songs and Eric Dolphy; Ms. Thomas intoned and repeated lines, going from whisper to shriek. They played in close communication, feeding off each other's sputtering energy." Thomas refers to his music as "adventurous jazz," and acknowledged the influence of Eric Dolphy, calling him "my great teacher." Although Thomas performs on both bass clarinet and saxophone, he stated that "the bass clarinet has that floor-of-the-ocean tone that I really adore." In an AllMusic review, Michael G. Nastos wrote: "The bass | graphic scores, which, according to an interviewer, resemble paintings by Kandinsky. Thomas began experimenting with notation in the 1970s, and said that his engineering background influenced the appearance of his scores. According to Thomas, his music is an expression of his Baháʼí faith. In an interview, he commented that "music comes from the world of beyond... to convey collective reality," and stated that the performance of music is "having a conversation with God." Discography As leader or co-leader Unity in Multiplicity (Rastascan, 1996) Transmissions (Eremite, 1999) with Alan Silva Before The Beginning (Recorded, 2002) Nigeria (Not Two, 2006) The Power Of Light (Not Two, 2007) with Henry Grimes Beneath Tones Floor (NoBusiness, 2010) with Sirone and Michael Wimberly With Positive Knowledge Another Day's Journey (Music & Arts, 1994) Invocation #9 (Music & Arts, 1995) At the Center of the Threshold (Ear Light, 2000) Live In New York (Edgetone, 2003) First Ones (Charles Lester, 2005) Invisible Wisdom (Charles Lester, 2006) Edgefest Edition (Not Two, 2010) Live in Detroit (self-released, 2018) As sideman With Marco Eneidi Marco Eneidi & The American Jungle Orchestra (Botticelli, 1996) With Henry Kaiser |
Winter Olympics where she did not advance from the heat. Sporting career Dubrova took up the sport in 2012. She started her international senior sporting career in late 2019 when she debuted at the World Cup. | in late 2019 when she debuted at the World Cup. One year before that, she debuted at the World Junior Championships. Uliana Dubrova managed to qualify for her first Winter Games in Beijing based on the performances during the 2021–22 World Cup. She finished last in her heats race. Results Winter Olympics European Championships References External links Dubrova's |
went to coach Torreense then in the second tier from 1952 to 1954 where he almost repeated the stunt of taking another club to the top tier. After a brief return to Estoril-Praia, in 1955, he signed with Sporting CP as assistant to his fellow countryman Alejandro Scopelli and coaching the youth team where we was youth national and regional champion (1956 and 1957). For a short period between these two trophies he lead the first team in 2 matches in 1956. He then sat on the bench of Beira-Mar which he also lead to the Primeira Divisão for the first time. He eventually coached Belenenses and CUF Barreiro. Anselmo Pisa died in 1965 at the age of only 47 victim of a long-term illness. On the centenary of his birth (7 April 2018) the municipality of Aveiro dedicated a street in the surroundings of the Aveiro Municipal Stadium to Anselmo Pisa in recognition of the great feat of taking Beira-Mar for the first time | the stunt of taking another club to the top tier. After a brief return to Estoril-Praia, in 1955, he signed with Sporting CP as assistant to his fellow countryman Alejandro Scopelli and coaching the youth team where we was youth national and regional champion (1956 and 1957). For a short period between these two trophies he lead the first team in 2 matches in 1956. He then sat on the bench of Beira-Mar which he also lead to the Primeira Divisão for the first time. He eventually coached Belenenses and CUF Barreiro. Anselmo Pisa died in 1965 at the age of only 47 victim of a long-term illness. On the centenary of his birth (7 April 2018) the municipality of Aveiro dedicated a street in the surroundings of the Aveiro Municipal Stadium to Anselmo Pisa in recognition of the great feat of taking Beira-Mar for the first time to the Portuguese Primeira Divisão References 1918 births 1965 deaths People from Buenos Aires Argentine footballers Italian footballers Association football midfielders Club Atlético Banfield players S.S. Lazio players G.D. Estoril Praia players Primeira Liga players Serie A players Italian football managers Primeira Liga managers Liga Portugal 2 managers G.D. |
Jewish and Israeli organizations that work in the fields of global service, international development and humanitarian aid. It was launched in 2015 by the Alliance for Global Good, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Philanthropies and the Pears Foundation. OLAM, whose name is "an allusion to the Hebrew term tikkun olam (repairing the world), one of the central tenets of Jewish | global service, international development and humanitarian aid. It was launched in 2015 by the Alliance for Global Good, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Philanthropies and the Pears Foundation. OLAM, whose name is "an allusion to the Hebrew term tikkun olam (repairing the world), one of the central tenets of Jewish tradition", brings together more than fifty Jewish and Israeli organizations working in international development and humanitarian relief. According to its website, OLAM seeks: To inspire, educate, and empower Jewish leaders to become |
on May 15, 2016, making her ineligible to run for election to a full term in 2016. Republican JB McCuskey won the 2016 election as auditor, becoming the first Republican auditor of West Virginia since 1976. She received her B.A. from Barnard College and her J.D. from the Boston University School of Law. As of 2020, she serves as president of the North American Securities Administrators Association. References West Virginia | the office of the West Virginia auditor in 1999. In 2001, she became the general counsel of the office and the deputy commissioner of securities. She remained in these positions until being appointed interim auditor. The filing deadlines already passed at the time Hopkins was appointed on May 15, 2016, making her ineligible to run for election to a full term in 2016. Republican JB McCuskey won the 2016 election as auditor, becoming the first Republican auditor of West Virginia since 1976. She received her |
Latvia Railway stations opened in | Latvia Railway stations opened in 1931 |
Time High) which was then affected by a wild market fluctuation which decreased the highest value reached since its launch, but the Token kept going. Team Wallet Token Burning In October 2021 the organization team went on to burn the Team Wallet worth 210.000.000 EXO seeking to increase and assure liquidity from users and investors and help the project move forward independently. Security Audit In November 2021, Exohood claimed to be the world's first crypto decentralized organization that successfully passes security compliance and data protection audit by Intercer & LL-C. The organization undergoes the ISO 27001, the international recognized standard for security management which the user to create | year 2020. The EXO Token was launched on the 16th of April, 2021 on the Binance Smart Chain network, but the team decided to maintained its appearance discreet and humble within the ecosystem. Consequently, the Token hadn't made an ICO to support its release on the market. Reportedly, the Exohood Team didn't expect such immediate endorsement by users. However, a few days after the launch on the network, the token was listed on CoinMarketCap, generating relevant news and in a few hours, it got a significant ATH (All Time High) which was then affected by a wild market fluctuation which decreased the highest value reached since its launch, |
per sport/discipline. Cross-country skiing Pol Makuri has qualified to compete in cross-country skiing. Snowboarding Víctor González has qualified to compete in snowboarding. See also Spain at the Paralympics Spain at the 2022 Winter Olympics References Nations at the 2022 | number of competitors participating at the Games per sport/discipline. Cross-country skiing Pol Makuri has qualified to compete in cross-country skiing. Snowboarding Víctor González has qualified |
Guerrero was born in California to parents from Mexico. She was raised in the Imperial Valley, California. At the age of 16, Guerrero worked at a grocery store. She graduated co-valedictorian. Guerrero graduated from University of California, Berkeley. She completed a J.D. at Stanford Law School. Career From 2002 to 2003, Guerrero was an assistant U.S. attorney in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California. She joined Latham & Watkins as an associate and was promoted to partner in 2006. In 2013, Guerrero became a judge on the San Diego County Superior Court. In 2017, she became an appellate justice on the California Courts of Appeal and was the | partner in 2006. In 2013, Guerrero became a judge on the San Diego County Superior Court. In 2017, she became an appellate justice on the California Courts of Appeal and was the supervising judge for the family law division. In February 2022, Guerrero was nominated by California governor Gavin Newsom to replace associate justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar on the Supreme Court of California. She would be the first Latina to hold the position. References Living people 21st-century American women lawyers 21st-century women judges American judges |
Salt Lake County, Utah. They are usually referred to as the Broads Fork Twin Peaks, to distinguish them from the nearby American Fork Twin Peaks and Avenues Twin Peaks. Consisting of two sub-peaks, only the eastern peak has the prominence to be considered | They are usually referred to as the Broads Fork Twin Peaks, to distinguish them from the nearby American Fork Twin Peaks and Avenues Twin Peaks. Consisting of two sub-peaks, only the eastern peak has the prominence to be considered |
Range in Utah, on the border between Salt Lake and Utah County. They are usually referred to as the American Fork Twin Peaks, to distinguish them from the nearby Broads Fork Twin Peaks and Avenues Twin Peaks. Consisting | Utah County. They are usually referred to as the American Fork Twin Peaks, to distinguish them from the nearby Broads Fork Twin Peaks and Avenues Twin Peaks. Consisting of several sub-peaks, only one has the prominence to be considered a true summit. The summit has an elevation of , making it the |
John A. Danaher. Satti won reelection in 1936 but lost his second reelection campaign in 1938 to Republican nominee Sara B. Crawford of Westport. In a year when Republicans swept the statewide elections, Crawford garnered 203,949 votes to Satti's 192,706 votes. Personal life Satti married Dorothy May Heffernan of Brooklyn on June 25, 1926. The couple had four children: John, Robert, Eleanor, and Dianna Maria Satti. Robert became an attorney and public prosecutor, while John became a physician after graduating from the University of Bologna. Dorothy Satti was the first woman to serve as a New London County commissioner. She died in 1960. C. John Satti died on May 7, 1968, at Lawrence + Memorial Hospital in New London at the age of 72. References 1895 births 1968 deaths Politicians from New London, Connecticut University of Rhode Island alumni Yale School of Medicine alumni Physicians from Connecticut Connecticut Democrats 20th-century American politicians American | State College, and received his MD from the Yale School of Medicine in 1923. He was a resident at King County Hospital in Brooklyn from 1923 to 1925 and then joined New Haven Hospital. In 1925, he launched a private practice in New London and remained in active practice for more than forty years. Satti was a long-time president of the New London Medical Association and a member of the city board of education and chamber of commerce, the Yale Alumni Association, and various Italian-American societies. Political career Satti led the New London Italian American Democratic Club in the 1930s, building a strong political base and wresting partial control of the city's Democratic Party from the Irish Americans. He was long-time Democratic town chair in New London and served on the Democratic State Central Committee and as a delegate to the Connecticut Constitutional Convention of 1965. Satti was elected Secretary of the State |
in the equatorial constellation of Orion. It has the identifier GJ 182 in the Gliese–Jahreiß catalogue; V1005 Ori is its variable star designation. This star is too faint to be visible to the naked eye, having a mean apparent visual magnitude of 10.1. It is located at a distance of 79.6 light years from the Sun and is drifting further away with a radial velocity of 19.2 km/s. The star is a possible member of the IC 2391 supercluster. Flare activity was first reported for this star by N. I. Shakhovskaya in 1974. B. W. Bopp found anomalously strong lithium lines in the spectrum of GJ 182, a rarity for stars of this class and a possible indicator of a very young star. Together with F. Espenak, in 1977 Bopp demonstrated the star showed periodic variations similar to BY Draconis. In 1984, Byrne and associates found a preliminary rotation period of 4.55 days and showed the star had a normal flare rate. The stellar classification of V1005 Ori is M0Ve, indicating this is an | It is located at a distance of 79.6 light years from the Sun and is drifting further away with a radial velocity of 19.2 km/s. The star is a possible member of the IC 2391 supercluster. Flare activity was first reported for this star by N. I. Shakhovskaya in 1974. B. W. Bopp found anomalously strong lithium lines in the spectrum of GJ 182, a rarity for stars of this class and a possible indicator of a very young star. Together with F. Espenak, in 1977 Bopp demonstrated the star showed periodic variations similar to BY Draconis. In 1984, Byrne and associates found a preliminary rotation period of 4.55 days and showed the star had a normal flare rate. The stellar classification of V1005 Ori is M0Ve, indicating this is an M-type main-sequence star (a "red dwarf") with emission lines (e) in its spectrum. It is classified as a BY Draconis and UV Ceti variable, which means it is a |
Manager at Edmonton Multicultural Coalition, he also served as a Policy Advisor for the Government of Alberta in Canada. Muganga has held several teaching, consulting and professional positions in Canada, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Finland, Singapore, Sweden, USA and Solomon Islands majorly focusing on researching, planning, developing, implementing, and assessing policies that contribute towards human capital development and improving the quality of life for populations. In 2020, he was appointed as the new Vice Chancellor for Victoria University Uganda. Research He has published the finding of his educational research in educational journals and other peer publications. Grant In 2019, Muganga published a book called “You Can't Make Fish Climb Trees” and won a grant of $1.3 million from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Controversies On 2 September 2021, he was arrested by the Ugandan joint security forces for espionage and illegal stay in the country but he was freed 2 days later without any charge. References External links Victoria University Cuts Tuition Fees for New Entrants : Muhoozi’s Rwanda mission Uganda: Victoria University Explains 'Bad | Muganga moved to Rwanda and worked in Rwanda Revenue Authority as an Internal Auditor (2003-2005). He worked as a Project Manager at Edmonton Multicultural Coalition, he also served as a Policy Advisor for the Government of Alberta in Canada. Muganga has held several teaching, consulting and professional positions in Canada, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Finland, Singapore, Sweden, USA and Solomon Islands majorly focusing on researching, planning, developing, implementing, and assessing policies that contribute towards human capital development and improving the quality of life for populations. In 2020, he was appointed as the new Vice Chancellor for Victoria University Uganda. Research He has published the finding of his educational research in educational journals and other peer publications. Grant In 2019, Muganga published a book called “You Can't Make Fish Climb Trees” and won a grant of $1.3 million from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Controversies On 2 September 2021, he was arrested by the Ugandan joint security forces for espionage and illegal stay in the |
Balad. A Hamdanid counter-offensive followed in the region of Amida, but failed to score any success. Indeed, al-Husayn was taken prisoner, finding refuge with the Fatimids after his release, while Ibrahim fled to Uqaylid-held Nisibis, where Muhammad took him and his son Ali prisoner and killed them. At the same time, Muhammad also sidelined his principal Bedouin rival, the leader of the Banu Numayr, and secured control of Mosul and its province. In 991/2, however, the Uqayl were defeated by a Buyid army under al-Hajjaj ibn Ustadh Hurmuz, and in a peace concluded in the next year, they had to again recognize Buyid suzerainty. They kept control of districts around Mosul, but the city itself became the seat of al-Hajjaj as Buyid governor and abandon Mosul. Muhammad died in 996, and a succession struggle followed between his brothers, Ali and al-Muqallad, resulting in a shared authority and weakening the Uqaylid emirate, although during this time, | to Mosul, in the hope that their local ties would mobilize opposition against Badh, and keep the Arab tribes reined in. The Hamdanids were indeed received with enthusiasm by the local population, to such a degree that they rose in revolt and expelled the Buyid governor from Mosul. The Uqayl backed the Hamdanids, and received control of the towns of Jazirat ibn Umar, Nisibis, and Balad (north of Mosul), in exchange. Exploiting the turmoil, Badh attacked Mosul in the next year, but was defeated and killed by the numerically inferior Uqayl forces in battle near Balad. A Hamdanid counter-offensive followed in the region of Amida, but failed to score any success. Indeed, al-Husayn was taken prisoner, finding refuge with the Fatimids after his release, while Ibrahim fled to Uqaylid-held Nisibis, where Muhammad took him and his son Ali prisoner and killed them. At the same time, Muhammad also sidelined his principal Bedouin rival, the leader of the Banu Numayr, and secured control of Mosul and its province. In 991/2, however, the Uqayl were defeated by a Buyid army under al-Hajjaj ibn |
2019 at Golf de Montauban L'Estang in Montauban, France. In 2021, French amateur Marine Griffaut, a member of Texas State Bobcats women's golf team, earned her first professional win. Winners References External links LET | women's professional golf tournament played as part of the LET Access Series, held since 2019 at Golf de Montauban |
are usually referred to as the Avenues Twin Peaks, to distinguish them from the nearby and much-higher Broads Fork Twin Peaks and American Fork Twin Peaks. With a maximum elevation of , neither high point has the prominence to be considered a | and much-higher Broads Fork Twin Peaks and American Fork Twin Peaks. With a maximum elevation of , neither high point has the |
urban planner. She is one of the four partners of ISA Internationales Stadtbauatelier and its general director at the Beijing headquarters. She also works as a correspondent for the | Stadtbauatelier and its general director at the Beijing headquarters. She also works as a correspondent for the Chinese magazine Community Design. References 20th-century Chinese women 21st-century |
workers, were employed in the textile industry. She has a brother and five sisters. At age three, Mutluer moved with her mother to Turkey, where she resided in the cities Mersin and Adana. Mutluer returned to the Netherlands in 1988 with her mother. There, she lived in the Zaandam neighborhood Poelenburg and attended the high school Zaanlands Lyceum at gymnasium level. Mutluer subsequently studied law at the University of Amsterdam, obtaining a Master of Laws degree. During her study, when she was just over twenty years old, she returned to Turkey to intern at an Ankara law firm for four months. After graduating, Mutluer started teaching law at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and received a grant to research invitations to tender. She also became a legal professional specialized in invitations to tender and contracts and worked for the governmental organization Rijkswaterstaat. Politics Mutluer became a member of the municipal council of Zaanstad after she was elected in the 2006 election as the Labour Party's fifth candidate in the municipality. Mutluer was re-elected in March 2010, being placed second on the party list. She became her party's caucus leader in the municipal council in December 2010. She again appeared second on the Labour Party's list in the 2014 municipal election. Besides, Mutluer became a member of an advisory committee that selected the Labour Party's candidates for the 2017 general election. She stepped down as caucus leader for a half year | at an Ankara law firm for four months. After graduating, Mutluer started teaching law at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and received a grant to research invitations to tender. She also became a legal professional specialized in invitations to tender and contracts and worked for the governmental organization Rijkswaterstaat. Politics Mutluer became a member of the municipal council of Zaanstad after she was elected in the 2006 election as the Labour Party's fifth candidate in the municipality. Mutluer was re-elected in March 2010, being placed second on the party list. She became her party's caucus leader in the municipal council in December 2010. She again appeared second on the Labour Party's list in the 2014 municipal election. Besides, Mutluer became a member of an advisory committee that selected the Labour Party's candidates for the 2017 general election. She stepped down as caucus leader for a half year starting in the spring of 2016 in order to write her dissertation. Mutluer was re-elected once again in March 2018 as her party's . She vacated her seat in the municipal council in June to serve as alderwoman of housing, youth care services, poverty, and elderly policy in the new municipal executive. She also became a board member of the Association of Netherlands Municipalities in late 2019. Zaanstad received €20.5 million from the national |
Georgia, United States. It was founded in 1899 as Central City College and was renamed in 1938. It closed due to financial difficulties in 1956. The idea for the school arose in the 1890s due to disagreements between some African American Baptists in the state and the American Baptist Home Mission Society (ABHMS), a Baptist organization that was affiliated with the Atlanta Baptist Seminary (now Morehouse College, a historically black college in Atlanta). They argued that Atlanta Baptist should have more African American representation in its leadership, and in 1899, Central City College was formed as an African American-led alternative to Atlanta Baptist, with the project spearheaded by noted Baptist preacher Emanuel K. Love of Savannah, Georgia. William E. Holmes, an instructor from Atlanta Baptist, served as its first president. The school functioned primarily as a primary and secondary school for its first few decades of operation, adding a college department in 1920. In 1921, a fire destroyed much of the school, though it was later rebuilt. The school struggled financially for much of its existence and in 1937, it went into foreclosure. The school continued on for several years after this, but finally closed in 1956. Background The idea for the school originated in the 1890s due to internal conflicts among African American Baptists in the U.S. state of Georgia. At the time, the American Baptist Home Mission Society (ABHMS), a New York City-based Baptist organization, was an influential group that supported several African American Baptist institutions throughout the state, including several institutions of higher learning such as the Atlanta Baptist Seminary. However, many African American Baptists were critical of the organization's leadership of these institutions, which were often led by white Americans. The Reverend Emanuel K. Love, a noted Baptist leader from Savannah, Georgia, was an outspoken advocate for more African American leadership in Baptist institutions and he had unsuccessfully sought positions on the board of trustees at both Atlanta Baptist and Spelman Seminary, another Baptist seminary located in Atlanta. In 1897, seeking to diffuse the tension, the ABHMS agreed to work with African Americans to ensure increased representation on the colleges' boards of trustees. That same year, Atlanta Baptist was re-incorporated as a college, though African Americans were still largely excluded from leadership positions, a trend that would continue through 1899. That year, Love announced the formation of an African American Baptist college to rival the ABHMS-affiliated Atlanta Baptist. Love, acting under the auspices of the Missionary Baptist Convention of Georgia (a statewide Baptist group that Love was the president of), acquired about of land near Macon, Georgia to serve as the site of a new college. In September 1899, Love reached out to William E. Holmes, an African American faculty member from Atlanta Baptist, to offer him the position of president for this new college. Holmes had been the first African American faculty member at Atlanta Baptist and had worked there for over two decades at the time, and while he initially agreed to remain at Atlanta Baptist, he changed his mind and joined Love after then-Atlanta Baptist President George Sale asked him to publicly denounce the formation of the new school. Some time prior to this, Holmes had been involved in an effort to ouster Sale from his position | regional trend of independent Baptist colleges that formed around the late 1800s and early 1900s to serve African Americans in the American South, with similar institutions including Guadalupe College and Morris College. In its initial form, the institution functioned primarily as a grade school, with the school offering a primary school, high school, and a three-year theology program. The school was coeducational, although the theology program was only offered to men. Only a small number of students participated in the theology program. From its beginning, the school attempted to follow the educational model found in the liberal arts colleges of New England, in opposition to the industrial education favored by noted African American leader Booker T. Washington. The primary school offered sources in geometry, grammar, history, mathematics, penmanship, and reading, while the high school courses included additional history courses, advanced mathematics, bookkeeping, physiology, physics, and language courses on English, Greek, and Latin. Only two faculty members held college degrees—Holmes and the Reverend James M. Nabrit, who also held a bachelor's degree from Atlanta Baptist. Early years By the school's third year of operation, it had an enrollment of 365 students, and by 1908 it employed 11 teachers and enrolled about 325 students. The school struggled financially for most of its existence, with one biography of the school stating that it "remained perpetually on the verge of bankruptcy and closure". By 1908, the school had an annual operating expense of about $4,000, while records from 1916 show that the school collected only $307 in school fees, equal to about $5 per student at the time. The school received some financial support from the Missionary Baptist Association to help it continue its operations, and additionally, the school farmed some of its large campus. By 1908, of the school's campus, approximately were used as farmland. Office of Education report In 1914, the school was visited by members of the United States Office of Education, who were collecting information on African American education in the United States. As part of their report, they recorded an enrollment of 40 primary school students and 25 high school students, though they stated that the number was usually larger in the winter months, taught by four full-time teachers and two volunteer teachers. They valued the school's assets, including the property, buildings, and materials, at about $16,000 and noted that the school was in $5,000 of debt due mostly to back pay and other general expenses. Assessing the state of education in Bibb County, Georgia as a whole, the report stated that, "The Central City College, a private school located in the suburbs, is of slight educational value to the community", and additionally recommended "[t]hat the plant be sold and the work transferred to some of the stronger Baptist schools of the State". Later years In 1920, the school officially began its college department, and the number of teachers had risen to eight. However, in May of the following year, Central City College's school buildings were destroyed in a fire. According to Holmes, the fire, which had been started by someone accused of insanity, destroyed most of the school's infrastructure, as well as "our Records and nearly everything else we had". In the aftermath of the destruction, community farmers sold some of their produce to raise money for the school's reconstruction, collecting about $164.34 for the school, while the Reverend T. J. Goodall (preacher at First African Baptist Church in Savannah and a board member of Central City College) personally donated $50 to the cause. For the fall semester that year, the school enrolled 204 students, with classes being held in tents set up on the campus. 161 students commuted, while the 43 who lived on campus stayed either in the president's house or in tents. Fundraising efforts continued through at least 1923. Shortly before Christmas 1921, Holmes was visited at Central City College by Hope (who by this time was president of Atlanta Baptist, which had since been renamed to Morehouse College), E. C. Sage of the General Education Board (GEB, a private organization that supported schools for African Americans) and the Reverend M. W. Reddick (president of the Missionary Baptist Convention), who came to discuss the possible future of the school. While they stated that the school was "poorly managed, and educationally amounts to very little", they were interested in redeveloping the school as "a good secondary school, linked up with the Morehouse-Americus-Spelman system". In 1924, Holmes retired as president of the school and was replaced by the Reverend J. H. Gadson, who had been an educator at a school in Rome, Georgia for about 18 years. Gadson requested support from the GEB to help fund Central City and even proposed a new direction for the school to focus more on industrial education at the high school level, though ultimately the GEB did not offer the school its financial support. In late 1933, Gadson launched a large fundraising campaign for improvements to the school that would elevate it to the same level of prestige as Atlanta University, another African American educational institute in Atlanta. During a trip to New York City, he was able to secure donations from the National Baptist Convention, and he committed his entire year's salary of $1,800 to the fundraising efforts. Additional contributions came from |
was dubbed the shortest player at the World Cup. Mak played in Hong Kong's test match against Spain in 2017. She made the squad again | in 2017. She made the squad again in their 2018 Autumn Tour of Spain and Wales. References 1995 births Living people Hong Kong people Hong Kong rugby |
strategy for the title which soon became an international success with 26 shorts, 3 seasons of production, and is being acquired by leading broadcasters across the world, including France 3, Super RTL, RAI, Cartoon Network, Netflix, Sprout, and many others. The Jungle Bunch received several awards and accolades and became France's first animated TV series to win the prestigious International Emmy Award for Best Animated TV Series of the Year. In 2013, PGS joined as a distributor of the reboot of the ALVINNN!!! and the Chipmunks TV series from Bagdasarian Productions, in co-production with Technicolor Animation Productions. The title is now aired by broadcasters such as Nickelodeon, Super RTL, Gloob, Netflix, Disney, Pop, RTBF, Télé-Québec, and more. With a total of seven seasons ordered and season 5 currently in production, ALVINNN!!! and The Chipmunks was one of the most watched series in Europe in 2019, according to Mediametrie. In 2016, PGS teamed up to distribute new Zag titles Zak Storm created by Man of Action and Ghost Force, both of which will see toy releases by BANDAI across the world, along with the relaunch of Monchhichi character from Technicolor Animation Production, which hit screens in 2018. In 2019, PGS Entertainment became the distributor of Moominvalley, the new TV adaptation of the Finnish writer and artist Tove Jansson’s Moomin stories. Produced by Gutsy Animations, it is at the time one of the most expensive animated TV series in Europe. Moominvalley has won several awards at distinguished festivals and competitions around the world, including Best Children’s Series at British Animation Awards (2020) and Best Animated Kids Programme at TBI Content Innovation Awards (2019). More recently, PGS joined as the global distributor for the new preschool series from Technicolor Animation Productions, Gus – the Itsy Bitsy Knight, in partnership with TF1, Disney and Mattel. Launched in | the Chipmunks TV series from Bagdasarian Productions, in co-production with Technicolor Animation Productions. The title is now aired by broadcasters such as Nickelodeon, Super RTL, Gloob, Netflix, Disney, Pop, RTBF, Télé-Québec, and more. With a total of seven seasons ordered and season 5 currently in production, ALVINNN!!! and The Chipmunks was one of the most watched series in Europe in 2019, according to Mediametrie. In 2016, PGS teamed up to distribute new Zag titles Zak Storm created by Man of Action and Ghost Force, both of which will see toy releases by BANDAI across the world, along with the relaunch of Monchhichi character from Technicolor Animation Production, which hit screens in 2018. In 2019, PGS Entertainment became the distributor of Moominvalley, the new TV adaptation of the Finnish writer and artist Tove Jansson’s Moomin stories. Produced by Gutsy Animations, it is at the time one of the most expensive animated TV series in Europe. Moominvalley has won several awards at distinguished festivals and competitions around the world, including Best Children’s Series at British Animation Awards (2020) and Best Animated Kids Programme at TBI Content Innovation Awards (2019). More recently, PGS joined as the global distributor for the new preschool series from Technicolor Animation Productions, Gus – the Itsy Bitsy Knight, in partnership with TF1, Disney and Mattel. |
Clare's Girls' School St Joseph's College St Louis School St. Stephen's Church College St Stephen's Girls' College Ying Wa Girls' School Direct Subsidy Scheme St. Paul's Co-educational College St Paul's College Private German Swiss International School Island Waldorf School (香島華德福學校) Primary schools Arranged by alphabetical order of their full names in each category. Government Bonham Road Government Primary School (般咸道官立小學) (李陞小學) Aided Catholic Mission School (天主教總堂區學校) Central & Western District St Anthony's School (中西區聖安多尼學校) Chiu Sheung School, Hong Kong | School, Hong Kong (香港潮商學校) King's College Old Boys' Association Primary School (英皇書院同學會小學) King's College Old Boys' Association Primary School No. 2 (英皇書院同學會小學第二校) Sacred Heart Canossian School (嘉諾撒聖心學校) San Wui Commercial Society School (新會商會學校) SKH Kei Yan Primary School (聖公會基恩小學) SKH Lui Ming Choi Memorial Primary School (聖公會呂明才紀念小學) SKH St Matthew's Primary School (聖公會聖馬太小學) (聖公會聖彼得小學) St Anthony's School (聖安多尼學校) St Charles School (聖嘉祿學校) St Stephen's Girls' |
Rawalpindi, Punjab on Chak Beli Khan Rawat road. It is located at 33.3963° N, 73.1372° E E with an altitude | Bassali. Languages Punjabi is the main language of Bassali, other languages are Urdu Pothohari , and rarely spoken language Pashto. References Villages in Rawalpindi |
Association (RAGA) is a United States national political advocacy group that focuses on electing Republicans as state attorneys general. Its Democratic counterpart is the Democratic Attorneys General Association. Operations RAGA operated as an arm of the Republican State Leadership Committee until 2014, when RAGA was split off. The current chairman is Alan Wilson, Attorney General of South Carolina. Controversy RAGA operates The Rule of Law Defense Fund, which became the center of controversy following revelations that it had sponsored mass robocalls urging recipients to | of the Capitol on January 6; the rally resulted in the 2021 United States Capitol attack. The robocall did not advocate for violence or storming the Capitol complex. Following the January 6 attack, donations to RAGA dropped significantly. The executive director of RAGA, resigned less than a week after the robocall and attack. Chairman Christopher M. Carr, Georgia's Attorney General, resigned in April 2021 as a result of the split within the group over the January 6 attack. External links Official website References Conservative political advocacy groups in |
(Liberated) (Gereformeerde Kerken in Nederland (vrijgemaakt)). This event was called Liberation (Vrijmaking). Since then there have been no serious attempts at reconciliation by either side. In 1967 a new controversy arose over the exclusivity of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated) (GKV) as a true Christian church in Netherlands. The denomination decided that the GKV were the only true Christian churches in the country, which is why many members left the denomination. In the same year, these members constituted the Netherlands Reformed Churches (NGK) (Nederlands Gereformeerde Kerken). In the following decades, however, the GKV changed its position, starting to recognize the existence of other truly Christian churches in the Netherlands. This led to rapprochement between the GKV and the NGK. In 2017, the | authority, staying longer than the three years allowed by Church Order legislation. In 1944 many pastors and theologians who opposed Abraham Kuyper's view were excommunicated by the General Synod. Therefore, a large number of local congregations broke away from the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands, led by Prof. Dr. Klaas Schilder among others, to form his own denomination, the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated) (Gereformeerde Kerken in Nederland (vrijgemaakt)). This event was called Liberation (Vrijmaking). Since then there have been no serious attempts at reconciliation by either side. In 1967 a new controversy arose over the exclusivity of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated) (GKV) as a true Christian church in Netherlands. The denomination decided that the GKV were the only true Christian churches in the country, which is why many members left the denomination. In the same year, these members constituted the Netherlands Reformed Churches (NGK) (Nederlands Gereformeerde Kerken). In the following decades, however, the GKV changed its position, starting to recognize the existence of other truly Christian churches in the Netherlands. This led to rapprochement between the GKV and the NGK. In 2017, the two denominations began negotiating a merger. In |
Denkyembour District in the Eastern Region of Ghana. References Living people New Patriotic Party | in the Eastern Region of Ghana. References Living people |
in 1928 as a founding section of a multi-sports club. They currently play in the fourth tier of the Polish football league. | the semi-finals and quarter-finals of the Polish Cup in the 1968–69 and 1970–71 season respectively. References External links Official website 90minut.pl profile Association football clubs established in 1928 Sport in Lesser |
went to Rumelia and Morias following Ioannis Kolettis with whom he was close friends. The Second National Assembly at Astros, after Ioannis Kolettis took action, appointed him as the eparch of Athens during the age in which the castellan of the keep in Acropolis was Ioannis Gouras. The reference letter Ioannis Kolettis wrote to Gouras is worth mentioning as it is particularly distinctive: «My friend and brother, the very noble sir Ioannis Genovellis has been elected eparch of Athens. He is without question my friend and thus yours as well. So be friends with him in the same way you are with me. Trust him the same way you trust me and think about him as if he were me. Take advice from him for whatever you consider beneficial for our country so that you may as well be popular among those that were governed by him as I am sure you want them to have his gratitude and for me to be your friend. Ioannis Kolettis, June 2nd 1825». According to Ioannis Makrygiannis and Hlias Vasilias, Ioannis Genovellis took part, along with other warlords from Preveza, in a naval expedition on September 19, 1828 whose end goal was to cut off Vonitsas communication with the rest of the world and block their supply routes from Preveza and finally capture it. The achievements of the captains from Hydra under the leadership of the commander in chief of the Greek army Richard Church was remembered by the old residents of Preveza as the “Kairos me ta Mistikia” (The Time of Secrets) and which is considered folklore music. Ioannis Kolettis was initially a confidant of Ioannis Kapodistrias and became better known for his actions as a temporary commissioner of the Department of North Messenia in 1828 and of Laconia and South Messenia until the 14th of August, 1829. He then became a senator. During the presidency of Kapodistrias, he was assigned the role of the manager of the department of education of the Typiko (the predecessor of the Evelpidon Academy), the superintendent of Sparta and the eparch of Mani (March 20, 1830). In 1829 he took part in the fourth national assembly at Argos as the plenipotentiary of Epirus. Most likely after he was replaced by Iakovos Cornelius as the eparch of Mani -which was done only after Kapodistrias intervened- Genovellis joined Kolettis’ party who was politically opposed to Ioannis Kapodistrias. External links https://el.wikipedia.org/wiki/%CE%99%CF%89%CE%AC%CE%BD%CE%BD%CE%B7%CF%82_%CE%93%CE%B5%CE%BD%CE%BF%CE%B2%CE%AD%CE%BB%CE%B7%CF%82 http://www.et.gr/idocsnph/search/pdfViewerForm.htmlargs=5C7QrtC22wHcrFd1Jc1ZndtvSoClrL8yDC9E5e67ropCCmqt4mgGEHlbmahCJFQEmRQwePEviF8EeCoaT0MAKztT3Sb63xk3VkL3PiCQ3RLoVYQqjKiogfu8Gq1RKKQmyoZK8o4WQPBYEo7HlVm96q-IeztWhMIviv-EhLXdJAKJiN7bL-w6A.. https://preveza.gr/archeio-ton-veneton-provlepton-tis-prevezas/ References Bibliography Αρχείο Μητροπόλεως & Πρεβέζης, Κώδικας Νο.122/120, σελ. 27. Η υπογραφή του Γενοβέλη ακολουθεί την εξής σημείωσή του: «Από τις 29 | the eparch of Mani -which was done only after Kapodistrias intervened- Genovellis joined Kolettis’ party who was politically opposed to Ioannis Kapodistrias. External links https://el.wikipedia.org/wiki/%CE%99%CF%89%CE%AC%CE%BD%CE%BD%CE%B7%CF%82_%CE%93%CE%B5%CE%BD%CE%BF%CE%B2%CE%AD%CE%BB%CE%B7%CF%82 http://www.et.gr/idocsnph/search/pdfViewerForm.htmlargs=5C7QrtC22wHcrFd1Jc1ZndtvSoClrL8yDC9E5e67ropCCmqt4mgGEHlbmahCJFQEmRQwePEviF8EeCoaT0MAKztT3Sb63xk3VkL3PiCQ3RLoVYQqjKiogfu8Gq1RKKQmyoZK8o4WQPBYEo7HlVm96q-IeztWhMIviv-EhLXdJAKJiN7bL-w6A.. https://preveza.gr/archeio-ton-veneton-provlepton-tis-prevezas/ References Bibliography Αρχείο Μητροπόλεως & Πρεβέζης, Κώδικας Νο.122/120, σελ. 27. Η υπογραφή του Γενοβέλη ακολουθεί την εξής σημείωσή του: «Από τις 29 Μαΐου 1798 έως την σήμερον 1801 13 Μαρτίου δεν έγινε άλλη πράξις εις το καγκέλον μου, ούτε καμμία διαθήκη εξ αιτίας της καταστροφής της Πρεβέζης». ↑ Άλμα πάνω, στο:2,0 2,1 2,2 2,3 2,4 Ηλίας Β. Βασιλάς, Ιωάννης Γκενοβέλης. Ο πρώτος έπαρχος των Αθηνών, Άπαντα, (επιμ. Νίκος Δ. Καράμπελας), Πρέβεζα 2012, σελ. 500-512. ↑ Άλμα πάνω, στο:3,0 3,1 Παναγιώτης Αραβαντινός, Περιγραφή της Ηπείρου εις μέρη τρία. Μέρος Γ΄, Ιωάννινα 1984, έκδοση Εταιρείας Ηπειρωτικών Μελετών, σελ. 296, 317 και 319. ↑ Βλ. Βασιλικό Διάταγμα της 25.3.1843, Φ.Ε.Κ. αριθμ. 9, 25 Μαρτίου 1843, σελ. 43. ↑ Άλμα πάνω, στο:5,0 5,1 Χριστίνα Ε. Παπακώστα, Το αρχείο των Βενετών προβλεπτών της Πρέβεζας. Διοίκηση και οργάνωση της πόλης τον 18ο αιώνα, Πρέβεζα 2014, έκδοση Περιφέρειας Ηπείρου-Περιφερειακής Ενότητας Πρέβεζας. ↑ Άλμα πάνω, στο:6,0 6,1 Ρόδη Σταμούλη, Πολιτικές κινητοποιήσεις των Πρεβεζάνων μετά τον “Χαλασμό” (1798-1801), Μεσαιωνικά και Νέα Ελληνικά, τόμος 6ος, Αθήνα 2000, σελ. 322-323. ↑ Αρχείο Μητροπόλεως & Πρεβέζης, Κώδικας Νο.164/043, φύλλο 103r. Η σημείωση έχει ως εξής: «Από τις 8 Αυγούστου 1798 έως 28 Δεκεμβρίου 1800 δεν έγινε καμμία εγγραφή εξ αιτίας της καταστροφής της Πρεβέζης». ↑ Άλμα πάνω, στο:8,0 8,1 Νίκος Δ. Καράμπελας, Ο Άγγλος θεολόγος Thomas S. Hughes στην Πρέβεζα και τη Νικόπολη, Πρεβεζάνικα Χρονικά 41-42, Πρέβεζα 2005, σελ. 52-144. Σχετικά με τον Ιωάννη Γενοβέλη, βλ. σελ. 73-74 και υποσημ. 70. ↑ Σεραφείμ Ξενόπουλος ο Βυζάντιος, Δοκίμιον ιστορικής τινός περιλήψεως της ποτε αρχαίας και εγκρίτου Ηπειρωτικής Πόλεως Άρτης και της ωσαύτως νεωτέρας πόλεως Πρεβέζης, Αθήναι 1884, σελ. 230. ↑ Ιωάννης Φ. Δημάρατος, λήμμα Πρέβεζα, Μεγάλη Ελληνική Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Πυρσού, Αθήνα 1932, τόμ. 20, σελ. 654-660. ↑ Νίκος Δ. Καράμπελας, Ο Άγγλος λοχαγός William Leake στην Πρέβεζα, τη Νικόπολη και το Άκτιο, Πρεβεζάνικα Χρονικά 43-44, Πρέβεζα 2007, σελ. 164-263. Σχετικά με τον Ιωάννη Γενοβέλη, βλ. σελ. 235 και υποσημ. 153. ↑ Γιάννης Βλαχογιάννης, Αθηναϊκόν αρχείον, από τα έγγραφα του στρατηγού Γκούρα, Αθήνα 1901, σελ. 462. ↑ Ηλίας Β. Βασιλάς, Ο πίναξ του Μακρυγιάννη για |
The collection was published by BoSz and received praise from the author. In 2011, Agrafka undertook its first children's book project. Produced alongside the Bogdan Textbook publishing house, the book, a Ukrainian folk tale, was recognized as the best book at the Lviv International Children's Festival, won the Grand Prix Children's Book Prize, and was recognized in the 2012 edition of White Ravens, an international catalog of children's books. Working again with Bogdan Textbook, Agrafka illustrated another Ukrainian folk tale called "Turnip" in 2012. The book won the Lion's Children's Book Award for Best Art and was included in White Ravens in 2013. In the following years, Agrafka cooperated closely with the Old Lion Publishing House. The publishing house put out four books illustrated by Agrafka: "Antomies" and "Stars and Poppies" in 2014, and "My Home and Things in It" and "The War that Changed Rondo" in 2015. In 2015, Old Lion, Agrafka, | Franko in 2006 and "Three Rings" by Bohdan Ihor Antonych in 2008. Their work on "Withered Leaves" was especially important, as it represented their first complete work which encompassed design, layout, and graphics. Romanyshyn and Lesiv continued their studies in book design during an internship in Krakow in 2010 as part of the Polish Minister of Culture's "Gaude Polonia" scholarship. During this period they worked on the last piece by Polish Nobel Prize laureate Wislawa Szymborska, a collection of poems called "Może To Wszystko". The collection was published by BoSz and received praise from the author. In 2011, Agrafka undertook its first children's book project. Produced alongside the Bogdan Textbook publishing house, the book, a Ukrainian folk tale, was recognized as the best book at the Lviv International Children's Festival, won the Grand Prix Children's Book Prize, and was recognized in the 2012 edition of White Ravens, an international catalog of children's books. Working again with Bogdan Textbook, Agrafka illustrated another Ukrainian folk tale called "Turnip" in 2012. The book won the Lion's Children's Book Award for Best Art and was included in White Ravens in 2013. In the following years, Agrafka cooperated closely with the Old Lion Publishing House. The publishing house put out four books illustrated by Agrafka: "Antomies" and "Stars and Poppies" in 2014, and "My Home and Things in It" and "The War that Changed Rondo" in 2015. In 2015, Old Lion, Agrafka, and authors O. Dumanska and G. Tereshchuk produced the first book in a series of alphabet encyclopedias which won Best Book of the Publishers' Forum. The next year, they designed a supplement to the series which also won Best Book of the Publishers' Forum and earned the All-Ukrainian title of Book of the Year 2016. Awards 2006: 13th Publishers' Forum in Lviv Prize for "Withered Leaves" 2009: International Renaissance |
to a rare type of steppe characterized by a soil of mixed chalk and sand. References | flowering plant in the family Plantaginaceae, native to central European Russia. It is a |
he was injured in battle. After the war he returned to Cambridge to complete his degree and joined the civil service in 1920. Career Sir Arthur Rucker's career began at the Ministry of Health in 1920 as an assistant principal. He rose to become Neville Chamberlain's Principal Private Secretary at the outbreak of the Second World War (1939–1940). After a period working for Nye Bevin, in 1948, he left the both civil service and Britain to take up the post of deputy director-general of the International Refugee Organisation in Geneva. Rucker was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1937 New Year Honours list,Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1941 New Year Honours list and knighted (KCMG) in The King's Birthday Honours of 1942. Personal life In 1922 Sir Arthur married Elsie Marion Broadbent and they remained wedded until she passed away just one month before him. The union produced two sons and two daughters. References 1895 | into the 12th battalion of the Suffolk Regiment, he gained the rank of second lieutenant during his time in service. In 1915 he was posted to France where he was injured in battle. After the war he returned to Cambridge to complete his degree and joined the civil service in 1920. Career Sir Arthur Rucker's career began at the Ministry of Health in 1920 as an assistant principal. He rose to become Neville Chamberlain's Principal Private Secretary at the outbreak of the Second World War (1939–1940). After a period working for Nye Bevin, in 1948, he left the both civil service and Britain to take up the post of deputy director-general of the International Refugee Organisation in Geneva. Rucker was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1937 New Year Honours list,Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1941 New Year |
an American trailerable sailboat that was designed by the Sovereign Design Group as a cruiser and first built in 1982. Production The design was built by Sovereign Yachts in the United States, starting in 1982, but it is now out | the standard shoal draft keel. The design has a hull speed of . See also List of sailing boat types References Keelboats 1980s sailboat type designs Sailing yachts Trailer sailers Sailboat type designs |
Ghanaian politician. He is the Municipal Chief Executive of the Akuapem North Municipal | in the Eastern Region of Ghana. References Living people New |
in 1995 by lichenologists Klaus Kalb and Bettina Staiger. The type specimen was collected in the cordillera of Piribebuy in Paraguay; here it was found growing on the bark of Cinchona. The specific epithet refers to the fluorescence observed when the lichen is shone with a UV light; this is caused | (bark-dwelling) and crustose lichen in the family Haematommataceae. Found in the neotropics, it was formally described as a new species in 1995 by lichenologists Klaus Kalb and Bettina Staiger. The type specimen was collected in the cordillera of Piribebuy in Paraguay; here it was found growing on the bark of Cinchona. The specific epithet refers to the fluorescence observed when the lichen is shone with a UV light; this is caused by the secondary compound |
of Hargeisa from 2003 to 2012 and holds the title of the longest-serving mayor of Hargeisa for roughly 10 years. He hails from the | Somali politician and is the former Mayor of Hargeisa from 2003 to 2012 and holds the |
Saskatchewan since winning the 2022 Athabasca provincial by-election. References Living people Saskatchewan Party MLAs 21st-century Canadian politicians | Lemaigre is a Canadian politician who has been a member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan since |
at 16:08 local time and was uneventful until 17:00, when one of the crew members, 34-year-old Shi Mingzhen, broke into the cockpit and demanded the pilots to fly to Mainland China. Captain Gao Zhixian and First Officer Gong Zhongkang (both former Republic of China Air Force pilots) refused the demands and were beaten by Shi. Despite the injuries the pilot suffered from the beating, the pilots ordered an on-board security guard to the cockpit. The guard broke down the cockpit door using a fire extinguisher and shot and killed the hijacker. The flight landed at Kai Tak Airport at 17:20, after which the | China Air Force pilots) refused the demands and were beaten by Shi. Despite the injuries the pilot suffered from the beating, the pilots ordered an on-board security guard to the cockpit. The guard broke down the cockpit door using a fire extinguisher and shot and killed the hijacker. The flight landed at Kai Tak Airport at 17:20, after which the Airport Security Unit searched the aircraft for any potential accomplices and questioned passengers. |
Gunn Wållgren as Otti Moreus Margit Carlqvist as Iris Isa Quensel as Luiza Cabral Gunnar Björnstrand as Dr. Dalander Aurore Palmgren as Cemetery Worker Hugo Björne as Johannes Astrid Bodin as Telegraphist Helga Brofeldt as Marta's landlady Sven-Axel Carlsson as Messenger John Ivar Deckner as Professional dancer Elsa Ebbesen as Ida, nurse Paul Lakovary as Foreign glass customer Sten Lindén as Driver Lennart Lundh as | Björne as Johannes Astrid Bodin as Telegraphist Helga Brofeldt as Marta's landlady Sven-Axel Carlsson as Messenger John Ivar Deckner as Professional dancer Elsa Ebbesen as Ida, nurse Paul Lakovary as Foreign glass customer Sten Lindén as Driver Lennart Lundh as Foreign department clerk Ulla Nyrén as Professional dancer Prico Paschetto as Foreign glass customer Gunvor |
The 1956–57 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University as a member of the Mid-American Conference in the college basketball season of 1956–57. The team was coached by | with a conference record of 7–5. Schedule |- !colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| regular season Source: References Ohio Bobcats men's basketball seasons Ohio Ohio |
(2004, 2005, 2012) Silver: 1 (1994) Bronze: 2 (2013, 2014) Pair Polish Champion Gold: 2 (2007, 2013) Silver: 2 (2004, 2009) Individual Polish Champion Gold: 5 (1967, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2013) Silver: 3 (2005, 2007, 2010) Bronze: 3 (2005, 2009, 2013) References | retaining the same historic name. Honours Team Polish Champions Gold: 3 (2004, 2005, 2012) Silver: 1 (1994) Bronze: 2 (2013, 2014) Pair Polish Champion Gold: 2 (2007, 2013) Silver: 2 (2004, 2009) Individual Polish Champion Gold: 5 (1967, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2013) Silver: 3 (2005, 2007, 2010) Bronze: |
último rey is an upcoming Mexican biographical drama television series that will premiere on 14 March 2022 on Las Estrellas. The series is produced by Juan Osorio for TelevisaUnivision. It is based on the book of the same name that journalist Olga Wornat wrote about Vicente Fernández's life. Pablo Montero will star as Vicente Fernández. Cast Pablo Montero as Vicente Fernández Salvador Sánchez | Osorio for TelevisaUnivision. It is based on the book of the same name that journalist Olga Wornat wrote about Vicente Fernández's life. Pablo Montero will star as Vicente Fernández. Cast Pablo Montero as Vicente Fernández Salvador Sánchez as Old Vicente Fernández Angélica Aragón as Delia Vince Miranda as Alejandro Fernández Emilio Osorio as Young Alejandro Fernández Iván Arana as Vicente Fernández Jr. Alejandra |
It Through the Grapevine"/"Ain't No Mountain High Enough" Medley: "Scarborough Fair"/"Michael, Row the Boat Ashore"/"Abraham, Martin & John" Medley: "Can't Buy Me Love"/"All You Need Is Love"/"Hey Jude"/"Let The Sunshine In" "Up with People" Critical reception Contemporary reception Joe Lapointe of the Detroit Free Press called the show, "ironic and sort of sad". Roger Fischer of the Tampa Bay Times likened the show to, "a Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters prime time affair", and opined that the broadcast time allotted to showing the performance would have been better used to provide further game analysis. Geoff Hobson of the Press & Sun-Bulletin wrote negatively of the show. He criticized the decision to have Up with People perform, instead of the marching band of the University of Michigan (located relatively near the site of that year's Super Bowl). He opined that the show, "should have been shot for impersonating a Norman Rockwell painting. Painted smiles on painted faces perched on platinum peaks. Singing cliches in outfits that looked older than the songs they sang from the 1960s." Retrospective reception In a 2010 retrospective look at Super Bowl halftime shows, the San Francisco Chronicle ranked the Super XVI halftime show as the worst in history, up through 2010. While critical of all of Up with People's appearances, the piece considered their 1982 halftime appearance to be their worst, writing, "The group's ‘Salute to Motown and the 1960s’ was the worst of its four Super Bowl appearances. The performances featured the whitest people in the world performing music mostly identified with African-American culture. Imagine watching the cast of ‘Bonanza’ performing in a Tyler Perry play". In response to this piece, in 2013, Doug Williams of ESPN noted, "to be fair, Up With People had several African-American performers that year". In a 2013 article, Sports Illustrated ranked the show as the seventh-worst halftime show (up through 2012), writing that the show, "featured the band's super smiley/creepy attitude". Contrarily, a 2012 The Washington Times article gave the performance a positive retrospective look, ranking it the ninth-best Super Bowl halftime show up through 2012, considering it to be enjoyably wholesome in comparison to more modern Super Bowl halftime shows, writing that Up with People, "were as inoffensive as puppies eating ice cream and apple pie". Additionally, a 2017 mlive article by Edward Pevos considered the show to have been "fun". Super Bowl XX halftime show (1986) The Super Bowl XX halftime show was the fourth (and final) Super Bowl halftime show headlined by Up with People, and the fifth overall Super Bowl halftime show in which they performed. The theme of the show was "Beat of the Future". The show itself was given the title "Room for Everyone". Logistics The show was directed by John Gonzalez. Up with People's music director for the show was Annette Wilkins. Up with People's cast for the show featured between 500 and members. The 10-ton, stage utilized for the performance was transported to the venue from an airport near New Orleans Airport at midnight several days before the game, with some streets being closed and a police escort accompanying the convoy of seven trucks carrying the oversize load of the stage. A three minute commercial break before the performance was allotted for the set-up of the stage. For the performance, a gondola carrying of lighting equipment was lowered from the stadium's rafters. Five tons of theatrical lighting was used in the performance. The NFL refused to allow Up with People to turn off the venue's stadium lighting, fearing that there would be a risk that the lightning might fail to turn back on after the performance. To deal with this, blackout screens were placed to help darken the venue. Space-focused artist Robert McCall (who worked with NASA) designed the sets for the show. Some of the individuals that had organized the 1984 Summer Olympics closing ceremony helped to come up ideas for incorporating crowd participation into the show. The show was scheduled to last 12 minutes. There were reports that Up with People was given US$30 million in return for organizing the halftime show. Synopsis The halftime performance was dedicated in memory of Martin Luther King, Jr. It featured a taped segment with Bill Cosby and Lily Tomlin encouraging Americans to participate in the upcoming Hands Across America demonstration. In the performance, dancers acted out various scenes portraying the future. The setlist was a mix of slower-paced songs and up-beat tunes. The show's setlist featured contemporary 1980s songs. Setlist "Beat of the Future" "Talkin' With My Feet" Medley: "Born in the U.S.A."/"The Power of Love"/"I Just Called to Say I Love You"/"Theme from Footloose" Medley: "Room For Everyone"/"We'll Be There" Critical reception Contemporary reception In an article negative towards the performance, Dick Shippy of the Akron Beacon Journal called the show, "one of the dumbest halftime shows ever conceived". Shippy called the show "ludicrous". He criticized the inclusion of the appeal for participation in Hands Across America (a demonstration against hunger in the United States), writing, "there could be no more inappropriate place for such an appeal than a Super Bowl game. Anything connected with Super Bowl and Super Bowl Week screams of conspicuous consumption." Shippy went on to criticize the dedication of the performance to Martin Luther King Jr., writing, "only a little bit behind in the bitter irony category was the Up with People halftime tribute to Dr. Martin Liuther King Jr. Do you have a feeling that a pitch for brotherhood, made at a Roman circus, is something less than heartfelt?" Ahead of the game, Alan Greenberg of the Hartford Courant was critical of the decision to again have Up with People perform the halftime show, opining that Up with People, "is a horribly bad, boring, group that always succeeds in making even the worst NFL game seem interesting by comparison". | enjoyably wholesome in comparison to more modern Super Bowl halftime shows, writing that Up with People, "were as inoffensive as puppies eating ice cream and apple pie". Additionally, a 2017 mlive article by Edward Pevos considered the show to have been "fun". Super Bowl XX halftime show (1986) The Super Bowl XX halftime show was the fourth (and final) Super Bowl halftime show headlined by Up with People, and the fifth overall Super Bowl halftime show in which they performed. The theme of the show was "Beat of the Future". The show itself was given the title "Room for Everyone". Logistics The show was directed by John Gonzalez. Up with People's music director for the show was Annette Wilkins. Up with People's cast for the show featured between 500 and members. The 10-ton, stage utilized for the performance was transported to the venue from an airport near New Orleans Airport at midnight several days before the game, with some streets being closed and a police escort accompanying the convoy of seven trucks carrying the oversize load of the stage. A three minute commercial break before the performance was allotted for the set-up of the stage. For the performance, a gondola carrying of lighting equipment was lowered from the stadium's rafters. Five tons of theatrical lighting was used in the performance. The NFL refused to allow Up with People to turn off the venue's stadium lighting, fearing that there would be a risk that the lightning might fail to turn back on after the performance. To deal with this, blackout screens were placed to help darken the venue. Space-focused artist Robert McCall (who worked with NASA) designed the sets for the show. Some of the individuals that had organized the 1984 Summer Olympics closing ceremony helped to come up ideas for incorporating crowd participation into the show. The show was scheduled to last 12 minutes. There were reports that Up with People was given US$30 million in return for organizing the halftime show. Synopsis The halftime performance was dedicated in memory of Martin Luther King, Jr. It featured a taped segment with Bill Cosby and Lily Tomlin encouraging Americans to participate in the upcoming Hands Across America demonstration. In the performance, dancers acted out various scenes portraying the future. The setlist was a mix of slower-paced songs and up-beat tunes. The show's setlist featured contemporary 1980s songs. Setlist "Beat of the Future" "Talkin' With My Feet" Medley: "Born in the U.S.A."/"The Power of Love"/"I Just Called to Say I Love You"/"Theme from Footloose" Medley: "Room For Everyone"/"We'll Be There" Critical reception Contemporary reception In an article negative towards the performance, Dick Shippy of the Akron Beacon Journal called the show, "one of the dumbest halftime shows ever conceived". Shippy called the show "ludicrous". He criticized the inclusion of the appeal for participation in Hands Across America (a demonstration against hunger in the United States), writing, "there could be no more inappropriate place for such an appeal than a Super Bowl game. Anything connected with Super Bowl and Super Bowl Week screams of conspicuous consumption." Shippy went on to criticize the dedication of the performance to Martin Luther King Jr., writing, "only a little bit behind in the bitter irony category was the Up with People halftime tribute to Dr. Martin Liuther King Jr. Do you have a feeling that a pitch for brotherhood, made at a Roman circus, is something less than heartfelt?" Ahead of the game, Alan Greenberg of the Hartford Courant was critical of the decision to again have Up with People perform the halftime show, opining that Up with People, "is a horribly bad, boring, group that always succeeds in making even the worst NFL game seem interesting by comparison". Also ahead of the game, Bill Modoono of The Pittsburgh Press noted that the "perpetual cheeriness" of Up with People makes some viewers, "nauseous". Retrospective reception In a 2013 Bleacher Report article, Matt King ranked the Super Bowl XX halftime show as the fifth-worst halftime show up to the previous year. A 2017 mlive article by Edward Pevos considered the mix of slower songs and upbeat tunes to be "bizarre", and opined that, despite its theme, the show failed to look futuristic. Pevos further opined that the show, "didn't match the fun" of Up with People's preceding performance at Super Bowl XVI. In a 2020 Lineups article, Tyler Worthington ranked this the sixth-worst halftime show up through 2020, writing, "Up With People is a music group that didn't do anything excited and just had us hoping that the game would get started again. This was their last performance and by the reception of these performances, I think that is for the better." In a 2013 article, Sports Illustrated ranked the show as the sixth-worst halftime show (up through 2012). Commenting on it being their last halftime performance, the magazine opined that their departure from the Super Bowl halftime scene came, "not a moment too soon." Super Bowl XXV pre-game show (1991) Up with People performed the Super Bowl XXV pre-game show. This was their last appearance as Super Bowl performers. Overall retrospective critical reception of halftime performances Retrospective looks at the Super Bowl halftime shows Up with People performed have been negative. A 2010 San Francisco Chronicle article opined, "I hope you were throwing the football in your front yard during halftime shows in the 1970s and early 1980s, which all seemed to feature Up With People or Carol Channing. Up With People always had a creepy-weird cultish quality, with exaggerated dance moves, brightly colored yet chaste clothing and industrial-grade happiness." In a 2013 Bleacher Report article, writer Matt King criticized the perennial inclusion of Up with People at the Super Bowl, calling them, "a bland group that sang bland music in a bland fashion". In an 2022 Adweek article, Robert Klara negatively looked back at Up with People as halftime performers, describing them as a "treacly (and overwhelmingly white) dance troupe". In a 2021 Yardbarker article, Daniel Tran collectively ranked Up with People's four headlining Super Bowl halftime appearances as the worst halftime shows up through 2020, writing that the shows featured, "grown adults singing and dancing with cult-like enthusiasm and soulless eyes," and opining that the four shows, "will forever be the worst and probably most terrifying series of Super Bowl halftime performances ever." In a 2022 Athlon Sports article, Aaroon Allen collectively ranked Up with People's four headlining halftime appearances the 15th-worst of Super Bowl halftime shows out of 48 entries. In a 2022 Live365 article, Kathryn Milewski collectively ranked every Super Bowl halftime performance by Up with People as the fifth-worst Super Bowl halftime shows, opining, In a 2016 Houston Chronicle piece, characterizing Up With People's shows as belonging to a more "innocent era" of Super Bowl entertainment, Ken Hoffman described Up With People as, "the squeaky clean, optimistic and, sure, corny and slap-happy group of fresh-faced entertainers whose most sinister wardrobe malfunction was maybe a tilted American flag lapel pin." In pop culture In a parody of Up With People's halftime appearances on the long-running cartoon series The Simpsons, the fictional group "Hooray for Everything" (the show's |
Framework performance issue, it is available to download on NuGet. This library solves EF issues using several Bulk operations along with other features such as: BulkSaveChanges BulkInsert | download on NuGet. This library solves EF issues using several Bulk operations along with other features such as: BulkSaveChanges BulkInsert BulkUpdate BulkDelete BulkMerge DeleteFromQuery |
Ludovic Taillandier – Head Coach Patrick Nyarko – Assistant Coach See also Chicago Fire U-23 MLS Next Pro References External links Association football clubs established in 2021 2021 establishments in Illinois Chicago Fire | Bridgeview, Illinois. It is the reserve team of Chicago Fire FC and participates in MLS Next Pro. History On December 6, 2021, the Chicago Fire FC were named as one of 21 clubs that would field a team in the new MLS Next Pro league beginning in the 2022 season. Players and |
→ replaced by Magdalena Fręch Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova → replaced by Panna Udvardy Rebecca Peterson → replaced by Heather Watson Yulia Putintseva → replaced by Marie Bouzková Emma Raducanu → replaced by Kamilla Rakhimova Ajla Tomljanović → replaced by Anna Karolína Schmiedlová Doubles main draw entrants Seeds Rankings as of February 21, 2022. Other entrants The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw: Fernanda Contreras / Marcela Zacarías Bianca Fernandez / Leylah Fernandez Withdrawals Before the tournament Rebecca Peterson / Anastasia Potapova → replaced by Anastasia Potapova / Kamilla Rakhimova Daria Saville / Storm Sanders → replaced by Emina Bektas / Tara Moore Xu Yifan / Yang Zhaoxuan → replaced by Mayar Sherif / Heather Watson References External links Official website 2022 WTA Tour 2022 2022 in Mexican tennis February 2022 sports | sponsorship reasons) is a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It is the 14th edition of the Monterrey Open and a WTA 250 tournament on the 2022 WTA Tour. It take place at the Club Sonoma in Monterrey, Mexico, from February 26th to March 6th, 2022. Champions Singles vs. Doubles / vs. / Points and prize money Point distribution Prize money *per team Singles main draw entrants Seeds 1 Rankings as of February 21, 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the main draw: Emma Navarro Marcela Zacarías Renata Zarazúa The following player received a special exempt into the main draw: Wang Qiang The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Sara Errani Dalma Gálfi Jule Niemeier Diane Parry Harmony Tan Viktoriya Tomova The following player received entry as a lucky loser: Lucia Bronzetti Seone Mendez Withdrawals Before the tournament Anhelina Kalinina → replaced |
process for textiles that imparts various functional properties at a lower cost, with fewer chemical adverse effects, and with a reduced environmental impact all while maintaining important textile properties. Plasma After solid, liquid, and gas, plasma is referred to as the fourth state of matter. Non-thermal and cold plasma are used | at a lower cost, with fewer chemical adverse effects, and with a reduced environmental impact all while maintaining important textile properties. Plasma After solid, liquid, and gas, plasma is referred to as the fourth state of matter. Non-thermal and cold plasma are used to modify the surfaces of textiles. Interactions with cold plasma have little effect on the bulk characteristics of textiles. When a cold plasma interacts with a material contained within it (substrate), a variety of events occur, individually or in combination. Four major types of effects |
as Sasuke 2018 God Eater 3 as Player (Male) 2019 Jump Force as Venoms Sakura Wars as Seijuro Kamiyama Atelier Ryza: Ever Darkness & the Secret Hideout as Bos Brunnen 2020 Ensemble Stars! as Rinne Amagi 2021 Samurai Warriors 5 as Shikanosuke Yamanaka Tsukihime -A piece of blue glass moon- as Michael Roa Valdamjong Melty Blood: Type Lumina as Michael Roa Valdamjong Tokimeki Memorial: Girl's Side 4th Heart as Minoru Nanatsumori 2022 Digimon Survive as Ryou Tominaga References External links Official agency profile Aoni Production voice actors Japanese male video game actors Japanese male voice actors Living people Male voice actors from | as Genji Akui Get Up! Get Live! as Ren Kitami My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU Climax as Hatano 2021 Godzilla Singular Point as Shunya Satō The Aquatope on White Sand as Kūya Yakamashi D_Cide Traumerei the Animation as Ryuuhei Oda Shinkansen Henkei Robo Shinkalion Z as Kannagi 2022 Love All Play as Shо̄hei Sakaki When Will Ayumu Make His Move? as Ayumu Tanaka Original net animation 2019 Kengan Ashura as Iwan Karaev 2020 Shabake as Sasuke 2021 Gundam Breaker Battlogue as Kentarō Mahara 2022 Spriggan as Jean Jacquemonde Theatrical animation 2018 Dragon Ball Super: Broly as Leek Video games 2015 Touken Ranbu as Shizukagata Naginata 2016 Ys VIII: Lacrimosa of Dana as Franz, Captain Reed Samurai Warriors: Spirit of Sanada as Sasuke 2018 God Eater 3 as Player (Male) 2019 Jump Force as Venoms Sakura Wars as Seijuro Kamiyama Atelier Ryza: Ever Darkness & the Secret Hideout as Bos Brunnen |
east of the Highwood River, east of Highway 40, and north of Highway 541. Another parcel is south of the Highwood River and Highway 40, north of Cataract Creek Provincial Recreation Area, and east of Highway 940. The parcel is centered on the valley of Cataract Creek. Going further south, there are five parcels in the Livingstone Range surrounding Mount Livingstone Natural Area. They are east of Highway 40 and the Livingstone River, south of Highway 532, and north of Bob Creek Wildland Provincial Park. To the west, lies a long, thin strip on the eastern slopes of the Continental Divide, the border with British Columbia. It starts at Mount Odlum at the Elbow-Sheep WPP boundary. It runs south to Mount Gass and borders the Beehive Natural Area. This strip is over long and varies from to wide. Ecology The Don Getty WPP parcels connect with existing protected spaces and add ecological integrity, continuity, and contiguity to adjacent protected areas that preserve the natural heritage. The park contains alpine, sub-alpine, and montane ecosystems. The park also contains one of the deepest known caves in Alberta at Forgetmenot Pot on the south end of Forgetmenot Ridge. There are examples of several well-preserved periglacial features in the park: felsenmeer, stone stripes and stone polygons. The park includes Cataract Creek, "one of Alberta's finest walk-in trout fishing streams". Activities Motorized vehicles are | and west of the Junction Mountain fire lookout tower bordering both Elbow-Sheep WPP and Bluerock WPP to the west. South of this is another parcel adjoining Elbow-Sheep WPP to the north containing Mount Patterson, Mount Head, and Holy Cross Mountain in the Highwood Range. This parcel is north and east of the Highwood River, east of Highway 40, and north of Highway 541. Another parcel is south of the Highwood River and Highway 40, north of Cataract Creek Provincial Recreation Area, and east of Highway 940. The parcel is centered on the valley of Cataract Creek. Going further south, there are five parcels in the Livingstone Range surrounding Mount Livingstone Natural Area. They are east of Highway 40 and the Livingstone River, south of Highway 532, and north of Bob Creek Wildland Provincial Park. To the west, lies a long, thin strip on the eastern slopes of the Continental Divide, the border with British Columbia. It starts at Mount Odlum at the Elbow-Sheep WPP boundary. It runs south to Mount Gass and borders the Beehive Natural Area. This strip is over long and varies from to wide. Ecology The Don Getty WPP parcels connect with existing protected spaces and add ecological integrity, continuity, and contiguity to adjacent protected areas that preserve the natural heritage. The park contains alpine, sub-alpine, and montane ecosystems. The park also contains one of the deepest known caves in Alberta at Forgetmenot Pot on the south end of Forgetmenot Ridge. There are examples of several well-preserved periglacial features in the park: felsenmeer, stone stripes and stone polygons. The park includes Cataract Creek, "one of Alberta's finest walk-in trout fishing streams". Activities Motorized vehicles are not permitted in the park. Backcountry camping, hiking, and mountain biking are permitted; there are no developed facilities. Hunting and |
Dragão, home of FC Porto. The distinctive style of his work is a very familiar sight around the streets of Porto. Municipality of Porto's anti-graffiti department often preserves his works, rather than removing them. Exhibitions 2019, Prism - Le Cabinet D'amateur, Paris 2019, Raiz - DaVinci Art Gallery, Porto 2016, Epopeia - DaVinci Art Gallery, Porto 2015, Turquesa - REM Espaço Arte, Porto 2014, Prisma - Galeria Geraldes da Silva, Porto 2014, Sinergia - Galeria Metamorfose, Porto 2013, Cúbica - Galeria Almadas, Porto References | he made in the city of Porto. Though his work has been mostly focused in his home city, he has also had some exposure internationally, particularly in Paris, where he has painted many murals and exhibited his works in group and solo shows. A number of his commissioned murals are now considered landmarks in Porto, particularly his pieces by Trindade metro station and |
Kuk Mrs. Ma Kam Ming-Cheung Fook Sien College Tung Chung Catholic School Direct Subsidy Scheme Buddhist Fat Ho Memorial College Caritas Charles Vath College YMCA of Hong Kong Christian College Private Christian Zheng Sheng College Discovery Bay International School Discovery College Primary schools Aided Bui O Public School (杯澳公立學校) CCC Cheung Chau Church Kam Kong Primary School (中華基督教會長洲堂錦江小學) CCC Tai O Primary School (中華基督教會大澳小學) Cheng Chau Sacred Heart School (長洲聖心學校) Ching Chung Hau Po Woon Primary School (青松侯寶垣小學) HKFEW Wong Cho Bau | Primary schools Aided Bui O Public School (杯澳公立學校) CCC Cheung Chau Church Kam Kong Primary School (中華基督教會長洲堂錦江小學) CCC Tai O Primary School (中華基督教會大澳小學) Cheng Chau Sacred Heart School (長洲聖心學校) Ching Chung Hau Po Woon Primary School (青松侯寶垣小學) HKFEW Wong Cho Bau School (香港教育工作者聯會黃楚標學校) Ho Yu College and Primary School (sponsored by Sik Sik Yuen) (嗇色園主辦可譽中學暨可譽小學) Holy Family School (聖家學校) Kwok Man School (國民學校) Ling Liang Church Sau Tak Primary School (靈糧堂秀德小學) Mui Wo School (梅窩學校) Northern Lamma School (南丫北段公立小學) Po On Commercial Association Wan Ho |
France between 21 and 27 February 2022. Singles main draw entrants Seeds 1 Rankings are as of 14 February 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Elliot Benchetrit Harold Mayot Jo-Wilfried Tsonga The following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates: Maxime Janvier Nicola Kuhn The following players received entry from | of 14 February 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Elliot Benchetrit Harold Mayot Jo-Wilfried Tsonga The following players received entry into the singles main draw as alternates: Maxime Janvier Nicola Kuhn The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Antoine Escoffier Arthur Fils Ernests Gulbis Emilio Nava Ryan Peniston Luca Van Assche The following players received entry as lucky losers: Radu Albot Zhang Zhizhen Champions Singles Quentin Halys def. Vasek Pospisil |
teams are able to compete at the main event. They are broken up as follows: The host nation The top five teams from the 2020 European Championship not already qualified as host nation Final six from the qualifiers. Format The twelve teams will be split in two groups with six teams each. From there | Split, Croatia would host the 2022 edition of the competition. All games will be played at the Spaladium Arena. Qualification Sixteen teams are able to compete at the main event. They are broken up as follows: The host nation The top five teams from the 2020 European Championship not already qualified as host nation Final six from the qualifiers. Format The twelve teams will be split in two groups with six teams each. From there on, a knockout system is used. The first four teams of each group |
Albot was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Antoine Escoffier. Quentin Halys won the title after defeating | to Antoine Escoffier. Quentin Halys won the title after defeating Vasek Pospisil 4–6, |
Qatar Open. Petra Kvitová was the defending champion, but she retired from her second round match against Elise Mertens. Seeds The top eight seeds received a bye into the second round. Draw Finals Top half Section 1 Section 2 | win the singles title at the 2022 Qatar Open. Petra Kvitová was the defending champion, but she retired from her second round match against Elise Mertens. Seeds The top eight seeds received a bye into the second round. Draw Finals Top |
tryouts are not included, only qualification and final rounds. Men's tournaments Women's tournaments See also Japan men's national gymnastics team References National artistic gymnastics competitions | national gymnastics team References National artistic gymnastics competitions 2021 in gymnastics 2021 in Japanese sport April 2021 sports events in Japan December 2021 sports events |
Eliakim Coulibaly. Albano Olivetti and David Vega Hernández won the title after Karol Drzewiecki and Kacper Żuk withdrew from the final. Seeds Draw References Main draw Teréga Open Pau-Pyrénees - | Benchetrit and Eliakim Coulibaly. Albano Olivetti and David Vega Hernández won the title after Karol Drzewiecki and Kacper |
place in Forlì, Italy between 21 and 27 February 2022. Singles main draw entrants Seeds 1 Rankings as of 14 February 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Matteo Arnaldi Flavio Cobolli Stefano Napolitano The following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking: Juan Pablo Ficovich The following player received entry into the singles main | main draw entrants Seeds 1 Rankings as of 14 February 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Matteo Arnaldi Flavio Cobolli Stefano Napolitano The following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking: Juan Pablo Ficovich The following player received entry into the singles main draw as a special exempt: Tim van Rijthoven The following player received entry into the singles main |
parish of the Episcopal Diocese of Bethlehem in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1897 in a private residence in East Stroudsburg. The cornerstone for the current church building was laid on June 8, 1904, | It was founded in 1897 in a private residence in East Stroudsburg. The cornerstone for the current church building was laid on June 8, 1904, and the church was consecrated on November 21, 1905. Notable parishioners Montgomery Fletcher Crowe, Pennsylvania State senator Peter |
Finals Top half Bottom half References Main draw Qualifying draw Città di Forlì V - 1 | 7–6(10–8) in the final. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half References Main draw Qualifying draw Città |
often discoloured and not clean. Studies have found that the water given to the community contains high levels of coliform. Threats Rodrigo Mundaca, the organizations director and spokesperson, along with other local water activists such as Veronica Vilches have received numerous death threats in relation to their activism. Mundaca faced charges and possible jail time in 2012 when he released names of businesses who had built illegal underground channels diverting water from the River Petorca to their farms. See | by local agribusiness, specifically large-scale avocado farmers. Motadima activists state that their mission is to make visible the conflicts over water in the region at a national scale and bring to light the commodification of water driven by the 1981 Water Code. Motadima has spoken at universities and held demonstrations across the country for their cause. The organization has expanded their presence to the regions of O’Higgins, Los Lagos, Arica & Parinacota and Metropolitana. Modatima has also joined La Red Vida, a transnational organization representing water and land rights across the Americas. People in the region of Petorca get their water delivered by truck with each person receiving 50 liters a day, lower than the national average use of 196 liter per |
disguising herself as a Christian Polish girl. Sagall emigrated to Israel in 1946, when she was 17 years old. She attended Ayanot Agricultural School. In 1956, she began studying acting at the Strandale Bennett Theater School in Toronto, Canada. Career In 1962, Sagall moved back to Israel, and she was accepted as a member of the Haifa Theatre in the same year. Some of the roles she portrayed were those where she was a member of the lead cast, such as Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw. Sagall also played Maria in Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters, Ranevskaya in The Cherry Orchard also by Chekhov, the nanny in The Father by August Strindberg and Gogan in The Plough and the Stars by Seán O'Casey under the direction of Oded Kotler. She also starred solo in the plays The Woman Destroyed by Simone de Beauvoir in 1981, Available for Proposals five years that was authored for her by Arie Yas and Leah Goes Out on the Street in 1992. Sagall was the director of the children's plays Winnie-the-Pooh that was adopted from the A. A. Milne books in 1981 as well as The Cute Monster adapted from the writer Oded Burla. She wrote a play, Flowers for the Feast, | Leah in the 1990 film Parents and Sons, Fence in the television series in 1997, the groom in Urban Feel a year later, Chesha in the 2006 film The Galilee Eskimos and played Friedel in the 2008 film . In 2002, she authored the book, Goya with Freckles, which was published by Am Oved. In it, Sagall discussed how she survived The Holocaust. Personal life She was married. Sagall is the mother of the actor and screenwriter Jonathan Sagall, and she also had a daughter. On the evening of 7 August 2021, she died in Haifa. Sagall's funeral took place at Haifa Cemetery in Tamar gate on the following day's evening. Awards In 1979, she received the Margalit Award for Outstanding Actress for her performance in The Plough and the Stars and the Actress of the Year Award for the role in Fantasy on a Romantic Theme the following year. Sagall was awarded the Civic Award for the City of Haifa for "her many years |
were the defending champions but lost in the final to Marco Bortolotti and Vitaliy | lost in the final to Marco Bortolotti and Vitaliy Sachko. Bortolotti and Sachko won the |
acting Director of the Illinois Department of Veterans' Affairs. General Nezamis graduated from Western Michigan University in 1986, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Aviation Technology and Management. In December 1986, he commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the Michigan Air National Guard. He completed Undergraduate Pilot Training and was assigned to the 108th Air Refueling Squadron at O’Hare International Airport as a KC-135E pilot. He is a command pilot, instructor and evaluator with more than 5,300 hours, | at O’Hare International Airport as a KC-135E pilot. He is a command pilot, instructor and evaluator with more than 5,300 hours, commanded numerous expeditionary operations including the 492nd and the 506th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadrons and flown over 275 combat hours in support of several operations including Operations Desert |
native to Brazil, where it occurs in the Ivaí River basin in the upper Paraná River system. It reaches 4.15 cm (1.6 inches) SL and was described in 2016 by Cláudio Henrique Zawadzki and Weferson Júnio da Graça of State | is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is a freshwater species native to Brazil, where it occurs in the Ivaí River basin in the upper Paraná River system. It reaches 4.15 cm (1.6 inches) |
politician who was Minister of Social Affairs and Labour in the First Hussein Arnous | in the First Hussein Arnous government. References Living people Syrian ministers of social affairs and labour People from Idlib Governorate 21st-century |
not refer to the occult in western esotericism. According to Hachiman's Sugen Takada, the idea was to look beyond common sense and rationalism. Hachiman's occult writings and rights to experimental Holophonics technology created the "cyber-occult" ideas explored by Kawahara's music. After 1996, Kawahara lost interest in stereo music. He produced the video game The DJ-Rom for Sony in 1998. He was diagnosed with adult-onset Still's disease, and moved to Cambodia, where he died in 2012. His music experienced a revival in popularity during the early 2020s, leading to the release of a compilation Kawahara compiled before his | (Japanese: 川原義文), was a Japanese composer of avant-garde music. His music was an eclectic blend of experimental electronic, exotica and new age music. He referred to his music as "cyber-occult". Biography According to the notes for Cybernetic Defiance and Orgasm, Kawahara was born in Fukuoka. Kawahara was very active in the 1990s, releasing at least 23 albums. However, his work fell into obscurity because they were sold at occult book stores instead of music stores. He was closely tied to occult bookstore Hachiman (:ja:八幡書店). He also |
played their home games at the Men's Gymnasium. The Bobcats finished the regular season with a record of 13–11 and finished fifth in the MAC regular season with a conference record of 5–7. Schedule |- | season of 1955–56. The team was coached by Jim Snyder and played their home games at the Men's Gymnasium. The Bobcats finished |
Sörensen Lia Norée as Anna Sörensen Fritz Strandberg as Tobias Klementsen Josua Bengtson as Carpenter Tyra Dörum as Carpenter's Wife Elsa Ebbesen as Job seeking girl Hartwig Fock as Vacuum cleaner salesman Karl Hellgren as Einar - Grethe's fiancé Torsten Lennartsson as Customer at employment office Emma Meissner as Fru Stjernholm August Tollquist as Anselm - Kristiana's brother References Bibliography Freiburg, Jeanne Ellen. Regulatory Bodies: Gendered Visions of the State in German and Swedish Cinema. University of Minnesota, 1994. Qvist, Per Olov & Von Bagh, Peter . Guide to the Cinema of | as Grethe Elvin Ottoson as Palle Rasmussen Karin Swanström as Mathilde Rasmussen Erik Hoffman as Josef Olav Riégo as Sophus Sörensen Lia Norée as Anna Sörensen Fritz Strandberg as Tobias Klementsen Josua Bengtson as Carpenter Tyra Dörum as Carpenter's Wife Elsa Ebbesen as Job seeking girl Hartwig Fock as Vacuum cleaner salesman Karl Hellgren as Einar - Grethe's fiancé Torsten Lennartsson as Customer at employment office Emma Meissner as Fru Stjernholm August Tollquist as Anselm - |
Material Art Fair Mexico City, Expo Chicago, Untitled Miami, 1:54 New York, Art-O-Rama Marseille, Paris Photo, FIAC Paris and Contemporary Istanbul. The Pill's art fair participation has been awarded multiple times, winning the Opening Award for best stand at ARCO Madrid 2021 and Best Booth Design Award for Contemporary Istanbul in 2016. Its participation at Future Fair 2021, New York, was deemed "standout" by multiple reviews. Artists Soufiane Ababri | was among the institutional partners of Bourse Emerige Révélations in 2017 and 2018, a prize and long-term support mechanism for emerging French artists. It has participated in leading international art fairs such as ARCO Madrid, Material Art Fair Mexico City, Expo Chicago, Untitled Miami, 1:54 New York, Art-O-Rama Marseille, Paris Photo, FIAC Paris and Contemporary Istanbul. The Pill's art fair participation has been awarded multiple times, winning the Opening Award for best stand at ARCO Madrid 2021 and Best Booth Design Award |
United States. It is the reserve team of FC Cincinnati and participates in MLS Next Pro. History On December 6, 2021, FC Cincinnati were named as one of 21 clubs that would field a team in the new MLS Next Pro league beginning in the 2022 season. On February 22, 2022, FC Cincinnati unveiled the name and coaching staff of the new team. Stadium On February 24, 2022, the team announced that for their inaugural season, they would use three different venues as their home stadium. Their first seven home matches would be played at NKU Soccer Stadium, a 1,000-capacity venue at Northern Kentucky University | their remaining five matches would be played at Mercy Health Training Center, the team's training facility in Milford, Ohio which includes a 500-capacity stadium. One match would be played at TQL Stadium, the first team's 26,000-capacity home venue in Cincinnati, Ohio. Players and staff Roster Staff Tyrone Marshall – Head coach Ryan Coulter – Goalkeepers coach See also MLS Next Pro References External links Association football clubs established in 2021 |
|style="background-color:"| |align=left|Vladimir Arkhipov |align=left|Our Home – Russia | |0.90% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |8.20% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2003 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Andrey Makarov |align=left|United Russia | |72.19% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Valentina Proskuryakova |align=left|Agrarian Party | |8.28% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Artur Pykin |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |4.63% |- |style="background-color:#164C8C"| |align=left|Vladimir Kahstanov |align=left|United Russian Party Rus' | |1.39% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Ernest Pislyakov |align=left|Independent | |0.83% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |11.36% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2016 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color: " | |align=left|Pavel Fedyayev |align=left|United Russia | |77.50% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Igor Ukraintsev |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |8.24% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Vitkovsky |align=left|Communist Party | |6.48% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yevgeny Mishenin |align=left|A Just Russia | |3.58% |- |style="background:"| |align=left|Irina Usoltseva |align=left|Communists of Russia | |2.19% |- |style="background:"| |align=left|Gleb Alshevich |align=left|Yabloko | |1.62% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2021 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Pavel Fedyayev (incumbent) |align=left|United Russia | |71.51% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Olesya Terzitskaya |align=left|Communist Party | |5.36% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Nikolay Teltsov |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |4.30% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yevgeny Kostrov |align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth | |3.85% |- |style="background:"| |align=left|Galina Stratiyenko |align=left|Communists of | | |8.86% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksey Dorovenko |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |6.58% |- |style="background-color:#E98282"| |align=left|Galina Parshentseva (incumbent) |align=left|Women of Russia | |5.07% |- |style="background-color:#DA2021"| |align=left|Aleksandr Sergeyev |align=left|Ivan Rybkin Bloc | |4.43% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Tsigelnikov |align=left|Independent | |3.25% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Andrey Sidnev |align=left|Independent | |1.74% |- |style="background-color:#1C1A0D"| |align=left|Vera Podbereznaya |align=left|Forward, Russia! | |1.04% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Igor Goncharov |align=left|Independent | |0.76% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |7.54% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 1999 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Ivan Ivlev |align=left|Unity | |61.53% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Igor Kovtun |align=left|Independent | |10.41% |- |style="background-color:#3B9EDF"| |align=left|Valentina Proskuryakova |align=left|Fatherland – All Russia | |7.08% |- |style="background-color:#7C273A"| |align=left|Yury Babansky |align=left|Movement in Support of the Army | |4.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Gennady Karmanov |align=left|Independent | |3.28% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yevgeny Artemov |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |3.16% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Vladimir Arkhipov |align=left|Our Home – Russia | |0.90% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |8.20% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2003 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Andrey Makarov |align=left|United Russia | |72.19% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Valentina Proskuryakova |align=left|Agrarian Party | |8.28% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Artur Pykin |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |4.63% |- |
is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Arkadios Dimitrakopoulos (1824–1908), Greek | Dimitrakopoulos (born 1974), Greek volleyball player Giorgos Dimitrakopoulos (born |
no matter their ethnicity. As a result, local community members and her family provided postpartum care throughout the entire town. After the great migration, their family bought homes in the Bayview and at one time operated a small market in the neighborhood. Birth Education and Mentorship Deundra was formally trained by Cornerstone in San Francisco, California in addition to being listed as a "child birth educator" she also served on the board for the San Francisco Birth Center. Activism Deundra is also has been an activist and an advocate in the Bayview–Hunters Point, in the past she has spoken out against budget cuts for senior centers housing primarily Asian and African-American senior | 25 years. Completing her BA opened the opportunity for her to earn grants with Wells Fargo for a formal martial arts business located on on the Third Street corridor. After attending Oprah’s, “The Life You Want Weekend”, her passion for birth work was reignited. She immediately began researching Doula training programs and sign up for Cornerstone Doula Trainings, which was owned and operated by a mother-daughter team. Both of Deundra's paternal grandparents resided in the great state of Texas. Specifically, her dad was born in raised in Nacogdoches, TX (a population of just over 32,000). Her great aunt was the midwife of Nacogdoches and was responsible for the birth of babies from families, no matter their ethnicity. As a result, local community members and her family provided postpartum care throughout the entire town. After the great migration, their family bought homes in the Bayview and |
while performing in Hiroshima at the time of the bombing, when Nagata and other troupe members had been away for military service or other reasons. The monument was dedicated in 1959. Partial filmography The Battle of Hong Kong (1942) A Shadow Standing On Mt. Fuji (1942) Stray Dog (1949) The Human Condition (1959) The Snow Flurry (1959) Lucky Dragon No. 5 (1959) Immortal Love (1961) Sword of the Beast | a campaign to establish a monument in honor of nine members of the Sakura Corps acting company who died while performing in Hiroshima at the time of the bombing, when Nagata and other troupe members had been away for military service or other reasons. |
Roush Racing driver Matt Kenseth, would lock up the championship, clinching the championship by points to win his first and to date, only NASCAR Winston Cup Series championship. To fill out the podium, Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports and Jeremy Mayfield of Evernham Motorsports would finish second and third, respectively. Background North Carolina Speedway was opened as a flat, one-mile oval on October 31, 1965. In 1969, the track was extensively reconfigured to a high-banked, D-shaped oval just over one mile in length. In 1997, North Carolina Motor Speedway merged with Penske Motorsports, and was renamed North Carolina Speedway. Shortly thereafter, the infield was reconfigured, and competition on the infield road course, mostly by the SCCA, was discontinued. Currently, the track is home to the Fast Track High Performance Driving School. Entry list Practice Originally, three practices were going to be held, with one on Friday and two on Saturday. However, rain would cancel one session on Saturday and delay the second Saturday session. First practice The first practice session was held on Friday, November 7, at 11:20 AM EST, and would last for 2 hours. Ryan Newman of | and competition on the infield road course, mostly by the SCCA, was discontinued. Currently, the track is home to the Fast Track High Performance Driving School. Entry list Practice Originally, three practices were going to be held, with one on Friday and two on Saturday. However, rain would cancel one session on Saturday and delay the second Saturday session. First practice The first practice session was held on Friday, November 7, at 11:20 AM EST, and would last for 2 hours. Ryan Newman of Penske Racing South would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 23.533 and an average speed of . Second and final practice The second and final practice session, sometimes referred to as Happy Hour, was held on Saturday, November 8, at approximately 12:10 PM EST, and would last for 45 minutes. Jeff Burton of Roush Racing ould set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 24.089 and an average speed of . Qualifying Qualifying was held on Friday, November 7, at 3:05 PM EST. Each driver would |
Alan Hull On the Other Side, the 2005 version of the album Carry On by Kansas "On the Other Side", | may refer to: On the Other Side (film), a 2016 Croatian-Serbian film directed by Zrinko Ogresta On the Other Side, a 1983 album by Alan Hull On the Other Side, the 2005 version of the album |
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