sentence1
stringlengths 1
133k
| sentence2
stringlengths 1
131k
|
---|---|
the longest tributary of the Khatyrka river. Course The Iomrautvaam has its source in the Komeutyuyam Range of the Koryak Highlands. It flows in a roughly northeastern direction in the northern section of the range. Finally it meets the right bank of the Khatyrka from its mouth, close to the northeastern end of the ridge. Khatyrka meteorite The Khatyrka meteorite, a unique-type of meteorite fell in the area of the Iomrautvaam river basin at . It was found during an expedition to Chukotka in the | northern section of the range. Finally it meets the right bank of the Khatyrka from its mouth, close to the northeastern end of the ridge. Khatyrka meteorite The Khatyrka meteorite, a unique-type of meteorite fell in the area of the Iomrautvaam river basin at . It was found during an expedition to Chukotka in the summer of 2011 buried in a 7,000-year-old layer of dirt and was named Khatyrka meteorite. Flora and fauna The river basin is characterized by tundra vegetation, including mosses, lichens, dwarf shrubs, and sedges. See also Khatyrkite List of rivers of Russia References External links Astronomy.com - An old meteor yields a new |
a species of hide beetle in | is a species of hide beetle in |
species of hide beetle in the subfamily | Omorgus undaraensis is a species of hide |
in the subfamily Omorginae. References vladislavi Beetles | hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae. References |
(1922, 1923, 1928 and 1929). He was known as a master of topspin. He was one of the founders of the National Lawn Tennis Association. He was a member of Franklin D. Roosevelt's Black Cabinet, a founding member of the National Negro Council, and the United Government Employees | the National Negro Council, and the United Government Employees Union. In July 1941, Brown staged a one-person sit-down strike in Washington National Airport's main coffee shop after being refused a cup because of his race. See also Tally Holmes Lucy Slowe References African-American tennis players 1898 births 1954 deaths |
the 2022 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup and 2021 ACC Under-19 Asia Cup. Early life Raj Bawa was born in Nahan, Himachal Pradesh and grew up in Chandigarh. He is the grandson of Trilochan Singh Bawa, a member of the Olympic gold-winning Indian hockey team from the London 1948 Games. Career Bawa played under-19 cricket for Chandigarh. He made his first-class | Chandigarh in February 2022 in the 2021–22 Ranji Trophy, taking a wicket with his first delivery. He has played for the India national under-19 cricket team, including at the 2022 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup and 2021 ACC Under-19 Asia Cup. Early life Raj Bawa was born in Nahan, Himachal Pradesh and grew up in Chandigarh. He is the grandson of Trilochan Singh Bawa, a member |
Second Winter Training Camp: In Geoje and South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea - From 29 January 2022 to 6 February 2022 Third Winter Training Camp: In Yeongdeok County and North Gyeongsang Province, South Korea - From 7 February 2022 to 11 February 2022 Pre-season match results Competitions Overview K League 1 League table Results summary Results by round Matches FA Cup Match reports and match highlights Fixtures and Results at FC Seoul Official Website Season statistics K League 1 records All competitions records Attendance records Season total attendance is K League 1, FA Cup, and AFC Champions League combined | combined Squad statistics Goals Coaching staff Players Team squad All players registered for the 2021 season are listed. Out on loan and military service Note: Where a player has not declared an international allegiance, nation is determined by place of birth. ※ In: Transferred from other teams in the middle of the season. ※ Out: Transferred to other teams in the middle of the season. ※ Discharged: Transferred from Gimcheon Sangmuu for military service in the middle of the season (registered in 2021 season). ※ Conscripted: Transferred to Gimcheon Sangmu for military service after the end of the season. Transfers Tactics Tactical analysis Starting eleven and formation Substitutes See also FC Seoul References External links FC Seoul official website FC Seoul seasons South Korean football clubs 2021 |
1914 deaths Royal Navy admirals British naval | (13 October 1848 – 18 April 1914) was a Royal Navy |
of British post-punk band Public Image Ltd. Albums Studio albums Live albums Compilation albums Box sets Video albums | albums Live albums Compilation albums Box sets Video albums Other albums Singles References Discographies |
1915) was a Royal Navy officer. References 1852 | 1915) was a Royal Navy officer. References 1852 |
22 to July 24, 2022. Each team will play 12 games in a double round-robin format with six games at home and six on the road. The top-two teams will advance to the Championship Final scheduled for BC Day long weekend. The men's and women's divisions will use identical schedules with the two matches being played as | Each team will play 12 games in a double round-robin format with six games at home and six on the road. The top-two teams will advance to the Championship Final scheduled for BC Day long weekend. The men's and women's divisions will use identical schedules with the two matches being played as double-headers on the same day. Men's division The winner of the men's division is expected to qualify for the 2023 Canadian Championship. Table Women's |
7 September 1937) was a Royal | Gauntlett Dicken (26 April 1854 – 7 September 1937) |
is a mountain summit located in the town of Saranac, in Clinton County, New York. | Saranac, in Clinton County, New York. It is part of the Adirondack Mountains. References Mountains of |
but she lost in the quarterfinals to Bouzková in a rematch of last year's semifinal. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half Qualifying Seeds Qualifiers Qualifying draw First qualifier Second qualifier Third qualifier Fourth qualifier Fifth qualifier Sixth | a rematch of last year's semifinal. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half Qualifying Seeds Qualifiers Qualifying draw First qualifier Second qualifier Third qualifier Fourth qualifier Fifth qualifier Sixth qualifier References General Main Draw Qualifying Draw Specific External links 2022 Abierto |
Royal Navy officer. References 1852 births 1933 | was a Royal Navy officer. References 1852 births 1933 deaths |
kolandiaphonta was a kind of vessel, which was used by Early Chola. Chola used two varieties of vessels. The first kind, known as the Sangara, including vessels both large and small. The second variety, called Colandia, were very large in size and these types of vessels were used | jong ship). The Sangara is likely to have been derived from Indonesian twin-hulled vessels similar to Pacific catamarans. See also Ajanta caves boats Borobudur ship Junk (ship) K'un-lun po References External links Ancient history of India Chola Empire Chola dynasty Sailboat types Ship |
south through boreal forest and muskeg en route to its mouth at the Torch River. The Torch River flows east to the Saskatchewan River, which is part of the Hudson Bay drainage basin. There are no communities nor settlements along the course of the river. A portion of Narrow Hills Provincial Park's southern boundary follows the course of the Stewart Creek. Also near the park's southern boundary, Highway 926 crosses the river. Stewart Creek is the middle one of three rivers that run south together out of the Cub Hills and into the Torch River. To the west of Stewart Creek runs | out of the Cub Hills and into the Torch River. To the west of Stewart Creek runs White Gull Creek and to the east is Falling Horse Creek. All three rivers meet at the Torch River within a short distance of each other. Stewart Creek's source is Lower Fishing Lake, which is Caribou Creek's terminus. Along Stewart Creek's course it is fed by several smaller rivers and streams. See also List of rivers of Saskatchewan Hudson Bay |
full-time writer. Noonan was Writer in Residence at the Dunedin College of Education in 1993, and was the editor of the School Journal for eight years. Following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake Noonan wrote a children's picture book, Quaky Cat, about a cat's experience of the earthquakes. She donated all royalties to the Christchurch earthquake appeal, raising over $150,000. She and the book's illustrator Gavin Bishop received the North West Christchurch Award 2012 in appreciation of her donation. Awards and | her career as a teacher. She taught in secondary schools for four years then became a full-time writer. Noonan was Writer in Residence at the Dunedin College of Education in 1993, and was the editor of the School Journal for eight years. Following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake Noonan wrote a children's picture book, Quaky Cat, about |
who found the holotype specimen (PIN 5838/1) in 1999. Description Ondogurvel was a bipedal theropod. Like other parvicursorines, it had a robust humerus, and long hindlimbs suggesting a cusorial lifestyle. It is unique in that, unlike all other alvarezsaurids, it has metartarsals II and IV completely fused along their contact area. Classification Averianov and Lopatin (2022) place Ondogurvel in the alvarezsaurid subfamily Parvicursorinae which are classified by their manus morphology. They recovered that Ondogurvel formed a clade with Xixianykus and Albinykus which have proximally co-ossified metatarsals II and IV. The describing paper also proposes that the "drastic difference in the morphology of the carpometacarpus across Parvicursorinae may suggest a deep divergence between the parvicursorine lineages represented by the Bissekty alvarezsaurid – Linhenykus and Mononykus – Ondogurvel". Phylogeny after Averianov & Lopatin (2022): Paleobiology Nemegtomaia, an oviraptorosaur, is also known from the Nemegt locality of the Mongolian Barun Goyot Formation. Other localities have yielded dinosaurs | lizard") is a genus of alvarezsaurid dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous (Campanian) Barun Goyot Formation in southern Mongolia. The type and only species is O. alifanovi, known from a partial skeleton consisting of fragments of two last dorsal vertebrae, three anterior sacral vertebrae, right ilium, left and right pubis and ischium, articulated right tibia, fibula, metatarsals II and IV, and phalanges IV-1 and IV-2, right carpometacarpus, left and right manual phalanx II-1, right femur, left pedal phalanx II-1, and fragments of unidentified phalanges. Discovery and naming In 2022, the type species Ondogurvel alifanovi was named and described by Alexander O. Averianov and Alexey V. Lopatin. The generic name, "Ondogurvel" combines the Mongolian words өндөг “ondo” (), |
on society. The film premiered on April 23, 2021, at the Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival, and had its Canadian premiere at the Hot Docs | at the Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival, and had its Canadian premiere at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival on April 29. Sophie Farkas Bolla received a Canadian Screen |
It is found in cloud forests of Xalapa city, Mexico. Taxonomy The lichen was formally described as a new species in 2022 by Jorge Guzmán-Guillermo and Régulo Carlos Llarena-Hernández. The type specimen was collected in the El Haya ecological park (Xalapa, Veracruz). The lichen, which is only known from the type locality, occurs in cloud forest at an elevation of . The specific epithet honours Dr. Clementina Barrera-Bernal, who supported Guzmán-Guillermo's studies. Description Architrypethelium barrerae has a thin green to yellowish thallus, with ascomata immersed in the bark substrate, opened | was collected in the El Haya ecological park (Xalapa, Veracruz). The lichen, which is only known from the type locality, occurs in cloud forest at an elevation of . The specific epithet honours Dr. Clementina Barrera-Bernal, who supported Guzmán-Guillermo's studies. Description Architrypethelium barrerae has a thin green to yellowish thallus, with ascomata immersed in the bark substrate, opened by small holes (ostioles) measuring 0.7–1.2 mm in diameter. The ascospores, which number two per ascus, measure 160–200 |
first-ever No. 1 ranking in all three national polls. She led the country with 157 points, coming from 88 goals and a nation-leading 69 assists. She had five 10-point games and ended the season by scoring at least five points in 20 straight games. Ohlmiller was named a Tewaaraton Award finalist for the second straight year and was again named an Inside Lacrosse and IWLCA first team All-American, America East Offensive Player of the Year and first-team All-America East. On April 14, 2018, Stony Brook held "Kylie Ohlmiller Bobblehead Night" against Johns Hopkins, attracting a single-game program record 3,123 fans. On April 21 against UMBC, Ohlmiller broke both the NCAA career points and assists records, previously held by Jen Adams (445) and Hannah Nielsen (224), respectively. She was named the 2017–18 America East Woman of the Year. Stony Brook began the season 20–0 and advanced to the quarterfinals of the 2018 NCAA Tournament, where the Seawolves lost to Boston College 12–11 in double overtime to end their perfect season bid. Ohlmiller ended her career with 498 career points and 246 career assists, both NCAA records. She also scored 252 goals, second-most in Stony Brook history behind teammate Courtney Murphy's 341 career goals, an NCAA record. Her 252 career goals were the 16th-most in NCAA history. From 2019 to 2021, Ohlmiller also served as a volunteer assistant coach for Stony Brook after her graduation. College statistics Asterisks indicate NCAA Division I all-time record. National team career Ohlmiller tried out for the United States women's national lacrosse team in 2016 and made the 36-man roster for the 2017 team. She trained for the 2017 Federation of International Lacrosse Women's World Cup held in Guildford, England but did not make the final 18-player roster for competition. She made the 36-man roster again in 2021 and was named to the final 18-player roster ahead of the 2021 World Championship, along with her Stony Brook teammate Ally Kennedy. Professional career Ohlmiller was selected as the first overall draft pick in the 2018 United Women's Lacrosse League and the Women's Professional Lacrosse League drafts. Both leagues are now defunct. Players in the Women's Professional Lacrosse League, including Ohlmiller, moved on to the Athletes Unlimited league after the former folded in 2020 after the COVID-19 pandemic. She | College career Before her freshman season even began, Spallina said of Ohlmiller that "before she’s out of here, she’ll be a very strong candidate to win the Tewaaraton." In her collegiate debut on February 21, 2015 against USC, Ohlmiller recorded two assists. She scored her first career goal against Drexel and tied the program freshman record for assists against Villanova. She was named America East Rookie of the Week six times, Inside Lacrosse National Rookie of the Week three times and Inside Lacrosse National Player of the Week after guiding Stony Brook to a victory over No. 5 Northwestern, Stony Brook's first win over a top-five team in school history. She ended her freshman season with 42 goals and 44 assists for 86 points. In her sophomore year, Ohlmiller scored 91 points, the fifth-most in the country, and recorded 47 assists, the fourth-most. She earned IWLCA Player of the Week once and America East Player of the Week three times. She set a new career high with six goals against Vermont and earned a spot on the SportsCenter Top 10 for a no-look, behind-the-back goal she scored against Johns Hopkins. Ohlmiller's junior season was record-breaking. With 78 goals and 86 assists, she scored 164 points, breaking Maryland's Jen Adams' Division I single-season record of 148 points set in 2001. Ohlmiller became the first player in Division I history to record 70 goals and 70 assists in the same season. Her 86 assists broke Hannah Nielsen of Northwestern's record for 83 assists in a season, set in 2009. Ohlmiller set an America East record with eight assists in a game against New Hampshire. A behind-the-back assist to her sister Taryn Ohlmiller in that game earned her another SportsCenter Top 10 appearance. She was named a finalist for the Tewaaraton Award, the first ever in Stony Brook history, the IWLCA Division I Attacker of the Year, a first-team IWLCA and ILWomen All-American selection and America East Offensive Player of the Year. She scored a career-high 12 points against Bryant. Stony Brook ended the season 20–2 with a loss in the 2017 NCAA Tournament quarterfinals to Maryland, the furthest the program had advanced yet; Stony Brook led 11–7 in the second half before Maryland came back to win 13–12. Ohlmiller had seven points in the game, coming from three points and four assists. As a senior, Ohlmiller led Stony Brook to its first-ever No. 1 ranking in all three national polls. She led the country with 157 points, coming from 88 goals and a nation-leading 69 assists. She had five 10-point games and ended the season by scoring at least five points in 20 straight games. Ohlmiller was named a Tewaaraton Award finalist for the second straight year and was again named an Inside Lacrosse and IWLCA first team All-American, America East Offensive Player of the Year and first-team All-America East. On April 14, 2018, Stony Brook held "Kylie Ohlmiller Bobblehead Night" against Johns Hopkins, |
genuine care they feel for Corona. When someone comes to pick up Corona, her adoptive mother struggles to decide between whether to do what is best for her child and her urge not to return her to her rightful family. It is eventually revealed that the craft sent to pick her up was not from her home planet, but an alien, Pona, who was looking for lost children to raise on her own. Corona rejects her, saying that she likes staying with her family, and waves goodbye to Pona. Corona's mother finds her, and they reunite, having thought that Corona would return with her people. At its end, she muses to herself that some day, she and her family will eventually have to give up Corona. Development The title of the series is a parody on Swiss Family Robinson. The "Carlvinson" portion of the title likely refers to the USS Carl Vinson, which was active in the Sea of Japan between the 1980s and 1990s. It was often seen in Tokyo harbor during the time Asari had drawn the manga. In turn, the aircraft carrier is named after U.S. congressman from Georgia Carl Vinson, however it is unlikely that Asari was paying homage to the congressman, who was an active supporter of the US Navy during the Second World War, and rather simply having the name be a play on the similar sounding title. Asari, a fan of the science fiction genre, inserted in-group references to contemporary films and other related forms of media. There exists speculation that Space Family Carlvinson is a reference to the series Lost in Space, which was previously Space Family Robinson. Additionally, there are references to other science fiction films such as John Carpenter's The Thing, and Fiend Without a Face. According to historian Fred Patten, around the time of the animated OVA's release, the Cartoon/Fantasy Organization was undergoing a breakup, and thus the ensuing internal conflict resulted in a failure for the OVA to be brought to a wider audience in the United States. Characters Acting troupe/Saucer family A human child whose parents died when they crashed into the acting troupe's spaceship. Rescued as a baby, as her parents protected her as their spaceship crashed and died doing so, the story skips ahead to when she is 5 years old. The acting troupe takes it upon themselves to raise and care for her as if they were her parents, waiting for someone of her own species to take care of her to arrive. Naturally inquisitive and naive, she cares a lot for her family. A fluffy mouse like alien. She is the leader of the travelling acting troupe, and decides that they should raise the orphaned child. She takes up the role as Corona's mother. She serves as the voice of reason within the group. A robotic alien that consists of a detachable head and an interchangeable suit which hovers above the ground. He takes up the role as Corona's father. While stoic, he is also absentminded and easily hurt by Corona's frustrations. He has a mysterious past, and does not share it with the other members of his troupe, but was said to be a former soldier. A humanoid alien resembling an elf with animalistic | their spaceship crashed and died doing so, the story skips ahead to when she is 5 years old. The acting troupe takes it upon themselves to raise and care for her as if they were her parents, waiting for someone of her own species to take care of her to arrive. Naturally inquisitive and naive, she cares a lot for her family. A fluffy mouse like alien. She is the leader of the travelling acting troupe, and decides that they should raise the orphaned child. She takes up the role as Corona's mother. She serves as the voice of reason within the group. A robotic alien that consists of a detachable head and an interchangeable suit which hovers above the ground. He takes up the role as Corona's father. While stoic, he is also absentminded and easily hurt by Corona's frustrations. He has a mysterious past, and does not share it with the other members of his troupe, but was said to be a former soldier. A humanoid alien resembling an elf with animalistic features. She is extremely strong, and can shift into another form to perform feats of strength. Belka formerly worked as a mercenary and was rivals with Laika. Belka is extremely weak against heat, due to her home planet being cold and icy. She takes up the role of the sheriff of Anika. An alien resembling a human's nervous system complete with a brain, which serves as his head. He is the heir to a great fortune, but ran away from home to join the acting troupe. When a butler is sent to retrieve him, he refuses, saying that he enjoyed his life in Anika. Tah-kun plays the role as Corona's pet squirrel, and as a result, often suffers from Corona's crude methods of having fun. His appearance is inspired by the 1958 film Fiend Without a Face. An alien consisting of a single eye encased in a capsule with two robotic legs attached. He works as the owner of the general store on Anika, and is a shrewd businessman. An alien consisting of a huge oval shaped head and a singular eye with thin limbs. She is constantly with her arms raised in front of her, and does not speak at all. She is the love interest of the Anika native Jun. Her role within the acting troupe and in Anika is unknown. Anika townspeople Black, squid like aliens, with two arms and four legs with yellow teardrop-shaped faces. They evolved from nautili and live in the mountains, but are unable to swim. They bear characters resembling kanji on their forehead that serve to differentiate between each of them, and all are modelled after film directors. They serve |
episode: Pilot — Oldest son (The series was never picked up) (co-starring Frank Lovejoy as the series lead, a widowed sheriff. Produced by Four Star Productions.) Bounty Law (TV series) (1959-1963) — Jake Cahill (Lead role: 48 episodes) (directors: Paul Wendkos) Riverboat (year unknown) — Guest role (co-starred Burt Reynolds, directed by William Witney) Hullabaloo (1965) — Guest Star, Himself (Dalton appeared to promote his film Tanner. Musical guests: The Kinks, who also appeared on a real-life episode in 1965 which featured Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello as hosts. The clip in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood most closely resembles an episode from 1966 hosted by George Maharis.) Tarzan (1967) — episode: Jewel of the Jungle — Brick Bedford The Green Hornet (1967) — episode: Hornet Hunter — Thompson Shaw. The episode most closely resembles the real life episode Invasion from Outer Space. Gary Kent served as the stunt coordinator on the episode. Kent was married to stunt woman Tomi Barrett. Bingo Martin (1967) — episode: Heck to Pay — Rocky Ryan Land of the Giants (1968) — episode: Capture — Dr. David Hellstrom The F.B.I. (1969) — episode: All The Streets Are Silent — Michael Murtaugh (portrayed by Burt Reynolds in real-life episode) Lancer (1969) — episode: Pilot — Caleb DeCoteau. Inspired by the real-life pilot The High Riders. Matt Lincoln (1970) — Guest role [[Mission: Impossible (1966 TV series)|Mission: Impossible]] (early 1970s) — Guest villainCade's County (1971) — Guest roleBanacek (early 1970s) — Guest role FilmsBattle of the coral Sea (1959) — small role (loosely based on Cliff Booth's escape from a WWII POW camp. The film did not depict how Booth decapitated the Japanese soldiers.)Drag Race, No Stop (year unknown) — Lead role (directed by William Witney, written by Richard C. Sarafian. Co-starring Gene Evans, John Ashley and Richard Bakalyan)Comanche Uprising (1961) — Lt. Taylor Sullivan (co-starring Robert Taylor, Joan Evans, Claude Akins, James Best, Charles Bronson, Jay C. Flippen and Michael Dante. Directed by Bud Springsteen, screenplay by Samuel A. Peeples, music by William Lava, produced by Billy Bob Roberts, Roxie Rodriguez, and Sam Small)The Chapman Report (1962) — Ed Kraski (portrayed by Ty Hardin in real-life)Big Game (1963) — Randy Wilson (directed by Stewart Granger)Hellfire, Texas (1964) — Major Travis Jackson (directed by Phil Karlson, co-starring Glenn Ford, Inger Stevens, Paul Petersen, Todd Armstrong and Max Baer Jr., screenplay by Halsted Welles, based on the novel by Nelson and Shirley Wolford, produced by Harry Joe Brown, music composed by Mundell Lowe) Based on A Time for Killing.Tanner (1965) — Joe Tanner (the film co-stars Ralph Meeker, Henry Wilcoxon, Clint Ritchie, and Michael Callan. Directed by Jerry Hopper) It is loosely based on Gunman's Walk (1958).Jigsaw Jane (year unknown) — Name unknown (A twisted black-gloved psycho killer) (co-starring Suzanne Pleshette, Paul Burke, Jack Cassidy, Lloyd Bochner, Alice Ghostley, and Aldo Ray. Produced by Murphy Crawford and Martin H. Poll, directed by David Lowell Rich, screenplay by Jerome Zastoupil. Tarantino's middle name is Jerome and he grew up with the surname Zastoupil, the name of his stepfather.)The 14 Fists of McClusky (1966) — Sgt. Mike Lewis (directed by Paul Wendkos, co-starring Rod Taylor, Van Johnson, Adam West, Tom Laughlin and Kaz Garas) Dalton replaced Fabian Forte who broke his shoulder shortly before shooting.Salty, The Talking Sea Otter (1967) — Jed MartinKill Me Quick, Ringo, Said The Gringo (1969) — Ringo (The role was played by Montgomery Wood, Mark Damon, and Ken Clark in real-life Spaghetti Westerns)Nebraska Jim (1970) — Nebraska Jim (Directed by Sergio Corbucci). The 1966 Spaghetti Western film Savage Gringo or Ringo Del Nebraska was released in Germany as Nebraska Jim.Red Blood, Red Skin (1970) — Romeo Douglas (co-starring Telly Savalas and Carroll Baker) (Based on the novel The Only Good Indian Is a Dead Indian by Floyd Ray Wilson. Floyd Ray Wilson is the name of the boxer Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis) kills in the ring in Tarantino's Pulp Fiction.) Inspired by Land Raiders (1970).Hell Boats (1970) — Lt. Cmdr. Jeffords (directed by Paul Wendkos)Operazione Dyn-O-Mite! (1970) — Jason (Ty Hardin played the role in Death on the Run. Archive footage from Death on the Run was used in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood for the Operazione Dyn-O-Mite. Tarantino saw the character and film as a precursor for Jason Bourne. Operazione Dyn-O-Mite! is a spaghetti James Bond rip-off-type film directed by Antonio Margheriti and co-starring Francesca Capucci and Margaret Lee. It was also inspired by Secret Agent Super Dragon and Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die.)Cannon for Cordoba (1970) — Jackson Harkness (portrayed by Don Gordon in real-life)The Deadly Trackers (1973) — Role unknownGrizzly (1976) — Don Stober (portrayed by Andrew Prine in real-life)The Fireman (early 1980s) — Lead role, director, producer, co-writer (co-written and produced by Cliff Booth. Booth also directs the action sequences. Co-starring Samuel L. Jackson, Jim Brown, Ralph Meeker, Lynda Day George, and Jane Kennedy)The Fireman 2 (1980s) — lead roleThe Fireman 3 (1980s) — lead roleComing Home In a Bodybag (1980s) — Colonel MacDuff. The film is originally referred to in the Tarantino penned True Romance. [Co-starring Mickey Burnett, Luke Griffin, and Somerset O'Neal (O'Neal starred in the pilot episode of Fox Force Five as the blonde leader with Mia Wallace as Raven | (1968) — episode: Capture — Dr. David Hellstrom The F.B.I. (1969) — episode: All The Streets Are Silent — Michael Murtaugh (portrayed by Burt Reynolds in real-life episode) Lancer (1969) — episode: Pilot — Caleb DeCoteau. Inspired by the real-life pilot The High Riders. Matt Lincoln (1970) — Guest role [[Mission: Impossible (1966 TV series)|Mission: Impossible]] (early 1970s) — Guest villainCade's County (1971) — Guest roleBanacek (early 1970s) — Guest role FilmsBattle of the coral Sea (1959) — small role (loosely based on Cliff Booth's escape from a WWII POW camp. The film did not depict how Booth decapitated the Japanese soldiers.)Drag Race, No Stop (year unknown) — Lead role (directed by William Witney, written by Richard C. Sarafian. Co-starring Gene Evans, John Ashley and Richard Bakalyan)Comanche Uprising (1961) — Lt. Taylor Sullivan (co-starring Robert Taylor, Joan Evans, Claude Akins, James Best, Charles Bronson, Jay C. Flippen and Michael Dante. Directed by Bud Springsteen, screenplay by Samuel A. Peeples, music by William Lava, produced by Billy Bob Roberts, Roxie Rodriguez, and Sam Small)The Chapman Report (1962) — Ed Kraski (portrayed by Ty Hardin in real-life)Big Game (1963) — Randy Wilson (directed by Stewart Granger)Hellfire, Texas (1964) — Major Travis Jackson (directed by Phil Karlson, co-starring Glenn Ford, Inger Stevens, Paul Petersen, Todd Armstrong and Max Baer Jr., screenplay by Halsted Welles, based on the novel by Nelson and Shirley Wolford, produced by Harry Joe Brown, music composed by Mundell Lowe) Based on A Time for Killing.Tanner (1965) — Joe Tanner (the film co-stars Ralph Meeker, Henry Wilcoxon, Clint Ritchie, and Michael Callan. Directed by Jerry Hopper) It is loosely based on Gunman's Walk (1958).Jigsaw Jane (year unknown) — Name unknown (A twisted black-gloved psycho killer) (co-starring Suzanne Pleshette, Paul Burke, Jack Cassidy, Lloyd Bochner, Alice Ghostley, and Aldo Ray. Produced by Murphy Crawford and Martin H. Poll, directed by David Lowell Rich, screenplay by Jerome Zastoupil. Tarantino's middle name is Jerome and he grew up with the surname Zastoupil, the name of his stepfather.)The 14 Fists of McClusky (1966) — Sgt. Mike Lewis (directed by Paul Wendkos, co-starring Rod Taylor, Van Johnson, Adam West, Tom Laughlin and Kaz Garas) Dalton replaced Fabian Forte who broke his shoulder shortly before shooting.Salty, The Talking Sea Otter (1967) — Jed MartinKill Me Quick, Ringo, Said The Gringo (1969) — Ringo (The role was played by Montgomery Wood, Mark Damon, and Ken Clark in real-life Spaghetti Westerns)Nebraska Jim (1970) — Nebraska Jim (Directed by Sergio Corbucci). The 1966 Spaghetti Western film Savage Gringo or Ringo Del Nebraska was released in Germany as Nebraska Jim.Red Blood, Red Skin (1970) — Romeo Douglas (co-starring Telly Savalas and Carroll Baker) (Based on the novel The Only Good Indian Is a Dead Indian by Floyd Ray Wilson. Floyd Ray Wilson is the name of the boxer Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis) kills in the ring in Tarantino's Pulp Fiction.) Inspired by Land Raiders (1970).Hell Boats (1970) — Lt. Cmdr. Jeffords (directed by Paul Wendkos)Operazione Dyn-O-Mite! (1970) — Jason (Ty Hardin played the role in Death on the Run. Archive footage from Death on the Run was used in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood for the Operazione Dyn-O-Mite. Tarantino saw the character and film as a precursor for Jason Bourne. Operazione Dyn-O-Mite! is a spaghetti James Bond rip-off-type film directed by Antonio Margheriti and co-starring Francesca Capucci and Margaret Lee. It was also inspired by Secret Agent Super Dragon and Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die.)Cannon for Cordoba (1970) — Jackson Harkness (portrayed by Don Gordon in real-life)The Deadly Trackers (1973) — Role unknownGrizzly (1976) — Don Stober (portrayed by Andrew Prine in real-life)The Fireman (early 1980s) — Lead role, director, producer, co-writer (co-written and produced by Cliff Booth. Booth also directs the action sequences. Co-starring Samuel L. Jackson, Jim Brown, Ralph Meeker, Lynda Day George, and Jane Kennedy)The Fireman 2 (1980s) — lead roleThe Fireman 3 (1980s) — lead roleComing Home In a Bodybag (1980s) — Colonel MacDuff. The film is originally referred to in the Tarantino penned True Romance. [Co-starring Mickey Burnett, Luke Griffin, and Somerset O'Neal (O'Neal starred in the pilot episode of Fox Force Five as the blonde leader with Mia Wallace as Raven McCoy. Wallace is played by Uma Thurman in Pulp Fiction.) Directed by Anthony Irvin, written by Freddie White, music by Michael Kamen, produced by Lee Donowitz (Donowitz appears in True Romance, portrayed by Saul Rubinek. He is the son of Donny Donowitz portrayed by Eli Roth in Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds.)] Additionally Dalton was up for the role of Lover Boy in the 1959 film Gidget''. The role ultimately went to |
and helping organize the Manchester Talmud Torah School system. His rabbinical diploma was granted by Rabbi David Tevel Katzenellenbogen of Suwałki. In 1901, Asher immigrated to America and became rabbi of B'nai Jeshurun in New York City. He served as rabbi there until 1907, when he became rabbi of Orach Chaim in New York City. He served as rabbi there for the rest of his life. In 1902, he became professor of homiletics of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and was put in charge of the Seminary's department of philosophy and ethics. He also contributed an article on Jewish food and health laws to the Encyclopedia Americana and wrote reviews for the International Journal of Ethics and the Critical Review. Asher died at home from a weakened heart on November 9, 1909. His funeral | until 1907, when he became rabbi of Orach Chaim in New York City. He served as rabbi there for the rest of his life. In 1902, he became professor of homiletics of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and was put in charge of the Seminary's department of philosophy and ethics. He also contributed an article on Jewish food and health laws to the Encyclopedia Americana and wrote reviews for the International Journal of Ethics and the Critical Review. Asher died at home from a weakened heart on November 9, 1909. His funeral took place in his synagogue, with Rabbi Henry Pereira Mendes officiating the ceremony. He was buried in Beth Olam Cemetery in the Shearith Israel section. References 1872 births 1909 deaths Rabbis from Manchester American people of English-Jewish descent 19th-century British rabbis Alumni of the Victoria University of Manchester Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge English people of Russian-Jewish descent English emigrants to the United States 20th-century |
of the Exposition Universelle. In July, she attended the first congress of the Second International and was elected secretary. On her return to Saint Petersburg in September, she joined the illegal social democratic circle founded by Mikhail Brusnev and met, among others, Olga and Vladimir Ulyanov (the future Lenin). She was under police surveillance and, in 1891, her house was searched and illegal publications were discovered there. Relegated by the tsarist authorities to Pskov, she founded a school for workers and a public library there. In August 1898, she was allowed to return to Saint Petersburg. As a member of the menshevik RSDLP, she participated in the demonstrations of the 1905 Revolution. Reduced to poverty, she died of cancer on 1 September 1914 at the for poor women in Saint Petersburg and was buried in Novoderevenskoye cemetery. Family Yekaterina Bronevskaya married Viktor Ivanovich Bartenev, an army officer, in 1863. They had three sons, Viktor (born 1864), Grigory (born 1866), and German (born 1881). Viktor became a revolutionary like his parents and was exiled to Obdorsk. Bibliography (ru) Ivan Knijnik-Vetrov, Barteneva, sotsialistka i | the tsarist authorities to Pskov, she founded a school for workers and a public library there. In August 1898, she was allowed to return to Saint Petersburg. As a member of the menshevik RSDLP, she participated in the demonstrations of the 1905 Revolution. Reduced to poverty, she died of cancer on 1 September 1914 at the for poor women in Saint Petersburg and was buried in Novoderevenskoye cemetery. Family Yekaterina Bronevskaya married Viktor Ivanovich Bartenev, an army officer, in 1863. They had three sons, Viktor (born 1864), Grigory (born 1866), and German (born 1881). Viktor became a revolutionary like his parents and was exiled to Obdorsk. Bibliography (ru) Ivan Knijnik-Vetrov, Barteneva, sotsialistka i pisatelnitsa'' [Barteneva, seltevik is sutesik], « Katorga i ssylka », XI, 1929 References Further reading Members of the International Workingmen's Association Russian feminists Russian socialists Russian socialist feminists Russian revolutionaries People from Saint Petersburg 1843 births 1914 deaths Russian anarchists Narodniks |
15 different colors. Eye shadows, eye primers, mascaras, eyeliners, blushes, concealers, face primers, foundations, highlighters, contours, powders, and palettes are also manufactured. After being sold through Luxola, Luscious Cosmetics gained a place at Sephora in 2015. Now it is available in Sephora, Luxola, and other retailers in Hong Kong, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, and Pakistan. Later, in August 2017, it was launched in the United States too. Presently, the company has offices in Los Angeles, Dubai, and Lahore, as well as a staff of 500 employees. Cruelty-free cosmetic Luscious Cosmetics claims to be an all-vegan and cruelty-free brand with no testing on animals. The company is also | retailers, like Luxola and Sephora, in 11 countries around the globe. History Luscious Cosmetics was founded online in 2007 by Mehrbano Sethi, an undergraduate university student. Born in Lahore, Pakistan, Sethi obtained a degree in International Relations in 2000 from Boston University. Then, she returned to Pakistan and continued to promote her newly launched brand. Products and marketing Luscious Cosmetics offers six different lip products (including different types of sticks, glosses, primers, and liners) in up to 15 different colors. Eye shadows, eye primers, mascaras, eyeliners, blushes, concealers, face primers, foundations, highlighters, contours, powders, and palettes are also manufactured. After being sold through Luxola, Luscious Cosmetics |
to live in Sà Phìn palace. The Hmong king later became the nominal chairman of Đồng Văn district, but his actual power was much reduced. After the 1959 People's Council election, the key leadership positions in Đồng Văn were mostly transferred from the aristocracy to the elected government. In the past, although there was a people-elected government, administrative power was still closely tied to the interests of the family. Taking advantage of this situation, the remnants of Chiang's army promoted propaganda and colluded with the old aristocrats of Đồng Văn and Mèo Vạc to incite rebellion to establish an "independent Hmong Kingdom". Hmong king Dương Trung Nhân, supported by the United States and internationally, was about to return to rule Đồng Văn. The Kuomintang troops across the border were painted as an international army returning home to help the king recover the territory. In early 1959, groups of bandits started burning down the committee's headquarters in Phố Cáo, Bạch Đích and Thắng Mố communes. In May 1959, Vương Chí Sình went to Sà Phìn to set up a local force to stop the bandits. However, when he returned to Hanoi, his subordinate Vàng Chúng Dình (former Kuomintang veteran) quickly stepped up armed activities, beyond the control of the former Hmong king. Developments On 30 November 1959, a 40-man bandit platoon led by Vàng Chỉn Cáo locked the Cán Tỷ Heaven Gate, cutting off the arterial road from Hà Giang to . The next day, the band of bandits blocked Heaven's Gate, arrested two groups of horses carrying goods from the province to Đồng Văn, and chased the cadres back. On 9 December, the Central Committee sent father and son Vương Chí Sình to lead a delegation of Fatherland Front cadres to Đồng Văn to negotiate with bandit boss Vàng Chỉn Cáo, persuade them to disband, and not help guide the mob. However, the negotiations failed completely. A week later, a series of areas throughout Đồng Văn district were attacked and looted by bandits. On 12 December, Vàng Chúng Dình led 200 people to attack Đồng Văn town at the same time Vàng Dúng Mỷ attacked Mèo Vạc and robbed a trade store. In Lũng Phìn commune, the bandits destroyed the headquarters of the committee, robbed goods, destroyed the granary, and killed two commercial officials and two people. On 20 December, Phàn Chỉn Sài (Yao ethnicity) sent a group of bandits to attack Na Khê and Bạch Đích, forcing district officials to hang them on a tree as a target for | Phìn palace. The Hmong king later became the nominal chairman of Đồng Văn district, but his actual power was much reduced. After the 1959 People's Council election, the key leadership positions in Đồng Văn were mostly transferred from the aristocracy to the elected government. In the past, although there was a people-elected government, administrative power was still closely tied to the interests of the family. Taking advantage of this situation, the remnants of Chiang's army promoted propaganda and colluded with the old aristocrats of Đồng Văn and Mèo Vạc to incite rebellion to establish an "independent Hmong Kingdom". Hmong king Dương Trung Nhân, supported by the United States and internationally, was about to return to rule Đồng Văn. The Kuomintang troops across the border were painted as an international army returning home to help the king recover the territory. In early 1959, groups of bandits started burning down the committee's headquarters in Phố Cáo, Bạch Đích and Thắng Mố communes. In May 1959, Vương Chí Sình went to Sà Phìn to set up a local force to stop the bandits. However, when he returned to Hanoi, his subordinate Vàng Chúng Dình (former Kuomintang veteran) quickly stepped up armed activities, beyond the control of the former Hmong king. Developments On 30 November 1959, a 40-man bandit platoon led by Vàng Chỉn Cáo locked the Cán Tỷ Heaven Gate, cutting off the arterial road from Hà Giang to . The next day, the band of bandits blocked Heaven's Gate, arrested two groups of horses carrying goods from the province to Đồng Văn, and chased the cadres back. On 9 December, the Central Committee sent father and son Vương Chí Sình to lead a delegation of Fatherland Front cadres to Đồng Văn to negotiate |
against the tourists. His highest first-class score was 183 for PIA against Agriculture Development Bank in the semi-final of the Patron's Trophy in 1993–94, when he batted for ten and a half hours. He was a member of PIA's title-winning teams in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy in 1987–88 and 1989–90. | a former Pakistani cricketer who played 115 matches of first-class cricket in Pakistan, mostly for Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), from 1979 to 2000. His father was the cricketer Raees Mohammad, and his uncles Wazir, Hanif, Mushtaq and Sadiq all played Test cricket for Pakistan. Asif toured Zimbabwe with PIA in 1981–82, playing in both first-class matches against Zimbabwe, and scored a century in the second match. When the Sri |
James Buddy Day and released in 2021. The film examines the 2010–2017 Toronto serial homicides committed by Bruce McArthur; its premiere coincided with the release of Gloria Epstein's review of the Toronto Police Service's | in the United States on April 11, 2021, as part of "Serial Killer Week", and had its Canadian premiere April 30 on Super Channel. The film was a Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Documentary Program at the 10th Canadian Screen |
landet". Cast Georg Løkkeberg as Rikard Nordraak Jørn Ording as Edvard Grieg Axel Thue as Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson Wenche Foss as Louise Lund Ingolf Rogde as Edmund Neupert Helen Brinchmann as Erika | Siri Rom as Marie Lund Henrik Børseth as Rikard Nordraak's father References External links Rikard Nordraak at the National Library of Norway 1945 films Norwegian drama |
Soil (drums). They released their first album Scavenger in 2015, and gained notoriety when Rogers' and Soil's "how to write an Alt-J song" went viral on YouTube in May 2015. They released their second album Voyager in 2017 and Stunning & Atrocious in 2021. History Rogers, Soil and Miller began jamming together as teenagers in Toronto during summer camp. The band was formed in 2013 when the trio left for Montreal to study at Concordia and McGill University, meeting Jonathan Bell and Colin Spratt. Their debut album, Scavenger was named after their patchy process of arranging eclectic pieces of music. In May 2015, the band uploaded "how to write an Alt-J song" | toured North America through the fall. Musical style and influences Fleece's earlier work has drawn comparisons Radiohead, The Pixies, and Tame Impala. Exclaim! drew comparisons of the band's sophomore effort to psychedelic, grunge, and Toronto jazz trio BADBADNOTGOOD. In an interview with Indie88, Rogers cited improvisation as a crucial part of their artistic process. Discography Albums 2015: Scavenger 2017: Voyager 2021: Stunning & Atrocious Singles 2020: "Love Song for the Haters" 2020: "So Long" 2020: "Upside Down" 2020: "Do U Mind? (Leave the Light On)" 2021: "Bodies Lie" Music videos 2020: "Upside Down" 2021: "Do U Mind? (Leave the Light On)" Members Current members Matt Rogers – vocals, keyboard Megan Ennenberg – vocals, guitar Ethan Soil – drums Jameson Daniel – guitar, vocals Past members Gabe Miller Colin Spratt Jonathan Bell References Canadian indie rock groups |
at Michigan || Ray Fisher Stadium • Ann Arbor, Michigan || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 26 || April 2 || at Michgian || Ray Fisher Stadium • Ann Arbor, Michigan || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 27 || April 3 || at Michigan || Ray Fisher Stadium • Ann Arbor, Michigan || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 28 || April 6 || at || Dozer Park • Peoria, Illinois || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 29 || April 8 || || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 30 || April 9 || Illinois || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 31 || April 10 || Illinois || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 32 || April 12 || at || Franklin Field • Franklin, Wisconsin || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 33 || April 15 || || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 34 || April 16 || Minnesota || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 35 || April 17 || Minnesota || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 36 || April 19 || Bradley || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 37 || April 22 || at || Bainton Field • Piscataway, New Jersey || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 38 || April 23 || at Rutgers || Bainton Field • Piscataway, New Jersey || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 39 || April 24 || at Rutgers || Bainton Field • Piscataway, New Jersey || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 40 || April 26 || || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 41 || April 29 || at Nebraska || Haymarket Park • Lincoln, Nebraska || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 42 || April 30 || at Nebraska || Haymarket Park • Lincoln, Nebraska || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- |- align="center" bgcolor= | 43 || May 1 || at Nebraska || Haymarket Park • Lincoln, Nebraska || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | | Ann Arbor, Michigan || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 28 || April 6 || at || Dozer Park • Peoria, Illinois || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 29 || April 8 || || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 30 || April 9 || Illinois || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 31 || April 10 || Illinois || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 32 || April 12 || at || Franklin Field • Franklin, Wisconsin || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 33 || April 15 || || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 34 || April 16 || Minnesota || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 35 || April 17 || Minnesota || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 36 || April 19 || Bradley || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 37 || April 22 || at || Bainton Field • Piscataway, New Jersey || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 38 || April 23 || at Rutgers || Bainton Field • Piscataway, New Jersey || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 39 || April 24 || at Rutgers || Bainton Field • Piscataway, New Jersey || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 40 || April 26 || || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 41 || April 29 || at Nebraska || Haymarket Park • Lincoln, Nebraska || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 42 || April 30 || at Nebraska || Haymarket Park • Lincoln, Nebraska || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- |- align="center" bgcolor= | 43 || May 1 || at Nebraska || Haymarket Park • Lincoln, Nebraska || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 44 || May 3 || Illinois State || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 45 || May 6 || Purdue || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 46 || May 7 || Purdue || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 47 || May 8 || Purdue || Duane Banks Field • Iowa City, Iowa || – || – || – || – || – || – || – |- align="center" bgcolor= | 48 || |
Jean-Nicolas Démeunier (1751–1814), French writer and politician Jean-Nicolas de Francine (1662–1735), French musician Jean-Nicolas Gannal (1791–1852), French chemist Jean-Nicolas Geoffroy (1633–1694), French harpsichordist, organist and composer Jean-Nicolas Huyot (1780–1840), French architect Jean-Nicolas Laverlochère (1812–1884), French Roman Catholic missionary in Canada Jean-Nicolas Lemmens (1850–1897), Dutch Catholic bishop Jean-Nicolas Marjolin (1780–1850), French surgeon and pathologist Jean-Nicolas Marrigues (1757–1834), French organist Jean-Nicolas | (1812–1884), French Roman Catholic missionary in Canada Jean-Nicolas Lemmens (1850–1897), Dutch Catholic bishop Jean-Nicolas Marjolin (1780–1850), French surgeon and pathologist Jean-Nicolas Marrigues (1757–1834), French organist Jean-Nicolas Pache (1746–1823), French politician Jean-Nicolas Nissage Saget (1810–1880), President of Haiti Jean-Nicolas Stofflet (1753–1796), French military leader Jean-Nicolas Trouille (1750–1825) was a French architect, |
is mostly hilly, but its immediate surroundings are different. The nearest reasonably sized town is Delamere, 13.1 km north. In the region around Encounter Marine Park, coves, and bays are very common.The climate is of the marine park is cool. The average temperature is 17°C. The warmest month is December, at 24° C, and the coldest July, at 6°C. The average rainfall is 863 millimetres per year. | in the Fleurieu Peninsula in state of South Australia, close to Adelaide. The land around Encounter Marine Park is mostly hilly, but its immediate surroundings are different. The nearest reasonably sized town is Delamere, 13.1 km north. In the region around Encounter Marine Park, coves, and bays are very common.The climate is of the marine park is cool. |
The series centres on the Essex-West-Essex Fire Department, a smalltown volunteer fire department with too much time on their hands because their town never has any actual fires to fight. The series stars Jonathan Torrens, Sarah McCarthy, Alicia McCarvell, Edwina Govindsamy, Mary Austin, Brian George and James Faulkner. It was created by Torrens and McCarthy, and written by Torrens, McCarthy, Sylvia | Torrens, Sarah McCarthy, Alicia McCarvell, Edwina Govindsamy, Mary Austin, Brian George and James Faulkner. It was created by Torrens and McCarthy, and written by Torrens, McCarthy, Sylvia Beirnes and Mark Forward. It was shot in and around the Truro, Nova Scotia, area in spring 2021. Torrens received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Supporting |
1993), Indian author of thrillers about banking and bankers Karan Bajaj (PGP 2002), American author Mythology Vikrant Pande (PGP 1992), Indian author and translator Nityanand Misra (PGP 2007), Indian author and translator Rahul Singh (PGP 2015), Singaporean Author Regional Languages Vikrant Pande (PGP 1992), Indian author and translator Dr. Chellapilla Surya Lakshmi, Indian Author of Telugu language Satire/Humor Suresh Chandrasekaran (PGP 1988), Indian author and satirist Self-Help Parthasarathy S (PGP 1994) Rakesh Godhwani (PGSEM 2004), Indian Author Rahul Singh (PGP 2015), Singaporean Author TV/Movie Scripts Vikrant Pande (PGP 1992), Indian author and translator | Kerschner Family Chairperson in Finance Education & Professor of Finance, Stern School of Business, New York University Sangeet Paul Choudary (PGP 2006), Indian business scholar and author of the books Platform Revolution and Platform Scale. Business Bhaswar Mukherjee (PGP 1988), Indian author of business crime Vikrant Pande (PGP 1992), Indian business history author Fiction RV Raman (PGP 1988), Indian author of corporate thrillers and detective fiction set in India Bhaswar Mukherjee (PGP 1988), Indian author of crime fiction Abhijit Patwardhan (PGP 1989), Singaporean author of |
native to Ulleungdo and is found between rocks. Description Flowers bloom from June to August and it grows up from 20 cms to 50 cms. It has lanceolate leaves and the leaves | and the leaves in the middle are usually the length of around 6 to 9 cms and width is around 7 to 10 mms. References Silene Flora of South |
the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. Biography Baima was born in Yushu County (now Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture), Qinghai, in April 1946. In August 1960, he was admitted to Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture Normal School, he stayed at the school and taught there after graduation. He got involved in politics in December 1967, when he was appointed deputy director of Chindu County Revolutionary Committee, and joined the Chinese Communist Party in October 1968. He rose to become deputy party secretary of the county in October 1973. He was deputy director of Qinghai Provincial Bureau of Education in June 1976, and held that office until January 1980. In January 1980, he became deputy secretary of the Qinghai Provincial Committee of the Communist Youth League of China, rising to secretary the next year. In | Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference between 2007 and 2012. He was a member of the 16th CCP Central Commission for Discipline Inspection. He was a member of the 11th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. Biography Baima was born in Yushu County (now Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture), Qinghai, in April 1946. In August 1960, he was admitted to Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture Normal School, he stayed at the school and taught there after graduation. He got involved in politics in December 1967, when he was appointed deputy director of Chindu County Revolutionary Committee, and joined the Chinese Communist Party in October 1968. He rose to become deputy party secretary of the county in October 1973. He was deputy director of Qinghai Provincial Bureau of Education in June 1976, and held that office until January 1980. In January 1980, he became deputy secretary of the Qinghai Provincial Committee |
of Shenzhen CEC Group (the branch of China Electronics Corporation in Shenzhen) and the first high-rise building after Shenzhen was established. The office building is named after the industry the company occupying it is part of. Throughout the 1980s to the early 1990s, it was a local landmark building, and later a large electronics industry emerged surrounding the building. The | built in 1981 and completed in August the following year. It is the first-generation headquarters building of Shenzhen CEC Group (the branch of China Electronics Corporation in Shenzhen) and the first high-rise building after Shenzhen was established. The office building is named after the industry the company occupying it is part of. Throughout the 1980s to the |
to Poland, he served as a professor of mathematics and astronomy at the . In 1771, he helped establish the Astronomical Observatory of Lwów University, and served as its first Director. When the Jesuit Order was suppressed in 1773, he went to Kraków; becoming a Canon at Wawel Cathedral. On the occasion of the arrival of Stanisław August Poniatowski in 1787, he created a restoration plan for Wawel Castle. Later, he served as Crown Custodian, then as a Senator for the Free City of Kraków. After 1790, he was a clergyman with the . In 1806, the , where he was to preside, was built according to his plans. From 1809 to 1814, he served as Rector at | replacing the old wooden water tanks. These plans were never carried out, due to a lack of funds. Some of his monumental designs were used to create a colonnade in the chancel at the . Two of his writings survive: Architektura obejmująca wszelki gatunek murowania i budowania ("Architecture, covering all kinds of bricklaying and building", 2 Vols. 1812), which addresses the folk architecture tradition; and Rzecz o tanim... sposobie murowania w Krakowie domów na przedmieściach ("A thing about a cheap ... way of building houses in the suburbs in Krakow", 1817), which is still in manuscript. References External links "Ksiądz Sebastian Alojzy |
in Panchathan Record Inn. Music video The music video features Hrithik Roshan and Pooja Hegde dancing for the single. Release The music video was released on 6 July 2016, by T-Series. The lyrical was released on 10 August 2016 and the audio of the song was released on 9 July 2016. The song was made available at iTunes the same day of release and for online streaming at JioSaavn and Gaana on 6 July 2016. Reception Audience response Upon the release of the full video version of the song, it gained lots of appreciation for its music and choreography. A. R. Rahman, who composed the song received lots of praise for his work for the single. Critical reviews Koimoi on reviewing the music of the soundtrack wrote that "Tu Hai makes up for a soothing hear thanks to the vocals of A R Rahman and Sanah Moidutty. It is a slow-paced song with musical arrangements pulled off quite intelligently. There is a sense of calm that this track provides to its listener and also since the film is a period drama, the lyrics are penned in pure Hindi which | sense of calm that this track provides to its listener and also since the film is a period drama, the lyrics are penned in pure Hindi which is quite unique considering we live in the times of 'Pyaar Ki Maa Ki Puja Karni Hai'. Tu Hai will charm you if you have a penchant for Rahman's slow numbers." The Times of India stated that "Tu Hai is a classic Rahman number; it is soft, melodious, touches your heart with a simple tune and has the breeziness of a romantic track. Sanah scores in this minimalistic number, which lets the lyrics take center stage. Filmfare wrote that "Tu hai is a meatier, |
directed by Rama Prashad Samal. Lead roles were acted by Prakruti Mishra and Abhisek Behura. Mihir Das, Aparajita Mohanty, Daitari Panda, and Papu Pom Pom acted in supporting roles. Cast Prakruti Mishra Abhisek Behura Mihir Das Aparajita Mohanty Daitari | Prashad Samal. Lead roles were acted by Prakruti Mishra and Abhisek Behura. Mihir Das, Aparajita Mohanty, Daitari Panda, and Papu Pom Pom acted in supporting roles. Cast Prakruti Mishra Abhisek Behura Mihir Das Aparajita Mohanty Daitari Panda Papu |
1, 2022) was an American attorney. She was the first female attorney | S. Shapiro (September 7, 1928 - February 1, 2022) was an American attorney. She |
Mahbub Islam of The Financial Express praised the cast and the script of the film and wrote, "Vicky Zahed has set the story at the centre of the film, making it the prime focus. A thoroughly analysed script full of intriguing subtitles and a remarkable ending have made the film stand tall in the OTT original films arena". Music All the songs has been composed by Mahmud Hayet Arpon. References External links Redrum on Chorki Chorki original programming Bangladeshi films 2022 Bengali-language films | a 2022 Bangladeshi mystery thriller film written and directed by Vicky Zahed. The film stars Afran Nisho, Mehazabien Chowdhury, Azizul Hakim, Manoj Kumar Pramanik, Sallha Khanam Nadia, and Nasir Uddin Khan. It was released on Chorki on 17 February 2022. Plot Cast Release In 10 February 2022, Chorki drops the trailer of Redrum on social media. The film was premiered on Chorki on 17 February 2022. |
historic building situated in Piazza Cordusio in Milan, Italy. History The building was designed by the Italian architect Luca Beltrami to become the Milan headquarters of the Assicurazioni Generali insurance company. Construction began in 1897 and was completed in 1901. Description The building is the focal point | Assicurazioni Generali insurance company. Construction began in 1897 and was completed in 1901. Description The building is the focal point of Piazza Cordusio, a major square in the centre of Milan. It features a concave façade which accommodates a large niche with mosaics, and an octogonal |
an assistant city attorney for the city of Dallas from 1987 to 1989. She served as a staff attorney with the Maryland Legal Aid Bureau and from 1993 to 2000. Judicial career From March 27, 2000, to December 28, 2007, Eaves was an associate judge of the District Court of Maryland, District 9, Harford County. She has served on the Harford County Circuit Court since 2007, first as an associate judge from December 28, 2007, to January 26, 2015, and | as a staff attorney with the Maryland Legal Aid Bureau and from 1993 to 2000. Judicial career From March 27, 2000, to December 28, 2007, Eaves was an associate judge of the District Court of Maryland, District 9, Harford County. She has served on the Harford County Circuit Court since 2007, first as an associate judge from December 28, 2007, to January 26, 2015, and then as a county administrative judge since January 26, 2015. On February 17, 2022, governor Larry Hogan announced the appointment of Eaves to be a judge of the Maryland Court of Appeals to the seat to be vacated by judge Robert N. McDonald when he reaches mandatory retirement age on |
instrumental "Consciousness (Pt.3)" continues the "Consciousness" suite from their 2013 album Spiritual Migration. Track listing Personnel Persefone Marc Martins: vocals Carlos Lozano: guitars Miguel Espinosa: keyboards, vocals Tony Mestre: bass Sergi Verdeguer: drums Filipe Baldaia: guitars Guest musicians Einar Solberg (Leprous): vocals (track 1) Steffen Kummerer (Obscura): guitars (track 8 part 2) Angel Vivaldi: guitars (track 8 part 2) Merethe Soltvedt (Two | 1) Steffen Kummerer (Obscura): guitars (track 8 part 2) Angel Vivaldi: guitars (track 8 part 2) Merethe Soltvedt (Two Steps from Hell): vocals (tracks 5 and 8 part 2) Production Mixed by David Castillo (Leprous, Soen, Opeth) Mastered by Tony Lindgren (Enslaved, Ihsahn, Sepultura) |
Aided Bethel High School Buddhist Mau Fung Memorial College (佛教茂峰法師紀念中學) Caritas YL Chan Chun Ha Secondary School (明愛元朗陳震夏中學) CCC Fong Yun Wah Secondary School (中華基督教會方潤華中學) CCC Kei Long College (中華基督教會基朗中學) CCC Kei Yuen College (中華基督教會基元中學) CUHKFAA Thomas Cheung Secondary School (香港中文大學校友會聯會張煊昌中學) Cumberland Presbyterian Church Yao Dao Secondary School (金巴崙長老會耀道中學) The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hong Kong Yuen Long Lutheran Secondary School (基督教香港信義會元朗信義中學) Gertrude Simon Lutheran College (路德會西門英才中學) The Hong Kong Management Association K S Lo College (香港管理專業協會羅桂祥中學) Ho Dao College (sponsored by Sik Sik Yuen) (可道中學(嗇色園主辦)) Jockey Club Man Kwan Eduyoung College (賽馬會萬鈞毅智書院) Ju Ching Chu Secondary School (Yuen Long) (裘錦秋中學(元朗)) Poh Tang Pui King Memorial College (博愛醫院鄧佩瓊紀念中學) Pui Shing Catholic Secondary School (天主教培聖中學) Queen Elizabeth School Old Students' Association Secondary School (伊利沙伯中學舊生會中學) Queen Elizabeth School Old Students' Association Tong Kwok Wah Secondary School (伊利沙伯中學舊生會湯國華中學) Shung Tak Catholic English College (天主教崇德英文書院) SKH Bishop Baker Secondary School (聖公會白約翰會督中學) SPHRC Kung Yik She Secondary School (十八鄉鄉事委員會公益社中學) STFA Yung Yau College (順德聯誼總會翁祐中學) Tin Shui Wai Methodist College (天水圍循道衞理中學) TWGH Cy Ma Memorial College (東華三院馬振玉紀念中學) TWGH Kwok Yat Wai College (東華三院郭一葦中學) TWGH Lo Kon Ting Memorial College (東華三院盧幹庭紀念中學) The Yuen Yuen Institute MFBM Nei Ming Chan Lui Chung Tak Memorial College (圓玄學院妙法寺內明陳呂重德紀念中學) YLPMSAA Tang Siu Tong Secondary School (元朗公立中學校友會鄧兆棠中學) Yuen Long Catholic Secondary School (元朗天主教中學) Yuen Long Merchants Association Secondary School (元朗商會中學) Direct Subsidy Scheme Chinese YMCA Secondary School (中華基督教青年會中學) ELCHK Lutheran Academy (基督教香港信義會宏信書院) Heung To Middle School (Tin Shui Wai) (天水圍香島中學) HKFYG Lee Shau Kee College (香港青年協會李兆基書院) Man Kwan Pak Kau College (萬鈞伯裘書院) Private Beacon College (遵理學校) Gertrude Simon Lutheran Evening College (路德會西門英才夜校) Rudolf Steiner Education Foundation Hong Kong Maria College Primary schools Government South Yuen Long Government Primary School (南元朗官立小學) Tin Shui Wai Government Primary School (天水圍官立小學) Yuen Long Government Primary School (元朗官立小學) Aided AD&FD of POHL Leung Sing | Catholic Secondary School (元朗天主教中學) Yuen Long Merchants Association Secondary School (元朗商會中學) Direct Subsidy Scheme Chinese YMCA Secondary School (中華基督教青年會中學) ELCHK Lutheran Academy (基督教香港信義會宏信書院) Heung To Middle School (Tin Shui Wai) (天水圍香島中學) HKFYG Lee Shau Kee College (香港青年協會李兆基書院) Man Kwan Pak Kau College (萬鈞伯裘書院) Private Beacon College (遵理學校) Gertrude Simon Lutheran Evening College (路德會西門英才夜校) Rudolf Steiner Education Foundation Hong Kong Maria College Primary schools Government South Yuen Long Government Primary School (南元朗官立小學) Tin Shui Wai Government Primary School (天水圍官立小學) Yuen Long Government Primary School (元朗官立小學) Aided AD&FD of POHL Leung Sing Tak School (博愛醫院歷屆總理聯誼會梁省德學校) Buddhist Chan Wing Kan Memorial School (佛教陳榮根紀念學校) Buddhist Wing Yan School (佛教榮茵學校) C & M Alliance Chui Chak Lam Memorial School (基督教宣道會徐澤林紀念小學) CCC Chun Kwong Primary School (中華基督教會元朗真光小學) CCC Fong Yun Wah Primary School (中華基督教會方潤華小學) Chinese YMCA Primary School (中華基督教青年會小學) Chiu Yang Por Yen Primary School (潮陽百欣小學) Chiu Yang Primary School of Hong Kong (香港潮陽小學) Christian Alliance S Y Yeh Memorial Primary School (宣道會葉紹蔭紀念小學) Chung Sing School (鐘聲學校) Cumberland Presbyterian Church Yao Dao Primary School (金巴崙長老會耀道小學) Hong Kong and Macau Lutheran Church Wong Chan Sook Ying Memorial School (港澳信義會黃陳淑英紀念學校) HKFYG Lee Shau Kee Primary School (香港青年協會李兆基小學) Ho Ming Primary School SPSD by Sik Sik Yuen (嗇色園主辦可銘學校) Hong Kong Student Aid Society Primary School (香港學生輔助會小學) Kam |
shows Awards and nominations References External links Song Won-seok | References External links Song Won-seok at Starhaus Entertainment 1988 births Living people South Korean |
a general under Louis XV. He served as French ambassador at the courts of Frederick William I of Prussia and Frederick the | as a general under Louis XV. He served as French ambassador at the courts of Frederick William I of Prussia and Frederick the Great. List |
station has one elevated island platform, capable of accommodating eight-car trains, with the station building underneath. The station is staffed. Platforms Adjacent stations History The station was opened on March 15, 2008. Passenger statistics In fiscal 2019, the station was used by an average of 5,201 passengers daily (boarding passengers only). Surrounding area Kintetsu Shuntokumichi Station See also List | West). Lines JR-Shuntokumichi Station is served by the Osaka Higashi Line, and is located 14.9 kilometers from Shin-Osaka Station. Station layout The station has one elevated island platform, capable of accommodating eight-car trains, with the station building underneath. The station is staffed. Platforms Adjacent stations History The station was opened on March 15, |
Indian Telugu-language horror film See also Anveshane, a 1983 Indian Kannada-language film Anweshanam, a 1972 Indian Malayalam-language thriller drama film Anveshanam, a 2020 Indian Malayalam-language thriller drama film Anveshitha, a 1997 Indian | also refer to: Anveshana (novel), a 1976 novel written by S. L. Bhyrappa Anveshana (2002 film), a 2002 Indian Telugu-language horror film See also Anveshane, a 1983 Indian Kannada-language film Anweshanam, a |
was established, with Zhaxi Wangqug as the founding governor. In September 1954, he was unanimously chosen as a delegate to the 1st National People's Congress. In December of that same year, he rose to become vice governor of Qinghai. In May 1958, he was labeled as one of the "Two Local Protectionist Figures" with Feng Baiju and brought to be persecuted. In 1964, he was appointed head of Political and Legal Department of the Central People's Commission, but having held the position for only two years. In 1966, the Cultural Revolution broke out, Zhaxi Wangqug was denounced as a "capitalist roader" and "local nationalism", and was sent to the May Seventh Cadre Schools to do farm works in Jilin and Hubei provinces. In 1972, under the help of Premier Zhou Enlai, he returned to Beijing and was reinstated. After the Cultural Revolution in 1979, he was appointed vice governor and deputy party secretary of Qinghai. In September 1979, he was appointed chairman of the Qinghai Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, he remained in that position until November 1981, when he took office as chairman of Qinghai People's Congress. On 16 October 2003, he died from an illness in Beijing, at the age of 90. References 1913 births 2003 deaths People from Xinlong County Tibetan politicians Minzu University of China alumni People's Republic of China politicians from Qinghai Chinese Communist Party politicians from Qinghai | Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference from 1979 to 1981 and chairman of Qinghai People's Congress from 1981 to 1983. He was a representative of the 8th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party. He was delegates to the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th National People's Congresses. He was members of the 6th and 7th Standing Committees of the National People's Congress. He was members of the 4th and 5th National Committees of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. Biography Zhaxi Wangqug was born into a herdsman family in Zhanhua County (now Xinlong County), Xikang, on 28 July 1913. In early 1935, the set up the Tibetan People's Republic in Garzê County. Zhaxi Wangqug became company commander of a troop of cavalry. On 2 July 1936, the arrived in Garzê County and successfully met with the Fourth Front Army. Soon, the Fourth Front Army went north first, and Zhaxi Wangqug stayed to prepare food and other materials for the Second Front Army. In August 1936, he took part in the Long March under He Long, becoming the only Tibetan |
suburb of San Francisco and San Jose, California. Cupertino may also refer | error in spell checkers Joseph of Cupertino (1603-1663), Italian Catholic saint Stevens Creek (California), formerly Cupertino Creek See |
was first presented in 2021 Festival to replace the Best Actor and Best Actress. Winners References External | outstanding performance in a leading role and chosen by the jury from the films in main competition at the festival. It was first presented in 2021 Festival to replace the Best |
Yponomeutidae Taxa named by Edward Meyrick Moths of New Zealand Endemic fauna of New | Kessleria copidota is a moth of the family Yponomeutidae. It is endemic |
Puzzles are handmade wooden jigsaw puzzles made in New York. History It was started by Francis Ware and John Henriques in 1932. After the death of Henriques and retirement of Ware, Gallagher became interested in par puzzles, and in | retirement of Ware, Gallagher became interested in par puzzles, and in the 1970s relocated it to Massapequa. Gallagher designed between 100 and 150 puzzles each year. The name par is related to golf. So, the par time is the amount of |
Massachusetts for Boston with 48 passengers on board. The train was traveling on the Hoosac Tunnel line, which was owned and maintained by the state and operated by the Fitchburg Railroad. Shortly before 6 pm, the outer rail and a portion of the track between the Bardwell's Ferry and West Deerfield stations gave way due to a washout. The locomotive was wrecked and cars were thrown 100 feet down an embankment. Three of the cars caught fire almost immediately. All of the cars except for the Troy and Boston coach were destroyed. 47 of the 48 passengers were injured and 11 were killed instantly or died from their injuries. A special train containing physicians, reporters, and others who could assist was dispatched from Greenfield, Massachusetts. The steepness of the embankment made rendering aid very difficult. The injured were transported to Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts and the deceased to Greenfield. Investigation The Massachusetts Railroad Commission found that the slide in the | 6 pm, the outer rail and a portion of the track between the Bardwell's Ferry and West Deerfield stations gave way due to a washout. The locomotive was wrecked and cars were thrown 100 feet down an embankment. Three of the cars caught fire almost immediately. All of the cars except for the Troy and Boston coach were destroyed. 47 of the 48 passengers were injured and 11 were killed instantly or died from their injuries. A special train containing physicians, reporters, and others who could assist was dispatched from Greenfield, Massachusetts. The steepness of the embankment made rendering aid very difficult. The injured were |
by their owners. Among the best known inhabitants of the town were sisters Úrsula and Cristina Calderón, the last native speakers of the Yaghan language. The Yaghans residing in Villa Ukika owns a large part of the buildings on the site, as well as surrounding land. Services In Villa Ukika there is the "Centro de Artesanía Yagán Kipa-Ákar" — "Casa de la Mujer" in the Yaghan language, built between 2003 and 2004 and in which Yaghan handicrafts are exhibited and sold, consisting of basketry made reeds and scale replicas of the canoes used to navigate the southern channels. Gastronomy is also presented, consisting mainly of marine | the end of the 1990s in Villa Ukika, there were 14 houses, most of them built in wood and brass and occupied by their owners. Among the best known inhabitants of the town were sisters Úrsula and Cristina Calderón, the last native speakers of the Yaghan language. The Yaghans residing in Villa Ukika owns a large part of the buildings on the site, as well as surrounding land. Services In Villa Ukika there is the "Centro de Artesanía Yagán Kipa-Ákar" — "Casa de la |
Manuel Garcia References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. Solomon, Aubrey. The Fox Film Corporation, 1915-1935: A History and Filmography. McFarland, 2011. | Sachet Sid Jordan as Manuel Garcia References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. Solomon, Aubrey. The Fox Film Corporation, 1915-1935: A History and Filmography. McFarland, 2011. |
Comedy Program or Series at the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020 for the episode "Humanity Is in an Awkward Stage". She was previously a nominee in the same category at the 5th Canadian Screen Awards in 2017 for Baroness von Sketch Show ("Last Year You Weren't Forty") and at the 6th Canadian Screen Awards in | as a director of Baroness von Sketch Show, for which she won a Canadian Screen Award for Best Direction in a Variety or Sketch Comedy Program or Series at the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020 for the episode "Humanity Is in an Awkward Stage". She was previously a nominee in the same category at the 5th Canadian Screen Awards in 2017 for Baroness von Sketch Show ("Last Year |
of New Zealand Endemic fauna of New Zealand | 1927 Moths of New Zealand Endemic fauna of New Zealand Taxa named by Edward |
award presented at the Berlin International Film Festival for an outstanding performance in a supporting role and chosen | main competition at the festival. It was first presented in 2021 Festival to replace the Best Actor and Best Actress. Winners References External links Berlinale |
College (深圳鹏城技师学院), previously Shenzhen Second Senior Technical School (深圳市技工学校) (深圳科学高中) Shenzhen Primary School (深圳小学) Shenzhen Second Foreign Languages School (深圳第二外国语学校) (深圳市第二高级中学) Shenzhen Senior High School Shenzhen Sports School (深圳体育运动学校) Shenzhen Yuanping Special Education School (深圳元平特殊教育学校) Shenzhen Yuxin School (深圳市育新学校), previously known as the Shenzhen Work-Study School List of district-operated schools Please consult the "By district" section above and select the relevant district. List of international schools International schools in the city designated as for children of foreign workers include: Shenzhen American International School Shekou | District, Shenzhen List of schools in Luohu District List of schools in Nanshan District, Shenzhen List of schools in Pingshan District, Shenzhen List of schools in Yantian District Dapeng New District schools are listed in that article. By type List of municipal schools (深圳大学师范学院附属中学) - Affiliated with Shenzhen University The First Vocational Technical School of Shenzhen (深圳市第一职业技术学校) (深圳市第二实验学校) Shenzhen No. 2 Vocational School of Technology (深圳市第二职业技术学校) (深圳市第三高级中学) Shenzhen No. 7 Senior High School (深圳市第七高级中学) (深圳艺术学校) Shenzhen Experimental School Shenzhen Foreign Languages School (深圳技师学院) Shenzhen Middle School Shenzhen Pengcheng Technical College (深圳鹏城技师学院), previously Shenzhen Second Senior Technical School (深圳市技工学校) (深圳科学高中) Shenzhen Primary School (深圳小学) Shenzhen Second Foreign Languages School (深圳第二外国语学校) (深圳市第二高级中学) Shenzhen Senior High School Shenzhen Sports School (深圳体育运动学校) Shenzhen Yuanping Special Education School (深圳元平特殊教育学校) Shenzhen Yuxin School (深圳市育新学校), previously known as the Shenzhen Work-Study School List of district-operated |
from the peasantry. On October 18, 1961, the U.S. Government sent Taylor and Rostow, two members of the National Security Council, to lead a delegation of military and civilian experts to South Vietnam to study and reassess the specific situation and draw conclusions on the spot and propose countermeasures. The delegation proposed three options of action for the U.S. as follows: Bringing into South Vietnam three divisions of American troops to defeat the Viet Cong. Symbolize some American combat troops "for the purpose of establishing the U.S. presence in South Vietnam" to lift the morale of the army and the Saigon government, which is falling sharply, and also to create favorable conditions for reinforcement of American troops when needed. Increase aid, weapons, war equipment and step up training for Saigon's armed forces to improve its combat power. On November 3, 1961, Taylor's delegation sent to Washington the above report, which recommended a series of urgent measures to save the situation: Send administrative advisors to join the Saigon government apparatus to take necessary measures to improve the military and political intelligence network in this government and army. Open a large investigation in provinces throughout the South to quantify social, political, economic, intelligence, military, psychological factors... related to "counter-insurgency work" to provide more basis for more effective measures. Increase aid, weapons, equipment and training for security and militia forces so that this force can replace regular units on "ground" tasks (land preservation), creating favorable conditions for regular units to step up offensive and mobile operations. Assist the Saigon government in monitoring and controlling the seas and inland waterways by providing the necessary advisors, operators, and facilities for this mission. Reorganized and increased the staffing of the U.S. military aid advisory mission. Bringing into South Vietnam a special military force of 6,000 to 8,000 US troops to create a military presence, support military operations and, when needed, launch operations with offensive nature. In addition, the task force also serves as "as a front-line element of US forces that would be brought in if the Pacific Commander-in-Chief or SEATO emergency plans were used". Increase aid to properly support the "expanded counter-insurgency" program. In addition to the above general measures, the Taylor delegation also proposed a "Limited Participation Program" of the United States in the military field; sending to South Vietnam senior advisers to participate in government agencies and key ministries; establish a joint military inspection committee from the central government down to the military zones and provinces; substantially increase U.S. training personnel at all levels and in all military, administrative, economic, cultural, and social fields; deploying to South Vietnam engineering, logistics, and helicopter units within the framework of the U.S. military special forces that were previously proposed; pass. add US special forces teams to join Saigon special forces to strengthen the border area; stepped up covert offensive operations in North Vietnam and Laos, including air raids, In order to implement the "Limited Participation Program", the Taylor delegation said that there should be a change in the mental and organizational status of the Military Aid Advisory Mission in South Vietnam. "This mission needs to be transformed from an advisory organization into something akin to - though not quite - an operational command post in a war zone." Moreover, in order to win, "the United States must become a limited participant in the war, on the one hand, must avoid the formalities and rituals of advising; on the other hand, it must avoid waging war on its own." Deployment The Army of the Republic of Vietnam developed | officially ended when U.S. Marines landed in Da Nang in March 1965 to directly engage in combat in South Vietnam. Formation In the 1960s, the United States implemented a policy of "flexibly reacting", not going to war with the Soviet Union and the socialist system, but using wars below the normal level to deal with the tendency to demand independence with different colors and communist identity in newly independent countries. There was a new conception that was taking shape in the United States at the time, which was to see South Vietnam as the focal point of all American interests in Southeast Asia. Thus in 1961, American research delegations flocked to South Vietnam: U.S. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson's delegation arrived in Saigon in May 1961, the delegation of economist Dr. Eugene Staley of the Stanford Research Institute arrived in Saigon in June 1961, the delegation of Maxwell D. Taylor and Walt Whitman Rostow of the U.S. Department of Defense to South Vietnam in October 1961. The South Vietnamese outcome would be where the typical war-type pilot of the "Flexible Response" global strategy was born. The Staley–Taylor Plan published in May 1961 consisted of three phases: Phase 1 was implemented from mid–1961, the main goal was to pacify the South by means of strategic hamlets. Phase 2 was implemented from the beginning of 1963, restored the economy, strengthened the army, and completed the pacification. Phase 3 was implemented until the end of 1965, developing the economy, stabilizing the South and ending the war. The opening and decisive plan is in Phase 1 with two strategic measures: Quickly increase the force and combat ability of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam; it was the backbone of the war according to the formula: ARVN + American weapons and equipment + American advisers. Implement the strategic hamlet national policy. That is both a basic goal, a strategic measure, and an immediate and long-term plan to win the war in Vietnam. The content of the plan is to pacify the situation in the South after the co-initiation event within 18 months. The Army of the Republic of Vietnam, with the help of American military advisers, weapons aid, and military firepower will assume the role of controlling South Vietnam. Strategic hamlets were set up to manage the people, prevent them from being in contact with the NLF, thereby isolating the Liberation Army support from the peasantry. On October 18, 1961, the U.S. Government sent Taylor and Rostow, two members of the National Security Council, to lead a delegation of military and civilian experts to South Vietnam to study and reassess the specific situation and draw conclusions on the spot and propose countermeasures. The delegation proposed three options of action for the U.S. as follows: Bringing into South Vietnam three divisions of American troops to defeat the Viet Cong. Symbolize some American combat troops "for the purpose of establishing the U.S. presence in South Vietnam" to lift the morale of the army and the Saigon government, which is falling sharply, and also to create favorable conditions for reinforcement of American troops when needed. Increase aid, weapons, war equipment and step up training for Saigon's armed forces to improve its combat power. On November 3, 1961, Taylor's delegation sent to Washington the above report, which recommended a series of urgent measures to save the situation: Send administrative advisors to join the Saigon government apparatus to take necessary measures to improve the military and political intelligence network in this government and army. Open a large investigation in provinces throughout the South to quantify social, political, economic, intelligence, military, psychological factors... related to "counter-insurgency work" to provide more basis for more effective measures. Increase aid, weapons, equipment and training for security and militia forces so that this force can replace regular units on "ground" tasks (land preservation), creating favorable conditions for regular units to step up offensive and mobile operations. Assist the Saigon government in monitoring and controlling the seas and inland waterways by providing the necessary advisors, operators, and facilities for this mission. Reorganized and increased the staffing of the U.S. military aid advisory mission. Bringing |
jump 20 June Shot put 19 June Discus throw 20 June Hammer throw 19 June Javelin throw 20 June Women's results 100 metres 19 JuneWind: -1.9 m/s 200 metres 20 JuneWind: +0.6 m/s 400 metres 19 June 800 metres 19 June 1500 metres 20 June 3000 metres 19 June 5000 metres 20 June 100 metres hurdles 20 JuneWind: -1.0 m/s 400 metres hurdles 19 June 3000 metres steeplechase 20 June 4 × 100 metres relay 19 June 4 × 400 metres relay 20 June High jump 20 June Pole vault 19 June Long | metres 19 JuneWind: -3.2 m/s 200 metres 20 JuneWind: 0.0 m/s 400 metres 19 June 800 metres 20 June 1500 metres 19 June 3000 metres 20 June 5000 metres 19 June 110 metres hurdles 20 JuneWind: -1.0 m/s 400 metres hurdles 19 June 3000 metres steeplechase 20 June 4 × 100 metres relay 19 June 4 × 400 metres relay 20 June High jump 19 June Pole vault 20 June Long jump 19 June Triple jump 20 |
Brentwood Writers' Circle, Billericay Arts Group as well as the Romanic Novelist Association. Bibliography Lord, Elizabeth (1981). Dark Summer Dawn Lord, Elizabeth (1994). Stolen Years Lord, Elizabeth (1995). The Angry Heart Lord, Elizabeth (1996). A Better Life Lord, Elizabeth (1997). The Turning Tides Lord, Elizabeth (1998). For All the Bright Promise Lord, Elizabeth (1999). The Bowmaker Girls Lord, Elizabeth (2000). Mile End Girl Lord, Elizabeth (2001). Brenda's Place Lord, Elizabeth (2001). Butterfly Summers Lord, Elizabeth. Shadow's of Honour Lord, Elizabeth (2002). From Bow to Bond Street Lord, Elizabeth (2002). Autumn Skies Lord, Elizabeth (2002). Shadow of the Protector Lord, Elizabeth (2002). Fortunes Daughter Lord, Elizabeth (2004). Company of Rebels Lord, Elizabeth (2004). The Flower Girl Lord, Elizabeth (2006). Give Me Tomorrow Lord, Elizabeth (2006). To Cast a Stone Lord, Elizabeth (2006). Winter Wine Lord, Elizabeth (2007). A Secret Inheritance Lord, | 1928) was a British writer. Early life and family Maggie was born in 1928 in London, England as Ivy Lord. From an early age she was interested in writing and wrote her first play at the age of nine. In 1954, her first husband died due to a tragic accident at work. She re-married after her husband’s death and started a nursery and garden centre. Career Her writing career started when she wrote an article for Weekend magazine about a robbery that happened when she was at home with her daughter. In the 1970s, she started writing romantic stories for various magazines. In 1981, she published her first novel, Dark Summer Dawn. Her novel, Company of Rebels, published in 2004, has sold in the United Kingdom and the United States. In 2006, her another novel, Give Me Tomorrow, was published. Later, Publisher's Weekly reviewed the novel. In 2013, her novel, The Soldier's Bride, was published which was later reviewed by Burnley Express. In 2014, her novel, Call Nurse Jenny, was published. The novel was reviewed by Blackpool Gazette. During her writing career, she was a member of Brentwood Writers' Circle, Billericay Arts Group as well as the Romanic Novelist Association. Bibliography Lord, Elizabeth (1981). Dark Summer Dawn Lord, Elizabeth (1994). Stolen Years Lord, Elizabeth (1995). The Angry Heart Lord, Elizabeth (1996). A Better Life Lord, Elizabeth (1997). |
of sedge that is native to parts of Central America and Mexico. See also | References chorisanthus Plants described in 1908 Flora of Nicaragua Flora of Panama |
in Baku. He started playing sports in Baku as a child. Career In 2004, Cui became the champion of Azerbaijan in jitsu. He repeated this success in 2005, 2006 and 2010. In 2009 he became the champion of Azerbaijan in free fighting. He then won an international tournament in Tbilissi (Georgia). In 2011, he once again became the champion of Azerbaijan in free fighting. In the same year he went to the World Cup in pankration and won a bronze medal. In 2012, he became the champion of Azerbaijan in | child. Career In 2004, Cui became the champion of Azerbaijan in jitsu. He repeated this success in 2005, 2006 and 2010. In 2009 he became the champion of Azerbaijan in free fighting. He then won an international tournament in Tbilissi (Georgia). In 2011, he once again became the champion of Azerbaijan in free fighting. In the same year he went to the World Cup in pankration and won a bronze medal. In 2012, he became the champion of Azerbaijan in Kung Fu Sanda. It repeats its success in |
School in 1998, where he was senior editor of the Yale Law Journal. Legal career Fader began his legal career serving as a law clerk for judge Leonie M. Brinkema of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia from 1998 to 1999. He served as a trial attorney with the United States Department of Justice from 1999 to 2002. From 2002 to 2006, he was an associate with K&L Gates, turning partner in 2006 and remaining so until 2010. From 2010 to 2017, he served in the office of the Maryland Attorney General; serving as an assistant attorney general from 2010 to 2012, deputy chief of the civil litigation division from 2012 to 2017 and chief of the civil litigation division in 2017. Judicial career On October 6, 2017, governor Larry Hogan announced the appointment of Fader to serve as a judge of the Maryland Court of Special Appeals. His term began on November 1, 2017. On November 20, 2018, Governor Hogan announced his designation | 1999. He served as a trial attorney with the United States Department of Justice from 1999 to 2002. From 2002 to 2006, he was an associate with K&L Gates, turning partner in 2006 and remaining so until 2010. From 2010 to 2017, he served in the office of the Maryland Attorney General; serving as an assistant attorney general from 2010 to 2012, deputy chief of the civil litigation division from 2012 to 2017 and chief of the civil litigation division in 2017. Judicial career On October 6, 2017, governor Larry Hogan announced the appointment of Fader to serve as a judge of the Maryland Court of Special Appeals. His term began on November 1, 2017. On November 20, 2018, Governor Hogan announced his designation of Fader as chief judge; his term as chief |
death unknown Welsh footballers Association football defenders English Football League players Wrexham A.F.C. players Manchester Central F.C. players Fulham F.C. players Derry City F.C. players Belfast Celtic F.C. players Connah's Quay & Shotton F.C. players Colwyn Bay F.C. players Milford United | unknown Welsh footballers Association football defenders English Football League players Wrexham A.F.C. players Manchester Central F.C. players Fulham F.C. players Derry City F.C. players |
1956. He was also a Fulbright scholar and studied at the University of Paris. He joined Milbank Tweed upon graduating from law school and opened the firm's first Japanese office in Tokyo in 1977, which led to protests from the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, resulting in a freeze on the establishment of foreign law offices in Japan. However, his trailblazing effort subsequently led to the entry of other foreign law firms. In 1986, he joined Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and headed its international practice, opening its practice in Japan. He became of counsel to the firm in 2001. Shapiro was a director of Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi Foundation in New York City, and served as a past president of the Isamu Noguchi Foundation. He also served as president of the Japan Society from 1970 to 1977. He is the author of Edokko: Growing Up a Foreigner in Wartime Japan, an autobiography of his childhood. He was also the author of The Soviet Legal System, a textbook on Soviet law, co-written with Columbia law professor John N. | first cellist of the Frankfurter Opern- und Museumsorchester, and moved to Japan, where he pioneered the establishment of Western classical music. His mother was a concert pianist who met and married the elder Shapiro in Berlin, before leaving for Harbin, China, and Japan. He is also a nephew of concert pianist Maxim Shpairo and Russian-French philosopher Vladimir Lossky. Shapiro grew up in the Japanese-occupied Harbin and Yokohama during World War II. He studied at Saint Joseph College, Yokohama but his studies were interrupted by the war. He moved to the United States in 1945, after then-marine officer John C. Munn hired him as translator and was made his guardian. He attended Punahou School in Honolulu, graduating from Columbia College in 1954, and Columbia Law School in 1956. He was also a Fulbright scholar and studied at the University of Paris. He joined Milbank Tweed upon graduating from law school and opened the firm's first Japanese office in Tokyo in 1977, which led to protests from the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, resulting in a freeze on the establishment of foreign law offices in Japan. However, his trailblazing effort subsequently led to the entry of other foreign law firms. In 1986, he joined Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and headed its international practice, opening its practice in Japan. He became of counsel to the firm in 2001. Shapiro was a director of Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi Foundation in New |
(Lost election).(co-endorsements) 2018 2018 Kansas gubernatorial election Endorsed Kris Kobach for the General election (Lost election). 2017 2017 United States Senate special election in Alabama Endorsed Luther Strange (Failed to get past primary). Later Endorsed Roy Moore. 2016 International Brazil In 2021, Trump give his endorsement to Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro for the 2022 Brazilian general election. Hungary In January 2022, Trump give his endorsement to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán for the 2022 Hungarian parliamentary election. Israel In 2013, Trump give his endorsement to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the 2013 Israeli legislative election. In 2019, Trump give his endorsement to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the April 2019 Israeli legislative election. UK In 2016, Trump give his endorsement to the UK to Leave the EU for the 2016 United | McGeachin. 2022 South Dakota gubernatorial election Endorsed Governor Kristi Noem. 2022 South Carolina gubernatorial election Endorsed Governor Henry McMaster. 2022 United States Senate election in Alaska Endorsed Kelly Tshibaka. 2022 United States Senate election in Florida Endorsed Senator Marco Rubio. 2022 United States Senate election in Louisiana Endorsed Senator John Kennedy. 2022 United States Senate election in Alabama Endorsed Mo Brooks. 2022 United States Senate election in Arkansas Endorsed Senator John Boozman. 2022 Kansas gubernatorial election Endorsed Derek Schmidt. 2020 2019 2019 Louisiana gubernatorial election Endorsed Ralph Abraham and Eddie Rispone (Lost election).(co-endorsements) 2018 2018 Kansas gubernatorial election Endorsed Kris Kobach for the General election (Lost election). 2017 2017 United States Senate special election in Alabama Endorsed Luther Strange (Failed to get past primary). Later Endorsed Roy Moore. 2016 International Brazil In 2021, Trump give his |
Bibliography External links Banedanmark – government agency responsible for maintenance and traffic control of most of the Danish railway network DSB – largest Danish train operating company Danske Jernbaner – website with information on railway history in Denmark Buildings and structures in the Central Denmark Region Railway stations opened in 1868 Railway stations closed in 1974 Railway stations opened in 2006 Railway stations in | company DSB. History Hedensted station was opened on 3 October 1868 with the opening of the Fredericia-Aarhus railway line from Fredericia to Aarhus. It was closed on 26 May 1974, but the station reopened on 8 January 2006. Operations The train services are operated by the national railway company DSB. The station offers regional train services to Aarhus and Fredericia. References Citations Bibliography External links Banedanmark – government agency responsible for maintenance and traffic control of most of the Danish railway network DSB – largest Danish train |
Shahnez Boushaki (born 22 October 1985) is an Algerian basketball player who plays for GS Pétroliers and Algeria. Club career Boushaki played eight seasons for MC Alger since 2002, and red-shirted her first season there. She started her professional career with the GS Pétroliers of the Algerian Women's Basketball Cup in 2010. Boushaki won the 2015 Algerian Women's Basketball Cup with her team GS Pétroliers who defeated their rivals OC Alger in the final match with a 73–55 score. She has participated with her GS Pétroliers team in several basketball competitions within the framework of the Arab Club Basketball Championship, namely: 2014 Arab Women's Club Basketball Championship in Egypt 2016 Arab | Algeria. Club career Boushaki played eight seasons for MC Alger since 2002, and red-shirted her first season there. She started her professional career with the GS Pétroliers of the Algerian Women's Basketball Cup in 2010. Boushaki won the 2015 Algerian Women's Basketball Cup with her team GS Pétroliers who defeated their rivals OC Alger in the final match with a 73–55 score. She has participated with her GS Pétroliers team in several basketball competitions within the framework of the Arab Club Basketball Championship, namely: 2014 Arab Women's Club Basketball Championship in Egypt 2016 Arab Women's Club Basketball Championship 3x3 in |
fish is named in honor of German aquarist Johann Paul Arnold (1869-1952), who donated the type specimens to the Zoological Museum of Berlin. References Jégu, M., 2003. Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). p. 182-196. In R.E. Reis, S.O. Kullander and C.J. Ferraris, | bites to humans. Etymology The fish is named in honor of German aquarist Johann Paul Arnold (1869-1952), who donated the type specimens to the Zoological Museum of Berlin. References Jégu, M., 2003. Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). p. 182-196. In R.E. Reis, S.O. Kullander and C.J. Ferraris, Jr. (eds.) Checklist |
2022 Winter Olympics. Career During the 2019 World Junior Speed Skating Championships, he became first Austrian male skater to win a World Junior | speed skater who competed at the 2022 Winter Olympics. Career During the 2019 World Junior Speed Skating Championships, he |
(d. 2009). April 20: Aurora Miranda, Brazilian singer and actress (sang and danced with Donald Duck and José Carioca in The Three Caballeros), (d. 2005). May May 1: Art Stevens, American animator (Walt Disney Company) and director (The Rescuers, The Fox and the Hound), (d. 2007). May 5: Ben Wright, British actor (voice of Roger Radcliffe in 101 Dalmatians, Rama in The Jungle Book, and Grimsby in The Little Mermaid), (d. 1989). May 6: Orson Welles, American theatre director, film director, actor and voice actor (narrator and voice of Nag and Chuchundra in Rikki-Tikki-Tavi, narrator in Bugs Bunny: Superstar, voice of Unicron in The Transformers: The Movie), (d. 1985). May 12: Tony Strobl, American animator and comics artist (Walt Disney Company, scriptwriter for Duck Tales), (d. 1991). May 22: Raymond Leblanc, Belgian comics publisher, animated film producer (founder of Belvision) and animated film director (Tintin and the Lake of Sharks), (d. 2008). Torsten Bjarre, Swedish animator and comics artist, (d. 2001). May 26: Sam Edwards, American actor (voice of young Bambi in Bambi, voice of Rod Rocket in Rod Rocket), (d. 2004). June June 2: Walter Tetley, American actor (voice of Felix the Cat, Andy Panda, Sherman in The Peabody segments of The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Friends), (d. 1975). June 4: John N. Carey, American animator and comics artist (Warner Bros. Cartoons), (d. 1987). June 19: Pat Buttram, American voice actor (voice of Napoleon in The Aristocats, the Sheriff of Nottingham in Robin Hood, Luke the Muskrat in The Rescuers, Chief the Dog in The Fox and the Hound, Cactus Jake in Garfield and Friends), (d. 1994). August August 16: Gloria Blondell, American actress (second voice of Daisy Duck in several Donald Duck cartoons), (d. 1986). August 22: Te Wei, Chinese comics artist and animator (The Proud General), (d. 2010). September September 11: Carl Fallberg, Writer and cartoonist (Walt Disney Animation Studios, Hanna-Barbera, Warner Bros Cartoons), (d. 1996). October October 24: Bob Kane, American comic book writer, animator and artist (co-creator of Batman, Cool McCool, and Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse), (d. 1998). October 28: Dody Goodman, American actress (voice of Miss | February - Colonel Heeza Liar In The Haunted Castle (United States) The Police Dog No. 2 (United States) 20 March - Colonel Heeza Liar Runs The Blockade (United States) 27 March - The Police Dog No. 3 (United States) 3 April - Colonel Heeza Liar And The Torpedo (United States) 10 April - Colonel Heeza Liar And The Zeppelin (United States) 1 May - The Police Dog No. 4 (United States) 8 May - Colonel Heeza Liar Signs The Pledge (United States) 13 May - Colonel Heeza Liar In The Trenches (United States) 16 May - Colonel Heeza Liar at The Front (United States) 22 May - Colonel Heeza Liar, Aviator (United States) 5 June - Colonel Heeza Liar Invents A New King Of Shell (United States) 12 June - The Police Dog No. 5 (United States) 10 July - Colonel Heeza Liar, Dog Fancier (United States) 24 July - The Police Dog Gets Piffles In Bad (United States) 31 July - Colonel Heeza Liar Foils The Enemy (United States) 21 August - Colonel Heeza Liar, War Dog (United States) 4 September - Colonel Heeza Liar at The Bat (United States) 19 September - Pool Sharks (United States) 25 September - The Police Dog to the Rescue (United States) 12 October - Down on the Phoney Farm (United States) 28 December - Colonel Heeza Liar, Nature Faker (United States) Births January January 29: Bill Peet, American children's illustrator, writer and animator (Walt Disney Company), (d. 2002). February February 2: Don Tobin, American animator and comics artist (Walt Disney Animation Studios), (d. 1995). February 19: Dick Emery, British comedian and actor (voice of Jeremy Hillary Boob, the Mayor of Pepperland and Max the Blue Meanie in Yellow Submarine), (d. 1983). February 28: Zero Mostel, American actor (voice of Kehaar in Watership Down), (d. 1977). March March 17: Ben Washam, American animator (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Jay Ward), (d. 1984). April April 16: Joan Alexander, |
is a species of acoel found in New | New Caledonia. References Fauna of New |
Shield rivers. It and can grow to a length of . References Jégu, M., 2003. Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). p. 182-196. In R.E. Reis, S.O. Kullander and C.J. Ferraris, Jr. (eds.) Checklist of the Freshwater Fishes of South and Central America. Porto Alegre: EDIPUCRS, | 182-196. In R.E. Reis, S.O. Kullander and C.J. Ferraris, Jr. (eds.) Checklist of the Freshwater Fishes of South and Central America. Porto Alegre: EDIPUCRS, Brasil. Serrasalmidae Fish of the Amazon basin Taxa named by Johannes Peter Müller Taxa named by Franz |
Last Alarm (sculpture), public art work by Robert Daus | Alarm (1926 film), American silent drama film The Last Alarm (1940 film), |
has been exhibited in Japan, Taiwan, China, France, Germany, and USA. Art Style Kimura frequently depicts the motif of ikemen (good-looking men) and notes her inspiration from "Johnny's boys", a male entertainment and talent agency famous in Japan. Though her backgrounds and Nihonga style appear quite conservative and hearken back to Muromachi Period works, her modern human subjects and inversion of the male-gaze from Bijin-ga demonstrate her contemporary influences. She is also inspired by stained glass of Christian art, which she studied before seriously pursuing painting from 2003. In an essay, Kimura compares the black sumi ink outlines of Nihonga to the thick linework in stained glass windows. Exhibitions Solo Exhibitions 2007 “Prince Come True” GalleryES / Produced by MIZUMA ACTION, Tokyo, Japan 2008 “Prince Come True” The Butchart International Contemporary Art Space, Taipei, Taiwan 2009 “Born to be WILD” Mizuma and One Gallery , Beijing, China 2009 “Born to be WILD” The Butchart International Contemporary Art Space, Taipai, Taiwan 2010 “The Date for Marriage Hunting ★ SUGOROKU” KIDO press, Tokyo, Japan 2011 “PARADISE” Mizuma Action, Tokyo, Japan 2012 “LA FASCINATION DES BEAUX HOMMES” Galerie Vanessa Rau, Paris, France 2013 “MA PETITE AVANTURE – Where is my Prince?” KANAZAWA ART GUMMI, Kanazawa, Japan 2014 “Be your animals” TORAUMARIS SPACE, Tokyo, Japan 2015 “Beaute Animale de L'Hmme” Galerie Vanessa Rau, Paris, France. 2016 “IkemenMärchen” Artcomplex Center of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. 2018 “Tenderheartedness” Kyoto-ba, Kyoto, Japan 2021 Solo show at DUB GALLERY AKIHABARA, Tokyo, Japan Group Exhibitions 2010 “The 6th Chinese Character Festival. Making Waves Contemporary Art Exhibition” National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan. 2010 “GOLD EXPERIENCE: Contemporary Painting | “LA FASCINATION DES BEAUX HOMMES” Galerie Vanessa Rau, Paris, France 2013 “MA PETITE AVANTURE – Where is my Prince?” KANAZAWA ART GUMMI, Kanazawa, Japan 2014 “Be your animals” TORAUMARIS SPACE, Tokyo, Japan 2015 “Beaute Animale de L'Hmme” Galerie Vanessa Rau, Paris, France. 2016 “IkemenMärchen” Artcomplex Center of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. 2018 “Tenderheartedness” Kyoto-ba, Kyoto, Japan 2021 Solo show at DUB GALLERY AKIHABARA, Tokyo, Japan Group Exhibitions 2010 “The 6th Chinese Character Festival. Making Waves Contemporary Art Exhibition” National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan. 2010 “GOLD EXPERIENCE: Contemporary Painting with Gold Leaf from Korea and Japan ”HYUN GALLERY Seoul, Korea. 2010 “ELe Japon Vintage et Contemporian ”Galerie Vanessa Rau, Paris, France. 2011 “Gekitotsu -ten ”unseal contemporary, Tokyo, Japan. 2011 “Kan-Hikari Art Expo” Jijo Castle, Kyoto, Japan. 2012 “Gold Experience 2: – Homage to the Golden Tiger fish,” Satellite Gallery of Aichi Prefectural University of Fine Arts and Music, Nagoya Japan 2013 “Tainai-meguri & Miyage of GAZOKU” The Kyoto traditional craft Museum , Kyoto Japan 2013 “Soluble Fish Continued Realities s” Gallery Fleur of Kyoto SEIKA University of Fine Arts, Kyoto Japan 2013 “KIZUNA – emerging women artists from Japan” MICHEKO GALERIE, Munich Germany 2013“ Tokyo Miyage of GAZOKU ”Book gallery Popotam, Tokyo Japan 2013” View of the movie world of MITANI Kouki by TANEDA Yohei “The Ueno Royal Museum Tokyo Japan 2014 “Koganecho Bazzar 2014” “Yokohama, Japan. 2014 “Impacts! Japan Art Festival” Zane Bennet Contemporary Art Santa-fe, USA 2014 “ZAUBERBOX” MICHEKO GALERIE, Munich Germany 2015 “for humans” JIRO MIURA GALLERY, Tokyo, Japan. 2016-17 “IMAYŌ: JAPAN'S NEW TRADITIONISTS” The Art Gallery at the |
three judges scoring the fight 100–90 for him. Crowely's sole fight of 2020 came against Josh Torres on 6 September 2020, at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, on the undercard of the Yordenis Ugas and Abel Ramos WBA World welterweight title bout. It was his first fight in United States since 14 May 2016. Crowely won the fight by a unanimous decision, with all three judges awarding him a 100–90 scorecard. Crowley was expected to face the #1 ranked IBF welterweight contender Kudratillo Abdukakhorov on 10 April 2021, as a replacement for Javier Flores, who was forced to withdraw from the bout after a positive COVID-19 test. The fight would fail to pan out however, as the two camps were unable to come to terms. Crowley was instead booked to face Gabriel Maestre for the vacant WBA interim welterweight title on 7 August 2021. Crowley withdrew from the fight on 29 July, after testing positive for COVID-19. Crowley was booked to face the Kudratillo Abdukakhorov on 11 December 2021, at the Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California, on the undercard of the Nonito Donaire and Reymart Gaballo WBC world bantamweight title bout. Despite getting knocked down in the second round, Crowley managed to rally back in the following rounds and win the fight by unanimous decision, with scores of 97–92, 95–94 and 98–91. Professional boxing record References Living people 1993 births Canadian male boxers Sportspeople from Peterborough Boxing | rounds of the bout. Crowley made his first title defense against Richard Holmes on 30 September 2017. He won the fight by a sixth-round technical knockout. Crowley was booked to face Kevin Higson for the vacant Canada Professional Boxing Council National super welterweight title on 5 May 2018. He won the fight by a dominant unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring the fight 100–90 in his favor. Crowely next faced Michi Munoz in a non-title bout on 14 July 2018. He won the fight by a second-round knockout. Crowley faced Juan Angulo Gonzalez in yet another non-title bout on 16 November 2018. He won the fight by a sixth-round technical knockout. Crowley made his first CPBC National super welterweight title defense against Stuart McLellan on 9 February 2019. He won the fight by unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring the fight 120–107 in his favor. Crowley made his second national title defense against Mian Hussain on 19 October 2019. He won the fight by unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring the fight 100–90 for him. Crowely's sole fight of 2020 came against Josh Torres on 6 September 2020, at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, on the undercard of the Yordenis Ugas and Abel Ramos WBA World welterweight title bout. It was his first fight in United States since 14 May 2016. Crowely won the fight by a unanimous decision, with all three judges awarding him a 100–90 scorecard. Crowley was expected to face the #1 ranked IBF |
aeneiventris E. alata E. albocaudata E. albosignata E. amoena E. amoenula E. anchorites E. assimilis E. associata E. atroaenea E. atrovirens E. aurata E. auricrucis E. aurigera E. aurovestita E. australasiae E. bicolorata E. bilobata E. bipartita E. biplagiata E. bivulnerata E. blanda E. brachynota E. burkei E. caeruleiceps E. caliginosa E. carbonaria E. castaneiventris E. chalconota E. chalcosoma E. chrysochlora E. cockerelli E. cocytia E. comes E. condonensis E. confraterna E. contigua E. cordatiformis E. corusca E. cyaneidorsis E. cyanescens E. darwiniana E. dentifrons E. dentipes E. depressa E. diaphanopyga E. distinguenda E. diversipes E. edmondi E. egena E. elderi E. elegans E. emeraldiana E. excerpta E. fabricii E. fallax E. ferruginata E. formicaria E. fragilis E. froggatti E. fulvescens E. fulvocrinita E. fulvodorsalis E. germana E. gilesi E. gondennda E. haematogastra E. henrici E. hirtella E. hospes E. illustris E. impressiventris E. interjecta E. jucunda E. labeculata E. laetabilis E. lamellifrons E. lateralis E. latidentata E. lauta E. lineithorax E. liopyga E. lurida E. lutaria E. mackayensis E. macracantha E. maculata E. | cordatiformis E. corusca E. cyaneidorsis E. cyanescens E. darwiniana E. dentifrons E. dentipes E. depressa E. diaphanopyga E. distinguenda E. diversipes E. edmondi E. egena E. elderi E. elegans E. emeraldiana E. excerpta E. fabricii E. fallax E. ferruginata E. formicaria E. fragilis E. froggatti E. fulvescens E. fulvocrinita E. fulvodorsalis E. germana E. gilesi E. gondennda E. haematogastra E. henrici E. hirtella E. hospes E. illustris E. impressiventris E. interjecta E. jucunda E. labeculata E. laetabilis E. lamellifrons E. lateralis E. latidentata E. lauta E. lineithorax E. liopyga E. lurida E. lutaria E. mackayensis E. macracantha E. maculata E. maculiventris E. melanaderia E. meranoploides E. mimula E. minuscula E. mira E. misera E. morosa |
and number 58 in Canada, making this song one of the worst-charting singles in John's career. However, the song found better success in Belgium (No. 26), Ireland (No. 24), New Zealand (No. 22) and notably Australia, peaking at number 7. Music video The music video, directed by Mike Brady, features John and his band playing the song in a stage-like background. It also includes clips from mid-1940s movies and some historical events. Personnel Elton John – vocals Charlie Morgan – drums Davey Johnstone – guitars, backing vocals Fred Mandel – Prophet 2000, Roland P60 and programming Gus Dudgeon – electronic percussion Graham Dickson – electronic percussion Vicky Brown, Alan Carvell, Gordon Neville – backing vocals References 1986 songs 1986 singles Elton John songs Songs with music by Elton John Songs with lyrics by Bernie | John and Bernie Taupin, it was released as the album's lead single in September 1986, charting at number 45 in the UK Singles Chart and at number 55 on the US Billboard Hot 100, and reaching the top 10 in Australia, where it peaked at number 7. The song talks about not being able to date for a night. John performed Heartache All Over the World four times during his Tour De Force tour |
of the family Serrasalmidae from South America, where found in the Paraguay-Paraná River basin. It and can grow to a length of . References Jégu, M., 2003. Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). p. 182-196. In R.E. Reis, S.O. Kullander and | Porto Alegre: EDIPUCRS, Brasil. Serrasalmidae Taxa named by Carl H. Eigenmann Taxa named by Waldo Lee McAtee Fish described in 1907 Freshwater fish of |
Flora of Malawi Flora of Burundi Flora of Angola Flora of Guatemala Flora of Zambia Flora of | chrysocephalus is a species of sedge that is native to parts of Africa. See also List of Cyperus species References chrysocephalus Plants described in 1921 Flora of Tanzania |
Amazon and Orinoco River basins. It and can grow to a length of . References Jégu, M., 2003. Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). p. 182-196. In R.E. Reis, S.O. Kullander and C.J. Ferraris, Jr. (eds.) Checklist of the Freshwater | large omnivorous fish of the family Serrasalmidae from South America, where found in the Amazon and Orinoco River basins. It and can grow to a length of . References Jégu, M., 2003. Serrasalminae (Pacus and piranhas). p. 182-196. In R.E. |
Ratchaniphon Thongsing (#2), Parichanan Nunjuy (#5), Supattra Shangshueng (#6), Punyaporn Yotchatr (#7), Phitchaya Srathongta (#8), and Yada Jaengsawang (#9). The team was mercied 13:3 by China, losing 4:11 to Japan and 10:16 to Iran, drew with South Korea and Indonesia, and beating Australia 6:4. The team came fifth overall, ahead of Indonesia. ASEAN Para Games 2015 Singapore The team competed at the 8th and 2015 ASEAN Para Games, with competition from Friday 4 to Wednesday 9 December 2015, at Marina Bay Sands, Singapore. There were four men's teams (Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Thailand) and three women's teams (Laos, Myanmar, Thailand). Team athletes were: Chalita Eiamnuch, Yada Jaengsawang, Ornpreeya Mongkolsittichai, Thatnaret Pasoedphan, Sutasinee Potita, and Phitchaya Srathongta. The team came first, ahead of Laos and Myanmar. 2017 Kuala Lumpur The team competed at the 9th and 2017 ASEAN Para Games, with competition from Sunday 17 to Saturday 23 September 2017, at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. There were at least three men's teams (Laos, Malaysia, Thailand) and three women's teams (Laos, Malaysia, Thailand). Team athletes were Chalita Eiamnuch, Yada Jaengsawang, Ornpreeya Mongkolsittichai, Thatnaret Pasoedphan, Phitchaya Srathongta, and Kamonnath Srihachan. The team won gold with a 5:0 win over Laos. Asian Para Games 2018 Jakarta The team competed at the 2018 Asian Para Games, competing from Sunday 7 to Friday 12 October 2018, at the Balai | of Thailand. Goalball is a team sport designed specifically for athletes with a vision impairment. The team takes part in international competitions. Regional championships The team competed in IBSA Asia goalball region, and from January 2010 became part of the IBSA Asia-Pacific goalball competition region. 2015 Hangzhou The team competed in the 2015 IBSA Asia Pacific Goalball Regional Championships, from 8 to 12 November 2015, in the China National Goalball Training Centre, Hangzhou, China. There were five women's teams: Australia, China, Japan, Mongolia, Thailand. The team came fourth, ahead of Mongolia. 2017 Bangkok The team competed in the 2017 IBSA Asia/Pacific Goalball Regional Championships, from Monday 21 to Saturday 26 August 2017, in the Thai-Japan Sports Stadium, Din Daeng, Bangkok, Thailand. There were six women's teams: Australia, China, Iran, Japan, South Korea, Thailand. Team athletes were Chalita Eiamnuch (#3), Yada Jaengsawang (#4), Ornpreeya Mongkolsittichai (#5), Thatnaret Pasoedphan |
1970s she formed her own theatrical company, La Barraca. In 1980 she founded an acting school, the Escuela Alicia Hermida ("Alicia Hermida School"). She was also active in cinema, where she debuted in 1960 and worked with prominent directors such as José Luis Cuerda, Emilio Martínez-Lázaro and Jaime Chávarri, and on television, where she was best known for her roles in the long-running series Cuéntame cómo pasó and in , the Spanish remake of The Golden | in , the Spanish remake of The Golden Girls. During her career Hermida was the recipient of several honors and accolades, including the 1998 Max Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Divinas palabras and a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Spanish Actors Union in 2017. Beyond her career, Harmida was also well known for her political activism; she was a strong supporter of the Cuban Revolution and of the Castro politics, and she was a candidate for the 2009 election of the European Parliament with the Iniciativa Internacionalista party. Hermida died on 9 February 2022, at the age of 89, in the retirement |
At the Mountain West Indoor Championships, she finished fourth and seventh in the 60m (7.45, personal-best) and 200m (24.22, personal-best), respectively. Competing in the 100m, 200m, and 4x100m relay, she participated in seven outdoor meets, including the 2017 Mountain West Outdoor Championships, NCAA West Preliminary, and NCAA Outdoor Championships. At the Mountain West Outdoor Championships, she ran a personal-best 100m time of 11.73 and helped her 4x100m relay team to a program-best and first place finish (43.81). Her 4x100m relay team qualified for the NCAA West Preliminary and NCAA Outdoor Championships. Her 2017 outdoor 4x100m relay performance earned her Mountain West All-Conference Team and U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Second Team All-America honors. 2018 As a sophomore, she participated in four indoor (60m, 200m, and 4x400m relay) and 10 outdoor (100m, 200m, 4x100m relay, and 4x400m relay) meets. At the 2018 Mountain West Indoor Championship, she helped her relay team win the 4x400m, in addition to posting personal-best times in the 60m (7.38) and 200m (23.96). At the 2018 Mountain West Outdoor Championships, she helped her 4x100m and 4x400m relay teams achieve second place finishes in both events. She also finished fifth place in both the 100m (11.37) and 200m (23.58) with season-best times in both events. In the 100m, she qualified for the NCAA West Preliminary. In the 4x100m relay, she helped her team qualify for the NCAA West Preliminary, then the NCAA Outdoor Championships. She was named to the Mountain West All-Conference Team for the indoor 200m x 4x400m relay and the outdoor 4x100m and 4x400m relays. She was also again named to the USTFCCCA All-America Second Team for the 4x100m relay. 2019 As a junior, she competed in five indoor (60m, 200m, and 4x400m relay) and eight outdoor (100m, 200m, 4x100m relay, 4x400m relay, 1600m sprint medley relay, and high jump) meets. At the 2019 Mountain West Indoor Championships, she placed fourth and sixth in the 200m and 60m, respectively. At the Steve Scott Invitational, she finished second in the 200m with a personal-best time of 23.66; she also helped her relay team win the 4x400m (3:40.31). At the Sheila Tarr Multis meet, she posted a personal-best height of 1.71m in the high jump. At the 2019 Mountain West Outdoor Championships, she helped her 4x100m relay team to a fourth-place finish; she finished fifth and sixth in the 100m and 200m, respectively. She qualified for the NCAA West Preliminary in the 100m, where she posted a time of 11.52. 2020 As a senior, she competed in six indoor meets in the 60m, 200m, and 4x400 relay. At the Mountain West Conference Indoor Championships, she finished third in the 60m (7.48), fourth in the 200m (23.71, career-best time), and second in the 4x400m relay (3:37.03). At the NAU Friday Night Duals, she posted a career-best 60m time of 7.33 seconds. Love’s 60m and 4x400m relay performances earned her 2020 Mountain West All-Conference Team honors. The 2020 Mountain West Outdoor Track & Field Championships were cancelled due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Love completed her collegiate track and field career ranked among the best all-time in the UNLV record books, including: first in the outdoor 4x100m relay (43.81); third in the indoor 4x400m relay (3:38.65); fourth in the indoor 60m (7.38); and fifth in the outdoor 4x400m relay (3:35.35). She finished her UNLV career with the following indoor personal bests: 60m in 7.33; 200m in 23.71; and high jump of 1.55m. Her UNLV outdoor personal bests included: 100m in 11.47; 200m in 23.66; and high jump of 1.71m. Bobsled career Love did not begin bobsledding until age 23 when she was invited to a 12-day USA Bobsled rookie push camp in Lake Placid, New York, in October | Love ran anchor). She tied for second in the 5A high jump (1.60m) at the Utah UHSAA State Track & Field Championships. She also won the 100m (11.77) and 200m (24.28) in the seeded section at the Arcadia Invitational meet. She was the 2016 Gatorade State Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year in Utah following her senior performance. She set numerous Utah high school girls track records, including: 100m dash (11.68) (outright record); 200m dash (24.52) (4A record and tied-eighth outright); and 4x100m relay (47.33) (outright record). She finished her high school career with the following personal bests: 60m (7.53), 100m (11.63w/11.68), 200m (24.11), and high jump (1.73m). Track career 2017 As a freshman at UNLV, Love competed in both indoor and outdoor track and field meets in a total of 11 meets. She competed in four indoor track and field meets, including the 2017 Mountain West Indoor Championships, in the 60m, 200m, and high jump. At the Mountain West Indoor Championships, she finished fourth and seventh in the 60m (7.45, personal-best) and 200m (24.22, personal-best), respectively. Competing in the 100m, 200m, and 4x100m relay, she participated in seven outdoor meets, including the 2017 Mountain West Outdoor Championships, NCAA West Preliminary, and NCAA Outdoor Championships. At the Mountain West Outdoor Championships, she ran a personal-best 100m time of 11.73 and helped her 4x100m relay team to a program-best and first place finish (43.81). Her 4x100m relay team qualified for the NCAA West Preliminary and NCAA Outdoor Championships. Her 2017 outdoor 4x100m relay performance earned her Mountain West All-Conference Team and U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Second Team All-America honors. 2018 As a sophomore, she participated in four indoor (60m, 200m, and 4x400m relay) and 10 outdoor (100m, 200m, 4x100m relay, and 4x400m relay) meets. At the 2018 Mountain West Indoor Championship, she helped her relay team win the 4x400m, in addition to posting personal-best times in the 60m (7.38) and 200m (23.96). At the 2018 Mountain West Outdoor Championships, she helped her 4x100m and 4x400m relay teams achieve second place finishes in both events. She also finished fifth place in both the 100m (11.37) and 200m (23.58) with season-best times in both events. In the 100m, she qualified for the NCAA West Preliminary. In the 4x100m relay, she helped her team qualify for the NCAA West Preliminary, then the NCAA Outdoor Championships. She was named to the Mountain West All-Conference Team for the indoor 200m x 4x400m relay and the outdoor 4x100m and 4x400m relays. She was also again named to the USTFCCCA All-America Second Team for the 4x100m relay. 2019 As a junior, she competed in five indoor (60m, 200m, and 4x400m relay) and eight outdoor (100m, 200m, 4x100m relay, 4x400m relay, 1600m sprint medley relay, and high jump) meets. At the 2019 Mountain West Indoor Championships, she placed fourth and sixth in the 200m and 60m, respectively. At the Steve Scott Invitational, she finished second in the 200m with a personal-best time of 23.66; she also helped her relay team win the 4x400m (3:40.31). At the Sheila Tarr Multis |
native Katherine Casada in 1903, with whom he raised three children. After she died in 1941, he remarried the next year, to Clare Hale. Armstrong and Hale farmed near Ottumwa. He was involved in Freemasonry and the Kiwanis, as well as several local organizations before serving a single two-year term (1953–1955) on the Iowa | After she died in 1941, he remarried the next year, to Clare Hale. Armstrong and Hale farmed near Ottumwa. He was involved in Freemasonry and the Kiwanis, as well as several local organizations before serving a single two-year term (1953–1955) on |
to Kazan and worked in the 1920s in the Tatar Professional Council. Works Amlong is a representative of the Art Nouveau style. The most notable amongst his works are Shamil's house, Podrueva's house, the house of the Commander of the Kazan Military District (presumably) and Klimov's house (1909). References Murtazina L. M. Amlong Fyodor Romanovich // Online Encyclopedia Tatarica (in Russian) The theater, the museum, and the prison of architect Amlong (in Russian) Russian architects Art Nouveau architects 1871 | Council. In 1904, Amlong became a Kazan city architect. In 1913, he opened the construction and technical office "Modern Architecture" (Russian Современное зодчество, Sovremennoe zodchestvo) in the Solomin-Smolin House. In 1915, he and his family were exiled to the governorate of Irkutsk because of the accusation of espionage in favor of Germany brought against his wife. After the revolution, he returned to Kazan and worked in the 1920s in the |
a medium to large omnivorous fish of the family Serrasalmidae from South America, where found in the east and the northeastern Guiana Shield rivers. It and can grow to a length of . Etymology The fish is named in honor of ichthyologist and naturalist Carl Ternetz (1870-1928), who made extensive collections of fish in French Guiana | It and can grow to a length of . Etymology The fish is named in honor of ichthyologist and naturalist Carl Ternetz (1870-1928), who made extensive collections of fish in French |
government. Otterbech was denied entry to Burma. Otterbech was then named as the first Norwegian ambassador to South Africa, as diplomatic ties were created in light of de-apartheidization. He assumed office in 1992. He received side accreditations to Lesotho and Swaziland. Lastly, from 1996 to 2000 he was the ambassador to Vietnam, also being accredited to Laos. He resided at Stabekk. References 1933 births Living people People from Arendal Norwegian civil servants Ambassadors of Norway to Singapore Ambassadors of Norway to South Africa Ambassadors of Norway | 1933) was a Norwegian diplomat. He was born in Hisøy, and graduated with the siv.øk. degree in business administration. He started working for the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1961. In 1981 he became deputy under-secretary of state, and from 1984 he was an adviser in trace policy. In 1986 Otterbech got his first ambassadorial |
Betina Temelkova (; born 26 February 1997) is a Bulgarian Israeli judoka. Since 2017, Bulgarian born Temelkova is competing | (; born 26 February 1997) is a Bulgarian Israeli judoka. Since 2017, Bulgarian born Temelkova is competing |
He then taught anatomy at the University of Pittsburgh at the invitation of Davenport Hooker. He joined Yale in 1926 and became Sterling professor of zoology in 1939. He served at Yale until his retirement in 1963. Nicholas followed experiments in the asymmetry of development which had been begun by his Yale supervisor Ross G. Harrison. Harrison had shown that grafts develop as left or right limbs based on the orientation in which a limb bud was grafted. Spangler showed that this orientation was defined by a narrow ring of cells. He later developed experimental methods to grow rat embryos in chicken chorioallantois. | of embryology through transplants, the early stage development of teleost and mammalian zygotes. Life and work Nicholas was born at Kintnersville, Pennsylvania, the only child of Reverend Samuel Trauger and Elizabeth Ellen. Although the parents hoped he would join the Lutheran order, he chose to study medicine, influenced by an uncle, Harry Spangler. His early education was at Gettysburg College (BS 1916 and MS 1917) followed by entry into Yale. He enlisted with the Army Medical Corps during the war and returned following discharge in 1919. He received a doctorate in 1921. In 1915 He then taught anatomy at the University of Pittsburgh at the invitation |
Erlhoff (22 December 1944 – 17 February 2022) was a German professional football player and coach. Playing career Erlhoff played as a defender and midfielder for TSV Marl-Hüls, FC Schalke 04 and Rot-Weiss Essen. He made a total of 162 appearances in the Bundesliga, scoring 15 goals. He was also the league's second ever substitute player. Coaching career After retiring as a player in 1976, Erlhoff became a coach at Rot-Weiss Essen before becoming manager. He later coached at | goals. He was also the league's second ever substitute player. Coaching career After retiring as a player in 1976, Erlhoff became a coach at Rot-Weiss Essen before becoming manager. He later coached at a number of amateur teams, including Rot-Weiß Oberhausen and SpVgg Erkenschwick. He also managed women's team FFC Flaesheim-Hillen, who he led to the final of the 2000–01 DFB-Pokal Frauen, |
new tracks, that were written for the The Neon album but not used. It was released in CD, cassette and digitally. In October 2021, Erasure also released a video for Time (Hearts Full of Love). In November 2021, Erasure released Ne:EP Remixed, which contains a remix version of all 5 | and digitally. In October 2021, Erasure also released a video for Time (Hearts Full of Love). In November 2021, Erasure released Ne:EP Remixed, which contains a remix version of all 5 songs from Ne:EP, including remixes by 7th Heaven (Same Game), Gareth Shortland (Leaving) |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.