sentence1
stringlengths 1
133k
| sentence2
stringlengths 1
131k
|
---|---|
designer on Ratchet and Clank: Rift Apart at Insomniac Games. Curlee's Masters thesis was Meaningful Level Design. Background Christina graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a BFA in 2016 and the University of California Los Angeles in 2019 with a MFA. Christina collaborated on Final Flight, described as anime in a surrealist environment with the programmers wanting an '80s aesthetic. Career Curlee was a 2016 International Game Developers Association Foundation Women in Games Ambassador. In 2018, Curlee's game Artifacts II | Clank: Rift Apart at Insomniac Games. Curlee's Masters thesis was Meaningful Level Design. Background Christina graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a BFA in 2016 and the University of California Los Angeles in 2019 with a MFA. Christina collaborated on Final Flight, described as anime in a surrealist environment with the programmers wanting an '80s |
Murphy, Johnnie Walker and Raymond McKee. Cast Edna Murphy as Georgette Johnnie Walker as Johnnie Stanton Raymond McKee as Terence Nolan Albert Prisco as Jerry Limur Bertram Anderson-Smith as Colonel Anderson Clarence Wilson as Georgette's Father Lule Warrenton as Georgette's Mother 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 | Warrenton as Georgette's Mother 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 |
Angeles Marathon. At the race, she led more than 10,000 other women, including Kenyan Jane Kibii and Ethiopian Biruktayit Degefa, punching through the miles in the mild 60-degree air to break the tape and finish in 2:34:24. The year proved to be a big one for her. She traveled to Duluth, Minnesota, for the Grandma's Marathon (named after the restaurant on the canal). Starting in to Two Harbors, Minnesota, she raced with the top runners along the North Shore of Lake Superior to capture the first-place prize. A few months later, she was the second-place finisher at the Minneapolis to St. Paul, Minnesota, Twin Cities Marathon. The three races earned her $40,000 in prize winnings. In 2019, she chased Ethiopian Lemelem Berha to finish second in 2:31:33 at the World Athletics Bronze-labeled BP Castellón Marathon in Spain. She ran the Lisbon Marathon as well, again on the | one of three women chosen to compete for Kenya in the African Half Marathon Championship. She was the top Kenyan competitor in a race that saw Ethiopians sweep the podium. She finished in fourth place with a time of 1:12:29, a few seconds behind Tola Mesetey Belete. Professional career Jepkurgat has won many races throughout France, including the 2009 Tour de Tirol, the 2012 Mémorial Partigiani Stellina, and the 2016 Marathon Vert de Rennes. Her second-place finish at the 2011 Nairobi Half Marathon established her as a major international half marathoner. In Italy, she won half marathons in Torino (in 2012) Jesolo (in 2014), and Piacenza (in 2015, clocking 1:09:56, one of the fastest woman's half marathon times of that year). She still holds the course record (as of 2022) for the Venice-based Moonlight Half Marathon. In the 2016 Geneva Marathon, Jepkurgat made her marathon debut and raced with Jane Kiptoo through the Swiss streets. They ran through the warm weather close together, but Jeptoo pulled away and won by 12 seconds. In 2017, she won the largest marathon in California: the Los Angeles Marathon. At the race, she led more than 10,000 other women, including Kenyan Jane Kibii and Ethiopian Biruktayit Degefa, punching through the miles in the mild 60-degree air to break the tape and finish in 2:34:24. The year proved to be a big one for her. She traveled to Duluth, Minnesota, for the Grandma's Marathon (named after the restaurant on the canal). Starting in |
Day International (ODI) match, in fixture of the 2020 Oman Tri-Nation Series, between Namibia and the United Arab Emirates. See also List of One Day International cricket umpires List of Twenty20 International cricket umpires References | the fixture between Maldives and Kuwait in the 2019 ACC Western Region T20 tournament. On 6 January 2020, Vinod stood in his first One Day International (ODI) match, in fixture of the 2020 Oman Tri-Nation Series, between Namibia and the United Arab |
southeastern United States, it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by Garima Singh and André Aptroot. The type specimen was collected by James Lendemer in the Sapelo Island Wildlife Management Area (Sapelo Island, Georgia); here the lichen was | species of corticolous (bark dwelling) and crustose lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. Found in the southeastern United States, it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by Garima Singh and André Aptroot. The type specimen was collected by James Lendemer in the Sapelo Island Wildlife Management Area (Sapelo Island, Georgia); here the lichen was found growing on oak bark. It has a thin, shiny, pale |
is a comprehensive list of victories of the cycling team. The races are categorized according to the UCI Continental Circuits rules. The team was a Continental team in 2008 a Professional Continental team from 2011 to 2020. In 2021 the team stepped up to the world tour. Sources: 2008 No recorded wins 2009 Circuit de Wallonie, Romain Zingle 2010 Arno Wallaard Memorial, Stefan Van Dijk Omloop der Kempen, Stefan Van Dijk Stage 3 Rhône-Alpes Isère Tour, Andy Cappelle Flèche Ardennaise, Thomas Degand Stage 2 Tour de Wallonie, Stefan Van Dijk Polynormande, Andy Cappelle Grote Prijs Stad Zottegem, Stefan Van Dijk Omloop van het Houtland, Stefan Van Dijk 2011 Beverbeek Classic, Evert Verbist Stage 2 Delta Tour Zeeland, Steven Caethoven Stage 1 Route du Sud, Stefan Van Dijk Stage 3 Route du Sud, Jurgen Van Goolen Dwars door het Hageland, Gregory Habeaux 2012 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens, Steven Caethoven 2013 Stage 1 Driedaagse van West-Vlaanderen, Danilo Napolitano 2014 Stage 2 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, Jérôme Baugnies Stage 3 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, Roy Jans Stages 6 & 7 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, Fréderique Robert Omloop van | races are categorized according to the UCI Continental Circuits rules. The team was a Continental team in 2008 a Professional Continental team from 2011 to 2020. In 2021 the team stepped up to the world tour. Sources: 2008 No recorded wins 2009 Circuit de Wallonie, Romain Zingle 2010 Arno Wallaard Memorial, Stefan Van Dijk Omloop der Kempen, Stefan Van Dijk Stage 3 Rhône-Alpes Isère Tour, Andy Cappelle Flèche Ardennaise, Thomas Degand Stage 2 Tour de Wallonie, Stefan Van Dijk Polynormande, Andy Cappelle Grote Prijs Stad Zottegem, Stefan Van Dijk Omloop van het Houtland, Stefan Van Dijk 2011 Beverbeek Classic, Evert Verbist Stage 2 Delta Tour Zeeland, Steven Caethoven Stage 1 Route du Sud, Stefan Van Dijk Stage 3 Route du Sud, Jurgen Van Goolen Dwars door het Hageland, Gregory Habeaux 2012 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens, Steven Caethoven 2013 Stage 1 Driedaagse van West-Vlaanderen, Danilo Napolitano 2014 Stage 2 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, Jérôme Baugnies Stage 3 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, Roy Jans Stages 6 & 7 La Tropicale Amissa Bongo, Fréderique Robert Omloop van het Waasland, Danilo Napolitano Stage 1 Tour des Fjords, Jérôme Baugnies La Poly Normande, Jan Ghyselinck Stage 1 Tour du Limousin, Björn Leukemans Stage 1 Tour du Gévaudan Languedoc-Roussillon, Thomas Degand Gooikse Pijl, Roy Jans 2015 Stage 2 Etoile de Bessèges, Roy Jans Tour du Finistère, Tim De Troyer Stage 3 Boucles de la Mayenne, Danilo Napolitano Ronde van Limburg, Björn Leukemans Grote Prijs Jef Scherens, Björn Leukemans Druivenkoers Overijse, Jérôme Baugnies Schaal Sels-Merksem, Robin Stenuit 2016 Amstel Gold Race, Enrico Gasparotto Stage 4 4 Jours de Dunkerque, Kenny Dehaes Stage 3 |
the 1925 film Greater Than a Crown Synopsis Hoping to escape an arranged marriage Princess Isabel escapes to England where she falls in love with Lord Anthony Conway. Cast William Russell as Lord Anthony Conway Mary Thurman as Princess Isabel / Molly Moncke Mathilde Brundage as Lady Jocelyn Robert Klein as Count de Se Jean De Briac as Ex-King Pedro Francis Ford as Count de Freitas William Brunton as Tiger Bugg Douglas Gerrard as Sir Henry Lillian Worth as Lady Laura Arthur Van Sickle as Spaulding Louis Dumar as Count Cognasto References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, | William Brunton as Tiger Bugg Douglas Gerrard as Sir Henry Lillian Worth as Lady Laura Arthur Van Sickle as Spaulding Louis Dumar as Count Cognasto 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. External links 1921 films 1921 drama films English-language films American films |
I women's basketball season. The Red Storm, led by tenth-year head coach Joe Tartamella, play their games at Carnesecca Arena and are members of | women's basketball team represent St. John's University during the 2021–22 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Red Storm, led by tenth-year head coach Joe Tartamella, play their games |
was held on Saturday, June 22, 2013, in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin at Road America, a permanent road course. The race was extended from its scheduled 50 laps to 55 due to multiple green–white–checker finishes. At race's end, A. J. Allmendinger, driving for Penske Racing, would hold off the field on the final restart to complete a dominant performance and win his first career NASCAR Nationwide Series win and his first win of the season. To fill out the podium, Justin Allgaier of Turner Scott Motorsports and Parker Kligerman of Kyle Busch Motorsports would | The first practice session was held on Friday, June 21, at 11:30 AM CST, and would last for an hour and 30 minutes. Sam Hornish Jr. of Penske Racing would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 2:26.888 and an average speed of . Second and final practice The second and final practice session, sometimes referred to as Happy Hour, was held on Friday, June 21, at 1:30 PM CST, and would last for an hour and 25 minutes. Owen Kelly of Joe Gibbs Racing would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 2:14.038 and an average speed of . Qualifying Qualifying was held on Saturday, June 22, at 11:05 AM CST. Each driver would have one lap to set a time. A. J. Allmendinger of Penske Racing would win the pole, setting a time of 2:13.410 |
Thayen village, Kalaroos of Kupwara when they were killed in Machil area. The family of one of the victims, Riyaz stated that Bashir Ahmad Lone offered a good job opportunity to Riyaz at the border. Riyaz Ahmad Lone, 20 was working at a mechanical shop in Sopore while another victim, Shahzad Ahmed Khan, 27 was a fruit seller and Mohammad Shafi Lone, 19 was working as a laborer. The victims left their homes on 27 April for a job meeting with Lone. However, they were asked to come after a some days. During the police interrogation, driver of the vehicle which was used by the army sources confessed that he took the trio from Nadihal village to Kupwara. After the victims were killed, army buried them in Machil, however Jammu and Kashmir Police played a central role and brought the bodies for burial in a local graveyard. The faces of the victims were painted with black colour after army labelled them militants. Court martial When police revealed the background of the fake encounter, they filed a chargesheet against the 11 accused persons, including 9 army personnel and two civilians. The accused included a colonel and 2 majors. They were charged under sections 302 for murder, section 364 for abduction, section 120-B for criminal conspiracy and section 34 for common intent of the Ranbir Penal Code. The case was initially heard by the Sopore High Court chief | they were asked to come after a some days. During the police interrogation, driver of the vehicle which was used by the army sources confessed that he took the trio from Nadihal village to Kupwara. After the victims were killed, army buried them in Machil, however Jammu and Kashmir Police played a central role and brought the bodies for burial in a local graveyard. The faces of the victims were painted with black colour after army labelled them militants. Court martial When police revealed the background of the fake encounter, they filed a chargesheet against the 11 accused persons, including 9 army personnel and two civilians. The accused included a colonel and 2 majors. They were charged under sections 302 for murder, section 364 for abduction, section 120-B for criminal conspiracy and section 34 for common intent of the Ranbir Penal Code. The case was initially heard by the Sopore High Court chief judicial magistrate and issued a notice to the army asking to produce involved people before the police. The army decline to follow the court orders, leading the local court to transfer it to the High Court of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh which ordered the army to setup an army court inquiry. The inquiry was started in December 2013 and the accused were sentenced life imprisonment in 2014 by the Summary General Court Martial (SGCM). The army confirmed the life imprisonment of convicted people on 7 September 2015. However, three army sources such as Abbas, Bashir and Hamid were acquitted by the court. It was first time in 25 years of insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir when army confirmed life imprisonment by the General Court Martial (GCM) for killing civilians. Aftermath The killing of the trio was heavily criticised by the people which turned into an uprising which left 113 to 120 people dead with hundreds of people injured in different clashes with the Jammu and Kashmir police and the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF). Later development The Armed Forces Tribunal granted bail to 5 convicted army personnel and suspended their conviction in 2017. However, the then ruling party Jammu and |
with one winning thirteen. A member of the Institute of Australian Photographers (IAP) he was the invited speaker at its October 1969 'Hypo' bi-annual convention in Canberra at which he agitated for better remuneration for photographic services;"This is a profession where a photographer with a lifetime of training and with plant worth $20,000 finishes with exactly the same money for taking a fashion photograph, processing it, retouching it, packing it and delivering a ten-by-eight print as does his model: whose plant is a bra, panties, and a pair of false eyelashes! This is a profession whose ideas are pillaged consistently and blatantly by art directors of advertising agencies; who pay the photographers’ meagre fees, with luck and after endless dispute, in five months. Above all, this is a weak-kneed, spineless profession, whose members wallow in apathy and self-adoration; while those trades and professions about them get on with the task. Do any of you really feel any concern for your image? Are you content to be made to look like bumbling congenital idiots on television? Are you content to do more and more, yet accept less and less? Are you content to slash the “ground from under your contemporaries by every known price-cutting device? And here’s something of particular importance to your wives and children! Do you know what the community thinks of you? The Sociology Department of the University of New South Wales does! It finds you enjoying precisely the same esteem in the eyes of your fellow citizens as do beekeepers, [and] bank clerks..." Educator In 1970 De Lisle, then in his late forties, followed Ian McKenzie as Senior Lecturer in Charge Photography in the Diploma stream of Prahran College of Technology where he researched videotape and electronic education, hired by the vocationally-oriented graphic designer Principal Alan Warren but after suffering a severe heart attack in 1971 was replaced, by the incoming Principal Dr David Armstrong, with Athol Shmith. While at Prahran he worked on his high-contrast photomontage series on “the raped land, Australia, as it would appear to a woman who returns from | the task. Do any of you really feel any concern for your image? Are you content to be made to look like bumbling congenital idiots on television? Are you content to do more and more, yet accept less and less? Are you content to slash the “ground from under your contemporaries by every known price-cutting device? And here’s something of particular importance to your wives and children! Do you know what the community thinks of you? The Sociology Department of the University of New South Wales does! It finds you enjoying precisely the same esteem in the eyes of your fellow citizens as do beekeepers, [and] bank clerks..." Educator In 1970 De Lisle, then in his late forties, followed Ian McKenzie as Senior Lecturer in Charge Photography in the Diploma stream of Prahran College of Technology where he researched videotape and electronic education, hired by the vocationally-oriented graphic designer Principal Alan Warren but after suffering a severe heart attack in 1971 was replaced, by the incoming Principal Dr David Armstrong, with Athol Shmith. While at Prahran he worked on his high-contrast photomontage series on “the raped land, Australia, as it would appear to a woman who returns from the dead to discover that her country, too, is dying,” which combined his love of the Australian landscape and the female form, and was exhibited and published in 1972 in the Ilford-funded Concern. Though he contributed to charities, and decried cruelty to sheep, and expressed sympathy for the plight of Marilyn Monroe in letters to newspapers, De Lisle had a reputation at the College for a wolfish attitude to young women, and one of De Lisle's students, and employee at his studio, was Graham Howe, who regarded him "as the Sam Haskins of Australia". Victorian premier of 1955–72, Henry Bolte's vice squad raided his family home, confiscating his "pornography"; nudes for which he was then winning international awards, an experience which confirmed his vehemently expressed opposition to censorship, particularly of the arts. A regular writer |
recorded in New South Wales. The specific epithet refers both to its Australian distribution, and the presence of isidia. Secondary chemicals in the lichen that are detectable with thin-layer chromatography include alectoronic acid (major), and minor to trace amounts of dehydroalectoronic acid and β–alectoronic acid. References australisidiata Lichens described in 2018 Lichens of Australia | was formally described as a new species in 2018 by Garima Singh and André Aptroot. The type specimen was collected by Gintaras Kantvilas north of Emerald Springs (Northern Territory); here it was found growing on the wood or bark of a Cooktown ironwood tree. The lichen has also been recorded in New South Wales. The specific epithet refers |
between two or more characters." Recipients References 21st-century literary awards LGBT literary awards Gay Romance Awards established in 2007 | love relationship between two or more characters." Recipients References 21st-century literary awards LGBT literary awards Gay Romance Awards established in 2007 English-language literary awards Lists of LGBT-related award winners and nominees |
2007) was an Indian film historian, journalist, and publicist. He wrote several books, both fictions and non-fictions, and started his career as a film-focusing journalist in the 1940s, working for several publications, including Filmfare. According to Randhir Kapoor, a son of the actor Raj Kapoor, whose biography Reuben wrote, "It is a great loss to the | a great loss to the RK family and the film industry. He was not only a good journalist and publicist, he was a great film historian." Navras Jaat Aafreedi of the Presidency University, Kolkata described Reuben in 2016 as one of the most prominent Bene Israel figures of India. Bibliography References 1926 births 2007 deaths Indian film historians Indian |
Skien. The court in Kviteseid accepts cases from the municipalities of Fyresdal, Kviteseid, Nissedal, Tokke, Seljord, and Vinje. The court in Notodden accepts cases from the municipalities of Hjartdal, Notodden, Tinn, and Midt-Telemark. The court is subordinate to the Agder Court of Appeal. The court is led by a chief judge () and several other judges. The court is a court of first instance. Its judicial duties are mainly to settle criminal cases and to resolve civil litigation as well as bankruptcy. The administration and registration tasks of the court include death registration, issuing certain certificates, performing duties of a notary public, and officiating civil wedding ceremonies. Cases | The court serves the western part of the county which includes 17 municipalities. The court in Skien accepts cases from the municipalities of Bamble, Drangedal, Kragerø, Nome, Porsgrunn, Siljan, and Skien. The court in Kviteseid accepts cases from the municipalities of Fyresdal, Kviteseid, Nissedal, Tokke, Seljord, and Vinje. The court in Notodden accepts cases from the municipalities of Hjartdal, Notodden, Tinn, and Midt-Telemark. The court is subordinate to the Agder Court of Appeal. The court is led by a chief judge () and several other judges. The court is a court of first instance. Its judicial duties are mainly to settle criminal cases and to resolve civil litigation as well as bankruptcy. The administration and registration tasks of the court include |
as Ingebjørg Ragnar Olason as Gunvor's father Kristian Løvlie as Oskar Ottar Wicklund as Aksel Snekkersveen Ada Ørvik as Emma Harald Aimarsen as Smikkstad Gunda Ullsaker as Mrs. Smikkstad Agnes Bjerke as Krestine Alf Prøysen as himself Anker Wahlstrøm Gudmund Blaalid Joachim Calmeyer Willie Hoel as Teodor Snekkersveen Songs "Trippe-Tripp" (foxtrot) (melody: Maj Sønstevold, lyrics: Alf Prøysen). Issued on 78 rpm (Philips AA 53018-1-H) | Eva Snekkersveen Pål Bang-Hansen as Arne Barnhemmet Randi Nordby as Ingebjørg Ragnar Olason as Gunvor's father Kristian Løvlie as Oskar Ottar Wicklund as Aksel Snekkersveen Ada Ørvik as Emma Harald Aimarsen as Smikkstad Gunda Ullsaker as Mrs. Smikkstad Agnes Bjerke as Krestine Alf Prøysen as himself Anker Wahlstrøm Gudmund Blaalid Joachim Calmeyer Willie Hoel as Teodor Snekkersveen Songs "Trippe-Tripp" (foxtrot) (melody: Maj Sønstevold, lyrics: Alf Prøysen). Issued on 78 rpm (Philips AA 53018-1-H) "Blåklokkeleiken" (waltz) (melody: Maj Sønstevold, lyrics: Alf Prøysen). Issued on 78 rpm (Philips AA 53018-2-H) References External links Trost |
silent film The Lady from Longacre directed by George Marshall and starring William Russell and Mary Thurman. It was remade as a 1925 film Greater Than a Crown directed by Roy William Neill and starring Edmund | Bridges. It was published in the United States the following year. Adaptations In 1921 it was adapted into an American silent film The Lady from Longacre directed by George Marshall and starring William Russell and Mary Thurman. It was remade as a 1925 film Greater Than a Crown directed by Roy William Neill and starring Edmund Lowe and Dolores Costello. Both |
Jonathan Berger Nayland Blake Cassandra Press Theresa Hak Kyung Cha Raven Chacon Leidy Churchman Tony Cokes Jacky Connolly Matt Connors Alex Da Corte Aria Dean Danielle Dean Buck Ellison Alia Farid Coco Fusco Ellen Gallagher A Gathering of the Tribes/Steve Cannon Cy Gavin Adam Gordon Renée Green Pao Houa Her EJ Hill Alfredo Jaar Rindon Johnson Ivy Kwan Arce and Julie Tolentino Ralph Lemon Duane Linklater James Little Rick Lowe Daniel Joseph Martinez Dave McKenzie Rodney McMillian Na Mira Alejandro "Luperca" Morales Moved by the Motion Terence Nance Woody De | as the "most closely watched contemporary art exhibition in the United States", the biennial is curated by David Breslin and Adrienne Edwards and hosts 63 artists and collectives. Artists The curators selected 63 artists for the biennial: Lisa Alvarado Harold Ancart Mónica Arreola Emily Barker Yto Barrada Rebecca Belmore Jonathan Berger Nayland Blake Cassandra Press Theresa Hak Kyung Cha Raven Chacon Leidy Churchman Tony Cokes Jacky Connolly Matt Connors Alex Da Corte Aria Dean Danielle Dean Buck Ellison Alia Farid Coco Fusco Ellen Gallagher A Gathering of |
cap, which is also the highest point of the Koryak Highlands. To the east, not far from the sea, rises high Mt Undyer (гора Ундер). The Ukelayat Range has also the largest glacier of the highland area, the Slozhny Glacier with a surface of . The range includes two of the three major glacier regions of the Koryak Highlands, having 344 glaciers with a total area of . Flora and fauna The mountains are covered with mountain tundra, bare rocky areas, dwarf forests and shrub birches. Willow thickets, with diamondleaf willow, feltleaf willow and Salix krylovii, may be found in some of the | comes from the Koryak "vukvylgayat" (Вуквылгаят), meaning "rock/fall". Geography The Ukelayat Range rises above the southern side of the valley of the Ukelayat river. It stretches in a roughly east–west direction with its eastern end close to the Bering Sea, between Dezhnyov Bay and Anastasii Bay. To the south rises the Snegovoy Range and to the north, above the other bank of the Ukelayat river, the Pikas Range. The highest point is Ledyanaya, a high rocky peak topped |
pedestrian protesters at its peak on the first weekend and hundreds of vehicles, including 18-wheelers that were parked directly on Wellington Street, in front of the Prime Minister's office. In spite of an injunction by a judge and the invocation of three levels of states of emergency, municipal, provincial, and federal, protesters temporarily refused to end blockades and the occupation of the red zone. On February 14, Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act. Over the weekend of February 17 to 20, a large joint-operation police presence in Ottawa arrested about 200 organizers and protesters, laid 389 charges, issued fines, removed the heavy trucks and trailers with 79 vehicles towed away, seized 36 license plates, and dismantled encampments across the city. Action was taken against thirty-six commercial vehicles by the Ministry of Transportation. By February 20, the area surrounding the Parliamentary Precinct, occupied by protesters for three weeks, was fenced off by police after it has been secured by a series of police advances pushing the crowd away from Parliament Hill. A heavy police presence remained. All times specified or approximated given in Eastern Time, or UTC-5:00: Preceding events 2020 January 25: The first "presumptive" case of COVID-19 was reported in Canada. May 30: The first (Alpha) wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, lasted 175 day, peaked on day 127, May 30, 2020, with 35,040 active cases, and ended 48 days after the peak with 35,040 active cases and 8,839 deaths. 2021 January 10: The second (Beta) wave, lasted 230 days, peaked on January 10, day 17, with 85,595 active cases. The Beta wave was the deadliest of the five waves with 13,312 deaths. There were no vaccinations available at that time. April 18: Vaccination campaigns began during the third (Gamma) wave, which peaked on April 18 with 89,884 cases. Vaccination campaigns began during this wave. While the number of cases increased slightly, the number of deaths, 2,569 decreased during the Gamma wave. September 26: The Delta wave reached its peak on September 26 with 51,747 cases. It was during the fourth (Delta) wave that vaccine mandates and passports began to be considered as free vaccinations were widely available across Canada. The lowest number of deaths, 2,569 occurred during the fourth wave because of the high uptake on vaccinations. October: New United States Department of Homeland Security regulations, released in October 2021, were regarding cross-border travel between the Canada and the United States and were based on guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To prevent supply chain disruptions, the DHS allowed for a window of four monthsuntil January 22, 2022for Canadian truckers to get fully vaccinated against COVID-19. November 19: The Public Health Agency of Canada announced upcoming adjustments to Canada's border measures. This would include the requirement for essential service providers, including truck drivers, to be fully vaccinated after January 15, 2022. The announcement clarified that unvaccinated or partially vaccinated foreign national truck drivers would be prohibited from entering Canada after that date. Unvaccinated Canadian truck drivers could enter Canada but would have to quarantine for two weeks. According to the Canadian Press and CBC, as of January 22, the mandates would impact an estimated 26,000 unvaccinated truckers of the 160,000 truck drivers who regularly cross the border in both the United States and Canada. When asked in the House of Commons to produce data linking truckers to COVID-19 infections in Canada, neither the minister of health Jean-Yves Duclos nor the chief public health officer Theresa Tam were able to do so. December: Patrick King, a native of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario who would become an organizer of the convoy, said of public health measures: "The only way this is going to be solved is with bullets." Mid-December: Canada United posted the Memorandum of Understanding on their website and sent copies to the Governor General of Canada and the Canadian Senate. until its February 8 retraction. One of the main organizers behind the convoy, Canada Unity (CU), acknowledged that they had planned to submit their signed "memorandum of understanding" (MoU) to the Senate of Canada and Governor General Mary Simon, described in the MoU as the "SCGGC". The MoU which was signed by James and Sandra Bauder and Martin Brodmann, was posted on the Canada Unity website in mid-December 2021 and publicly available Bauder, whose name is at the top of a CTV News' list of "major players" in the convoy, is the founder of Canada Unity. CTV cited Bauder saying that he hoped the signed MoU would convince Elections Canada to trigger an election, which is not constitutionally possible. In this pseudolegal document, CU called on the "SCGGC" to cease all vaccine mandates, reemploy all employees terminated due to vaccination status, and rescind all fines imposed for non-compliance with public health orders. If this failed, the MoU called on the "SCGGC" to dissolve the government, and name members of the CU to form a Canadian Citizens Committee (CCC), which is beyond the constitutional powers of either the Governor General or the Senate. The original MoU contained no specific mention of cross-border truckers as it had originally been drafted and delivered over a month earlier, but then was reissued for the protest. 2022 January January 9: The fifth (Omicron) wave reached a peak with the number of active cases reaching a record high of 443,676. January 15: The January 15 enforcement of the vaccination requirement applies to truckers who are entering Canada at international border crossings. Since January 15, unvaccinated American cross-border truckers have been denied entry into Canada. Canadian truckers who are not fully vaccinated "have to show proof of a negative PCR test collected within 72 hours of arriving at the border"; they also "need to quarantine after arrival". January 22: A reciprocal vaccination requirement for the cross-border trucking industry has been in place since January 22, when the United States enforced theirs, affecting unvaccinated American truckers returning to the United States. Unvaccinated Canadian truckers are denied entry to the United States. The first convoy departed Prince Rupert, arriving in Prince George in the evening. January 23: Another convoy left from Delta with supporters gathering along Highway 1, the Trans-Canada Highway. January 24: In Saskatchewan, police in Regina reported that there were supporters greeting a convoy of about 1,200 vehicles as it drove through the Regina. January 25: Another convoy passed through Kenora, Ontario, where Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) in contact with the convoy stated that 200–300 vehicles would be passing through Kenora. The convoys consisted of three main routes across Canada, which would converge for the Ottawa protest on the weekend. January 26: The Ottawa Police Service expected an estimated 2,000 demonstrators in Ottawa by January 28 weekend. The OPP estimated approximately 400 vehicles had entered Ontario from the Manitoba border as part of the eastbound convoy. In a phone interview Jason LaFace said he was invited by Canada Unity to join them to organize much of the Ontario convoy. Laface said the convoy team was working with constitutional lawyers to get signatures to "compel the government to dissolve government." He compared mask mandates which forced him to wear a mask in grocery stores to "living in Nazi Germany". He concluded by saying Trudeau was a criminal. January 27: The Kingston Police estimated approximately 300 vehicles (17 full tractor-trailers, 104 tractors without trailers, 424 passenger vehicles and six RVs) to go through Kingston. January: Intelligence reports by the Integrated Terrorism Assessment Centre (ITAC), which is part of CSIS, said that some convoy supporters "advocated civil war", had "called for violence against prime minister Justin Trudeau, and said the protest should be 'used as Canada's 'January 6'". The ITAC reports, which were seen by The Guardian, warned in late January that that "extremists" were "likely involved" and the "potential for violence remained real". January 28: The province of Nova Scotia banned gatherings along highways, specifically on the Trans-Canada (Highway 104) between the Nova Scotia and New Brunswick border, in relation to protests related to the freedom convoy. The number of vehicles in the convoy was estimated as including between 551 and 1,155 vehicles with 121–230 trucks and from 430 to 925 personal vehicles. A convoy of trucks from Niagara Region arrive in Ottawa, led by West Lincoln Township councillor Harold Jonker, who served as road captain. January 29: Canadian Trucking Alliance said many of the supporters at the protest in Ottawa had no direct connection to the trucking industry. As the western convoy reached Ontario, it began to expand from its original goals. Several protesters voiced opposition to perceived authoritarianism and corruption by Justin Trudeau, stating they wanted him "out of office", while others said: "This is not an anti-vaccination movement, this is a freedom movement". Big rigs began to block downtown traffic near Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Media reported protesters drinking and dancing on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the National War Memorial, and putting protest posters and an upside-down Canadian flag on the memorial statue of cancer fundraiser Terry Fox. Images of a Canadian flag marked with a swastika were seen, as were Confederate flags. There were reports of some protesters harassing volunteers at a local soup kitchen, the Shepherds of Good Hope. Its press release said trucks were towed after blocking its ambulance drop-off zone for around half a day. The Ottawa Police Service has 1,500 officers to serve the million residents of the city of Ottawa. There were only 150 officers on the streets in "three of the most affected neighbourhoods over the course of a day". OPS Chief Sloly requested an additional 1,800 officers early on, but by February 13, they had not arrived. Estimates of the number of people range from 3,000 to 18,000 people. Media outlets estimated 8,000–15,000 people The OPS estimated from 5,000 to 18,000 people. CBC estimated there were 3,000 people in attendance. | access. OPS launched a criminal investigation into the desecration of the National War Memorial and statue of Terry Fox. They will also be investigating "threatening/illegal/intimidating behaviour" toward police officers, workers and other private citizens. OPS Chief of Police Peter Sloly said: "I think the only thing we can say for sure we're still going to be dealing with some level of traffic disruption and demonstration over the next 24 hours." January 31: The House of Commons resumed on January 31, after the holiday break. February February 1: In a 6:00 a.m. Canada Newswire press release, Tamara Lich who self-identified as the Freedom Convoy's spokesperson, said that the organizers had been surprised and temporarily overwhelmed "from a logistical point of view" by the number of protesters from all across Canada, but that they were not "retreating." She said they were "well-organized" and had "settled in" and "would remain in Ottawa " "for as long as it takes...[to] end all mandates associated with COVID-19"—"until Canada is a free nation again." February 2: Ottawa's police chief, Peter Sloly, described a "significant element" of American involvement in the organization and funding of the convoys. Many of the anonymous donors participating in the protest's GoFundMe campaign claimed to be from the United States, and many used false names. February 3: Ottawa mayor Jim Watson submitted a request for help for additional resources to the Minister of Public Safety, Marco Mendicino. February 4: Following a phone call with Mayor Watson, Mendicino said, "The convoy in Ottawa has caused significant disruption to local residents – including vandalism, harassment, expressions of hate and violence and ongoing obstruction of many essential services. The community is entitled to expect that the law is upheld and enforced by police, and that public safety is maintained." During a CBC television interview, Mendicino said, "We put the question of vaccines and vaccine mandates on the ballot ... in the (2021) election and we're simply carrying out the promise that we made with the support of the vast majority of Canadians." He said that "government would not back down on the issue". February 5: According to the Daily Hive, protesters barbecued food, played hockey, and set up bouncy castles for their children to play in. Global News reported that there were about 1,000 vehicles and 5,000 people in attendance. February 6 (Day 10) Mayor Watson said that "demonstrators outnumbered police and controlled the situation." Mayor Watson declared a state of emergency in response to the "unprecedented 10-day occupation". In his statement he said, that this "reflects the serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents posed by the ongoing demonstrations and highlights the need for support from other jurisdictions and levels of government." The "Freedom Convoy 2022 Fund Raiser" Facebook group was started on Facebook. February 7 (Day 11): The Ottawa Police Board held an emergency meeting where Ottawa city councillor and Board chair, Diane Deans, said the Ottawa was "under siege", and that the disruption had "become a nationwide insurrection", with protesters "terrorizing" and "threatening" Ottawa residents. An Ottawa judge, Justice Hugh McLean, granted a ten-day interim injunction to "silence the honking horns" as requested by lawyer Paul Champ on behalf of his client, Zexi Li, in their proposed class-action lawsuit filed at the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. In their February 7 statement, Teamsters Canadarepresenting more than 55,000 professional drivers, including approximately 15,000 long-haul truck drivers, of which 90% are vaccinated, said that the so-called “freedom convoy” are "delegitimiz[ing] the real concerns of most truck drivers today". The statement said that the convoy and "the despicable display of hate lead by the political Right and shamefully encouraged by elected conservative politicians does not reflect the values of Teamsters Canada." Facebook parent Meta Platforms said it had removed one convoy protest-associated Facebook group for promoting the QAnon conspiracy theory. Meta also "removed dozens" of "spammer" and "scammer" "groups, pages and accounts" that claimed ties to the truck convoy protest. Self-declared spokesperson Tom Marazzo said at "emergency press conference" that he was proposing that a "core group of organizers and their supporters could sit at a table “with the Conservatives, and the NDP, and the Bloc as a coalition." February 8: ITAC report raised concerns that the "online rhetoric" was "violent", and that there were "ideological extremists" who were "physically present" at "some gatherings". Canada Unity retracted their MoU that had "underpinned its fight against COVID-19 measures". February 10: The Chief Medical Officer of Health of Ontario, Dr. Kieran Moore, said that there was a "remarkable improvement" in "all of key metrics" in the province that will lead to a review of all COVID-19 "public health measures" which includes "mask mandates and proof of vaccination." As a third border blockade began in Manitoba, the Conservatives reversed their position supporting the border blockades. Bergen called for the blockades to disperse, "for the sake of the economy", but vowed to continue pushing the governing Liberals to release a clear plan for ending COVID-19 restrictions. OPS announced on Twitter that there was a “concerted effort” to flood 911 with "excessive calls to jam up Ottawa's emergency call system. The OPS reported that the these nuisance callsmany of which came from the United Stateswere part of a efforts that were "ongoing throughout this demonstration" to swat-and-dox OPS "organizations and logistics." The prank calls "endanger lives". These calls were tracked and police will "charge anyone deliberately interfering with emergencies.” OPS Chief Sloly said the 911 calls were considered to be "linked to the ongoing protests against COVID-19 vaccine mandates." Protester circled Ottawa Macdonald–Cartier International Airport for two hours; the Ottawa International Airport Authority said it had little effect on operations. February 11: In a misappropriation of Orange Shirt Day, that was condemned by Indigenous leaders, the protest convoy declared February 11 an "orange shirt day" and called for student walkouts to end COVID-19 restrictions in schools. In a virtual meeting, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and US President Joe Biden discussed ending the blockades at the border. February 12: Federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos alongside Dr. Tam, said that the worst of the fifth (Omicron) wave of the COVID-19 pandemic was behind us, most new cases were community-driven, and cross-border restrictions were less effective. Duclos announced an update on health restrictions in the following week. Plans for the creation of the new Integrated Command Centre (ICC) were in place. The ICC was created to help Ottawa Police Services (OPS) coordinate with Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) and RCMP when the anticipated reinforcements would arrive. As an estimated 4,000 protesters converged on Parliament Hill, the extra reinforcements requested by Chief Sloly a week earlier had not yet arrived. February 13: Ontario Premier Doug Ford declared a state of emergency in Ontario as protesters continued to occupy the Ambassador Bridge. Ford referred to the situation in downtown Ottawa as a "siege". By February 12, police had cleared trucks from the bridge, with busloads of police, some with heavy weapons, and an armoured vehicle. Protesters returned on foot. Protesters were completely cleared from the Ambassador Bridge blockade at approximately 8 a.m, although the border was not immediately opened. The bridge re-opened Sunday evening with 25 to 30 people arrested and 12 small vehicles seized. There was a substantial police presence and Jersey barriers were installed to keep the three-mile long access road to the bridge open. On February 16, police intercepted a convoy of six or seven trucks away from Windsor — heading towards the city after leaving Ottawa. February 14: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act, to "end border blockades and the occupation of downtown Ottawa by so-called “Freedom Convoy” protesters." The Act gave banks and the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC) temporary "powers to monitor transactions and potentially freeze accounts" in order to prevent key figures in the protest from accessing funds to continue the illegal demonstration. February 15: During the fifth wave there were 134, 098 active cases which was more than three times higher than at any other peak number in the previous waves. While most cases were milder, there were 6,584 deaths recorded by mid-February. Canada's total death count of 35,679 over the 753 days of the pandemic is lower than many advanced economy nations. February 15: During the fifth wave there were 134, 098 active cases which was more than three times higher than at any other peak number in the previous waves. While most cases were milder, there were 6,584 deaths recorded by mid-February. Canada's total death count of 35,679 over the 753 days of the pandemic is lower than many advanced economy nations. February 17–20: A large-numbered joint-operation police presence in Ottawa began making arrests of organizers, protesters, the removal of parked vehicles and dismantling of blockades from Ottawa streets. By February 20, the downtown of Ottawa had been secured by police, with the area in front of Parliament cleared of protesters and concrete barricades and fencing blocking off the area. February 18: Six investigators from the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) are investigating an incident on Friday, at about 5:14 p.m. on Rideau Street and Mackenzie Avenue involving a Toronto Police Service officer in the mounted police unit and a 49-year-old woman, who "has a reported serious injury". There is a now-debunked but widely-spread online rumour that a woman had been trampled by a horse and killed. The |
Itabaiana National Park (Sergipe, Brazil), at an altitude of about . The specific epithet brasilisidiata refers to both the country where it was first scientifically documented, as well as the presence of isidia. The lichen contains secondary compounds that can be detected using thin-layer chromatography, including alectoronic acid (major), and minor to trace amounts of dehydroalectoronic acid and β-alectoronic acid. When shone with a UV light, the medulla of the thallus and the isidia | (bark-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. It has a neotropical distribution, and has been recorded from Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Brazil, where it grows in parks and open areas. The lichen was formally described as a new species in 2018 by Garima Singh, Marcela Eugenia da Silva Cáceres, and André Aptroot. The type specimen was collected by Cáceres and Aptroot in the Serra de |
publishers Mills & Boon as he was signed up by Hodder & Stoughton who hoped he could replicate the success of Edgar Wallace's thrillers. Adaptation In 1923 it was made into a silent film Through Fire and Water produced by the British studio Ideal Films. Directed by Thomas Bentley it starred Clive Brook, | Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999. McAleer, Joseph. Passion's Fortune: The Story of Mills & Boon. OUP Oxford, 1999. Reilly, John M. Twentieth Century Crime & Mystery Writers. Springer, 2015. 1922 British |
between American Frank "The Animal" Fletcher and Argentina's Juan Roldan, which was won by Roldan by a brutal, blistering sixth round knockout. Hagler won the fight by a fifteen rounds unanimous decision. Despite what boxing fans and experts expected, it was a largely tactical affair, with Duran unexpectedly boxing from outside (he is mostly remembered as an in-fighter) while Hagler awaited for his opportunities, picking his shots. Duran led on the three official judges' scorecards after thirteen rounds by one point on each. But Hagler dominated rounds fourteen and fifteen to forge ahead and retain his titles by a close but unanimous decision, the scores reading 146-145 (on judge Yusaku Yoshida's), 144-143 (on Ove Ovesen's) and 142-141 (on Guy Jutras') on the cards, all in favor of champion Hagler. Aftermath Hagler then retained his title 4 more times, including victories over Roldan, over Hearns and John Mugabi before losing it on his final fight, to Ray Leonard on April 6th, 1987. He retired with a record of 62 wins, 3 losses and 2 draws (ties), with 52 wins by knockout, after he moved to Italy and became an actor, filming various movies in Italy and a commercial in the United States for Pizza Hut. He was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame 14 years before Duran was, in 1993. On the other hand, Duran lost on his very next fight to Hearns and retired immediately after that, but he made several comebacks afterwards, including one where he actually realized his dream of becoming a four division world champion (albeit being the third one, not the first one as he'd been had he won against Hagler; Hearns and Leonard were boxing's first and second four division world champions, respectively) against Iran Barkley, fights with Vinny Paz and Hector Camacho (twice each; Duran lost to both twice each by decisions) William Joppy-a third-round technical knockout loss for Joppy's WBA world Junior Middleweight title which had belonged to Duran himself a decade and a half before- and a rubber match with Leonard (they had beaten each other once each before). Duran retired with 103 wins and 16 losses in 119 contests, 70 of those wins coming by knockout. Duran went on to record Salsa music albums as a singer and was in Argentina promoting one of his albums when he suffered | Other media outlets, such as Sports Illustrated, also covered the event. Hagler came into the fight with 57 wins, 2 losses and 2 draws (ties), 48 of his wins being by knockout. For his part, Panama's Duran sported a record of 77 wins and 4 losses in 81 professional boxing contests, 58 of his wins by knockout. The bout's presenter was Chuck Hull; its referee was Stanley Christodoulou of South Africa. Christodoulou, coincidentally, had also refereed Duran's fellow Latin and Central American Alexis Arguello's first attempt versus Aaron Pryor at becoming a four division world boxing champion, which had come almost a year before Hagler-Duran's date, on November 12, 1982 at Miami, Florida. Also like Pryor-Arguello I and II (the latter of which was also held at the Caesars Palace hotel), the fight was promoted by Bob Arum. The fight The bout was the main event of a program that also included Freddie Roach's 10-round unanimous decision loss to Louie Burke, and a contest to determine Hagler-Duran's winner's next challenger, between American Frank "The Animal" Fletcher and Argentina's Juan Roldan, which was won by Roldan by a brutal, blistering sixth round knockout. Hagler won the fight by a fifteen rounds unanimous decision. Despite what boxing fans and experts expected, it was a largely tactical affair, with Duran unexpectedly boxing from outside (he is mostly remembered as an in-fighter) while Hagler awaited for his opportunities, picking his shots. Duran led on the three official judges' scorecards after thirteen rounds by one point on each. But Hagler dominated rounds fourteen and fifteen to forge ahead and retain his titles by a |
Galmarini, served as secretary of sports of Argentina during the presidency of Carlos Menem. She has two brothers: Sebastián (born 1978), a fellow politician and member of the provincial senate, and Martín (born 1982), a professional football player in Club Atlético Tigre. She studied political science at the Universidad de Belgrano, graduating with a licenciatura degree. Political career Galmarini became a member of the Justicialist Party aged 18. In 1998, she was appointed as undersecretary of youth affairs at the Ministry of Health and Social Action. In 2008, Galmarini was appointed Secretary of Health Policies and Human Development of Tigre Partido, during the mayorship of Julio Zamora. Later, in 2009, she was elected to the City Council of Tigre on the Front for Victory list. She was re-elected in 2013 as part of the Renewal Front, the party founded by her husband, Sergio Massa. Galmarini remained in her position as secretary of health in the Tigre municipal government during Massa's mayorship. In the 2019 provincial elections, Galmarini was elected to the Buenos Aires Province Chamber of Deputies as part of the Frente de Todos list in the First Electoral Section. She was sworn in on 10 December 2019, however, the incoming government of Alberto Fernández announced she would be the new president of Agua y Saneamientos Argentinos (AySA) starting on 12 December 2019. | Durrieu, was a national deputy for the Justicialist Party, while her father, Fernando Galmarini, served as secretary of sports of Argentina during the presidency of Carlos Menem. She has two brothers: Sebastián (born 1978), a fellow politician and member of the provincial senate, and Martín (born 1982), a professional football player in Club Atlético Tigre. She studied political science at the Universidad de Belgrano, graduating with a licenciatura degree. Political career Galmarini became a member of the Justicialist Party aged 18. In 1998, she was appointed as undersecretary of youth affairs at the Ministry of Health and Social Action. In 2008, Galmarini was appointed Secretary of Health Policies and Human Development of Tigre Partido, during the mayorship of Julio Zamora. Later, in 2009, she was elected to the City Council of Tigre on the Front for Victory list. She was re-elected in 2013 as part of the Renewal Front, the party founded by her husband, Sergio Massa. Galmarini remained in her position as secretary of health in the Tigre municipal government during Massa's mayorship. In |
Neoprotoparmelia capensis is a species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. Found in South Africa, it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by | epithet refers to the province in which it was discovered. The lichen is only known from the type locality, a karoo biome with many succulent plants; it grows on exposed sandstone, forming thin, light grey to pale to strong brown and areolate crusts |
10 and would practise by playing along to albums by Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin. She has listed The Velvet Underground's drummer Moe Tucker as an influence. She later studied at the Australian National University School of Music. During the 1990s and early 2000s she was a member of rock group Rebel Astronauts with Emma Hoy, Matt McBeath, and Tom Roberts. They released three singles and one mini-album, and were likened to Mogwai and Sonic Youth. In 2010 she collaborated with Nick Wales for the soundtrack to dance work Happy As Larry. It was later released as an album. She was artist in residence at Campbelltown Arts Centre in 2015 where she collaborated with artist Kate McIntosh on In Stereo. The two musicians performed their piece sitting back-to-back, playing on a variety of percussive instruments and found objects. In 2019 she created a new piece for the Canberra Youth Orchestra which was performed | percussionist and composer, born in Townsville, Queensland. She is now based in Newcastle. Career Across her career Bree van Reyk has worked within classical, jazz, rock, and experimental music performances and groups. She has worked with the Australian Chamber Orchestra and Sydney Symphony Orchestra and played with Paul Kelly, Holly Throsby, Gurrumul, Seeker Lover Keeper, Lior, Darren Hanlon, and others. As a child, she started learning piano before switching to the drums at age 10 and would practise by playing along to albums by Pink Floyd and |
is an American physicist. Sauls studied physics at the Colorado School of Mines, graduating in 1975, and pursued a doctorate in the subject at Stony Brook University, which he completed in 1980. Sauls began his academic career at Princeton University, as research associate, instructor, then assistant professor of physics. In 1987, Sauls joined the faculty of Northwestern University as associate professor. He became a full professor in 1991. In 2021, Sauls was appointed the Sarah Rebecca Roland | subject at Stony Brook University, which he completed in 1980. Sauls began his academic career at Princeton University, as research associate, instructor, then assistant professor of physics. In 1987, Sauls joined the faculty of Northwestern University as associate professor. He became a full professor in 1991. In 2021, Sauls was appointed the Sarah Rebecca Roland Professor of Physics. In 1998, Sauls was elected |
located in Swabi District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. References | in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistani culture Ancient Central Asia |
of All Russian Saints in Burlingame, where the Russian language, geography, history and the law of God were taught. Vladimir graduated from the University of San Francisco with a bachelor's degree in Russian literature and music. He then studied architecture for three years. He acquired his first icon painting skills from N. S. Zadorozhny while painting the Church of All Russian Saints in Burlingame (the construction of the church was led by Vladimir's father). From 1969 to 1978, he was an assistant to the icon painter Father Cyprian (Pyzhov) from the Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, who was invited to San Francisco to paint the Cathedral and other Orthodox churches in California. For several years he went to the icon-painting workshop at the Holy Trinity Monastery in order to improve in icon painting. In 1979, Vladimir Krassovsky replaced his mentor and teacher Mikhail Konstantinov as the choir director of the archbishop's choir at Holy Virgin Cathedral. In 1985, having received the blessing of Father Cyprian, he left his service in the insurance company and | in the United States, California. In parallel with an American school, he attended the parish gymnasium at the Church of All Russian Saints in Burlingame, where the Russian language, geography, history and the law of God were taught. Vladimir graduated from the University of San Francisco with a bachelor's degree in Russian literature and music. He then studied architecture for three years. He acquired his first icon painting skills from N. S. Zadorozhny while painting the Church of All Russian Saints in Burlingame (the construction of the church was led by Vladimir's father). From 1969 to 1978, he was an assistant to the icon painter Father Cyprian (Pyzhov) from the Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, who was invited to San Francisco to paint the Cathedral and other Orthodox churches in California. For several years he went to the icon-painting workshop at the Holy Trinity Monastery in order to improve in icon painting. In 1979, Vladimir Krassovsky replaced his mentor and teacher Mikhail Konstantinov as the choir director of the archbishop's choir at Holy Virgin Cathedral. In 1985, having received the blessing of Father Cyprian, he left his service in the insurance company and devoted himself entirely to icon painting. Over the next years, he painted about ten Orthodox churches in the United States. He painted several dozen icons for churches and monasteries in Russia, as well as for exalted Russian |
scored three goals in the 2018 CECAFA Women's Championship to win the top goal scorer of the competition award. References External links Living people Ethiopian women's footballers | plays as a forward for and the Ethiopia women's national team. In 2018, she scored three goals in the 2018 CECAFA Women's Championship to win the top goal |
the Dragon (2005) Luntik (2006-present) Lavatory – Lovestory (2006) Ilya Muromets and Nightingale the Robber (2007) The Tale of Soldier Fedot, The Daring Fellow (2008) How Not to Rescue a Princess (2010) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf (2011) The Barkers (2011-present) Three Heroes on the Distant Shores (2012) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 2 (2013) We Can't Live Without Cosmos (2014) Three Heroes. Horse Course (2014) The Fortress. With Shield and Sword (2015) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 3 (2015) Three Heroes and the Sea King (2016) Fantastic Journey to Oz (2017) Three Heroes and the Princess of Egypt (2017) Little Tiaras (2018-present) Three Heroes. The Heiress to the Throne (2018) He Can't Live Without Cosmos (2019) Fantastic Return to Oz (2019) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 4 (2019) The Barkers: Mind the Cats! (2020) Horse Julius and Big Horse Racing (2020) Three Heroes and a Horse on the Throne (2021) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 5 (2022) Executive producer Adventures in the Emerald City (1999-2000) The Cat and the Fox (2004) Screenwriter Little Longnose (2003) Alyosha Popovich and Tugarin Zmey (2004) Dobrinya and the Dragon (2005) Ilya Muromets and Nightingale the Robber (2007) How Not to Rescue a Princess (2010) Baikino Village (2010) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf (2011) Three Heroes on the Distant Shores (2012) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 2 (2013) Three Heroes. Horse Course (2014) The Fortress. With Shield and Sword (2015) Three Heroes and the Sea King (2016) Fantastic Journey to Oz (2017) Three Heroes and the Princess of Egypt (2017) Little Tiaras (2018-present) Fantastic Return to Oz (2019) The | The Barkers: Mind the Cats! (2020) Horse Julius and Big Horse Racing (2020) Three Heroes and a Horse on the Throne (2021) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 5 (2022) Executive producer Adventures in the Emerald City (1999-2000) The Cat and the Fox (2004) Screenwriter Little Longnose (2003) Alyosha Popovich and Tugarin Zmey (2004) Dobrinya and the Dragon (2005) Ilya Muromets and Nightingale the Robber (2007) How Not to Rescue a Princess (2010) Baikino Village (2010) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf (2011) Three Heroes on the Distant Shores (2012) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 2 (2013) Three Heroes. Horse Course (2014) The Fortress. With Shield and Sword (2015) Three Heroes and the Sea King (2016) Fantastic Journey to Oz (2017) Three Heroes and the Princess of Egypt (2017) Little Tiaras (2018-present) Fantastic Return to Oz (2019) The Barkers: Mind the Cats! (2020) Horse Julius and Big Horse Racing (2020) Three Heroes and a Horse on the Throne (2021) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 5 (2022) Composer Midnight Games (1991) Three Heroes and the Princess of Egypt (2017) Fantastic Return to Oz (2019) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 4 (2019) The Barkers: Mind the Cats! (2020) Horse Julius and Big Horse Racing (2020) Three Heroes and a Horse on the Throne (2021) Ivan Tsarevich and the Gray Wolf 5 (2022) Sound Director Switchcraft (1994) |
reconciled with his father (A'). The climax of these events is when king David detected Joab's plan (C). Absalom returned to Jerusalem (14:1–27) Joab read signs that David was ready for Absalom's return, so Joab used trickery to get David's permission so he could bring Absalom, a possible heir to the throne, back to the king's court. For executing his plan, Joab channeled his plea to David through the mouth of a wise woman from Tekoah who had the special gift of either a gift of speech or a gift for feigning or acting lamentation. There are possible connections between this episode and other biblical passages: The style resembles Nathan's parable (2 Samuel 12), after which David condemned himself in his response to the described injustice. Here David convicted himself in his judgement (verse 13). The tale about two brothers where one killing the other is reminiscent of Cain and Abel in Genesis 4, especially the protection given to the murderer by divine promise (Genesis 4:15) and here by royal oath (verse 11). The account of Joab's interaction with the wise woman of Tekoa contains several links to his conversation with the wise women of Abel of Beth-maacah in 2 Samuel 20. The woman presented to David a dilemma: she was a widow with only two sons, that when one murdered the other, she was torn between her duty to avenge the death of one son and her duty to her husband to preserve his name by protecting the life of the remaining son (verse 7). Her community rightly demanded a blood revenge, but her appeal for special consideration so that 'her last ember would not be quenched' touched king David's heart, so he promised a ruling (verse 8), which became a royal oath on the woman's further insistence that no one would touch her son. The oath placed David in jeopardy because he had condemned himself for his treatmentq of Absalom as the woman argued (verse 14): all would die, and Amnon's death cannot be changed by keeping Absalom in banishment. The parallel of the parable devised by Joab to be spoken by the woman to the story of Cain and Abel can be summarized below: Apparently Joab crafted the tale assuming that David had a masterful knowledge of the Torah, and that David would use it as an authoritative guide in making his legal decisions (cf. Nathan's parable; 2 Samuel 12:6), so the king would give the same verdict that the Lord issued for Cain. At this time, David realized that the woman's action was actually Joab's doing, still he acceded to the request that Absalom be allowed to return, although not be granted full privileges (verse 24). The section comprising verses 25–27 provides specific descriptions on Absalom — his beauty and in particular to the weight of his hair— as well as his | so Joab used trickery to get David's permission so he could bring Absalom, a possible heir to the throne, back to the king's court. For executing his plan, Joab channeled his plea to David through the mouth of a wise woman from Tekoah who had the special gift of either a gift of speech or a gift for feigning or acting lamentation. There are possible connections between this episode and other biblical passages: The style resembles Nathan's parable (2 Samuel 12), after which David condemned himself in his response to the described injustice. Here David convicted himself in his judgement (verse 13). The tale about two brothers where one killing the other is reminiscent of Cain and Abel in Genesis 4, especially the protection given to the murderer by divine promise (Genesis 4:15) and here by royal oath (verse 11). The account of Joab's interaction with the wise woman of Tekoa contains several links to his conversation with the wise women of Abel of Beth-maacah in 2 Samuel 20. The woman presented to David a dilemma: she was a widow with only two sons, that when one murdered the other, she was torn between her duty to avenge the death of one son and her duty to her husband to preserve his name by protecting the life of the remaining son (verse 7). Her community rightly demanded a blood revenge, but her appeal for special consideration so that 'her last ember would not be quenched' touched king David's heart, so he promised a ruling (verse 8), which became a royal oath on the woman's further insistence that no one would touch her son. The oath placed David in jeopardy because he had condemned himself for his treatmentq of Absalom as the woman argued (verse 14): all would die, and Amnon's death cannot be changed by keeping Absalom in banishment. The parallel of the parable devised by Joab to be spoken by the woman to the story of Cain and Abel can be summarized below: Apparently Joab crafted the tale assuming that David had a masterful knowledge of the Torah, and that David would use it as an authoritative guide in making his legal decisions (cf. Nathan's parable; 2 Samuel 12:6), so the king would give the same verdict that the Lord issued for Cain. At this time, David realized that the woman's action was actually Joab's doing, still he acceded to the request that Absalom be allowed to return, although not be granted full privileges (verse 24). The section comprising verses 25–27 provides specific descriptions on Absalom — his beauty and in particular to the weight of his hair— as well as his children, probably intended to show the popularity of Absalom among the people of Israel. Verse 27 And to Absalom there were born three sons, and one daughter whose name was Tamar; she was a woman of beautiful appearance. "Three sons": Their names are not given, indicating that they may have died in infancy, as supported by 2 Samuel 18:18, where Absalom said, "I have no son to keep my name in remembrance." "Tamar": Absalom's daughter named after her aunt, who was also said to be beautiful. The Septuagint version has an addition that "she |
and the Tanzania women's national team. International career In 2018, Minja scored three goals in the 2018 CECAFA Women's Championship to win the top goal scorer of the competition award. Honours CECAFA Women's Championship: 2018 CECAFA | goal scorer of the competition award. Honours CECAFA Women's Championship: 2018 CECAFA Women's Championship Top Scorer : 2018 References Living people Tanzanian women's |
the #2 seed Arizona Wildcats in the quarterfinals. The Cougars received an at large bid to the 2021 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament. They received the #9 seed in the Mercado Regional. They lost in the first round to the #8 seed South Florida and were eliminated. Roster Schedule |- !colspan=9 style=| Exhibition |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 | large bid to the 2021 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament. They received the #9 seed in the Mercado Regional. They lost in the first round to the #8 seed South Florida and were eliminated. Roster Schedule |- !colspan=9 style=| Exhibition |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| Pac-12 Women's Tournament Source: Rankings *The preseason and week 1 polls were the same.^Coaches did not release a week 2 poll. See also 2021–22 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team Notes References Washington State |
Basel and partnered with Livio Vacchini from 1995 to 2001. Gmür was also a professor at ETH Zurich from 1979 to 1985. An exhibition of her projects was displayed at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in 2014, the same year in which a similar exhibition was held at the Galerie d'Architecture in Paris. Awards Progressive Architecture Award | Zurich from 1979 to 1985. An exhibition of her projects was displayed at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in 2014, the same year in which a similar exhibition was held at the Galerie d'Architecture in Paris. Awards Progressive Architecture Award (1977) |
is a species of crustose lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. Found in Australia, it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by Garima Singh and André Aptroot. The type specimen was collected by John Elix in Solar Village (Australian Capital Territory). It is only known to occur here and | it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by Garima Singh and André Aptroot. The type specimen was collected by John Elix in Solar Village (Australian Capital Territory). It is only |
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. External links 1921 films 1921 Western (genre) films English-language | 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. External links 1921 films 1921 Western (genre) films English-language films American films |
East Conference. Roster Schedule |- !colspan=9 style=|Exhibition |- !colspan=9 style=| Non-conference regular season Rankings 2021–22 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings See also 2021–22 Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball team References Marquette Marquette Golden | I women's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by third year head coach Megan Duffy, play their home games at the Al McGuire Center and are members of the |
include: noble gases noble | considered "noble" include: |
a 1720 book by Scottish Presbyterian theologian and philosopher Thomas Boston. Boston organizes human nature into four aspects: Primitive Integrity, Entire Depravity, Begun Recovery, and Consummate | theologian and philosopher Thomas Boston. Boston organizes human nature into four aspects: Primitive Integrity, Entire Depravity, Begun Recovery, and Consummate Happiness or Misery. The correspond to Augustine of Hippo's |
old and belongs from to the era of Gandhara Kingdom. As on date, more than 400 antiquities have been recovered. It is said to be the | be the largest stupa in the area. Further excavations are underway. References Cultural heritage sites in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistani |
1921 American silent western film directed by George Marshall and starring Tom Mix, Pauline Curley and Charles K. French. Cast Tom Mix as Tex Roberts Pauline Curley as Ramona Wadley Charles K. French as Clint Wadley Lloyd Bacon as Ford Wadley Frank Clark as Capt. Jim Ellison Sid Jordan as Pete Dinsmore Merrill McCormick as Tony Alviro Virginia Warwick | Pauline Curley and Charles K. French. Cast Tom Mix as Tex Roberts Pauline Curley as Ramona Wadley Charles K. French as Clint Wadley Lloyd Bacon as Ford Wadley Frank Clark as Capt. Jim Ellison Sid Jordan as Pete Dinsmore Merrill McCormick as Tony |
family and motherhood. Rahul Radhakrishnan from Indian express writes that, in Acid, Sangeetha combines the life of insecure characters with Middle-class urban life, nuclear family unrest, marital discomfort, variations of sexuality, the intensity of intoxication, the new generation of definitions of human relationships, and above all, the colors, rhythms, and stumbles of a metropolis that never sets at night. Works Novels Translations . Translation of Elena Ferrante's Days of Abandonment . Translation of her own Malayalam novel Acid. . Translation of Sarah Josep's Malayalam novel Budhini. Her translation of one of George Simenon's Maigret novels is about to publish by Mathrubhumi Books. She is currently translating Chris Kraus's cult feminist classic I Love Dick. Short story collection Children's literature Children's literature. Awards and honors Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award for Translation 2020 for Upekshikkappetta Dinangal, the Malayalam translation of the novel The Days of Abandonment by Italian author Elena Ferrante Thoppil Ravi award 2017 for Acid(Malayalam) Malayattoor Award 2015 for Aparakanthi Nooranad Haneef Novel Award References 1975 births Malayalam-language writers English-language writers Indian women short story writers Indian | write about women's lives without a barrier and about women's sexuality. She says that her mother's influence on her writing and life is immense. Receptions Methil Radhakrishnan has dedicated his book Methil Kavithakal to Sangeetha and wrote "to my best friend who wrote the book Penguin Who Lost the March" in the introduction. Actor and director Madhupal decided to make her novel Aparakanthi into a film and Sangeetha wrote the script as per his request but due to some circumstances the film was later cancelled. Novel Acid Sangeetha's most critically acclaimed novel is Acid, originally written in Malayalam and later translated to English. Sonali Majumdar from Hindustan Times wrote Acid as a tempestuous and turbulent trip, which is hallucinogenic, haywire, and is filled with a melancholia that is hard to shake off. writer K. R. Meera in a review publishe in The Hindu, wrote that the book is likely a first book to go deep into unapologetic handling of same-sex affinity between two women. In a review published in The Telegraph India, S. D. Chaudary states that, as the possessor of a loneliness unique to each character, the novel does not deny the complexities of life that the characters go through. He also |
Why Trust Your Husband? is a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by George Marshall and starring Eileen Percy, Harry Myers and Harry Dunkinson. Cast Eileen Percy as Eunice Day Harry Myers as Elmer Day Ray Ripley as Joe Perry Harry Dunkinson as Uncle Horace Milla Davenport | a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by George Marshall and starring Eileen Percy, Harry Myers and Harry Dunkinson. Cast Eileen Percy as Eunice Day Harry Myers as Elmer Day Ray Ripley as Joe Perry Harry Dunkinson as Uncle Horace Milla Davenport as Aunt Miranda Jane Miller as Maud Stone Hayward Mack as Gilbert Stone Bess True as Marie References Bibliography Connelly, Robert |
Honor) (1847–?), American soldier and recipient of the Medal of Honor | (politician) (1806–1888), Virginia politician and lawyer George W. Thompson (Medal of Honor) (1847–?), American soldier and recipient of the |
ARY Digital from 9 September 2012 to 3 February 2013 with a total of 20 episodes. It stars Aijaz Aslam, Maria Wasti, Nimra Bucha and Yasra Rizvi in leading roles. Plot summary As the word Baandi means slave girl, a woman who is not free or bound to someone. Thus, the series focuses that woman in our society are always bound to | Javed under banner A&B Entertainment and originally broadcast on ARY Digital from 9 September 2012 to 3 February 2013 with a total of 20 episodes. It stars Aijaz Aslam, Maria Wasti, Nimra Bucha and Yasra Rizvi in leading roles. Plot summary As the word |
Thai duo singer from music label RS Promotion. Consisting of two members: JR Kittikunlawong and Kriangkrai Angkunchai. Their songs are known is: "I Love You", "Only You", "Dek chao pan ha (เด็กเจ้าปัญหา)", "Ziggaza", "Ma tam mai (มาทำไม)", "Lon (ล้น)" and "Mai tam rai (ไม่ทำร้าย)" In current JR, He is still active in the music industry, with his changing appearance, and | "Only You", "Dek chao pan ha (เด็กเจ้าปัญหา)", "Ziggaza", "Ma tam mai (มาทำไม)", "Lon (ล้น)" and "Mai tam rai (ไม่ทำร้าย)" In current JR, He is still active in the music industry, with his changing appearance, and he is married, has a family and a baby. And Voy He's been working in production in Japan. Members JR (เจอาร์) – (เจอาร์ กิตติกุลวงศ์) Voy (วอย) – (เกรียงไกร อังคุณชัย) Discography Album Solo album JR Voy Other |
them were also the flagbearers for Malaysia. She is also the first female athlete to represent Malaysia at the Winter Olympics. Olympic results References Living people 2004 births Malaysian people of Malay descent Olympic alpine skiers of Malaysia Alpine skiers at the | Malaysian flag alongside Jeffrey Webb, who is also competing in alpine skiing. Both of them were also the flagbearers for Malaysia. She is also the first female athlete to represent Malaysia at the Winter Olympics. Olympic results References Living |
of Scots), but despite the team's success, it was felt they were stronger in attack than defence and individually he fell out of favour towards the end of the campaign and was not retained – Peter Meehan was brought in as a replacement and Donald Gow later also returned to the club. Smellie moved on to second-tier Walsall Town Swifts where he played for at least one season against the likes of Manchester City (in their final season of being known as Ardwick), Liverpool and Newcastle | played for at least one season against the likes of Manchester City (in their final season of being known as Ardwick), Liverpool and Newcastle United, leaving a match against the latter in December 1893 with an injury which may have been significant as he featured rarely if at all for Walsall in 1894 according to statistics available. He has often been confused with the better-known Bob Smellie of Queen's Park who was a Scotland international in the same era, playing in the same position (circumstantial evidence, and more significantly |
a pharmacist. Political career Twiggs was first elected to the Georgia House of Representatives in 1972. He would go on to win a total of sixteen terms in the chamber, amassing significant seniority. During his final term in office, Twiggs had risen to become chair of the Transportation Committee. He had also previously chaired the Public Safety Committee. A passionate advocate for public education, Twiggs championed Georgia's free kindergarten program. Death Twiggs died of pneumonia in Houston on September 17, 2003, where he | In 1951, he graduated from the Southern College of Pharmacy. After serving in the medical division of the United States Air Force in 1952, Twiggs began a career as a pharmacist. Political career Twiggs was first elected to the Georgia House of Representatives in 1972. He would go on to win a total of sixteen terms in the chamber, amassing significant seniority. During his final term in office, Twiggs had risen to become chair of the Transportation Committee. He had also previously chaired the Public Safety Committee. A passionate advocate for public education, Twiggs championed |
the MPSF preseason poll. Season highlights Will be filled in as the season progresses. Roster Schedule TV/Internet Streaming information: All home games will be televised on Pac-12 Network or streamed on Pac-12+ USC. Most road games will also be streamed by the schools streaming service. The conference tournament will be streamed by FloVolleyball. *-Indicates conference match. Times listed are Pacific Time Zone. Announcers for televised games UC Santa Barbara: Max Kelton & Katie Spieler UC Santa Barbara: Max Kelton & Katie Spieler Princeton: | I & II men's volleyball season. The Trojans, led by seventh year head coach Jeff Nygaard, play their home games at Galen Center. The Trojans are members of the MPSF and were picked to finish fifth in the MPSF preseason poll. Season highlights Will be filled in as the season progresses. Roster Schedule TV/Internet Streaming information: All home games will be televised on Pac-12 Network or streamed on Pac-12+ USC. Most road games |
d'etat, they laundered money through the British and French to send the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) on the Polar Bear Expedition under British Command by General Edmund Ironside in Operation Archangel, part of the North Russia intervention, an Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. General Jean Lavergne, chief of the French military mission to Russia was aided by Consul General :fr:Joseph-Fernand Grenard, who attempted to recruit resistance armies to march on Bolshevik Moscow, and dispatched agents across Russia. After the invasion failed, inquires were met with "evasive avoidance" in America, with FDR in 1933 inirectly denying the matter in claiming a "happy tradition of friendship for more than a century". | red terror. U.S. Secretary of state Robert Lansing allegedly initiated the plot after Lenin seized power in October 1917 and removed Russia from the World War I, as part of a secret deal the Bolsheviks had struck with Germany. President Woodrow Wilson's foreign policy was publicly opposed to interference, but he told Lansing the Moscow coup had his "entire approval". In addition to instigating an attempted coup d'etat, they laundered money through the British and French to send the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) on the Polar Bear Expedition under British Command by General Edmund Ironside in Operation Archangel, part of the North Russia intervention, an Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. General Jean Lavergne, chief of the French military mission to Russia was aided by Consul General :fr:Joseph-Fernand Grenard, who attempted to recruit resistance armies to march on Bolshevik Moscow, and dispatched agents across Russia. After the invasion failed, inquires were met with "evasive avoidance" in America, with FDR in 1933 inirectly denying the matter in |
a flower-bearing shrub that belongs to the genus Sorocephalus and forms part of the fynbos. The plant is native to the Western Cape where it is found in the Piketberg, Groot Winterhoek and Elandskloof mountains. However, plants were last observed at the latter two sites 50 years ago. The shrub grows only 2 m tall and flowers from August to September. Fire destroys the plant but the seeds survive. The plant | shrub that belongs to the genus Sorocephalus and forms part of the fynbos. The plant is native to the Western Cape where it is found in the Piketberg, Groot Winterhoek and Elandskloof mountains. However, plants were last observed at the latter two sites 50 years ago. The shrub grows only 2 m tall and flowers from August to September. |
non-spore-forming bacterium from the genus of Cerasicoccus which has been isolated frpm marine sand from Kamaishi. Cerasicoccus | frpm marine sand from Kamaishi. Cerasicoccus arenae can produce carotenoid. References Verrucomicrobiota Bacteria described |
could nevertheless enjoy a house decorated by the painter Rosso Fiorentino. Camilla was renowned for her beauty, musical and literary skills. She wrote letters to her friend Francesco del Nero (1487-1563), who was Filippo Strozzi's brother-in-law and close business associate, complaining about her mistreatment at her lover's hands. “When this pleasant, though somewhat unconventional, household was dissolved after Strozzi lost interest in it, the girls went on to Rome, where from the rank of cortigiane oneste they soon sank to that of cortigiane piacevoli and even lower.” Works She is known in literary history for the 33 | dissolved after Strozzi lost interest in it, the girls went on to Rome, where from the rank of cortigiane oneste they soon sank to that of cortigiane piacevoli and even lower.” Works She is known in literary history for the 33 letters she sent to Strozzi between 1516 and 1517. Her letters, together with those of Veronica Franco, are among the few and most important non-poetic writings that have come down to us from a courtesan of the Italian Renaissance. “Camilla Pisana's letters seek to persuade their readers of the writer's self-worth by employing the culturally designated language of courtly compliment, suitably phrased.” According to Alfred Einstein, Camilla provided the words to poems set to music by the famous madrigalists Costanzo Festa and Philippe Verdelot. It is also possible that this |
Allen Baxter (Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations), Masaki Inaba (Africa Japan Forum), Rodelyn Marte (APCASO), Shreehari Acharya (Malaria CSO Platform). Rachel Ong (Regional Coordinator, GFAN AP) is an ex-officio member of the Steering Committee, and Peter van Rooijen is an Adviser (appointed in 2022) to the Steering Committee. Activities Working closely with India communities and civil society organisations ahead of the Sixth Preparatory Meeting hosted by the Government of India in February 2019, communities and civil society raised the importance of the continued support of the Global Fund to India, and at the same time the solidarity that India should show with the rest of the world through increased pledges to the Global Fund, and to double its health budget which is only 1.2% of the GDP. For the Sixth Replenishment of the Global Fund, the largest communities and civil society mobilisation was coordinated by GFAN Asia-Pacific for the #LoveMoreGiveMore campaign, held on Saint Valentine's Day to thank donors and to share key messages of the Investment Case. In 2020, after COVID-19 started ravaging and brought countries programmes to a standstill in some situations, GFAN AP worked closely with country partners in the Asia-Pacific region to highlight | Communities Delegation to the Board of the Global Fund (Communities Delegation) and the Global Fund Advocates Network (GFAN) hosted by the Asia Pacific Network of People Living with HIV and 7 Sisters Network on 9 and 10 April 2014 in Bangkok, Thailand. The meeting brought together 27 representatives of regional networks of Key Affected Populations, Communities and Civil Society Delegations on the Board of the Global Fund, civil society organisations, and representatives from the Global Fund Secretariat. The meeting founded GFAN AP recognising the need for a more consolidated and concerted effort on advocacy and lobbying by community and civil society networks/organisations in the Asia-Pacific for the Global Fund. The first working group that resulted from the inaugural meeting consisted of Tracey Tully (Asia Pacific Network of Sex Workers), Malu Marin (7 Sisters), Rodelyn Marte (APCASO), Laurindo Garcia (B-Change), Blessina Kumar (Global Coalition of TB Activists), and Ting Ting Shen (Asia Catalyst). The Steering Committee was formed in 2016 and is chaired by Dr Khuat Thi Hai Oanh (Center for Community |
He also ruled on other decisions that formed much of Arlington County's zoning laws. In 1958, McCarthy ruled that racial segregation at churches, movie theaters and other public places was unconstitutional. McCarthy retired in 1972, but continued hearing cases until 1980. Personal life McCarthy married Ruth Clark of Washington, D.C.. Together, they had five children: Steve, Wilson, Walter, Robert and Helen. Death and legacy McCarthy died on March 18, 1985, while on vacation in Stuart, Florida. The Walter T. McCarthy Law Library in the Arlington Courthouse was named after him. References Date of birth missing 1898 births 1985 deaths People from Richmond, Virginia People from Arlington County, Virginia George Washington University alumni George Washington University Law School alumni Virginia circuit court judges | T. McCarthy was born in 1898, in Richmond, Virginia and moved to Arlington, Virginia at a young age. He did not finish high school. He graduated from George Washington University and then graduated from George Washington University Law School. He was a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. Career In 1930, McCarthy became the judge of Virginia's 16th Circuit Court, which then represented Arlington County, Fairfax County, Prince William County and the city of Alexandria. He succeeded Howard W. Smith. He was the youngest circuit court judge appointed in Virginia at the time. In 1944, McCarthy was elected to Virginia's 35th Circuit Court, representing Arlington County. In the 1950s, McCarthy ruled in a major decision that gave Arlington County Board the right to reject zoning applications in order to |
called the Rose Palace. During the Proctectorate, the building became a command post. The building was abandoned after the independence of the country. The Ministry of National Defense was responsible for restoring the building and turned it into a museum. Habib Bourguiba was the person who decided to convert the palace into a museum. In 1894, the museum was inaugurated after the 28th anniversary of the creation of the first nucleus of the army, although only soldiers and their families could access the museum. In 1989, the museum was opened to the general public. In May 2015, an exhibition of photographs of monuments of Manouba was held at the museum. Collections The museum contains more than 23,000 objects including shields, miniature models of waships and oil paintings. | the creation of the first nucleus of the army, although only soldiers and their families could access the museum. In 1989, the museum was opened to the general public. In May 2015, an exhibition of photographs of monuments of Manouba was held at the museum. Collections The museum contains more than 23,000 objects including shields, miniature models of waships and oil paintings. Most of the objects exhibited in the museum are weapons. The museum has rooms specialized in certain part of the country's history, including the Ancient, Medieval, Ottoman, Muradid and Husainid periods. The museum exhibits models of Carthaginian fleets, statues of Roman soldiers as well as vaults decorated with plaster using the naksh-hdîda decoration technique. The museum has a room called "Armed Resistance", which focuses on the French occupation, in this room are artillery, uniforms and newspaper excerpts from that time, there are also photos of fighters. |
family Puniceicoccaceae. References Verrucomicrobiota Bacteria genera Taxa described | References Verrucomicrobiota Bacteria genera Taxa described in 2007 |
1727 and a second edition was published in London in 1747. History was rooted in a pamphlet Colden published in 1724 called Papers Relating to the Indian Trade, although Papers and the first edition of History diverged widely. Papers was an appendix to the second edition of History, which was "very greatly enlarged" as compared to the first. History full title reads "History of the Five Indian Nations Depending on the Province of New-York in America", and as such the book | second edition was published in London in 1747. History was rooted in a pamphlet Colden published in 1724 called Papers Relating to the Indian Trade, although Papers and the first edition of History diverged widely. Papers was an appendix to the second edition of History, which was "very greatly enlarged" as compared to the first. History full title reads "History of the Five Indian Nations Depending on the Province of New-York in America", and as such the book accounts for the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas (later editions |
admiral Manley Hall Dixon (1786–1864), Royal Navy admiral Robert | Dixon may refer to: Manley Dixon (c. 1760–1837), Royal Navy admiral Manley |
History Golf Federation was founded in 1990 as Bohemian–Moravian Golf Union. In 1993 it succeeded Czechoslovak Golf Federation. References External links Czech Golf Federation National members of the European Golf Association Czech Republic Golf in the | both the IGF (International Golf Federation) which oversees the international governance and development of Table Tennis and the EGA (European Golf Association) which oversees the sport development at a regional level. Czech Golf Federation is member of the Czech |
state of Washington George Washington Scott (1829–1903), industrialist and philanthropist, benefactor | may refer to: George W. Scott (American football), American football and track and field coach George W. Scott (politician) (born |
Gram-negative, chemoheterotrophic bacterium from the genus | of Cerasicoccus which has been isolated from seawater. References |
a 1730 treatise by the German philosopher, author, and Age of Enlightenment figure Johann Christoph Gottsched. The treatise was the first effort to codify into German poetry the standards advocated for by Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, who in turn | and Age of Enlightenment figure Johann Christoph Gottsched. The treatise was the first effort to codify into German poetry the standards advocated for by Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, who in turn was inspired by Horace. Boileau was an |
their third studio album, Ummon, which was met with positive critical reviews. The band was unable to initially tour in support of the album due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated lockdowns. During the pandemic though, their self-titled single on the track was shared as a live recording on KEXP in the United States, helping garner the band international attention. Discography Studio albums La Planète Inexplorée (2018) Ummon (2020) Extended plays | La Planète Inexplorée 2020–present: Ummon and breakthrough success On 28 February 2020, the band released their third studio album, Ummon, which was met with positive critical reviews. The band was unable to initially tour in support of the album due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated lockdowns. During the pandemic though, their self-titled single on the track was shared as a live recording on KEXP in the United States, helping garner the band international attention. Discography Studio albums La Planète Inexplorée (2018) Ummon (2020) Extended plays |
off into the heavens." Writing for Classic Rock magazine, Jo Kendall gave the album a 7 out of 10. Kendall compared the album to the works of Pink Floyd and Thee Oh Sees, and that the album is "generally it’s all psych rockets blasting as the Toulouse trio soar to space-prog’s summit", and called it "a high-octane 11 tracker." In a staff review for Sputnikmusic, the album was described as a "ravaging, colourful journey that pushes and breaks through boundaries without production tricks of any kind, relying on a fantastic live performance to bring to life one of the best albums of the year." The staff gave it a 4.6 out of 5. Accolades References External links Ummon at Bandcamp 2020 albums Slift | reception The album was well received by music critics. On The Elite Extremophile, the website gave Ummon a 93 out of 100 saying that Ummon "[has] harnessed the menace of doom metal, the energy of garage rock, the hypnotic repetition of krautrock, and the general strangeness of prog. They put those elements together in an impressive and intense package. This album is demanding, but it is worth your time and energy." Nathan Whittle, writing for Louder |
E. Kothapalli Endapalli G–H Gadeguduru Galiveedu Gandikota Gandikovvur Garalamadugu Himakuntla K Kalasapadu Kamalakur Kamalapuram Kavalakuntla Kesalingayapalli Khajipet Sunkesula Kondam Palli Kondapuram Korrapadu Kumpinipuram L–O Lakkireddipalle Lakshmigari Palli Lingala Maduru Mallepalli Mantapampalle Mylavaram Nandalur Obulareddypeta Onipenta P Pamuluru Pathagollapalle Pedda Orampadu Peddamudium Peddapasupula Peddullapalli Pedduru Penagalur Pendlimarri Porumamilla Potladurthi Pullampeta Puttanavari Palli R–S R. Rachapalli Rajampet Rajasaheb Pet Rajupalem Ramapuram Rayavaram Sambepalle Sangala Palli Siddavatam Siddayya Gari Matham Simhadripuram Surabhi T T. Chowdaravaripalli | Matham C Chakarayapet Chapadu Chemmumiahpet Chennur, Kadapa district Chilamkur Chinnachowk Chinnaiahgaripalli Chinnamandem Chinnapasupula Chinnayarasala Harijanawada Chinthakommadinne Chitvel D–E Dammanapalli Duvvur Duvvuru Dwaraka Nagar E. Kothapalli Endapalli G–H Gadeguduru Galiveedu Gandikota Gandikovvur Garalamadugu Himakuntla K Kalasapadu Kamalakur Kamalapuram Kavalakuntla Kesalingayapalli Khajipet Sunkesula Kondam Palli Kondapuram Korrapadu Kumpinipuram L–O Lakkireddipalle Lakshmigari Palli Lingala Maduru Mallepalli Mantapampalle Mylavaram Nandalur Obulareddypeta Onipenta P Pamuluru |
a Gram-negative, obligately aerobic and non-motile bacterial genus from | Gram-negative, obligately aerobic and non-motile bacterial genus |
obligately aerobic, non-spore-forming and non-motile bacterium from the genus | a Gram-negative, obligately aerobic, non-spore-forming and non-motile bacterium from the |
has not "disowned" the book as has been claimed, despite its great dissimilarity to the rest of the oeuvre. The book's foreword is written by fellow arcade game enthusiast Steven Spielberg. Amis does strike an admonishing tone at times, even going so far as to say that video gaming is "morally ambiguous". The book was written concurrently with Money. References 1982 | book is both a survey of the 80s New York City arcade scene, and a cheat sheet of gaming tips and tricks. Despite some reportage to the contrary, Amis has not "disowned" the book as has been claimed, despite its great dissimilarity to the rest of the oeuvre. |
at the University of California, San Diego. He began teaching at Ohio State University in 1986 as an assistant professor. He was promoted to an associate professorship in 1990, and became a full professor in 1994. | the American Physical Society in 2011 "[f]or identifying energetic and symmetry principles for observation of non-Fermi liquid and Kondo impurity physics". References Ohio State University faculty Cornell University alumni University of California, Davis faculty Living people 21st-century American |
and obligately aerobic bacterium from the genus of Coraliomargarita which has been | Coraliomargarita which has been isolated from a marine solar saltern from the coast of Weihai. |
order Charales. Genera , AlgaeBase and Fossilworks accepted three genera: †Amblyochara Grambast – 6 species †Feistiella Schudack – 8 species Nitellopsis Hy – 24 species With this circumscription, the family as a whole is not extinct, since | 8 species Nitellopsis Hy – 24 species With this circumscription, the family as a whole is not extinct, since Nitellopsis contains living (extant) species, including |
collective organization or a formally recognized central organization until 1927–28. The term was first used in a newspaper column on 22 February 1871. Several temples in the region came do be known as Status Quo Ante Synagogue after the schism. See also Schism in Hungarian Jewry References External links | instead decided to retain their previous status(es). They remained without a collective organization or a formally recognized central organization until 1927–28. The term was first used in a newspaper column on 22 February 1871. Several temples in the region came do be known as |
the present day. This article displays polls conducted between 2019 and 2021. Voting intention estimates refer mainly to a hypothetical Congress of Deputies election. Polls are listed in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The "Lead" columns on | polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The "Lead" columns on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a poll. The tables below list nationwide voting intention estimates. Refusals are generally excluded from the party vote percentages, while question wording and the treatment of "don't know" responses and those not intending to vote may vary between polling organisations. When available, seat projections determined |
that he had began pre-production work of By Two Love's Telugu remake under the production of Sai Korrapati's Vaaraahi Chalana Chitram. By Two Love was released theatrically on 18 February 2022. Soundtrack The soundtrack album has four singles composed by B. Ajaneesh Loknath, and released on Anand Audio. Reception Reviewing the film for The Times of India, Sunayana Suresh wrote: "The film has some interesting nuances of the frailties and complexities of the current generation, who prefer being detached and baggage free." The New Indian Express critic A. Sharadhaa called it a "roller coaster ride" which " shouldered on the two young actors." She stated that the film was an urban tale that ran on familiar territory. On technical aspects, Vijaya Karnataka reviewer Avinash G. Ram wrote: "" Jagadish Anagdi of Deccan Herald termed it an "epic misfire." "The first half thoroughly tests our patience with too many unrelated scenes. It starts with | Pavitra Lokesh Achyuth Kumar Sadhu Kokila Rangayana Raghu Shivaraj K R Pete Dharamanna Kadur Jahangi Production and release The film was announced in December 2020 with Dhaveerrah and Sree Leela paired opposite each other. Santosh stated that he wrote By Two Love from his own experiences about the idea of marriage. Filming was completed in April 2021, and Santosh confirmed that he had began pre-production work of By Two Love's Telugu remake under the production of Sai Korrapati's Vaaraahi Chalana Chitram. By Two Love was released theatrically on 18 February 2022. Soundtrack The soundtrack album has four singles composed by B. Ajaneesh Loknath, and released on Anand Audio. Reception Reviewing the film for The Times of India, Sunayana Suresh wrote: "The film has some interesting nuances of the frailties and complexities of the current generation, who prefer being detached and baggage free." The New Indian Express critic A. Sharadhaa called it a "roller coaster ride" which " shouldered on the |
During his hiatus, Hopkins served as director of athletics for Cranston Public Schools. He came out of retirement and proceeded to win four NJCAA Region XXI (New England) Division II championships and Coach of the Year awards in 2001, 2002, 2009 and 2012. He also led the team to a trip to the NJCAA Division II World Series. He also served as a teacher at Cranston East until his election to the city council in 2016. Political career He served as a city councilman after taking office in fall 2016. In 2020, Hopkins faced Council President Michael Farina in a GOP primary. He was endorsed by incumbent mayor Allan Fung. He faced Democratic candidate Maria A. Bucci, a former councilwoman, in the general election. Hopkins won approximately 54% of the vote in the | record. He compiled a 68-62-2 record from 1985 to 1989. He then briefly retired from baseball until 2001. During his hiatus, Hopkins served as director of athletics for Cranston Public Schools. He came out of retirement and proceeded to win four NJCAA Region XXI (New England) Division II championships and Coach of the Year awards in 2001, 2002, 2009 and 2012. He also led the team to a trip to the NJCAA Division II World Series. He also served as a teacher at Cranston East until his election to the city council in 2016. Political career He served as a city councilman after taking office in fall 2016. In 2020, Hopkins faced Council President Michael Farina in a GOP primary. He was endorsed by incumbent mayor Allan Fung. He faced Democratic candidate Maria A. Bucci, a |
CMS-01 Communication Satellite. Launch PSLV-C50 successfully launched on December 17, 2020, from Satish Dhawan Space Centre carrying CMS-01 Communication Satellite. References Polar Satellite Launch | the Second Launch Pad, Satish Dhawan Space Centre at 10:11 (UTC) /15:41 (IST) carrying CMS-01 Communication Satellite. Launch PSLV-C50 successfully launched on December 17, 2020, from Satish Dhawan Space Centre carrying CMS-01 Communication Satellite. References Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle Spacecraft launched by |
rice paddy field. References Verrucomicrobiota Monotypic bacteria genera Bacteria genera Taxa described in | Terrimicrobiaceae with one known species (Terrimicrobium sacchariphilum). Terrimicrobium sacchariphilum has been isolated |
build a church in Dejima. Russell founded a mission school for girls and women in the foreign settlement in Higashi-Yamate, Nagasaki on December 1, 1879. Number of students increased from one in 1879–80, to eighteen in 1881, and forty-three in 1882. The purpose of Russell's school's curriculum was to train independent career women as well as homemakers and mothers. In addition to being the principal at Kwassui, Russell adopted a Japanese baby girl, named May in 1885. May was sent to the States when she was eleven. When May graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1910, she returned to Japan to help Russell. Russell also founded Kwassui Girl's home in Kumamoto, for children left without parents after natural disasters. In addition, Russell set up a seaman's home for sailors entering the Nagasaki's port in order to | her late thirties, she attended a Methodist revival camp, and decided to be a missionary. While continuing to teach, Russell became the secretary of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church (WFMS), West Virginia conference. After several years in the WFMS, Russell came to think she should personally go abroad for mission. Russell and another teacher named Jennie Gheer sailed from San Francisco for Japan, on October 25, 1879, reaching Nagasaki on November 23, 1879. In 1873, the American Episcopal Methodist Church had already sent John Carrol Davidson to Nagasaki, who had build a church in Dejima. Russell founded a mission school for girls and women in the foreign settlement in Higashi-Yamate, Nagasaki on December 1, 1879. Number of students increased from one in 1879–80, to eighteen in 1881, and forty-three in 1882. The purpose of Russell's school's curriculum was to train independent career women as well as homemakers and mothers. In addition to being the principal at Kwassui, Russell adopted a Japanese baby girl, named May in 1885. May was sent to the States when she was eleven. When May graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1910, she returned to Japan to help Russell. Russell also founded Kwassui Girl's home in Kumamoto, for children left without parents after natural disasters. In |
indicated on all general plans of the city drawn up in the 19th century. For instance, the 25th issue of the Kavkaz newspaper (1871) notes: “According to Abikh’s barometric calculations, the northeastern part of the city, where the Aghoghlan and Elizavetpol gates are located, is situated at an altitude of 3886 feet, and the southwestern part, called the "Shusha rock", and on which the Iravan gates are placed, is located at an altitude of 4705 feet”. Back in the ‘60s of the 19th century, these gates played an important role in the public life of Shusha, as evidenced by an article published in the "Иллюстрация" newspaper. According to it, the Aghoghlan and Iravan gates were intended for high officials and transportation of the goods, the Ganja gates were for the passage of the wagons. Some sources also spoke of the existence of the fourth gates, but their place and name were not established. The fortress gates built during Panah Ali Khan were called Iravan or Khalfali, considering that the road from them went to the village of Khalfali and further to Iravan. These gates, like other gates | of the city, where the Aghoghlan and Elizavetpol gates are located, is situated at an altitude of 3886 feet, and the southwestern part, called the "Shusha rock", and on which the Iravan gates are placed, is located at an altitude of 4705 feet”. Back in the ‘60s of the 19th century, these gates played an important role in the public life of Shusha, as evidenced by an article published in the "Иллюстрация" newspaper. According to it, the Aghoghlan and Iravan gates were intended for high officials and transportation of the goods, the Ganja gates were for the passage of the wagons. Some sources also spoke of the existence of the fourth gates, but their place and name were not established. The fortress gates built during Panah Ali Khan |
were placed with the Rams in the NFC West, allowing for two annual meetings between the teams. The Seahawks lead the series 25–24. The teams met twice in the playoffs, two Rams wins in the 2004 NFC Wild Card Round and the 2020 NFC Wild Card Round. History Pre-2013 history The rivalry between the Seahawks and Rams came into existence in 2002 following the Seahawks’ realignment to the NFC West. The first notable matchup between the two clubs occurred in the Wild Card Round of the 2004 playoffs, when the Rams defeated the Seahawks 27–20 in Seattle. The late 2000s and early 2010s saw a decline in the rivalry as the Seahawks consistently qualified for the playoffs, while the Rams struggled. Seattle won 10 straight meetings from 2005–09. 2013-19 Growing animosity Following the Rams’ return to Los Angeles in 2016 and subsequent playoff success, the rivalry has increased in intensity, however moments of animosity between the two teams would still occur during the Rams' final years in St. Louis. In a 2013 game in St. Louis, Seattle receiver Golden Tate visibly taunted and flashed his middle finger at Rams’ cornerback Janoris Jenkins following a failed interception on the pass, as Tate returned the ball for a touchdown. In 2015, Rams’ Punter Johnny Hekker shoved Seahawks’ Defensive End Cliff Avril following a 45-yard punt. Seahawks’ lineman Michael Bennett later attempted to tackle Hekker for retaliation, and would later refer to Hekker as “acting like a little girl” in the postgame interview. During a 2018 Rams home game in Los Angeles, Rams’ defensive tackle Aaron Donald was involved in a large altercation with Seahawks offensive guard Justin Britt that involved multiple players. Rams’ head coach Sean McVay intervened to prevent any penalties from being issued towards the team. During another Rams’ home game in 2019, Rams’ cornerback Jalen Ramsey and Seahawks’ then-rookie receiver DK Metcalf engaged in an altercation following Ramsey blocking three pass attempts intended for Metcalf. Most Notably; Rams’ star Defensive Tackle Aaron Donald has recorded 15 sacks against Seattle, more than any other opponent, along with the most sacks of quarterback Russell Wilson by a team in his career. 2020: The feud erupts Tensions between the two clubs ignited following a close battle to win the division in the 2020 season with Seattle securing the NFC West following a win over the Rams in week 15. Seahawks’ Safety Jamal Adams celebrated during a press conference by lighting a cigar and taunting various people on the Rams and declaring “it feels good don’t it Rams?” to the cameras. The Animosity was ripe for the Rams as they were on course to face the Seahawks in the NFC Wild Card that year in Seattle. Leading up to that matchup, Seattle had been undefeated in 10 postseason matchups at home. The Rams had benched Quarterback Jared Goff prior to the game due to a fracture within his thumb and were forced to start backup QB John Wolford. Later in the first quarter of the game, Jamal Adams would land an illegal low helmet-to-helmet hit on Wolford, knocking him out of the game. Goff would later be | 24–23| Rams 7–4 | |- | | style="| | style="| Rams 23–12| style="| Rams 33–27(OT)| Rams 9–4 | |- |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2004 Playoffs | style="| | | style="| Rams 27–20| Rams 10–4 | NFC Wild Card Round. First playoff meeting between the two franchises. |- | | style="| | style="| Seahawks 37–31| style="| Seahawks 31–16| Rams 10–6 | Seahawks lose Super Bowl XL. |- | | style="| | style="| Seahawks 30–28| style="| Seahawks 24–22| Rams 10–8 | |- | | style="| | style="| Seahawks 24–19| style="| Seahawks 33–6| Tie 10–10 | |- | | style="| | style="| Seahawks 23–20| style="| Seahawks 37–13| Seahawks 12–10 | |- | | style="| | style="| Seahawks 27–17| style="| Seahawks 28–0| Seahawks 14–10 | Seahawks win 10 straight meetings (2005–09) |- |- | | Tie 1–1| style="| Rams 20–3| style="| Seahawks 16-6| Seahawks 15–11 | |- | | style="| | style="| Seahawks 24–7| style="| Seahawks 30–13| Seahawks 17–11 | |- | | Tie 1–1| style="| Rams 19–13| style="| Seahawks 20–13| Seahawks 18-12 | Seahawks draft Russell Wilson. |- | | style="| | style="| Seahawks 14–9| style="| Seahawks 27–9| Seahawks 20–12 | Seahawks win Super Bowl XLVIII. |- | | Tie 1–1| style="| Rams 28–26| style="| Seahawks 20–6| Seahawks 21–13 | Seahawks win 10 straight home meetings (2005-14). Seahawks lose Super Bowl XLIX. |- | | style="| | style="| Rams 34–31(OT)| style="| Rams 23–17| Seahawks 21–15 | Game in Seattle is Rams’ last game as a St. Louis-based franchise. Rams' first win in Seattle since 2004 and sweep season series for first time since 2004. |- | | Tie 1–1| style="| Rams 9–3| style="| Seahawks 24–3| Seahawks 22–16 | Rams return to Los Angeles after 21 seasons in St. Louis. |- | | Tie 1–1| style="|Seahawks 16–10| style="| Rams 42–7| Seahawks 23–17 | |- | | style="| | style="| Rams 33–31| style="| Rams 36–31| Seahawks 23–19 | Rams lose Super Bowl LIII. |- | | Tie 1–1| style="| Seahawks 28–12| style="| Seahawks 30–29| Seahawks 24–20 | Final meeting at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. |- |- | | Tie 1–1| style="| Rams 23–16| style="| Seahawks 20–9| Seahawks 25–21 | No fans in attendance for either game due to COVID-19 pandemic. Rams open SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. |- |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2020 Playoffs | style="| | | style="| Rams 30–20| Seahawks 25–22 | NFC Wild Card Round. |- | | style="| | style="| Rams 26–17| style="| Rams 20–10| Seahawks 25–24 | Rams win Super Bowl LVI. |- | | | TBD | TBD | | |- |- | Regular season | style="|| Rams 14–9 | Seahawks 16–8 | Rams lead the series in Los Angeles 7–1 and Seattle won the series in St. Louis 8–7 |- | Postseason | style="|| no games | Rams 2–0 | NFC Wild Card Game: 2004, 2020 |- |
them. From there his career has been started as his song went viral on social medias. Later on that, he had received an opportunity to sing the song for a music production company. He also did many stage performances all around the West Bengal which brought him enormous fame as well a new career in Music Industry. Personal life Bhuvan Badyakar is a peanut seller who is currently a viral internet personality and a viral singer in India and Bangladesh. Bhuvan Badyakar was born and raised in the village of Kuralguri in Birbhum, West Bengal, India. Bhuvan Badyakar lives in his village with his two sons and wife. His wife’s name was not known. He has two sons and one daughter’s name is not known. Discography 2021 : Kacha Badam 2022 : Sa Re Ga Ma Ga Re Ami Badam Beche Khai Controversy After Bhuban Badyakar's Kacha Badam song went viral, many YouTubers, memers, tiktokers started using his song in their contents. Some creators made full length songs with his music and lyrics. | He has two sons and one daughter’s name is not known. Discography 2021 : Kacha Badam 2022 : Sa Re Ga Ma Ga Re Ami Badam Beche Khai Controversy After Bhuban Badyakar's Kacha Badam song went viral, many YouTubers, memers, tiktokers started using his song in their contents. Some creators made full length songs with his music and lyrics. At some point, Bhuban Badyakar claimed his copyright, and after that social media outbursts with mockery. Another controversy with social media mockery started when in an interview he says, |
Junior Handball Championship was held in Conakry, Guinea from 19 to 26 February 2022. It also acted as qualification tournament for the 2022 Women's Junior World Handball Championship to be held in Slovenia. Draw The draw was held on 15 January 2022 at the CAHB headquarters in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. Preliminary round | Handball Championship to be held in Slovenia. Draw The draw was held on 15 January 2022 at the CAHB headquarters in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. Preliminary round All times are local (UTC±0). Group A Group B Knockout stage Bracket 5–8th place bracket 5–8th place semifinals Semifinals Seventh place game Fifth place game Third place game Final |
P. (1891). Mollusques recueillis au Congo par M.É. Dupont entre l'embouchure du fleuve et le confluent du Kassai. Bulletins de l'Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique. ser. 3, 20: 566-579, pls. 1-3 Fukuda H. & Ponder W.F. 2003. Australian freshwater assimineids, with a synopsis of the Recent genus-group | snails with an operculum, terrestrial gastropod mollusks in the subfamily Omphalotropidinae of the family Assimineidae. Species Pseudogibbula duponti Dautzenberg, 1891 References Bank, R. A. (2017). Classification of the Recent freshwater/brackish Gastropoda of the World. Last update: January 24th, 2018. OpenAccess publication. External |
between the Russian president Boris Yeltsin and the Russian parliament that was resolved by military force. The relations between the president and the parliament had been deteriorating for some time. The power struggle reached its crisis on 21 September 1993, when President Yeltsin intended to dissolve the country's highest body (Congress of People's Deputies) and parliament (Supreme Soviet), although the constitution did not give the president the power to do so. Yeltsin justified his orders by the results of the referendum of April 1993. In response, the parliament declared the president's decision null and void, impeached Yeltsin and proclaimed vice president Aleksandr Rutskoy to be acting president. On 3 October, demonstrators removed militia cordons around the parliament and, urged by their leaders, took over the Mayor's offices and tried to storm the Ostankino television centre. The army, which had initially declared its neutrality, stormed the Supreme Soviet building in the early morning hours of 4 October by Yeltsin's order, and arrested the leaders of the resistance. At the climax of the crisis, Russia was thought by some to be "on the brink" of civil war. The ten-day conflict became the deadliest single event of street fighting in Moscow's history since the Russian Revolution. First Chechen War, 1994–1996 The First Chechen War was a rebellion by the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria against the Russian Federation, fought from December 1994 to August 1996. The first war was preceded by the Russian Intervention in Ichkeria, in which Russia tried to covertly overthrow the Ichkerian government. After the initial campaign of 1994–1995, culminating in the devastating Battle of Grozny, Russian federal forces attempted to seize control of the mountainous area of Chechnya but were set back by Chechen guerrilla warfare and raids on the flatlands despite Russia's overwhelming advantages in firepower, manpower, weaponry, artillery, combat vehicles, airstrikes and air support. The resulting widespread demoralization of federal forces and the almost universal opposition of the Russian public to the conflict led Boris Yeltsin's government to declare a ceasefire with the Chechens in 1996 and sign a peace treaty a year later. The official figure for Russian military deaths is 5,732, while most estimates put the number between 3,500 and 7,500, or even as high as 14,000. Although there are no accurate figures for the number of Chechen forces killed, various estimates put the number at about 3,000 to 17,391 dead or missing. Various figures estimate the number of civilian deaths at between 30,000 and 100,000 killed and possibly over 200,000 injured, while more than 500,000 people were displaced by the conflict, which left cities and villages across the republic in ruins. The conflict led to a significant decrease of non-Chechen population due to violence and discrimination. Second Chechen War, 1999–2000 The Second Chechen War was an armed conflict in Chechnya and the border regions of the North Caucasus between the Russian Federation and the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, fought from August 1999 to April 2000. In August 1999, Islamist fighters from Chechnya infiltrated Russia's Dagestan region, declaring it an independent state and calling for holy war. During the initial campaign, Russian military and pro-Russian Chechen paramilitary forces faced Chechen separatists in open combat and seized the Chechen capital Grozny after a winter siege that lasted from December 1999 until February 2000. Russia established direct rule over Chechnya in May 2000 although Chechen militant resistance throughout the North Caucasus region continued to inflict heavy Russian casualties and challenge Russian political control over Chechnya for several years. Both sides carried out attacks against civilians. These attacks drew international condemnation. In mid-2000, the Russian government transferred certain military responsibilities to pro-Russian Chechen forces. The military phase of operations was terminated in April 2002, and the coordination of the field operations were given first to the Federal Security Service and then to the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the summer of 2003. On 16 April 2009, the counter-terrorism operation in Chechnya was officially ended. The exact death toll of the conflict is unknown. Russian casualties are around 7,500 (official Russian casualty figures) or about 14,000 according to the Committee of Soldiers' Mothers. Unofficial sources estimate a range of 25,000 to 50,000 dead or missing, mostly Chechen civilians. Reforms Under Pavel Grachev (Defence Minister from 1992 to 1996) little military reform took place, though there was a plan to create more deployable mobile forces. Later Defence Minister Rodionov (in office 1996–1997) had good qualifications but did not manage to institute lasting change. Only under Defence Minister Igor Sergeyev (in office 1997–2001) did a certain amount of limited reform begin, though attention focused upon the Strategic Rocket Forces. 1997–1998 military reform The reform established 2 categories of military units: 1) constant combat readiness units manned to wartime standards; 2) short staffed units manned to peacetime standards (30-70% of wartime standards). The rest of military units were transformed into weapons and military equipment storage bases. Space Forces were incorporated into Strategic Rocket Forces. Space Missile Defence Forces were separated from Air Defence Forces and incorporated into Strategic Rocket Forces. The rest of Air Defence Forces were incorporated into Air Force. Transbaikal Military District was abolished, its territory was divided between Siberian Military District and Far Eastern Military District. Some military academies were disbanded. The total number of military personnel was reduced to 1.2 million troops. The possibility of the recruitment of volunteers for enlisted personnel and non-commissioned officers positions was provided but in fact these positions were filled by conscripts, as before. 2001–2004 military reform The reform was announced by minister of defence Sergei Ivanov in 2001 and was completed in 2004. As a result of the reform, constant combat readiness military units, staffed with volunteers only, appeared in Russia but draft system had been retained. As of 2008, there were 20% constant combat readiness military units, manned to wartime standards, and 80% cadre military units, manned to peacetime standards, in Russian Armed Forces. 2008 military reform After the Russo-Georgian War, it became clear that Russian military organization needed further reform; as Vladimir Shamanov said, cadre regiments and divisions, intended for receiving mobilization resources and deployment in the period immediately preceding the outbreak of war, have become a costly relic. In response to poor and unsatisfactory performance of Russian forces overall in the Russo-Georgian War in August 2008, significant reforms were announced on 14 October 2008 by minister of defence Anatoliy Serdyukov and major structural reorganisation began in 2009. Key elements of the reforms announced in October 2008 included reducing the armed forces to a strength of one million by 2012 (planned end-date was 2016); reducing the number of officers; centralising officer training from 65 military schools into 10 "systemic" military training centres; reducing the size of the central command; introducing more civilian logistics and auxiliary staff; elimination of cadre-strength formations; reorganising the reserves; reorganising the army into a brigade system; and reorganising air forces into an air-base system instead of regiments. The main organizational change was the transition from a 4-level operational chain of command (Military District - Army - Division - Regiment) to a 3-level one (Military District - Operational Command (Army) - Brigade). Also Russia fully refused cadre military units, manned to peacetime standards (so-called "paper divisions"), and since that time only constant combat readiness military units, 100% manned up to wartime standards, were part of Russian Armed Forces. On 31 October 2010, Anatoly Serdyukov stated that changes in organizational-regular structure was completed. On 17 October 2012 the head of the State Duma's Defence Committee told RIA Novosti that Russia planned to boost annual defense spending by 59 percent to almost 3 trillion rubles ($83.3 billion) in 2015 up from $61 billion in 2012. "Targeted national defence spending as a percentage of GDP will amount to 3.2 percent in 2013, 3.4 percent in 2014 and 3.7 percent in 2015", Defence Committee chairman Vladimir Komoedov is quoted as saying in the committee's conclusion on the draft budget for 2013–2015. The number of military units is to be reduced in accordance with the table: An essential part of the military reform involves downsizing. At the beginning of the reform the Russian Army had about 1,200,000 active personnel. Largely, the reductions fall among the officers. Personnel are to be reduced according to the table: The schedule envisaged reducing the total numbers in the officer corps from 335 thousand to 150 thousand, but in early February 2011 Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov announced the decision to increase officers by 70,000 - to 220 thousand to counteract this. According to Alexander Golts, journalist and military columnist, as a result of aforementioned reforms, Russia gained absolute military dominance in the post-Soviet area and Russian Armed Forces gained the ability that it had never had: ability to quick deployment, which was clearly demonstrated on 26 February 2014. Reforms of the reserve officer training system The reserve officer training system, inherited from the Soviet Union, involved selective conscription of graduates of civilian institutions of higher education, who have graduated the military departments of their almae matres and received a commission as an officer. Such person could be conscripted from the reserve of armed forces to active duty, but until the age of 27 only; the period of active duty of such officer was several years, and at the end of that period he was due to be enlisted in the reserve of armed forces again. Such officers were called "blazers" in army's slang (for example, Anatoly Kvashnin was a "blazer"). At the moment of the Dissolution of the Soviet Union, there were 397 civilian institutions of higher education which had military departments, in whole USSR, and 241 Russian institutions retained military departments after that event. Initially, there was a plan of more substantial reduction in the number of military departments, but it had to be abandoned due to dearth of lieutenants associated with regular officers voluntary discharge owing to financial problems of Armed Forces in 1990s, which had to be compensated through reserve officers conscription, which had acquired a particular importance on the background of First Chechen War. Like in the Soviet Union, Russian military education was aimed at training of narrow officers-specialists in particular military occupational specialties, and it differed greatly from American military education system where newly second lieutenants receive particular specialties in the framework of their "career branch" only after graduation of military academy or ROTC. Military departments conducted training mostly at command, engineering, and to a lesser | be accepted to the military department of this civilian institution of higher education (hereinafter in the text also - university). Enrolling in the military department was voluntary for all students. After finishing military department’s course, including military training camps or traineeship in military units of regular armed forces, and passing the state final exam student was due to be presented the promotion to primary military officer rank (lieutenant). Graduate of the military department was due to be promoted to officer at the same time as his enlisting in the reserve of armed forces. However, the relevant order of ministry of defence entered into force subject to student’s successful graduation of university in main, civilian degree. Afterwards, such officer could be conscripted from the reserve of armed forces to active duty, but until the age of 27 only. The period of active duty of such officer was 2 years, and at the end of that period he was due to be enlisted in the reserve of armed forces again. In 2005, minister of defence Sergei Ivanov announced the forthcoming significant reduction in the number of military departments carrying out the training commissioned officers from students of civilian institutions of higher education. By March 2008, 168 of 235 civilian universities, academies and institutions which previously had military departments had lost these units. In addition, 37 of 67 civilian universities, academies and institutions which retained military departments became the basis for establishment of new training military centers. In accordance with Government of Russia Decree of 6 March 2008 №152, the training military centers focused on training officers for active duty, whilst the military departments focused on training officers for reserve. In accordance with the amendments, contained in Federal Law of 6 July 2006 №104-FZ, the conscription of reserve officers was abolished, graduates of military departments were not subject to conscription to active duty no more (with exception of wartime mobilization) but all graduates of training military centers were due to be enrolled for 3 years active duty immediately upon the university graduation. In accordance with the amendments, contained in Federal Law of 3 August 2018 №309-FZ, the military departments and the training military centers were abolished, from that moment on, students of civilian institutions of higher education were trained under both officers training programmes (for reserve and for active duty) in the Military Training Centers. In 2019, there were the military training centers in 93 civilian institutions of higher education. The basic characteristic of new system is maximum possible harmonization of military occupational specialty and main civilian specialty of a student. Formation of voluntary military reserve force Russian military reserve force was established as experiment by the Presidential Decree of 17 July 2015 №370. In 2018, Russia started full-scale formation of military reserve force based on volunteers selected from among those who retired from active duty. Russian military reserve force () is a set of citizens who have signed a contracts to perform military service as a reservists, who were appointed to a military positions in particular military units in this capacity, and who are involved in all operational, mobilization, and combat activities of these military units, unlike other citizens who haven’t signed such contracts and who can be used for mobilization deployment of armed forces on involuntary basis only in cases stipulated by law (). The deployment of military units, composed of reservists, takes minimum time and do not requires any retraining of military personnel; furthermore, military units, composed of reservists, use the same weapons as used by military units, composed of active duty military personnel. Military units, staffed by reservists, are 100% manned up to wartime standards just like military units, staffed by active duty military personnel only. There is no possibility to define by military units designation what we're dealing with - reserve or not reserve military unit. The number of reservists is not presented in open sources and is not among the number of active duty military volunteers which is published by Ministry of Defence. This makes it difficult for establish real troop strength of new Russian military units and formations. Invasions and interventions Georgian war, 2008 The Russo-Georgian War was a war between Georgia, Russia and the Russian-backed self-proclaimed republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. The war took place in August 2008 following a period of worsening relations between Russia and Georgia, both formerly constituent republics of the Soviet Union. The fighting took place in the strategically important Transcaucasia region. It is regarded as the first European war of the 21st century. Russian forces temporarily occupied the Georgian cities of Zugdidi, Senaki, Poti and Gori, holding on to these areas beyond the ceasefire. The South Ossetians destroyed most ethnic Georgian villages in South Ossetia and were responsible for an ethnic cleansing of Georgians. Russia recognised the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia from Georgia on 26 August and the Georgian government severed diplomatic relations with Russia. Russia mostly completed its withdrawal of troops from undisputed parts of Georgia on 8 October. Ukrainian war, 2014–present The Russo-Ukrainian War is an ongoing and protracted conflict that started in February 2014, primarily involving Russia and pro-Russian forces on one hand, and Ukraine on the other. Following the Euromaidan protests and the subsequent removal of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych on 22 February 2014, and amidst pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine, Russian soldiers without insignias took control of strategic positions and infrastructure within the Ukrainian territory of Crimea. On 1 March 2014, the Federation Council of the Russian Federation unanimously adopted a resolution to petition Russian President Vladimir Putin to use military force in Ukraine. The resolution was adopted several days later, after the start of the Russian military operation on the "Returning of Crimea". Russia then annexed Crimea after a widely criticised local referendum which was organised by Russia after the capturing of the Crimean Parliament whose outcome was for the Autonomous Republic of Crimea to join the Russian Federation. In April, demonstrations by pro-Russian groups in the Donbas area of Ukraine escalated into a war between the Ukrainian government and the Russian-backed separatist forces of the self-declared Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics. In August, Russian military vehicles crossed the border in several locations of Donetsk Oblast. The incursion by the Russian military was seen as responsible for the defeat of Ukrainian forces in early September. On 24 February 2022, Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine. The campaign started after a prolonged military buildup and the Russian recognition of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic in the days prior to the invasion, followed by the entrance of the Russian Armed Forces to the Donbas region of Eastern Ukraine on 21 February 2022. At about 06:00 Moscow time (UTC+3), Russian president Vladimir Putin announced a military operation in eastern Ukraine; minutes later, missile strikes began at locations across the country, including in the capital Kyiv. The Ukrainian Border Service stated that its borders with Russia and Belarus were attacked. Multiple countries have condemned the attack on Ukraine. Syria, 2015–present The Russian military intervention in the Syrian civil war began in September |
known as Clara Galle, is a Spanish actress and model. She is best known for her lead role as Raquel in Through My Window (2022). Early life Clara Huete Sánchez was born in Pamplona. From an early age Galle showed | Huete Sánchez was born in Pamplona. From an early age Galle showed interest in acting where she studied performing at Plaza de la Cruz Institute. Career Galle debuts as Raquel Mendoza as the main female lead of Through My Window in 2022. The |
homopasta Antipterna lithophanes Antipterna microphanes Antipterna monostropha Antipterna naias Antipterna nivea Antipterna panarga Antipterna ptychomochla Antipterna spathulata Antipterna stichoptis Antipterna tephrodes Antipterna trilicella References External links | Antipterna panarga Antipterna ptychomochla Antipterna spathulata Antipterna stichoptis Antipterna tephrodes Antipterna trilicella References External links Images & occurrence data from GBIF. Antipterna Taxa described in 1916 Taxa named |
Dean, who says Guy Hocquenghem originated this strand of thought in his Deleuze and Guattari-inspired book Homosexual Desire (1972). Bersani never believed himself to be a part of queer theory, but the essay is nonetheless widely viewed as an early text in the field. Bersani republished the essay in Is the Rectum a Grave? and Other Essays (2009), a collection of his essays. "Is the Rectum a Grave?" is older than the other essays featured by about a decade, a move seen by queer theorist Brian Glavey as an attempt to refine his theories about sex. The title has been borrowed by other scholars, such as in "Is the Rectum Straight?" (1991) by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick and "Are the Lips a Grave?" (2011) by Lynne Huffer. References | Wiegman as part of the "inaugural" foundations of an explicitly anti-social perspective in queer theory. This has been put into question by queer theorist Tim Dean, who says Guy Hocquenghem originated this strand of thought in his Deleuze and Guattari-inspired book Homosexual Desire (1972). Bersani never believed himself to be a part of queer theory, but the essay is nonetheless widely viewed as an early text in the field. Bersani republished the essay in Is the Rectum a Grave? and Other Essays (2009), a collection of his essays. "Is the Rectum a Grave?" is older than the other essays featured by about a decade, a move seen by queer theorist Brian Glavey as an attempt to refine his theories about sex. The title has been borrowed by other scholars, such as in "Is the Rectum Straight?" (1991) by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick |
also planned an "Occupy Canberra" protest at Old Parliament House and the Australian Parliament House to coincide with the resumption of Parliament in the week of 7 February. Protesters waved flags or wore merchandise supporting Donald Trump, the United Australia Party, One Nation, the QAnon conspiracy theory, and anti-lockdown groups. In addition protesters criticised several prominent federal and state figures including Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews, New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet, and Australian Labor Party leader Anthony Albanese. The far right Canadian media outlet Rebel News's correspondent Avi Yemini also covered the protests; with the outlet's videos being circulated on several social media platforms including Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Telegram and Instagram. The presence of protesters created traffic chaos in Canberra. On 2 February, police used pepper spray and arrested at least four participants while attempting to clear protesters camped outside the National Library. On 4 February, "Sovereign citizen groups" gathered outside police stations where supporters attempted to "serve papers" on public officials. On 5 February, about 2,000 anti-vaccination mandate protestors marched to the Parliamentary Triangle. The march began at Glebe Park in the CBD, then onto Commonwealth Avenue, disrupting traffic. United Australia Party leader Craig Kelly, Liberal National Party of Queensland Member of Parliament George Christensen and Senator Gerard Rennick attended the protests. That same day, the National Capital Authority objected to illegal camping and parking outside the National Library and ordered Police to remove them. On 12 February, around 10,000 protesters converged on Parliament House and Old Parliament House. These protesters had camped at Exhibition Park in Canberra (EPIC), after being moved on from the lawns next to the National Library. Police arrested three people including one man for breaching a fence while two others were arrested for disturbing the peace. The crowd was generally well behaved. Participants called for the elimination of mandates and the sacking of government ministers. In response, Police called on protesters to vacate by 13 February. In response to protest activity, Lifeline Canberra and the Capital Regional Farmers Market suspended their events due to safety concerns for customers. By 13 February, many of the Convoy to Canberra protesters had dispersed after being moved on from a camping ground in the Canberra CBD ahead of preparations for the Royal Canberra Show. The presence of the protesters had created friction with Canberra locals over the past two weeks. The previous night, anti-mandate | attracted various elements including anti-vaccination activists, anti-vaccine mandate activists, the Sovereign citizen movement, ultra religious groups, members of the United Australia Party, and self-proclaimed indigenous rights activists. The Aboriginal Tent Embassy disavowed the indigenous rights activists participating in the Convoy to Canberra and criticised the Sovereign citizen activists for hijacking the Australian indigenous rights cause. Timeline From 31 January 2022, a "Convoy to Canberra" consisting of thousands of protesters in trailers, trucks, cars and campervans gathered in Canberra, picketing the National Library of Australia, the Australian Parliament House and the National Press Club. Convoy participants vowed to remain to protest COVID-19 restrictions until the Australian Parliament sat on 8 February 2022. Protest organisers also planned an "Occupy Canberra" protest at Old Parliament House and the Australian Parliament House to coincide with the resumption of Parliament in the week of 7 February. Protesters waved flags or wore merchandise supporting Donald Trump, the United Australia Party, One Nation, the QAnon conspiracy theory, and anti-lockdown groups. In addition protesters criticised several prominent federal and state figures including Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews, New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet, and Australian Labor Party leader Anthony Albanese. The far right Canadian media outlet Rebel News's correspondent Avi Yemini also covered the protests; with the outlet's videos being circulated on several social media platforms including Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Telegram and Instagram. The presence of protesters created traffic chaos in Canberra. On 2 February, police used pepper spray and arrested at least four participants while attempting to clear protesters camped outside the National Library. On 4 February, "Sovereign citizen groups" gathered outside police stations where supporters attempted to "serve papers" on public officials. On 5 February, about 2,000 anti-vaccination mandate protestors marched to the Parliamentary Triangle. The march began at Glebe Park in the CBD, then onto Commonwealth Avenue, disrupting traffic. United Australia Party leader Craig Kelly, Liberal National Party of Queensland Member of Parliament George Christensen and Senator Gerard Rennick attended the protests. That same day, the National Capital Authority objected to illegal camping and parking outside the National Library and ordered Police to remove them. On 12 February, around 10,000 protesters converged on Parliament House and Old Parliament House. These protesters had camped at Exhibition Park in Canberra (EPIC), after being moved on from the lawns next to the National Library. Police arrested three people including one man for breaching a fence while two others were arrested for disturbing the peace. The crowd was generally well behaved. Participants called for the elimination of mandates and the sacking of government ministers. In response, Police called on protesters to vacate by 13 February. In response to protest activity, Lifeline Canberra and the Capital Regional |
an Indian e-commerce platform for online stores launched by Flipkart, a subsidiary of Walmart, in 2021. Headquartered in Bangalore, Karnataka, Shopsy helps individuals and small businesses to resell products through social channels like WhatsApp, Facebook, and Instagram. History Shopsy was launched by Flipkart in July 2021. As of 2021, the platform had over 5.1 million users and 2.5 lakh resellers. The company has its corporate office in Bangalore and distribution channels in cities, such as Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Coimbatore, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Lucknow, Mumbai, | such as Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Coimbatore, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Lucknow, Mumbai, Patna, and Pune. Its gross merchandise volume (GMV) was $100 million in October 2021. On December 14, the company entered the grocery segment and started delivering groceries in 700 cities across India. In the same year the company launched a zero-commission marketplace model that allows a seller to sell products without having to pay any commission to the company. References Online retailers of India Privately |
also actively helped in collecting evidence in different way and arranging papers and witnesses to ensure punishment of many revolutionaries in Muraripur Bomb case. According to a secret plan Ashutosh Biswas was shot dead by Charu Chandra Bose on February 10th, 1909. On the various day Charu Chandra tied the revolver tightly to his crippled hand and covered it under a shawl. He find him and shot him within point-blank range in the afternoon. Charu Chandra Bose was arrested by a constable. , Death He died on the gallows in Alipore Central Jail on 19 March 1909. References 1890 births 1909 deaths Anushilan Samiti Revolutionaries of Bengal during British | revolutionary organisation of British India. He also associated with Yugantar, an organisation known for its revolutionary exploits. A notorious Public Prosecutor Ashutosh Biswas was responsible for the conviction of many revolutionaries in the Muraripukur bomb case. Biswas also dealing with many other false cases shortly after the Anti-Partition Movement in Bengal. He also actively helped in collecting evidence in different way and arranging papers and witnesses to ensure punishment of many revolutionaries in Muraripur Bomb case. According to a secret plan Ashutosh Biswas was shot dead by Charu Chandra Bose on |
following year. The ship was the third to be named after Admiral Sir Charles Napier, the nineteenth century sailor, to enter naval service. The vessel was deployed as part of the Grand Fleet, joining the Twelfth Destroyer Flotilla at Scapa Flow. Napier was undergoing refit in May 1916 and so missed the Battle of Jutland. On 5 June, the destroyer was sent out to look for survivors from the armoured cruiser . Hampshire had been sailing to Russia without escort with the Secretary of State for War, Field Marshal Lord Kitchener, but had sunk after hitting a mine and only 13 individuals, which did not include the Secretary of State, survived. Napier found only three deserted boats, including a dinghy and a whaler. On 16 November the destroyer sailed to confront the German High Seas Fleet at the Second Battle of Heligoland Bight as part of the defensive screen for the dreadnought battleships of the First Battle Squadron, but was not called on to engage the enemy forces and returned to port without firing a shot. On 27 January 1917, the destroyer was temporally seconded to the Harwich Force to bolster defences in the south of England. The posting did not last long and by July the vessel had returned to Scapa Flow. Later that year, Napier was involved in escorting oilers of the Grand Fleet. After the Armistice of 11 November 1918 and the end of the First World War, the Royal Navy returned to a peacetime level of mobilisation, and surplus vessels were culled. Napier was initially placed in reserve at Devonport. However, the posting did not last long. The harsh conditions of wartime service, particularly the combination of high speed and the poor weather that is typical of the North Sea, exacerbated by the fact that the hull was not galvanised, meant that much of the hull and superstructure was well worn. The destroyer was deemed unfit to remain in operation, subsequently was decommissioned and, on 8 November 1921, was sold to Slough TC to be broken up | and ratings. Construction and career Laid down by John Brown & Company of Clydebank at their shipyard on 6 July 1915 with the yard number 444, Napier was launched on 27 November and completed on 22 January the following year. The ship was the third to be named after Admiral Sir Charles Napier, the nineteenth century sailor, to enter naval service. The vessel was deployed as part of the Grand Fleet, joining the Twelfth Destroyer Flotilla at Scapa Flow. Napier was undergoing refit in May 1916 and so missed the Battle of Jutland. On 5 June, the destroyer was sent out to look for survivors from the armoured cruiser . Hampshire had been sailing to Russia without escort with the Secretary of State for War, Field Marshal Lord Kitchener, but had sunk after hitting a mine and only 13 individuals, which did not include the Secretary of State, survived. Napier found only three deserted boats, including a dinghy and a whaler. On 16 November the destroyer sailed to confront the German High Seas Fleet at the Second Battle of Heligoland Bight as part of the defensive screen for the dreadnought battleships of the First Battle Squadron, but was not called on to engage the enemy forces and returned to port without firing a shot. On 27 January 1917, the destroyer was temporally seconded to the Harwich Force to bolster defences in the south of England. The posting did not last long and by July the vessel had returned to Scapa Flow. Later that year, Napier was involved in escorting oilers of the Grand Fleet. After the Armistice of 11 November 1918 and the end of the First World War, the Royal Navy returned to a peacetime level of mobilisation, and surplus vessels were culled. Napier was initially placed in reserve at Devonport. However, the posting did not last long. The harsh conditions of wartime service, particularly the combination of high speed and the poor weather that is typical of the North Sea, exacerbated by the fact that the hull was not galvanised, meant that much of the hull |
signing an agreement in July 2012 with Magna Seating Chomutov (a unit of Canada's Magna International), in which the company received free land for a plant assembling car-seat covers. He was elected to the Vojvodina assembly in the 2012 provincial election for the Odžaci constituency seat. The DS and its allies won the election, and Cvetanović served for the next four years as a supporter of the administration. He was a member of the province's security committee and the committee for the organization of administration and local self-government. Vojvodina switched to a system of full proportional representation for the 2016 Vojvodina provincial election. Cvetanović was not a candidate for re-election. Electoral Record Provincial (Vojvodina) Local (Odžaci) References 1967 births Living people People from Odžaci Mayors of places in Serbia Members of the Assembly of Vojvodina | assembly in a 2010 off-year municipal election and was chosen as mayor when the DS won a plurality victory. The highlight of his mayoralty was signing an agreement in July 2012 with Magna Seating Chomutov (a unit of Canada's Magna International), in which the company received free land for a plant assembling car-seat covers. He was elected to the Vojvodina assembly in the 2012 provincial election for the Odžaci constituency seat. The DS and its allies won the election, and Cvetanović served for the next four years as a supporter of the administration. He was a member of the province's security committee and the committee for the organization of administration and local self-government. Vojvodina switched to a system of full proportional representation for the 2016 Vojvodina provincial election. Cvetanović was not a candidate for re-election. Electoral Record Provincial (Vojvodina) Local (Odžaci) References 1967 births |
Basketball League (NBL). References External links Saint Mary's Gaels bio 1997 births Living people | births Living people Australian men's basketball players Centers (basketball) Saint Mary's Gaels men's |
has been isolated from the gut contend of a sea cucomber (Stichopus japonicus). References Verrucomicrobiota Monotypic | (Stichopus japonicus). References Verrucomicrobiota Monotypic bacteria genera Bacteria genera Taxa described in 2003 |
career National Auto Sport Association At the age of 18, he would first race in the National Auto Sport Association, driving a Ford Mustang. He would win the American Iron division in 2019. ARCA Menards Series With help of Toyota Racing Development employee Jack Irving, Lane was able to buy a car from Venturini Motorsports to race in a future ARCA Menards Series race. While looking for a location to store the car, Empire Racing would offer Lane a mechanic job for the team. He would first make his debut | Kimmel Racing. Racing career National Auto Sport Association At the age of 18, he would first race in the National Auto Sport Association, driving a Ford Mustang. He would win the American Iron division in 2019. ARCA Menards Series With help of Toyota Racing Development employee Jack Irving, Lane was able to buy a car from Venturini Motorsports to race in a future ARCA Menards Series race. While looking |
director, producer and voice actor. He is most notable for being the main screenwriter of the animated series Kikoriki. Biography Aleksey Lebedev was born on 29 May 1973 in Murmansk. He graduated from the Suvorov Military School in Leningrad and the St. Petersburg Humanitarian University of Trade Unions (director department, acting and directing course with Zinovy Korogodsky) in 1997. In 2001, he graduated from the faculty of Mathematics and Mechanics at the Saint Petersburg State University. For some time, he was working as an actor and director of the drama theatre and also as a software developer. He wrote his first script in 1998 for a comedy film The Biedermeier Wardrobe which was never produced. In 2003, he was invited to the newly created Petersburg Animation Studio as a candidate for the main screenwriter of the Kikoriki series. He was elected right away after trying different people and that is how he came to be the main screenwriter of the animated series. From | graduated from the Suvorov Military School in Leningrad and the St. Petersburg Humanitarian University of Trade Unions (director department, acting and directing course with Zinovy Korogodsky) in 1997. In 2001, he graduated from the faculty of Mathematics and Mechanics at the Saint Petersburg State University. For some time, he was working as an actor and director of the drama theatre and also as a software developer. He wrote his first script in 1998 for a comedy film The Biedermeier Wardrobe which was never produced. In 2003, he was invited to the newly created Petersburg Animation Studio as a candidate for the main screenwriter of the Kikoriki series. He was elected right away after trying different people and that is how he came to be the main screenwriter of the animated series. From 2003 to 2012 he wrote over 230 screenplays for the traditional six-minute episodes of the original series (164 of which were released from 2003 to 2012, and 10 of which were released in their 3D spin-off, and the last seven scripts were dedicated to the seven deadly sins), 12 10-minute screenplays for the 3D spin-off Kikoriki. New Adventures, and the full-length film Kikoriki. Team Invincible. During its time the film was very popular in Russia and abroad. His reaction to the film after he saw it himself was quite negative: He also wrote a screenplay for the next film, Kikoriki. The Legend of the Golden Dragon, but was denied. The rest of his |
most of her childhood in Southern California, and graduated from UC Berkeley, where she focused on English literature and Asian American Studies. She received her MFA from Mills College. She currently lives in Berkeley, California. In 1999, she married her college sweetheart, and at the age of 33, she survived a left thalamic stroke on December 31, 2006, which left her with a fifteen-minute short-term memory. She was married for 14 years and divorced after the birth of their child. Career Lee has written short stories, reviews, and articles for The New York Times, BuzzFeed, Guernica, The Rumpus, and Catapult, where she sustained a column called Backyard Politics about seeing the world through the lens of her urban farm. In 2014, Lee wrote a personal essay about her stroke and recovery for BuzzFeed, which went viral and garnered over 300,000 views within 36 hours. | on December 31, 2006, which left her with a fifteen-minute short-term memory. She was married for 14 years and divorced after the birth of their child. Career Lee has written short stories, reviews, and articles for The New York Times, BuzzFeed, Guernica, The Rumpus, and Catapult, where she sustained a column called Backyard Politics about seeing the world through the lens of her urban farm. In 2014, Lee wrote a personal essay about her stroke and recovery for BuzzFeed, which went viral and garnered over 300,000 views within 36 hours. In 2017, she published her book, Tell Me Everything You Don’t Remember, which was featured by the New York Times and NPR’s Weekend Edition With Scott Simon. The book, according |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.