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and only mosque in Tasmania. Architecture The mosque has a capacity of 300 worshipers. See also Islam in Australia List of mosques in Oceania References External links 1985 establishments | of mosques in Oceania References External links 1985 establishments in Australia Buildings and structures in Hobart Mosques completed in 1985 Mosques in |
References Verrucomicrobiota Bacteria genera Taxa described in 2007 | the family of Puniceicoccaceae. References Verrucomicrobiota Bacteria genera Taxa |
has recruited them. His gang consists of Duke, also a Vietnam veteran, Limpy, Speed, and another Vietnam veteran, Dirty Denny. They are under the orders of Army Captain Jackson. The gang modifies their motorcycles in a garage run by Diem-Nuc. They weld armour plating with submachine guns on the handlebars. Limpy drives a three-wheeler modified from a Harley-Davidson frame with a Volkswagen rear end, that is armed with heavy .50 calibre machine guns and a multiple rocket launcher from a helicopter. In order to open fire on enemy soldiers in trees or towers the gang do wheelies whilst firing their weapons. Cast William Smith as Link Thomas Bernie Hamilton as Captain Jackson Huston Savage as Dirty Denny Adam Roarke as Duke Paul Koslo as Limpy Gene Cornelius as Speed John Garwood as Sergeant Winston Ana Korita as Kim Sue Vic Diaz as Diem-Nuc Alan Caillou as Albanian Production On 19 November 1965, Sonny Barger the "Maximum Leader" of the Hells Angels motorcycle club sent a telegram to President Johnson offering the Angels as "gorilla fighters" (sic) in the Vietnam War. | .50 calibre machine guns and a multiple rocket launcher from a helicopter. In order to open fire on enemy soldiers in trees or towers the gang do wheelies whilst firing their weapons. Cast William Smith as Link Thomas Bernie Hamilton as Captain Jackson Huston Savage as Dirty Denny Adam Roarke as Duke Paul Koslo as Limpy Gene Cornelius as Speed John Garwood as Sergeant Winston Ana Korita as Kim Sue Vic Diaz as Diem-Nuc Alan Caillou as Albanian Production On 19 November 1965, Sonny Barger the "Maximum Leader" of the Hells Angels motorcycle club sent a telegram to President Johnson offering the Angels as "gorilla fighters" (sic) in the Vietnam War. Though the President turned them down, the idea became a Vietnam War movie made in the Philippines using sets and crew from Too Late the Hero. William Smith stated that the original ending had the rescued diplomat die whilst the gang lived, but Jack Starrett and Smith rewrote Alan Caillou's screenplay. Smith also stated that the earring he wore in the film was given to him by the Hells Angels during another motorcycle film he made. Paul Koslo was taught to ride by the film's stuntman Gary McLarty. Originally titled Nam's Angels, the title was changed before release to the more generic The Losers with composer Stu Phillips writing a song incorporating the |
inventions to his credit with 40 of them patented. Life and work Bhisey was born in Bombay. His father Abaji had been a court worker, a Munsif to a Shirestadar before becoming a Sadar Amin at Surat. His father moved to Jalgaon where he spent time reading Scientific American and conducting experiments. He had only a high school education but was interested in tinkering with mechanical devices. He began a Scientific Club in Bombay which had meetings each month. He was also involved in other activities including mentalism, magic tricks, and seances - associating also with the theosophists of the period who admired his abilities as a traditional Indian necromancer. After his father passed away in 1893, he accepted an offer to go to England to show his inventions (of optical illusions and mind reading) with support from Sayajirao Gaikwad of Baroda, and he drew the interests of Dadabhai Naoroji, Ratan Tata and G.K. Gokhale. He examined paper pulping in England and returned to India to try to obtain a job at the Girgaon Paper Mill in 1896 but failed. During the same year, he volunteered in the plague management efforts in Fanaswadi Ward of Bombay. His community, people in the caste of Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu, had ostracised him for undertaking a sea voyage but in 1898 he was honoured for his work during the plague. In 1896 he applied for a patent for a station indicator for use in the railways which showed the station of halt, the stations that had been passed and an estimate of the time to reach the next station. His father wished that he trained in the legal profession but he did not have an interest but he worked in the Accountant General's office in Bombay (1888-1897) which left him time for his own studies and diversions. He came into the limelight when he won a £10 prize in July 1897 for an invention for automatic weighing machine in a contest held in England. Several Indian newspapers of the period declared that his work demonstrated Indian talent in science and sought sponsorship from Indian princes for him to travel and demonstrate his (and therefore Indian / Hindu) talents in Europe or America. In 1898 he designed a sliding door, while a patent application for a method for tying Indian turbans and pagries submitted in 1897 lapsed due to failure of payments. Around this period he moved to England. In 1901 Bhisey invented an illuminated advertising machine called a "Vertoscope" that could show multiple coloured advertisements which changed rapidly at intervals. This was however banned for use in London claiming that it startled horses. When this machine was displayed in the World Trade Exhibition in 1901 several English backers sought to purchase the rights but he was advised against it by Dadabhai Naoroji who helped him instead to found the Bhisey Patent Syndicate. He had the same device exhibited in Paris in 1901 with support from Mancherji Bhavnagari. He patented an automatic | Bombay. His community, people in the caste of Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu, had ostracised him for undertaking a sea voyage but in 1898 he was honoured for his work during the plague. In 1896 he applied for a patent for a station indicator for use in the railways which showed the station of halt, the stations that had been passed and an estimate of the time to reach the next station. His father wished that he trained in the legal profession but he did not have an interest but he worked in the Accountant General's office in Bombay (1888-1897) which left him time for his own studies and diversions. He came into the limelight when he won a £10 prize in July 1897 for an invention for automatic weighing machine in a contest held in England. Several Indian newspapers of the period declared that his work demonstrated Indian talent in science and sought sponsorship from Indian princes for him to travel and demonstrate his (and therefore Indian / Hindu) talents in Europe or America. In 1898 he designed a sliding door, while a patent application for a method for tying Indian turbans and pagries submitted in 1897 lapsed due to failure of payments. Around this period he moved to England. In 1901 Bhisey invented an illuminated advertising machine called a "Vertoscope" that could show multiple coloured advertisements which changed rapidly at intervals. This was however banned for use in London claiming that it startled horses. When this machine was displayed in the World Trade Exhibition in 1901 several English backers sought to purchase the rights but he was advised against it by Dadabhai Naoroji who helped him instead to found the Bhisey Patent Syndicate. He had the same device exhibited in Paris in 1901 with support from Mancherji Bhavnagari. He patented an automatic toilet flush, an automatic bicycle stand, and the Vertolite Sign Lamp. The most influential invention was a type-setting machine called the Spasotype and later the Bhiso-type which could insert blocks at 1500 to 2000 characters per hour for use in printing. The Hindu Missionary Society and several other Indian nationalist groups promoted Bhisey and his talents. He was invited to several meetings where he was honoured, including the Indian National Trade Congress at Madras on 26 December 1908. He established an Indian society in London along with his wife Sushilabai, and others like Govind Kukade and Govind Ray. In 1910 Ratan Tata established the Tata Bhisey Invention Syndicate in London. During World War I, Shapurji Saklatwala who managed operations in London for Tata shutdown Bhisey's syndicate and sold off the machinery to manufacture his Bhisotype. Bhisey then joined hands with Charles Slaughter of the Universal Type Casting Company in the US. Bhisey faced significant difficulties with the Tatas and it was not until 1920 that he was able to launch his own corporation in the US, the Bhisey Ideal Type Caster Corporation. In 1917 he also dabbled in chemistry, producing a washing chemical called "Shella". He also developed an iodine based formulation called Baseline that he believed cured his malaria and could make water safe for drinking. It was later bought in 1926 and renamed as Atomidine and |
seawater from Japan. References Verrucomicrobiota Bacteria described in | and chemoheterotrophic bacterium from the genus of |
granted 2560 acres of land at Kiora, in 1831, and moved there from 'Elderslie', in 1832. Kiora lay on the northern side of the Moruya River, at the southern-most limit of the Nineteen Counties, in which settlement was allowed by the colonial government. He had a house built there, known as 'Kiora House'. In the same year, 1832, as a squatter, he took up land at Howlong, on the Murray River, which he used for grazing cattle. He worked his land using assigned convict labour; at one time employing as many as 100, across various occupations, resulting in his remote estate being nearly self sufficient. He seems to have treated his assigned convicts, or 'government men', relatively well; probably as a result, he reported that he had little difficulty in managing them. Later, the blacksmith's forge, the mill, tailor's and shoemaker's shops, and the other trades that he brought to the district would be the nucleus of the town of Moruya. Encouraged by Hawdon, who was enthusiastic and optimistic about prospects in the colony, his younger brother Joseph came to Australia in 1834. In conjunction with his younger brother, Hawdon contracted for the first overland mail service between Sydney and the new settlement at Melbourne, in 1837, using one of his stockmen, John Bourke, as the mailman. Bourke carried Joseph Hawdon's pair of dueling pistols as protection. It was from Hawdon's land at Howlong (then known, confusingly, as Oolong) that Joseph Hawdon and two other men—John Gardiner and John Hepburn—drove cattle overland, for the first time, to the new colony of South Australia, in 1836. Both Hawdon brothers were early members of the Melbourne Club. It was Hawdon who wrote to the Governor in 1836, pointing out the dependence of the settlers on the safe anchorage and port at Broulee, leading to the surveying of a township there in 1837, by James Larmer. Wanting more land, from 1836, Hawdon squatted on a huge piece of land south of the Moruya River, comprising the area the areas known today as Congo, Bergalia, Tuross Head and Bodalla. This squatting run was referred to as 'Bergalia'. In 1843, he established an outstation at Bodalla. In 1848, he was able to obtain a Crown Lease over 30,000 acres of land in the area, much of it prime land. A large portion of the Crown Lease, around Bodalla, later became part of the estate of Thomas Suttcliff Mort, although Hawdon retained some land near Tuross Head, 'Kyla Park', and the original land grant at Kiora. In time, he would also own land near Mildura, and at Mount Greenock and Dandenong Creek, in the Port Phillip District, later the colony of Victoria. Relations with traditional owners At the time Hawdon was 'taking up' land, the traditional owners of that land were still occupying it. It was the granting of title deeds for the land, to settlers such as Hawdon, that was extinguishing what was later known as native title over that land. Hawdon seems to have enjoyed friendly relations with the local people. While living at 'Eldersie', he would lend them guns, powder and shot, repaid by the local people with half of the game that they had shot. He praised the friendliness and strict honesty of the local people around | the yard. It was local Yuin people, around Moruya, who showed Hawdon the rich well-watered land around Bodalla. It is unlikely that they understood the huge consequences of the Crown Lease that he later obtained over the land, effectively dispossessing Yuin people occupying that land. For many years, he employed at least three Aboriginal men as servants—'Mister Campbell', the coach-driver, dressed in black livery, 'Mister Walker', and 'Benson'. It was as if he was recreating an English manor, on the verges of what was, in the eyes of his contemporaries, still a wilderness. Colonial magistrate As an early and prominent settler of a remote area, Hawdon became a local magistrate. In the days before Moruya was established, the magistrates sat at nearby Broulee. Hawdon was not comfortable sentencing escaped convicts; when recaptured, their punishment would be flogging. His attitude was unusual for the colonial magistrates of the time, many of whom—particularly the ex-military officers—seemed unrestrained in handing down harsh sentences. His daughter recalled that, if he suspected the presence of any absconding convicts, he would loudly announce that he would return later, at a particular time, to make a thorough search, allowing them time to slip away discreetly. Although he was a magistrate, he was also involved in legal cases, in the role of defendant. In October 1840, he lost a civil action and had to pay damages for slander. On 30 January 1844, Hawdon entered the bar of the hotel at Broulee, on horseback. Assisted by three other men—Hawdon's brother-in-law, Mr Potts, another local magistrate , Mr Wason (from Ulladulla), and the Clerk-of-the-Bench, Mr McLean—Hawdon attacked William Oldrey's former superintendent, Richard Bingham Sheridan. The alleged assault could not be properly investigated nor tried, at Broulee, as the accused, Hawdon, was one of the two local magistrates, and the next closest bench, at Braidwood, refused to become involved. Sheridan doggedly persisted in seeking justice, and Hawdon was eventually tried—giving evidence by affidavit—and found guilty, by a jury, in the Supreme Court, nearly a year later. He was fined £100, and gave security of £500 and two sureties of £250 each, "to keep the peace for twelve months." The strange episode —out of character for Hawdon—appears to have been triggered by an argument, about money, between Oldrey and Sheridan at 'Mount Oldrey', earlier on the same day as the assault. There is some indication that alcohol was a factor. It seems that Hawdon was no longer working as a magistrate thereafter. Family, later life, and death He married Margaret Katherine Potts (1809–1886) at St Peter's Walls End, Northumberland (later Wallsend, Newcastle upon Tyne), in England. They had eight children; John (1827—1848), the only child born in England, Gilbert (1828—1863), who was born at sea, William (1832—1915), Ernest Werge (1834—1892), Joseph (1836—1859), Francis (1838—1919), who was born in the new settlement of Melbourne, Elizabeth Anne (1842—1890), and Annie (1844—1941). His first two sons were early students at The King's School, but |
from "Yedikuyular" (literally: "Seven wells"), where some wells are still existing today. Facilities The ski resort includes a visitor center of , a ski equipment rental shop of , a first aid facility of , commercial units covering , restaurant and coffeehouse of , social faciliteis of , ski lodges of . There three marked pistes: a green piste of at 15% grade, a blue piste of at 18% grade, and a red piste of at 38%. The skiing areas are served by two baby lifts of length and , Further facilities are ski junping ramps, picnic and recreation areas, | of at 18% grade, and a red piste of at 38%. The skiing areas are served by two baby lifts of length and , Further facilities are ski junping ramps, picnic and recreation areas, a pond, basketball and volleyball courts, off-road and trekking areas, a heliport, a 1,000 car capacity parking lot. A -long chairlift line and a -long gondola lift serve the skiing area from the base station at to the top station at . The ski resort is visited on weekends by 15,000-20,000 tourist. International winter sports events hosted The ski resort hosted one event of the CEV Snow Volleyball European Tour in 2022. References External links Official website Ski areas and resorts in Turkey Buildings and structures in Kahramanmaraş Province Tourist attractions in Kahramanmaraş Province Sports venues completed in 2018 2018 |
a wheelchair at the age of 24. In 2021, he helped launch a project called Ramp Up Reykjavík, a collaborative venture undertaken by local businesses, labour unions, government ministries, associations, banks, and city officials with the intention of helping local businesses install wheelchair ramps to improve accessibility for people with disabilities. After the projects great success, a new project called Ramp Up Iceland with | 2019, he was named the Icelandic business man of the year by the Icelandic Association of Business and Economists. In 2021, he sold the company to Twitter. Philanthropy Haraldur was born with a genetic congenital muscle disease that forced him to use a wheelchair |
The 1885 Sydney Badge Series was the first edition of the Sydney Badge Series. The season began on 6 June 1885 with six clubs Arcandians, Caledonians, Canterbury, Pyrmont Rangers, Revellers, Wanderers. Caledonians were awarded the Championship and received gold medals after the season was abandoned due to ground shortages cancelling several matches. Teams Arcandians Caledonians Canterbury Pyrmont Rangers | six clubs Arcandians, Caledonians, Canterbury, Pyrmont Rangers, Revellers, Wanderers. Caledonians were awarded the Championship and received gold medals after the season was abandoned due to ground shortages cancelling several matches. Teams Arcandians Caledonians Canterbury Pyrmont Rangers Revellers (Young Men's Field Association) Wanderers League table |
The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure, (d. 1968). June 17: Manuel Perez, Mexican-American animator and director (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Bill Melendez Productions, DePatie-Freleng, Hanna-Barbera, Fritz the Cat), and comics writer, (d. 1981). June 24: Paul Julian, American animator, background artist (My Little Pony: The Movie, Ferngully: The Last Rainforest, sound effects artist (Warner Bros. Cartoons), and voice actor (voice of Road Runner), (d. 1995). July July 3: George Bruns, American composer (wrote the soundtracks to the Disney films Sleeping Beauty, One Hundred and One Dalmatians, The Sword in the Stone, The Jungle Book, The Aristocats, and Robin Hood), (d. 1983). July 11: Hal Adelquist, American animator, animation producer and storyboard writer (Walt Disney Company), (d. 1981). Irving Spector, American animator and comics artist (Fleischer Studios, Hanna-Barbera), (d. 1977). July 23: Evelyn Lambart, Canadian animator and animated film director (co-directed Begone Dull Care, and A Chairy Tale), (d. 1999). August August 9: Martin Taras, American comics artist and animator (Fleischer Studios, Famous Studios, Hanna-Barbera, Terrytoons, Ralph Bakshi), and character designer (Baby Huey), (d. 1994). August 14: Boris Dyozhkin, Russian animated film director, caricaturist and animator (Cipollino, Fitil), (d. 1992). August 26: Richard Thompson, American animator and film director (Warner Bros. Cartoons, MGM, Hanna-Barbera, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, Bill Melendez), (d. 1998). September September 3: Willis Pyle, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Walter Lantz, UPA, Peanuts specials, co-creator of Mr. Magoo), (d. 2016). October October 6: Robert C. Bruce, American voice actor (narrator of various Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons), (d. 2003). October 28: Dody Goodman, American actress (voice of Miss Miller in Alvin and the Chipmunks), (d. 2008). November November 6: Jonathan Harris, American actor (voice of Manny in A Bug's Life, Geri the Cleaner in Toy Story 2, Count Blogg in Rainbow Brite and the Star Stealer, and The TV series, Phineas Sharp in Darkwing Duck, Professor Jones in Freakazoid!, Miles Warren in Spider-Man), (d. 2002). November 11: Mel Leven, American composer and lyricist (wrote "Cruella de Vil" for One Hundred and One Dalmatians), (d. 2007). November 22: Frank Graham, American radio presenter and voice actor (the Big Bad Wolf in Tex Avery's Droopy, the Mouse in Slap Happy Lion, and King-Size Canary, the Fox and the Crow in The Fox and the Crow, the Lion in the Tom & Jerry short Jerry and the Lion, the narrator in Disney's Chicken Little, and The Three Caballeros), (d. 1950). December December 1: Michel Douay, French comics artist, illustrator and animator (worked for Paul Grimault's studio) (d. 2010). December 19: Mel Shaw, | Studios, Famous Studios, Hanna-Barbera, Terrytoons, Ralph Bakshi), and character designer (Baby Huey), (d. 1994). August 14: Boris Dyozhkin, Russian animated film director, caricaturist and animator (Cipollino, Fitil), (d. 1992). August 26: Richard Thompson, American animator and film director (Warner Bros. Cartoons, MGM, Hanna-Barbera, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, Bill Melendez), (d. 1998). September September 3: Willis Pyle, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Walter Lantz, UPA, Peanuts specials, co-creator of Mr. Magoo), (d. 2016). October October 6: Robert C. Bruce, American voice actor (narrator of various Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons), (d. 2003). October 28: Dody Goodman, American actress (voice of Miss Miller in Alvin and the Chipmunks), (d. 2008). November November 6: Jonathan Harris, American actor (voice of Manny in A Bug's Life, Geri the Cleaner in Toy Story 2, Count Blogg in Rainbow Brite and the Star Stealer, and The TV series, Phineas Sharp in Darkwing Duck, Professor Jones in Freakazoid!, Miles Warren in Spider-Man), (d. 2002). November 11: Mel Leven, American composer and lyricist (wrote "Cruella de Vil" for One Hundred and One Dalmatians), (d. 2007). November 22: Frank Graham, American radio presenter and voice actor (the Big Bad Wolf in Tex Avery's Droopy, the Mouse in Slap Happy Lion, and King-Size Canary, the Fox and the Crow in The Fox and the Crow, the Lion in the Tom & Jerry short Jerry and the Lion, the narrator in Disney's Chicken Little, and The Three Caballeros), (d. 1950). December December 1: Michel Douay, French comics artist, illustrator and animator (worked for Paul Grimault's studio) (d. 2010). December 19: Mel Shaw, American animator (Walt Disney Company), (d. 2012). December 20: Charles McKimson, aka Chuck McKimson, American animator and comics artist (Warner Bros. Cartoons), (d. 1999). December 27: Jack Bradbury, American animator and comics |
Information and Culture under Keo Chenda, charged with the critical mission of bringing all the surviving dancers together. In 1981, Chheng Phon was named director of the School of Fine Arts which he reopened in Phnom Penh, as a place where he could gather the artists scattered across the country and train a new generation of dancers. His perception of the dire state of culture in Cambodia after the fall of the Khmers Rouges was unambiguous: Serving the renaissance of Cambodia as Minister of Culture In 1981, Chheng Pon was appointed Deputy Minister of the People's Republic of Kampuchea, thus becoming "the first person without any revolutionary or definite communist background to be appointed to a party leadership position". In 1982, Chheng Phon was appointed Minister of Culture of Kampuchea, staying in office until 1991, a position in which he had to reconcile his love for Khmer traditions and the political agenda of communist ideology, producing “revised” and politicized cultural works as artists were encouraged “ to adapt the tradition to modern times". Chheng Phon as Minister would however restore what was left of Khmer traditions among his people, saying: "the influence of Buddhism is quite significant, and the traditions of monarchy are still felt." He worked as an expert consultant on the set of Nine Levels of Hell, a Czech-Cambodian romantic drama from 1987. Professor Chheng Phon reopened the University of Fine Arts, Phnom Penh, the former Royal University of Fine Arts, in 1989 to promote the preservation of both tangible and intangible cultural assets of Cambodia. In 1990, as Minister of Culture, he told the Khmer classical ballet to revive all 18 forms of the ballet. Later life of the cultural conscience of Cambodia From retirement to spiritual retreat On August 5, 1990, Chheng Phon submitted his resignation as Minister for Culture for health reasons, though some journalists have noted that the real cause may have been his proximity with Ung Phan of the FUNCINPEC royalist party which had just been ousted. He retired from most of his political affairs in 1992 and used his own money to establish the Center for Culture and Vipassana at his home in the suburbs of Phnom Penh, in a place that was originally, in the late 1980s, a place for artists to study meditation in relation to performance. He travelled to California in 1993 to meet former students who had sought asylum in the United States. Together, they recreated the Khmer Royal Ballet in an auditorium at California State University at Long Beach. In 1993 he became a member of the National Council of Culture of Cambodia. Heading the National Election Committee After seven years far from political life, he returned to the public scene to hold a position as chairman of the National Election Committee of Cambodia in 1997, a choice that was criticized by those close to the FUNCINPEC who now considered him a supporter of Hun Sen too close to the Cambodian People's Party, which he had left briefly before the Paris Peace Agreements. On March 7, 1998, he signed a $25.8 million contract with a private company called Ciccone to stage the elections, and when criticized for his actions, he assumed his responsibility, saying there were no other options. Nevertheless, his neutrality was appreciated in the election process, even by international observers such as Human Rights Watch as well as the Asian Network for Free Elections, which acknowledged that Chheng Phon actively helped deploy a network of independent observers during the election cycle. Death Chheng Phon died on December 22, 2016, in Ta Khmau in Kandal | of only three major cultural figures who survived the years of killings, hiding his identity and pretending to be a peasant." He spend these terrible years in Kompong Thom Province. Reviving Khmer greatness with the Ministry of Culture Bringing surviving dancers together In January 1979, Heng Samrin proclaimed the restoration of normal society after four years of the Pol Pot regime had trashed most aspects of family life and the previous society. Actor, poet, and director Pich Tum Krovil and Chheng Phon were among the cultural stars who miraculously survived and now dedicated the rest of their lives to resuscitating their cherished traditions of dance.They were enlisted by the new Ministry of Information and Culture under Keo Chenda, charged with the critical mission of bringing all the surviving dancers together. In 1981, Chheng Phon was named director of the School of Fine Arts which he reopened in Phnom Penh, as a place where he could gather the artists scattered across the country and train a new generation of dancers. His perception of the dire state of culture in Cambodia after the fall of the Khmers Rouges was unambiguous: Serving the renaissance of Cambodia as Minister of Culture In 1981, Chheng Pon was appointed Deputy Minister of the People's Republic of Kampuchea, thus becoming "the first person without any revolutionary or definite communist background to be appointed to a party leadership position". In 1982, Chheng Phon was appointed Minister of Culture of Kampuchea, staying in office until 1991, a position in which he had to reconcile his love for Khmer traditions and the political agenda of communist ideology, producing “revised” and politicized cultural works as artists were encouraged “ to adapt the tradition to modern times". Chheng Phon as Minister would however restore what was left of Khmer traditions among his people, saying: "the influence of Buddhism is quite significant, and the traditions of monarchy are still felt." He worked as an expert consultant on the set of Nine Levels of Hell, a Czech-Cambodian romantic drama from 1987. Professor Chheng Phon reopened the University of Fine Arts, Phnom Penh, the former Royal University of Fine Arts, in 1989 to promote the preservation of both tangible and intangible cultural assets of Cambodia. In 1990, as Minister of Culture, he told the Khmer classical ballet to revive all 18 forms of the ballet. Later life of the cultural conscience of Cambodia From retirement to spiritual retreat On August 5, 1990, Chheng Phon submitted his resignation as Minister for Culture for health reasons, though some journalists have noted that the real cause may have been his proximity with Ung Phan of the FUNCINPEC royalist party which had just been ousted. He retired from most of his political affairs in 1992 and used his own money to establish the Center for Culture and Vipassana at his home in the suburbs of Phnom Penh, in a place that was originally, in the late 1980s, a place for artists to study meditation in relation to performance. He travelled to California in 1993 to meet former students who had sought asylum in the United States. Together, they recreated the Khmer Royal Ballet in an auditorium at California State University at Long Beach. In 1993 he became a member of the National Council of Culture of Cambodia. Heading the National Election Committee After seven years far from political life, he returned to the public scene to hold a position as chairman of the National Election Committee of Cambodia in 1997, a choice that was criticized by those close to the FUNCINPEC who now considered him a supporter of Hun Sen too close to the Cambodian People's Party, which he had left briefly before the Paris Peace Agreements. On March 7, 1998, he signed a $25.8 million contract with a private company called Ciccone to stage the elections, and when criticized for his actions, he assumed his responsibility, saying there were no other options. Nevertheless, his neutrality was appreciated in the election process, even by international observers such as Human Rights Watch as well as the Asian Network for Free Elections, which acknowledged that Chheng Phon actively helped deploy a network of independent observers during the election cycle. Death Chheng Phon died on December 22, 2016, in Ta Khmau in Kandal province at the age of 86. Sending his condolences to the family, Prime Minister Hun Sen acknowledged him as a national hero saying: Views The "warrior mentality" and spiritual battle of Khmer civilization Chheng Phon defended his efforts to rebuild the classical dance tradition by appealing to a sense of pride in a Cambodian "national aesthetic." Chheng Phon often insisted, as he did during his intervention at Japan Foundation's "Symposium on Angkor," that the cultural restoration in Cambodia should also be a spiritual restoration. To that end, the renaissance of Khmer civilization did not only require a stronger economy but a new generation of politicians with a "warrior mentality", "visionary men and women who can reignite pride in |
a former long jump. He is a World champion and three-time European champion in the javelin and has won two silver medals in the shot put. He competed at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in the long jump where he finished in ninth place. References 1989 births | the 2012 Summer Paralympics in the long jump where he finished in ninth place. References 1989 births Living people People from Krāslava Paralympic athletes of Latvia Latvian male javelin throwers Latvian male long jumpers Latvian male shot putters Athletes (track and field) at the 2012 Summer Paralympics Medalists at the World Para Athletics Championships World Para Athletics Championships winners Medalists |
states. The head office is located in Nairobi, Kenya. RECSA has the status of permanent observer in the UN General Assembly. References United Nations General Assembly observers 2005 establishments in Kenya Organisations based in | in 2005 and has 15 member states. The head office is located in Nairobi, Kenya. RECSA has the status of permanent observer in the UN General Assembly. References United Nations General Assembly observers 2005 establishments in Kenya Organisations based in Nairobi Organizations established in 2005 |
a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification). Transport Bolshoye Dolzhenkovo is located 15 km from the federal route Crimea Highway (a part of the European route ), 6 km from the road of regional importance (Kursk – Lgov – Rylsk – border with Ukraine), 0.3 km from the road of intermunicipal significance (Dyakonovo – Starkovo – Sokolovka), on the road (38N-073 – Bolshoye Dolzhenkovo via | is a rural locality () and the administrative center of Dolzhenkovsky Selsoviet Rural Settlement, Oktyabrsky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia. Population: Geography The village is located on the Rogozna River (a right tributary of the Seym River), 72 km from the Russia–Ukraine border, 20 km south-west of Kursk, 6 km north-west of the district center – the urban-type settlement Pryamitsyno. Streets There is Novaya Street and 272 houses. Climate Bolshoye Dolzhenkovo has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification). Transport Bolshoye Dolzhenkovo is located 15 |
Among his repertoire is "Hoy Tengo Que" with the Dominican MC Facundo Gonzalez released in 2017. He works as a DJ in some of the most important clubs in Barcelona such as Shoko, Opium, and the Coconut Club. In 2022 he resumed his La Formula Brigante project, a podcast | 1982), known as Amaury Brigante is a DJ, music producer, radio host, celebrity interviewer and Dominican actor resident in Barcelona. He was born in Sosúa, Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic. He has |
his patrol. In exchange for their services, he offers the Angels a share of the gold but does not mention the prisoners. After fighting their way through NVA held territory with the aid of friendly South Vietnamese, they discover the aborigines are lead by a German named Chard who has remained in Indochina since his French Foreign Legion service. Chard plans to sell his American prisoners to the NVA. Cast Brad Johnson as Lt. Vance Calhoun Vernon Wells as Chard Mark Venturini as Bonelli Kevin Duffis as Hickman Rick Dean as Larger Jeff Griffith as Carmody Romy Diaz as Turko Ken Metcalfe as Gen. Donipha Archi Adamos as Trinh Eric Hahn as Morey References External links Vietnam War films 1989 films Outlaw biker films | The Americans fight their way into a cave containing gold that is in the territory of aboriginals who kill the NVA as well as a few Americans, but capture the majority of the patrol with the exception of its leader, Lt. Vance Calhoun. Calhoun beseeches his commanding general to allow him to return to the area to rescue his men, but the General explains they have no resources, and the area will be bombed by B-52s in a few days time. Aware that four Hells Angels bikers are visiting Vietnam and had have been arrested and |
and George Challenge Cup was the first edition of the George and George Challenge Cup. The competition began on 31 May 1884 with four clubs Carlton, Prahran, Richmond and South Melbourne. The cup was won by Richmond who won 3–0 against South Melbourne in the Final on 16 August 1884. References External links Football NSW official website 1884 in | soccer competitions contested under the organisation of the Anglo-Australian Football Association in 1884. Across the one senior cup, this was the first season of organised soccer in Victoria. Cup competitions 1884 George and George Challenge Cup The George and George Challenge Cup was the first cup competition in Victoria. The 1884 George and George Challenge Cup was the first edition of |
was born on 16 November 1925 in the village of Domkhali, North Gujra, Raozan, Chittagong District. He has been staying at Nandankanan Buddhist Monastery in the Chittagong Hill Tracts since 1958. He became a shramana in 1944 and a monk in 1949. He studied till the entrance. He took the initiative to spread the economic, social, religious and educational life of the Buddhist common people in the Chittagong Hill Tracts. He established many religious and educational institutions in the hilly | 1958. He became a shramana in 1944 and a monk in 1949. He studied till the entrance. He took the initiative to spread the economic, social, religious and educational life of the Buddhist common people in the Chittagong Hill Tracts. He established many religious and educational institutions in the hilly and plain areas. In 1974, he set up a |
executive passenger train operated by PT Kereta Api Indonesia for use between Cilacap and Jakarta's Gambir station. | Indonesia for use between Cilacap and Jakarta's Gambir station. It is the only train running the route. Timetable Timetable as of February |
be considered as a new generation of missiles and a mutation in developments in the missile field of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The Kheibar Shekan is one of the third generation of long-range missiles of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which uses "solid fuel" and in the landing phase, has maneuverability to pass through the missile shield. Another important feature of the Kheibar Shekan missile is its optimal design, which weighs up to one-third less than similar models, and its preparation and firing time is reduced to one-sixth. Due to the design of the warhead and with special wingtips, the possibility of maneuvering this missile in the final phase to counter the anti-missile defense systems has been strengthened. This missile has high accuracy and has the ability to hit points. Its warhead can withstand very high temperatures. Dimensions The Kheibar Shekan missile is 10.5 meters long, 80 centimeters in diameter, and weighs 4.5 tons with a 500-kilogram warhead. Its warhead is a fast and intense explosive type. The body of the Kheibar Shekan missile's body is made of Composite material same as Raad-500 missile. One of the advantages of the Kheibar Shekan missile is its smaller dimensions compared to similar models. Therefore, in the limited space of underground missile bases, more of them can be stored. Warheads The relatively larger dimensions of its warheads increase the maneuverability of the warhead after entering the atmosphere and allow for more sophisticated and faster maneuvers to effectively cross the barrier of in-air missile defenses, which are characteristic of defense systems such as David's Sling of Israel Defense Forces and the Patriot of the United States. Its maneuverable reentry vehicle (MaRV) warheads maneuver when enter the Earth's atmosphere with the help of wingtips, which reduce kinetic energy and, of course, velocity during the maneuver. For this reason, at the moment the warhead hits the target, there are no signs of burning of the blocks and melting of the warhead, which makes it possible to perform heavy | radius of more than 1400 kilometers (900 miles), while the maneuverability of this missile is very high compared to its classmates. It is also referred to as a long-range ballistic and aim point missile. The Kheibar Shekan missile can be considered as a new generation of missiles and a mutation in developments in the missile field of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The Kheibar Shekan is one of the third generation of long-range missiles of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which uses "solid fuel" and in the landing phase, has maneuverability to pass through the missile shield. Another important feature of the Kheibar Shekan missile is its optimal design, which weighs up to one-third less than similar models, and its preparation and firing time is reduced to one-sixth. Due to the design of the warhead and with special wingtips, the possibility of maneuvering this missile in the final phase to counter the anti-missile defense systems has been strengthened. This missile has high accuracy and has the ability to hit points. Its warhead can withstand very high temperatures. Dimensions The Kheibar Shekan missile is 10.5 meters long, 80 centimeters in diameter, and weighs 4.5 tons with a 500-kilogram warhead. Its warhead is a fast and intense explosive type. The body of the Kheibar Shekan missile's body is made of Composite material same as Raad-500 missile. One of the advantages of the Kheibar Shekan missile is its smaller dimensions compared to similar models. Therefore, in the |
held the position of Deputy Mayor of the city of Yeysk. In 2001, he started working at the administration of the Krasnodar Krai. On May 24, 2006, he was appointed Deputy Governor of the Krasnodar Krai. In November 2007, Nikolai Doluda was elected ataman of the Kuban Cossack army. Three years later, he headed the Council of military atamans. He left the | of the Krasnodar Krai. In November 2007, Nikolai Doluda was elected ataman of the Kuban Cossack army. Three years later, he headed the Council of military atamans. He left the post in 2020 to become the new head of the All-Russian Cossack Society. Since 2021, he has served as a deputy of the |
and Astra Sharma were the reigning champions, but Sharma chose not to compete and Perez competed in | defeating Wang Xinyu and Zhu Lin in the final, 7–5, 6–3. Seeds Draw Draw |
Government with a list of 33 supporting MLAs. On March 7, 2002, first SPF Government was created. Along with chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh from INC, ministers were sworn in including Govindas Konthoujam of MSCP, Pheiroijam Parijat Singh of CPI and Chungkhokai Doungel of NCP. DRPP with 2 MLAs joined SPF afterwards. MLAs from NCP, MSCP DRPP and Samata Party defected to INC making their strength 33 in the assembly. 2007 assembly election In the 2007 Manipur Legislative Assembly election, Congress and CPI were not allied. But they formed the Government together as SPF along with NCP. In the election, INC won 30 seats, CPI 4, NCP 5 and MSCP 0 seats. On March 1, 2007, Congress and CPI jointly held the SPF Steering Committee Meeting, where 3 MLAs of RJD, 3 MLAs of NPP and 3 Independent MLAs supported SPF Government on March 2, 2007. Dissolution In the 2012 Manipur Legislative Assembly election, INC contested on its own, dissolving the front. CPI contested on | MLAs supported SPF Government on March 2, 2007. Dissolution In the 2012 Manipur Legislative Assembly election, INC contested on its own, dissolving the front. CPI contested on 24 seats. In the election INC won absolute majority of its own with 42 MLAs and CPI having no representatives in the assembly. See also Secular Progressive Front Manipur Progressive Secular Alliance Left and Democratic Front Left and Secular Alliance References Political party alliances in India Political parties in Manipur 2002 establishments in Manipur 2012 disestablishments in India |
Opitutales is | is a |
known as the Lagos State Agricultural Development Project (LSADP), was established in 1987 (Edict No. 14 of 31 August 1989) and became a scheduled parastatal of the State Government with effect from 1 April 1995 as the implementing arm of the State Ministry of Agriculture The Authority is one of the specialized agencies of the Lagos State Ministry of Agriculture established to oversee specific areas in the sector. Other specialized agencies include Lagos State Coconut Development Authority (LASCODA), Agricultural Land Holding Authority (ALHA) and Lagos State Input Supply Authority (LAISA).The Lagos State Agricultural Development Authority is a service-oriented agency, providing technical agricultural services to the farmers/ fisher folks in Lagos state. LSADA office is located No 371,Oko-Oba,Agege Motor road, Lagos State. Vision To be a major contributor to sustainable economic growth and social well-being in Lagos state. Services The services carried by the LSADA are : Extension Services: The mandate of extension services is to ensures sufficient geographical coverage of Lagos state; to make a maximum | Government with effect from 1 April 1995 as the implementing arm of the State Ministry of Agriculture The Authority is one of the specialized agencies of the Lagos State Ministry of Agriculture established to oversee specific areas in the sector. Other specialized agencies include Lagos State Coconut Development Authority (LASCODA), Agricultural Land Holding Authority (ALHA) and Lagos State Input Supply Authority (LAISA).The Lagos State Agricultural Development Authority is a service-oriented agency, providing technical agricultural services to the farmers/ fisher folks in Lagos state. LSADA office is located No 371,Oko-Oba,Agege Motor road, Lagos State. Vision To be a major contributor to sustainable economic growth and social well-being in Lagos state. Services The services carried by the LSADA are : Extension Services: The mandate of extension services is to ensures sufficient geographical coverage of Lagos state; to make a maximum |
the Shiga clan, a branch of the Ōtomo clan. He was also known as Buzen Hachirō. Life Shiga Yoshisato was born as the eighth son of Ōtomo Yoshinao and Shinmyō. Yoshinao was a gokenin retainer of shogun Minamoto no Yoritomo and the founder of the Ōtomo clan, and served as Governor of Buzen and Bungo Provinces, Defense Commissioner of the West and Lieutenant of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards (Sakon no shōgen) under the Kamakura shogunate. Shimyō was the daughter | Kamakura shogunate. Shimyō was the daughter of Hatakeyama Shigeyoshi, lord of Hatakeyama Manor. In 1223, his father Yoshinao died at the age of 51 and handed him over the position of governor (jitō), and the territory, of Kachigazuru, Buzen Province. In 1240, Yoshisato founded the Shiga clan after Shimyō handed him over the position of jitō of Shiga, Ōno Manor, Bungo Province. At the time of his Buddhist refuge, he received the Buddhist name Shinjyaku. Genealogy After Shiga Yoshisato, the Shiga clan, along with the Ōtomo clan, returned to Bungo Province during the Mongol invasion in 1274, and both expanded their power in Kyushu. The Ōtomo clan became an influential Shugo Daimyo family in |
The plant is bisexual and pollination takes place through the action of insects . The fruit ripens, two months after flowering, and the seeds fall to the ground where they are spread by ants . The plant grows in sandstone sand along streams or streams at altitudes of 910-1250 m. References External | genus Spatalla and forms part of the fynbos. The plant is native to the Western Cape where it is found in the Cederberg, Groot Winterhoek Mountains and Hex River Mountains. The shrub grows 1.0 m tall |
that is native to parts of the Caribbean. See also List of Cyperus species References constanzae Plants described in | by Ignatz Urban Flora of the Bahamas Flora of Cuba Flora of the |
with Dainik Khabar (Bengali: দৈনিক খবর) at the beginning in 1988. From his passion of writing he worked for different national print and online newspaper and news agency remarkably of which Daily Bhorer Somoy (Bengali: দৈনিক ভোরের সময়). He serves as executive director of Fair News Service (FNS), Joint Editor of Nirapad News (Bengali:নিরাপদ নিউজ), and Chief Editor of the Bangladesh Sangbad (Bengali:বাংলাদেশ সংবাদ). He joined as an assistant teacher of the Nawabpur | Arts, he also obtained BAGED from Bangladesh Open University and diploma in agriculture from Bangladesh technical educational board. Career His career as a journalist started with Dainik Khabar (Bengali: দৈনিক খবর) at the beginning in 1988. From his passion of writing he worked for different national print and online newspaper and news agency remarkably of which Daily Bhorer Somoy (Bengali: দৈনিক ভোরের সময়). He serves as executive director of Fair News Service (FNS), Joint Editor of Nirapad News (Bengali:নিরাপদ নিউজ), and Chief Editor of the Bangladesh Sangbad (Bengali:বাংলাদেশ সংবাদ). He joined as an assistant teacher of the Nawabpur Government High School in |
Disease and Review in 1989. He did a postdoc at the College of Veterinary Medicine, Oregon State University, from 1990 to 1992 and served as a research wildlife veterinarian from 1992 to 1996 at the Wildlife Laboratories. After a sabbatical with the National Veterinary Institute, Uppsala, Sweden, he became a wildlife epidemiologist with NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service Protected Species Investigations, Honolulu Laboratory in 1996. At the Wildlife Trust, he served as an International Field Wildlife Veterinarian in 1998. Then, served as Director for Conservation Medicine from 2001 to 2008, after which he was Senior Vice President for the Conservation Medicine Program for Ecohealth Alliance until 2011. He served as an executive director at the Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation and Director for the Mason Center for Conservation Studies till 2014. Since 2016, he is Professor and chair for Environmental Science and Policy Department at George Mason University. As part of Aguirre's academic career, he was appointed as assistant professor in 1992 at Colorado State University for the Department of Fishery and Wildlife Biology. At Columbia University, he was a research professor in the Ecology, Evolution & Environmental Biology Department from 1998 to 2011 and has been a professor at George Mason University since then. Research Aguirre's research includes the topics of wildlife anesthesia, ecology and management; ecosystem health, conservation medicine, one health and planetary health. His research is focused on uncovering the impact of emerging diseases in marine wildlife populations including manatees, monk seals and sea turtles. He co-founded the emerging discipline of Conservation medicine, with Mary C. Pearl and Gary Tabor, expanding the One Health approach to the environment, animals and people. Infectious Disease Ecology In a study Aguirre conducted in 2020, he searched for the exact origin of SARS-COV-2, which was unknown but the evidence pointed to the Wuhan wet market where several bats and wild animals were frequently stored and sold in close spaces and identified that in many pandemics in the past, bats were known for spreading zoonotic diseases and markets like these are the ideal conditions for viruses like COVID-19 to emerge. His research indicates that to keep future pandemics from taking place, wet markets should be banned from selling exotic animals and the illicit trade should be studied with zoonotic disease transmission and pandemics. In another paper, he gave examples of vector-borne and parasitic diseases that have persisted, emerged and re-emerged in the environment, significantly harming human and animal populations all over the world. He describes how specialists in the field of transdisciplinary and socio-ecological health umbrellas have collaborated and integrated new and established techniques for disease modelling, prediction, diagnosis, treatment, control, and prevention, and that approaches like these that mainly emphasize conservation of biodiversity for health protection provide novel opportunities for increasing the efficiency and probability of success. He also explored the spatial patterns of helminth parasite diversity on three main macroecological patterns and found that they may obey some of the macroecological relationships found in free-living species indicating that the parasites may provide support for the generality of these patterns and support promising counterexamples for others. He co-authored and co-edited two books titled Conservation Medicine: Ecological Health in Practice and New Directions in Conservation Medicine: Applied Cases of Ecological Health, providing a detailed analysis | Tropical Conservation: Perspectives on Local and Global Priorities, he discusses the tropics and subtropics where high biodiversity has great implications for research priorities, capacity building, and policy in order to address the challenges of conserving these regions. The importance of conservation concepts along with their application are also introduced. According to a review by Vojtech Novotny and Katerina Sam in Conservation Biology, "The book provides a unique and readable exposure to conservation in Latin America, Africa, and Asia and has the potential to become a key resource on the biodiversity conservation crisis in the tropics for university professors, students, researchers, and practitioners in conservation." In his paper on The Conservative Mosaic Approach to Reduce Corruption and the Illicit Sea Turtle Take and Trade, he discussed that although reducing corruption was not the clear goal of this initiative, he focused on how the states policies and conservation efforts made by the community sound address some of the practices that lead to corruption and endanger conservation outcomes. Awards/Honors 1998 - Harry Jalanka Memorial Medal Award, Helsinki, Finland 2006 - Campbell Memorial Lecture College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 2010 - Conservation Merit Bicentennial Award, Government of the State of Mexico 2014 - Distinguished Alumnus Award, Colorado State University Warner College of Natural Resources Alumni Association award 2018 - Service Award Wildlife Disease Association Council, Lawrence, Kansas Bibliography Selected Articles Rush, E. R., Dale, E., & Aguirre, A. A. (2021). Illegal Wildlife Trade and Emerging Infectious Diseases: Pervasive Impacts to Species, Ecosystems and Human Health. Animals, 11(6), 1821. Guzmán, C. A. F., Aguirre, A. A., Astle, B., Barros, E., Bayles, B., Chimbari, M., ... & Zylstra, M. (2021). A framework to guide planetary health education. The Lancet Planetary Health, 5(5), e253-e255. Aguirre, A. A., Gore, M. L., Kammer-Kerwick, M., Curtin, K. M., Heyns, A., Preiser, W., & Shelley, L. I. (2021). Opportunities for transdisciplinary science to mitigate biosecurity risks from the intersectionality of illegal wildlife trade with emerging zoonotic pathogens. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 9, 15. Aguirre, A. A., Catherina, R., Frye, H., & Shelley, L. (2020). Illicit wildlife trade, wet markets, and COVID‐19: preventing future pandemics. World Medical & Health Policy, 12(3), 256–265. Aguirre, A. A., & Nichols, W. J. (2020). The Conservation Mosaic Approach to Reduce Corruption and the Illicit Sea Turtle Take and Trade. Targeting Natural Resource Corruption Practice Note, April, USAID, WWF, 901, U4. Wilcox, B. A., Aguirre, A. A., De Paula, N., Siriaroonrat, B., & Echaubard, P. (2019). Operationalizing one health employing social-ecological systems theory: lessons from the greater Mekong sub-region. Frontiers in Public Health, 7, 85. Aguirre, A. A., Longcore, T., Barbieri, M., Dabritz, H., Hill, D., Klein, P. N., ... & Sizemore, G. C. (2019). The one health approach to toxoplasmosis: epidemiology, control, and prevention strategies. EcoHealth, 16(2), 378–390. Aguirre, A. A., Basu, N., Kahn, L. H., Morin, X. K., Echaubard, P., Wilcox, B. A., & Beasley, V. R. (2019). Transdisciplinary and social-ecological health frameworks—Novel approaches to emerging parasitic and vector-borne diseases. Parasite epidemiology and control, 4, e00084. Dallas, T., Gehman, A. L. M., Aguirre, A. A., Budischak, S. A., Drake, J. M., Farrell, M. J., ... & Morales‐Castilla, |
professional ten-ball pool tournament held between 17 and 21 September in Moscow, Russia. Niels Feijen | Feijen defeated Alexander Kazakis in the final 8–7. References 2018 in cue sports Kremlin World Cup Kremlin World Cup Kremlin |
soundtrack was released in December 1977. Reception The film review website Pulp International gave the film a negative review, writing of Williamson, "He should have done better, since this was his fifth go-round of nearly twenty in the director's chair. Possibly the studio messed up his final cut. Or, considerably more likely, it was a disaster from the snap." The review concludes that Williamson "just dropped the ball." The film review website spicyonion.com wrote that "Mr. Mean certainly fulfills audience expectations". Charlie Jane Anders of Gizmodo listed Mr. Mean as one of the reasons "you would think people would have learned not to fuck with Fred Williamson". Brad Avery of vanyaland.com described Mr. Mean as one of Williamson's "more macho characters". The Department of Afro American | in December 1977. Reception The film review website Pulp International gave the film a negative review, writing of Williamson, "He should have done better, since this was his fifth go-round of nearly twenty in the director's chair. Possibly the studio messed up his final cut. Or, considerably more likely, it was a disaster from the snap." The review concludes that Williamson "just dropped the ball." The film review website spicyonion.com wrote that "Mr. Mean certainly fulfills audience expectations". Charlie Jane Anders of Gizmodo listed Mr. Mean as one of the reasons "you would think people would have learned not to fuck with Fred Williamson". Brad Avery of vanyaland.com described Mr. Mean as one of Williamson's "more macho characters". The Department of Afro American Research, Arts, and Culture added the film's poster to its archive, writing, "dead men tell no tales, but some men are just too mean to die!" External links References 1977 films 1977 action films 1977 crime drama films 1970s action |
Suseenthiran and produced by Lendi Studio. The film stars Jai and Meenakshi Govindarajan with a supporting cast including Akanksha Singh, Bala Saravanan, Kaali Venkat, Harish Uthaman, Sharath Lohithaswa and Jayaprakash. The film marked Jai's debut as a music composer for songs. The film's background score is composed by Ajesh, with cinematography handled by R. Velraj and editing done by Mu. Kasi Vishwanathan. The film was initially titled as Shiva Shivaa before it changed to Veerapandiyapuram. The film released | Shathru Muthukumar Arjai Soundtrack The soundtrack is composed by Jai in his debut as composer, and the album features three songs. Reception The film opened to mixed reviews. Siby Jeyya of India Herald wrote, "Veerapandiayapuram may have been a good film if the storyline had more depth and better storytelling." Logesh Balachandran of The Times of India rated the film with 2/5 stars, stating that, "Veerapandiayapuram could have been a better film if the writing was better with depth in the screenplay." Navein Darshan of Cinema Express gave a rating of 1.5 out on 5 and called the film as an uninventive, dull revenge drama. References External links 2022 action drama films Films |
racemosa, the lax-stalked spoon, is a flower-bearing shrub that belongs to the genus Spatalla and forms part of the fynbos. The plant is native to the Western Cape where it is found in the Kogelberg, Groenlandberg, Babilonstoringberge, Kleinrivierberge as well as at Villiersdorp. The shrub grows only 50 cm tall and flowers | the genus Spatalla and forms part of the fynbos. The plant is native to the Western Cape where it is found in the Kogelberg, Groenlandberg, Babilonstoringberge, Kleinrivierberge as well as at Villiersdorp. The shrub grows only 50 cm tall and flowers from September to March. The plant dies after |
Honiton, South Australia Clyst Honiton, a village in Devon, England Honiton (UK Parliament constituency), a defunct parliamentary constituency of the United Kingdom Honiton railway station Institutions Honiton Town F.C., a football club | civil parish in Devon, England. Honiton may also refer to: Places Honiton, South Australia Clyst Honiton, a village in Devon, England Honiton (UK Parliament |
2019–2021, she headed the Department of Personnel Policy and Personnel Development of the Ministry of Economic Development. Since 2021, she has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma from the Lipetsk Oblast constituency. She ran with the United Russia. Tatyana Dyakonova is one of the winners of the prestigious competition initiated by | the 8th State Duma. From 2018 to 2019, she worked as an assistant to the Minister of Economic Development Maxim Oreshkin. In 2019–2021, she headed the Department of Personnel Policy and Personnel Development of the Ministry of Economic Development. Since 2021, she has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma from the Lipetsk Oblast constituency. She ran with the United Russia. Tatyana |
a degree in political science. In 1991, she joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. From November 1995 to August 1998, she was consul in Nuremberg. Later, from September 2004 to July 2008, she was Permanent Representative of NATO. Tardioli died after falling from a balcony at her home in Foligno on 20 February 2022, at | was an Italian diplomat. She served as Ambassador of Italy to Australia from 2019 to 2022. Biography Tardioli was born in Foligno, Umbria and graduated from the University of Perugia with a degree in political science. In 1991, she joined the Ministry of Foreign |
comes from the hero, a handicapped man who moves like an Indian Rat Snake (which is called Chera in Malayalam). Cast Roshan Mathew Nimisha Sajayan Guru Somasundaram Shaji Chen Jeo Baby Lena Pramod Veliyanad Production The film has been scripted by Najeem Koya. The first look poster of Chera has created a | Koya. The first look poster of Chera has created a big uproar in Kerala. The first look poster of this movie was released by Kunchacko Boban Soundtrack The music is by Shahbaz Aman and lyrics by Anwar |
in hoist side. Historical Flags Throughout history, only one other flag has been used on the island, it was the sultan's personal flag used from the unification of the island to the French annexation. According to Lucien Philippe, the standard of the Sultan was a crimson square flag with a | flag with a golden fringe and seven stars representing the seven Sultanates unified into one. The pattern of the stars shall recall the map of the island. Notes External links Flag Comorian culture |
Duma from the Tula constituency. In 2017, he became one of the 100 most influential people of the Tula oblast. Since 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma. References 1977 births Living people | he was re-elected for the 5th convocation. In 2016 he successfully ran for the 7th State Duma from the Tula constituency. In 2017, he became one of the 100 most influential people of the Tula oblast. Since 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma. References 1977 births Living |
Police used tear gas and water cannons to disperse the protesters. Protester says that the agreement will undermine Nepal's law and integrity. While in a statement from the embassy said the project was requested by the Nepalese government and people and was designed to | law and integrity. While in a statement from the embassy said the project was requested by the Nepalese government and people and was designed to reduce poverty and boost Nepal's economy in a transparent manner. References 2022 in Nepal 2022 protests Ongoing protests |
of the Omsk oblast (liquidated in 2008). On July 18, 2012, she was appointed Deputy Minister of Economy of the Omsk Region. She left the post in 2013 to become the deputy director of Omskgorgaz. In 2015 she returned to the civil service and became the First Deputy Minister of Economy of the Omsk Region. On | of Economy of the Omsk Region. She left the post in 2013 to become the deputy director of Omskgorgaz. In 2015 she returned to the civil service and became the First Deputy Minister of Economy of the Omsk Region. On October 30, 2015, she became the Minister of Economy of the Omsk Region. In 2017 she was elected the Mayor of Omsk. She left the post in 2021 |
to become the Deputy Minister of Health of the Russian Federation. In 2014 he was appointed the Deputy Minister of Finance. On September 18, 2016, he was elected deputy of the 7th State Duma from the Tatarstan constituency. Since September 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma. References 1968 births Living people United Russia politicians 21st-century Russian politicians Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian | In 2015 he was awarded a Doctor of Sciences in Medicine. From 1993 to 1995, he was the ward surgeon at the Kazan State Medical University department of surgery. From 1995 to 2006, he worked at the Republican Clinical Hospital of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Tatarstan. |
the name include: Gotthold Bohne (1890–1957), German law professor Hermann Bohne (1890–1949), Norwegian gymnast Louis Bohne (died 1821), sales agent for Veuve Clicquot Nikki Bohne (1987), | (died 1821), sales agent for Veuve Clicquot Nikki Bohne (1987), American singer, stage actress, and dancer Sam Bohne (1896–1977), |
holding company "Siberian Business Union" in Kemerovo and Moscow; the founder of the holding is his father entrepreneur Mikhail Fedyaev. In 2011, he was elected the deputy of the 6th State Duma from the Kemerovo Oblast constituency. Fedyaev was re-elected | started working as an economist at the JSC "Chernigovets". From 2005 to 2011, he worked at the holding company "Siberian Business Union" in Kemerovo and Moscow; the founder of the holding is his father entrepreneur Mikhail Fedyaev. In 2011, he was elected the deputy of |
value of this edition was recognized by Professor Vsevolod Miller in extensive reviews published in the "Journal of the Ministry of Public Education" in 1893. The magazine was published from 1881 to 1915 in Tbilsi in the printing house of the Main Directorate of the Viceroy of the Caucasus, but due to the war its publication was stopped. Only in 1926, thanks to the association of the North Caucasian mountain local lore organizations in Makhachkala, the 45th issue was published, and in 1929 - the 46th issue. From 1893 until 1915, the collection was published with a preface by Lev Lopatinsky. The main part of the authors of the publication are teachers, mostly teachers of | life and customs of Armenians, Georgians, Azerbaijanis, Ossetians, Mountain Jews, Svans, Udis and other Caucasian peoples. The multi-volume work contains information about everyday life, writing, way of life, customs, folklore and much more that was collected by researchers after the final conquest of the Caucasus. The publication contains descriptions of villages and cities, essays on their history, life and crafts of the population. Historical, lyrical, everyday and ritual songs, legends reveal the beauty of the language and the spiritual essence of the peoples of the Caucasus. The scientific value of this edition was recognized by Professor Vsevolod |
votes and lost all its seats. On the night of the election, he criticised then-leader and lead candidate Christoph Meyer and called for his resignation. Czaja was subsequently voted out of his position as deputy parliamentary leader. From September 2015 to February 2020, Czaja was general-secretary of the FDP Berlin. At the party congress on 12 March 2016, he was nominated as lead candidate for the 2016 Berlin state election with 72.4% approval. The FDP won 6.7% of votes in the election and re-entered the Abgeordnetenhaus with 12 seats. Czaja was subsequently elected leader of the FDP parliamentary group. In February 2019, he became chairman of the FDP's Steglitz-Zehlendorf branch, and in November 2020, he was elected one of three deputy leaders of the Berlin FDP. Czaja was again elected as lead candidate for the 2021 Berlin state election with 93.8% approval. The FDP achieved a marginal improvement but did not improve their seat count, and remained in opposition after the election. After the municipal elections in Steglitz-Zehlendorf, where Czaja is district chairman, the FDP joined a traffic light coalition and displaced the CDU as governing party for the first time in fifty years. Controversy In November 2017, it was reported that Czaja and his FDP colleague Thomas Seerig had been receiving a publicly-funded €1,000 monthly allowance for an office that had not yet been constructed. Czaja stated that his original statement on the issue had been unclear, and that the allowance had not yet been paid. In April 2019, Czaja described Engelbert Lütke Daldrup, manager of the Berlin Brandenburg Airport and former Berlin state secretary, as "a notorious liar from whom taxpayers cannot expect any truth". Lütke Daldrup subsequently filed a legal complaint against Czaja for defamation, which ended with a settlement in which Czaja agreed not to refer to Daldrup in such a manner in the future. In February 2020, Czaja wrote an article for the Berliner Zeitung in which he wrote that Björn Höcke, Thuringian branch leader of the Alternative for Germany, was "the kind of politician which a court classifies as a fascist on the basis of verifiable fact". In March, the Hamburg Regional Court issued an interim injunction prohibiting him from repeating the claim, stating that Czaja's wording could be construed by readers to mean that a court had definitively declared Höcke a fascist. The court in question had ruled that the description of Höcke as a fascist "lies on verifiable fact". Political positions Czaja was the initiator of the referendum "Berlin needs Tegel", the objective of which was to keep Berlin Tegel Airport operational even after the opening of the new Berlin Brandenburg Airport. The referendum on 24 September 2017 saw 56.4% vote in favour of the proposal. This correpsonded to 40.1% of eligible voters, surpassing the quorum of 25% required for the result to be considered valid. However, as the referendum did not include specific provisions for the proposal, it was non-binding. After months of debate, in June 2018, the Abgeordnetenhaus passed a resolution declaring that the referendum could not be implemented by the state government. Other engagements In 2014, Czaja co-founded the FDP-affiliated association Liberale Immobiliedenrunde ("Liberal Real Estate Circle") together with former FDP housing spokesman Sebastian Körber and Jürgen Michael Schick, chairman of the Real Estate Association of Germany. Czaja became its deputy chairman. He is involved in the German Parliamentary Society and was a member of the German Council Ne(X)t Gen which | served in the Berlin state government from 2011 to 2016 and became federal general-secretary of the CDU in 2022. Political career Christian Democratic Union Czaja was a member of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) from 1999 to 2005. From 2001 to 2002, he was district chairman of the Young Union in Marzahn-Hellersdorf and deputy chairman of the CDU's student wing in Berlin. He was elected to the municipal council of Marzahn-Hellersdorf for the CDU in 2001. Free Democratic Party Czaja joined the Free Democratic Party in 2005. His decision to change parties was motivated by a dispute over public subsidies to the Arche soup kitchen in Hellersdorf. Czaja believed that, due to the high volume of donations received by the kitchen, subsidies should be reduced. The CDU's opposition to his proposal prompted him to defect to the FDP and vote to cut subsidies. He also claimed that the CDU had neglected education, family, and social affairs policy. His defection saw the FDP group in the Marzahn-Hellersdorf council achieve official faction status, and Czaja became its chairman. His actions caused considerable controversy, and he was voted the second most-unpopular person in Berlin in 2005, behind Hartmut Mehdorn, the CEO of Deutsche Bahn. He was elected to the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin in the 2006 Berlin state election and became FDP spokesman for sport, vocational training, science, and research, and was a member of the committee for the same. He was also a member of the state expert committee for education and sport and the federal expert committee for higher education. He became deputy leader of the FDP parliamentary group in April 2009. The same year, he became district chairman of the Marszahn-Hellersdorf FDP, a position he held until 2012. He sought re-election to the Abgeordnetenhaus in the 2011 Berlin state election, running at the top of the FDP's in Marzahn-Hellersdorf party list. He was not re-elected as the FDP fell to just 1.8% of votes and lost all its seats. On the night of the election, he criticised then-leader and lead candidate Christoph Meyer and called for his resignation. Czaja was subsequently voted out of his position as deputy parliamentary leader. From September 2015 to February 2020, Czaja was general-secretary of the FDP Berlin. At the party congress on 12 March 2016, he was nominated as lead candidate for the 2016 Berlin state election with 72.4% approval. The FDP won 6.7% of votes in the election and re-entered the Abgeordnetenhaus with 12 seats. Czaja was subsequently elected leader of the FDP parliamentary group. In February 2019, he became chairman of the FDP's Steglitz-Zehlendorf branch, and in November 2020, he was elected one of three deputy leaders of the Berlin FDP. Czaja was again elected as lead candidate for the 2021 Berlin state election with 93.8% approval. The FDP achieved a marginal improvement but did not improve their seat count, and remained in opposition after the election. After the municipal elections in Steglitz-Zehlendorf, where Czaja is district chairman, the FDP joined a traffic light coalition and displaced the CDU as governing party for the first time in fifty years. Controversy In November |
Lastavica mountain, east of the city. Demographics According to the 2013 census, population of Radinovići | Demographics According to the 2013 census, population of Radinovići was 180, all |
Production and Circulation of Alcoholic Products of the Moscow Oblast. In 2004-2006 he headed the Committee on Consumer Market of the Moscow Oblast. In 2006 Fomichyov was appointed the Minister of Consumer Market and Services for Moscow Oblast. From 2016 to 2021, he was a deputy of the Moscow Oblast Duma of the 6th convocation. Since September 2021, he has been a deputy | of Alcoholic Products of the Moscow Oblast. In 2004-2006 he headed the Committee on Consumer Market of the Moscow Oblast. In 2006 Fomichyov was appointed the Minister of Consumer Market and Services for Moscow Oblast. From 2016 to 2021, he was |
a compilation of the arcade versions of 10 fighting games from various Capcom franchises. Darkstalkers series: Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors (1994) Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge (1995) Vampire Savior: The Lord of Vampire (1997) Vampire Hunter 2 (1997) Vampire Savior 2 (1997) Pocket Fighter: Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo Super Gem Fighter Mini Mix | Gameplay Capcom Fighting Collection is a compilation of the arcade versions of 10 fighting games from various Capcom franchises. Darkstalkers series: Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors (1994) Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge (1995) Vampire Savior: The Lord of Vampire (1997) Vampire Hunter 2 (1997) Vampire Savior |
listing All compositions by Bill Dixon. Disc 1 "When Winter Comes" – 8:05 "Webern Work / Study" – 1:07 "Tracings II" – 1:17 "The Long Walk" – 7:34 "Momenti" – 2:35 "Stanza" – 4:48 "I See Your Fancy Footwork – 1" – 7:53 "I See Your Fancy Footwork – 2" – 5:19 "I See Your Fancy Footwork – 3" – 2:49 Disc 2 "Mosaic" – 0:41 "Albert Ayler" – 0:54 "Summerdance For Judith Dunn – Pt. One" – 7:46 "Tracings" – 8:46 "The Long Line" – 5:31 "Swirls" – 2:26 "Requiem For Booker Little" – 4:58 "Masques I" – 8:18 Personnel Bill Dixon – trumpet Lawrence Cook – percussion | trumpet master... Dixon has a very painterly approach, and one can easily imagine these studies being drawn in space, their graceful lines reverberating in the air. His normal tone is mellow to the point of sounding like a flügelhorn, though he's quite capable of taking it to high and relatively abrasive extremes. More often... there's a sense of solitary, thoughtful melancholy that has more than a touch of Miles Davis... this is a good chance to hear a fascinating trumpeter displaying his ideas nakedly for the listener." The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz awarded the album 3½ stars, and stated: "These mostly lo-fi recordings are a valuable record of [Dixon's] progress as a solo performer... Remarkably few come across merely as technical exercises, even when that is the presumed intention, and it's to Dixon's eternal credit that every piece... seems to have its own logic and purpose... it isn't an easy listen... but it's hugely satisfying." Track listing All compositions by Bill Dixon. Disc 1 "When Winter Comes" – 8:05 "Webern Work / Study" – 1:07 |
to hand the 1988 Olympic bronze medallist his first pro defeat. Parks quit the sport following the win due to his discouragement over a lack of exposure and opportunities, but returned about six months later. He connected with a friend in Memphis, Tennessee, where he met Madison Square Garden promoter Bobby Goodman and was able to secure a one-year deal. After 16 straight wins to start his career, Parks captured the vacant WBC Continental Americas middleweight title when he scored a UD victory over Lenzie Morgan on July 6, 1991 in his hometown of Greenville, South Carolina. He then stopped Donny Giron five months later via sixth-round TKO for the vacant WBC–NABF middleweight title. In his next fight, he knocked out two-time Olympian Francisco de Jesus in a lopsided bout in New York City to improve his record to 20–0. On April 16, 1992, Parks defeated Percy Harris to retain his NABF belt and win the vacant IBF–USBA middleweight title, forcing a referee stoppage in the tenth round. By this time he was ranked as the second-best middleweight in the world by the WBC, as well as the fourth-best by both the WBA and IBF. On October 27, 1992, a 22-year-old Parks challenged Reggie Johnson for the WBA middleweight title at The Summit in Houston, losing the fight by unanimous decision. Johnson preferred the more lucrative title defense against Roy Jones Jr., but Parks forced the fight as the WBA's 1 contender and earned a reported $40,000 in his first career defeat. In a 2015 interview with The Ring, Johnson called Parks the best puncher and the best jabber he ever faced. On August 10, 1993, Parks defeated Gilbert Baptist in his hometown of Greenville for the vacant WBC Continental Americas middleweight title, forcing his opponent's trainer to throw in the towel in the 11th round after landing 18 straight punches. He stopped Joaquín Velásquez in four rounds in a tune-up fight in Atlantic City that November. This would end up being the final fight of his career, finishing with a 27–1 record with 21 knockouts. Now ranked as the No. 1 contender by all three major sanctioning organizations (WBC, WBA and IBF), Parks positioned himself as the mandatory challenger for Gerald McClellan's WBC middleweight title. He was also the mandatory challenger for Roy Jones Jr.'s IBF middleweight title, though they were reportedly reluctant to face each other due to the fact that they were childhood sparring partners and remained good friends. The Parks–McClellan world title bout was announced as a part of a Don King-promoted card at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas to be held on March 4, 1994, with Parks set to make over $150,000. They were slated to be the main event on a card with five world title bouts, and Parks relocated to Fort Pierce, Florida for training camp in January. However, he pulled out of the fight for unspecified medical reasons and a contract was sent to undefeated middleweight contender Otis Grant instead. Before Grant's camp could respond to the offer, Parks claimed to have recovered from | Scully of New England. Parks won 175 of his 188 amateur bouts, claiming five South Carolina Golden Gloves championships and three Southeast regional titles. Parks graduated from Greenville High School and briefly studied electronics engineering at Greenville Technical College. Professional career Parks made his professional debut on October 4, 1988, defeating Lennell Stroman by unanimous decision (UD) in Atlantic City, New Jersey. His father doubled as his manager and trainer, but he also brought along his childhood trainer Silas Epps. Parks defeated former National Golden Gloves champion Fabian Williams in his fourth pro bout, losing the opening four rounds before stopping Williams in the fifth. In his tenth fight, he defeated Chris Sande by fifth-round technical knockout (TKO) to hand the 1988 Olympic bronze medallist his first pro defeat. Parks quit the sport following the win due to his discouragement over a lack of exposure and opportunities, but returned about six months later. He connected with a friend in Memphis, Tennessee, where he met Madison Square Garden promoter Bobby Goodman and was able to secure a one-year deal. After 16 straight wins to start his career, Parks captured the vacant WBC Continental Americas middleweight title when he scored a UD victory over Lenzie Morgan on July 6, 1991 in his hometown of Greenville, South Carolina. He then stopped Donny Giron five months later via sixth-round TKO for the vacant WBC–NABF middleweight title. In his next fight, he knocked out two-time Olympian Francisco de Jesus in a lopsided bout in New York City to improve his record to 20–0. On April 16, 1992, Parks defeated Percy Harris to retain his NABF belt and win the vacant IBF–USBA middleweight title, forcing a referee stoppage in the tenth round. By this time he was ranked as the second-best middleweight in the world by the WBC, as well as the fourth-best by both the WBA and IBF. On October 27, 1992, a 22-year-old Parks challenged Reggie Johnson for the WBA middleweight title at The Summit in Houston, losing the fight by unanimous decision. Johnson preferred the more lucrative title defense against Roy Jones Jr., but Parks forced the fight as the WBA's 1 contender and earned a reported $40,000 in his first career defeat. In a 2015 interview with The Ring, Johnson called Parks the best puncher and the best jabber he ever faced. On August 10, 1993, Parks defeated Gilbert Baptist in his hometown of Greenville for the vacant WBC Continental Americas middleweight title, forcing his opponent's trainer to throw in the towel in the 11th round after landing 18 straight punches. He stopped Joaquín Velásquez in four rounds in a tune-up fight in Atlantic City that November. This would end up being the final fight of his career, finishing with a 27–1 record with 21 knockouts. Now ranked as the No. 1 contender by all three major sanctioning organizations (WBC, WBA and IBF), Parks positioned himself as the mandatory challenger for Gerald McClellan's WBC middleweight title. He was also the mandatory challenger for Roy Jones Jr.'s IBF middleweight title, though they were reportedly reluctant to face each other due to the fact that they were childhood sparring partners and remained good friends. The Parks–McClellan world title bout was announced as a part of a Don King-promoted card at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas to be held on March 4, 1994, with Parks set to make over $150,000. They were slated to be the main event on a card with five world title bouts, and Parks relocated to Fort Pierce, Florida for training camp in January. However, he pulled out of the fight for unspecified medical reasons and a contract was sent to undefeated middleweight contender Otis Grant instead. Before Grant's camp could respond to the |
Lord Rosse’s 72-inch telescope. It is an S0a type galaxy with a redshift of 0.026829. References 7767 Pegasus (constellation) | Copeland using Lord Rosse’s 72-inch telescope. It is an S0a type galaxy with a redshift of |
was an Indian politician, and a member of Shiromani Akali Dal. He served as Cabinet Minister in Punjab, and MLA twice | twice from Sangrur. Balian died on 16 February 2016 in Mohali, |
29, 1978, Derbent, Dagestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 8th State Duma. After graduating in 1999 from the Law School of the Moscow State University, Gadzhiev | of the Industrial Development Fund of the Moscow Region. Since September 2021, he has been a deputy of the 8th State Duma from the Tatarstan constituency. References 1978 |
and dental services. History The hospital was established in 1999 after the merging of state-run Nauru General Hospital and private-run Nauru Phosphate Corporation Hospital. Facilities The hospital consists of health facilities for radiology, lab works and surgery. See also Health in | surgical care, along with radiological, laboratory, pharmacy and dental services. History The hospital was established in 1999 after the merging of state-run Nauru General Hospital and private-run Nauru Phosphate Corporation Hospital. Facilities The hospital consists of health facilities for radiology, |
Dam is an arch gravity dam located in Saitama prefecture in Japan. The dam was constructed to control floods and to generate hydro-electricity. The catchment area of the dam is 170 km2. The dam impounds about 76 ha of land when full | construction of the dam was started on 1952 and completed in 1961. In 2003 a sediment removal program was started to remove 100,000m3 of sediment that was deposited in the reservoir. References Dams |
Broadcasting In his RT DE 15-minute, at times sarcastical weekly format Fasbenders Woche he comments on a wide range of political subjects. His talk show format Fasbender im Gespräch presents German-speaking personalities such as Norbert Häring, Roland Koch, Haralampi G. Oroschakoff, Roger Köppel, Hans-Joachim Frey, Maria Zakharova, Georg Pazderski, Tuvia Tenenbom, Dieter Stein, Alexander Neu, Billy Six and others. Book publications Wladimir W. Putin. Eine politische Biographie, Manuscriptum Verlagsbuchhandlung, Landt Verlag, 2022, Die AfD und die Klimafrage, Ed. Konrad Adam, Gerhard Hess Verlag, 2019, Kinderlieb, Roman, Lichtschlag Reihe Literatur, 2016, {{ISBN|978-3939562597, 339 Seiten Freiheit statt Demokratie. Russlands Weg und die Illusionen des Westens, Manuscriptum Verlagsbuchhandlung, 2014, Thomas Carlyle: Idealistische Geschichtssicht und visionäres Heldenideal, Königshausen u. Neumann, 1989, References External links Fasbenders Woche und Fasbender im Gespräch bei RT DE 1957 births Living | editor. He worked as press officer for a trade fair company and as assistant to the CEO with an electrical equipment multinational. For the same company Fasbender moved to Moscow in 1992. He was involved in the restructuring and liquidation of joint ventures founded during Soviet times. As managing director of a Russian subsidiary, he set up local production facilities. In 1999 he became self-employed as partner in a spinning and weaving mill on the Volga. In Moscow he operated a corporate fleet management company. In 2008, Fasbender took up writing again. In 2015 he returned to Berlin, where he has been working as journalist and author. He writes for Die Weltwoche, Sputnik et al. From 2016 |
Agency, often gathered via freedom of information requests. The documents reveal corporate and government cover-ups of dioxin studies, collusion enabling continued registration of pesticides based on fraudulent or nonexistent studies, and decisions to continue marketing known carcinogens, mutagens and teratogens. The Poison Papers, also available with continuing additions through Columbia University's Toxic Docs program are now available online for use by anyone seeking information on the dangers of using harmful chemicals in aerial herbicide spraying and attempts to end such spraying. Van Strum and , a Franco-Vietnamese environmental activist, appeared in the 2020 film The People vs. Agent Orange. The two have been involved in attempting to stop companies from producing, spraying, burning and dumping toxic defoliants such as those contained in Agent Orange and to force accountability for the harmful effects of these. Because of the once-prolific production, use and dumping of these chemicals and their long half-life, they can now be found in the soil, water, air and in living organisms, in many countries. In 2017 a ban against the spraying of pesticides on private timberland in Lincoln County was approved by voters. The ban was overturned two years later by the state. The Lincoln County Community Rights group asked Van Strum to be the spokesperson for the Siletz River ecosystem at the Oregon Court of Appeal in a challenge to the rescinding of the ban. In June 2021, the Court of Appeal upheld the lower court's ruling without comment. Private life In 1962, she married Steve Van Strum (1939–2021) with whom she had five children. The four who survived died in a fire at Five Rivers in 1978. After separating from Van Strum, she remarried and raised two sons, Jordan and Nicholas. Awards A Bitter Fog: Herbicides and Human | used in Agent Orange (including surplus Agent Orange itself after it was banned by the military in Vietnam). Concerned by the apparent resultant negative effects on their family, animals and plants, Van Strum, her husband Steve and their neighbours co-founded Citizens Against Toxic Sprays (CATS). It was formed to give forest dwellers a united voice against the United Sates Forest Service, the United States Environmental Protection Agency and Dow Chemical Company, manufacturer of the herbicides.CATS gathered information from residents and undertook a community-wide public health survey. Together with the Oregon Environmental Council and the Hoedads Reforestation Cooperative they filed a lawsuit against the US Forest Service in 1976 claiming that an environmental-impact statement for the herbicides was insufficient. U.S. District Judge Otto Richard Skopil Jr. issued an order in March 1977 to halt all spraying of 2,4,5-T in the Siuslaw National Forest until deficiencies in the statement were cleared up, thus effectively eliminating the spray program for a year. Although the ban was rescinded two years later, the work by Van Strum and others contributed to final cancellation of all 2,4,5-T registrations by EPA and a new national forest policy that favors selective harvests without herbicides. In 1983, Van Strum wrote A Bitter Fog: Herbicides and Human Rights. The book details widespread fraud in the safety testing of all pesticides used in forestry and a decade long struggle to end use of dioxin-contaminated and all other herbicides on the forests of Oregon, by taking on the chemical and timber companies as well as government agencies. In 1987 Van Strum and Paul Merrell wrote No Margin of Safety: a preliminary report on dioxin pollution and the need for emergency action in the pulp and paper industry. Originally published by Greenpeace, it is now available within the pages of another volume. Over four decades of research and work by Van Strum on pesticide and poison cases, including lawsuits against the Forest Service, litigation by Agent Orange veterans, personal injury cases by exposed workers, |
and ends up struggling to try to recover his normal life. Cast Main Kang Ha-neul as Kim Yo-han, a person with prudence and unique poker face who thinks a few moves ahead. Lee Yoo-young as Oh Soo-yeon, a successful businesswoman who made a great fortune through her connections. Um Chae-young as young Oh Soo-yeon Supporting Kim Sang-ho as Mok Jin-hyung Yoon Byung-hee Kang Young-seok as Jang Seon-oh Cha Yeop as Kim Gil-sang Sung Ji-ru as Heo Sang-soo Jung Man-sik as Yang-hwa Heo Sung-tae as Yoon Byung-wook Kim Si-eun as Park Ro-sa Special appearance Fan Bingbing Production and release It | television series starring Kang Ha-neul and Lee Yoo-young. It is scheduled for release on JTBC in the first half of 2022. Synopsis The series revolves around a judicial trainee whose life turns upside down when he goes on an undercover investigation, and ends up struggling to try to recover his normal life. Cast Main Kang Ha-neul as Kim Yo-han, a person with prudence and unique poker face who |
as Karuppu Munishkanth as SI Uthaman R. N. R. Manohar as Kodilingam S. S. Chakravarthy as DSP Vaidhyanathan Reshma Pasupuleti as Selvi Ravi as Kicha Sai Umesh Yogi Reception The series opened to extreme positive reviews. Vignesh Madhu of Cinema Express rated the series with 3/5 stars, stating that, "The word Vilangu translates to both handcuff and animal. It is an apt title for a series which is about cops as well as a deceitful man, who hides a beast in him. Leaving aside the horrifying violence, the convenient plot points, and the insipid 'family' scenes, Vilangu makes for a compelling watch." Behindwoods gave a rating of 3 out on 5 and wrote, "Strong performances | are being investigated by Paridhi and his team of Police officers including Karuppu (Balasaravanan), Uthaman (Munishkanth), and others. As they set out to find the killer, they are welcomed by a series of unexpected events. Who is responsible for the murders that happened in the village and what was the final outcome of the police investigation? Cast Vemal as Paridhi Ineya as Revathi Bala Saravanan as Karuppu Munishkanth as SI Uthaman R. N. R. Manohar as Kodilingam S. S. Chakravarthy as DSP Vaidhyanathan Reshma Pasupuleti as Selvi Ravi as Kicha Sai Umesh Yogi Reception The series opened to extreme positive reviews. Vignesh Madhu of Cinema Express rated the series with 3/5 stars, stating that, "The word Vilangu translates to both handcuff and animal. It is an apt title for a series which is about cops as well as a deceitful man, who hides a beast in him. Leaving aside the horrifying violence, the convenient plot points, and the insipid 'family' scenes, Vilangu makes for a compelling watch." Behindwoods gave a rating |
1998), Burkinabé football striker Benjamin Compaoré (born 1987), French triple jumper Blaise Compaoré (born 1951), Burkinabé politician, President of Burkina Faso Chantal Compaoré (born 1962), First Lady of Burkina Faso, wife of Blaise Daouda Compaoré (born 1973), Burkinabé | striker François Compaoré (born 1954), Burkinabé politician Issouf Compaoré (born 1988), Burkinabé football defender Simon Compaoré (born 1952), Burkinabé |
ran with the United Russia. In 2016 and 2021 he was re-elected for the 7th and 8th State Dumas respectively. Awards Order of Friendship Order of Honour References 1961 births Living people United Russia politicians 21st-century Russian politicians Sixth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) Seventh convocation members of the State Duma | became a deputy of the People's Assembly of the Republic of Dagestan. In 2011 he was elected deputy of the 6th State Duma from the Dagestan constituency. Gadzhiev ran with the United Russia. In 2016 and 2021 he was re-elected for the 7th and 8th State Dumas respectively. Awards Order of Friendship Order of Honour References 1961 births Living people United Russia politicians 21st-century Russian politicians Sixth convocation |
Lalit Narayan Mithila Universitylocated in Nehra, Darbhanga, Bihar, India. It was established in 1970. The college admits both undergraduates and post-graduates. At present, this college imparts intermediate, graduate education to students | also Lalit Narayan Mithila University References External links Official Website Darbhanga Careers360.com Universities and colleges in Bihar 1970 establishments in Bihar Mithila Educational institutions established in 1970 Education in Darbhanga Lalit Narayan Mithila University India university stubs Bihar school stubs Darbhanga |
Aleksandrovich Kozlovsky (; 7 May 1929 – 21 February 2022) was a Russian politician. A member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, he served as Minister of Geology from 1975 to 1989. Kozlovsky died on 21 February 2022, at the age of 92. References 1929 births 2022 deaths Russian politicians Soviet politicians Russian geologists Soviet geologists Russian people of Belarusian descent Communist Party of the Soviet Union members | politicians Russian geologists Soviet geologists Russian people of Belarusian descent Communist Party of the Soviet Union members Tenth convocation members of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union Eleventh convocation members of the Soviet of Nationalities Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union candidate members Recipients of the Order "For Merit to the Fatherland", 3rd class Recipients |
in 1893 was Mordvinic phonetics. In 1894, Paasonen became a Doctor of Primus and Docent of Finno-Ugric Linguistics. Paasonen made research trips to the Finno-Ugric peoples, including Hungary, collecting linguistic and ethnographic material. In 1902 he became the Chief Inspector of the School Board, a professor of Finno-Ugric linguistics at the University of Helsinki from 1904 to 1919. Paasonen research and collections were published quite extensively and even after his death. For example, the collection Mordwinische Volkslieder I-IV was published by Paavo Ravila from 1938 to 1947, and the Finno-Ugric Society has edited a dictionary of Mordvinic languages based on Paasonen's materials, which became the basis of lexicological research in these languages. Family Paasonen's spouse since 1894 was Hungarian-born Mariska Paskay de Palásth (born 1951). Colonel Aladár Paasonen was their son. Their other children were Maria Aranka Gizela, Arvid and Ilona Anna. Bibliography Heikki Paasonen. Die Türkischen Lehnwörter im Mordwinischen. Helsingfors, 1897 Heikki Paasonen. Mordvinische lautlehre. Helsingfors, Druckerei der Finnischen litteraturgesellschaft, 1903 Heikki Paasonen. Die finnisch-ugrischen s-laute. Helsinki, Société finno-ougrienne, 1918 Heikki Paasonen. Beiträge zur Aufhellung der Frage nach der Urheimat der finnisch-ugrischen Völker. Turku, Turun Suomalaisen Yliopiston Kustantama, 1923 Heikki Paasonen; Kai Donner. Ostjakisches Wörterbuch, nach den Dialekten and der Konda und am Jugan. Helsingfors, Société finno-ougrienne, 1926 Heikki Paasonen; M E Evsevʹev; Suomalais-ugrilainen Seura. Mordwinische Volksdichtung. Helsinki, Suomalais-ugrilainen Seura, 1938-<1981> Heikki Paasonen. H. Paasonens Ost-Tscheremissisches Wörterbuch. Helsinki, Suomalais-ugrilainen Seura, 1948 Heikki Paasonen. Eino Karahka; Martti Räsänen. Gebräuche und Volksdichtung der Tschuwassen. Helsinki, Suomalais-ugrilainen | studies. Biography Paasonen's parents were merchants Anders Paasonen and Fredrika Matiskainen. He became a student at the Swedish-language lyceum in Mikkeli in 1881 and graduated with a bachelor's degree in philosophy in 1888 and worked from the following year until 1890 as a researcher with the Mokshas and Erzyas. The subject of his dissertation in 1893 was Mordvinic phonetics. In 1894, Paasonen became a Doctor of Primus and Docent of Finno-Ugric Linguistics. Paasonen made research trips to the Finno-Ugric peoples, including Hungary, collecting linguistic and ethnographic material. In 1902 he became the Chief Inspector of the School Board, a professor of Finno-Ugric linguistics at the University of Helsinki from 1904 to 1919. Paasonen research and collections were published quite extensively and even after his death. For example, the collection Mordwinische Volkslieder I-IV was published by Paavo Ravila from 1938 to 1947, and the Finno-Ugric Society has edited a dictionary of Mordvinic languages based on Paasonen's materials, which became the basis of lexicological research in these languages. Family Paasonen's spouse since 1894 was Hungarian-born Mariska Paskay de Palásth (born 1951). Colonel Aladár Paasonen was their son. Their other children were Maria Aranka Gizela, Arvid and Ilona Anna. Bibliography Heikki Paasonen. Die |
Beirut without graduating there. He sang in Arabic but also in English and won several international prizes, such as the Menschen und Meer prize in Austria for his song Mori Mori which made him famous. His songs are characterized by romanticism. Besides Arabic (Lebanese) and English, he sang in Armenian, French, Italian, and Russian. He was famous for performing the score of popular cartoons in the 1980s. Most notably for singing the theme song of the Arabic version of the Japanese show "Grandizer". Clark was the head of the union of Lebanese artists. He died on 20 February 2022, at the age of 73. Selective songs English Mori Mori Take me with you Grendizer Arabic Theme Song Amazing | Law at the Jesuit University in Beirut without graduating there. He sang in Arabic but also in English and won several international prizes, such as the Menschen und Meer prize in Austria for his song Mori Mori which made him famous. His songs are characterized by romanticism. Besides Arabic (Lebanese) and English, he sang in Armenian, French, Italian, and Russian. He was famous for performing the score of popular cartoons in the 1980s. Most notably for singing the theme song of the Arabic version of the Japanese show "Grandizer". Clark was the head of the union of Lebanese artists. He died on 20 February 2022, at the age of 73. Selective songs English Mori Mori Take me with you Grendizer Arabic Theme Song |
Zepeda, on 21 June 2019 in the main event of Showtime's "ShoBox: The New Generation" card. Zepeda retired from the bout at the end of the fourth round. Fundora next faced Jamontay Clark for the vacant WBC Youth super welterweight title on 31 August 2019, on the undercard of the Erislandy Lara and Ramon Alvarez WBA super welterweight title bout. The fight was ruled a draw by split decision. Fundora faced the unbeaten Daniel Lewis on 22 February 2020, on the Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury II undercard. He won the fight by unanimous decision, with scores of 98–92, 99–91 and 97–93. Fundora was next booked to face Nathaniel Gallimore on 22 August 2020. He won the fight by a sixth-round knockout. Fundora faced Habib Ahmed on 5 December 2020, in his final fight of the year. He made quick work of Ahmed, winning the fight | career Fundora made his professional debut against Jose Cardenas on 24 September 2016. He won the fight by a first-round knockout. Fundora amassed a 12–0 record during the next three years. Fundora was booked to face the undefeated Donnie Marshall on 16 February 2019. He won the fight by a third-round knockout. Fundora faced another undefeated opponent, Hector Manuel Zepeda, on 21 June 2019 in the main event of Showtime's "ShoBox: The New Generation" card. Zepeda retired from the bout at the end of the fourth round. Fundora next faced Jamontay Clark for the vacant WBC Youth super welterweight title on 31 August 2019, on the undercard of the Erislandy Lara and Ramon Alvarez WBA super welterweight title bout. The fight |
is native to parts of Asia. See also List of Cyperus species References leucocephalus Plants described in 1788 Taxa named by Anders | described in 1788 Taxa named by Anders Jahan Retzius Flora of India Flora of Cambodia Flora of Bangladesh Flora of Myanmar Flora of Thailand |
Stetten salt mine, was put into operation as the third line of the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn on 7 June 1901. It was not until 1912 that the gap between Stetten and Hechingen was closed as the last main line built by the HzL. This created a continuous rail connection 86 kilometres-long across the Hohenzollernsche Land from Eyach via Hechingen, Gammertingen and Hanfertal to Sigmaringendorf. Since the Royal Württemberg State Railways owned the Plochingen–Immendingen railway and the Tübingen–Sigmaringen railway, the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn was initially denied access to the existing lines. In Eyach and Hechingen, for example, separate stations were built next to the existing stations, as well as on the other main lines of the HzL in Sigmaringen or Kleinengstingen. Operation and end of passenger services Initially, steam locomotives from the Hohenzollern Locomotive Works were used on the line. As early as 1934, the HzL procured the VT 1 and VT2 diesel multiple units and was able to significantly reduce the travel time between Eyach and Sigmaringen. In 1936, the VT 3 set was followed by another railcar, which had to be scrapped in 1968 after a head-on collision near Hart (near Haigerloch), in which the driver died. In the course of the nationwide closure of branch lines, the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn also switched passenger transport to bus service on some routes between 1968 and 1973. In 1972, passenger services were discontinued on the Eyach–Haigerloch section and | separate stations were built next to the existing stations, as well as on the other main lines of the HzL in Sigmaringen or Kleinengstingen. Operation and end of passenger services Initially, steam locomotives from the Hohenzollern Locomotive Works were used on the line. As early as 1934, the HzL procured the VT 1 and VT2 diesel multiple units and was able to significantly reduce the travel time between Eyach and Sigmaringen. In 1936, the VT 3 set was followed by another railcar, which had to be scrapped in 1968 after a head-on collision near Hart (near Haigerloch), in which the driver died. In the course of the nationwide closure of branch lines, the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn also switched passenger transport to bus service on some routes between 1968 and 1973. In 1972, passenger services were discontinued on the Eyach–Haigerloch section and eight months later on the Haigerloch–Hechingen section. Current freight and leisure traffic To this day, freight trains run on the line several times a week, mainly traffic from the Stetten salt mine and timber traffic. In the autumn of 2008, after 30 years, local passenger services with excursion trains was revived with the classic HzL trains. In 2009, leisure traffic was added as the 3-Löwen-Takt Radexpress Eyachtäler and renamed Zug der Zeit in 2016. Since 2012, it has been running on all Sundays and public holidays from 1 May to mid-October. A railcar runs every two hours between Eyach and Hechingen. A historic MAN railbus was mainly used until 2011. After the vehicles had become worn out and were subsequently sold, they were replaced by Regio-Shuttle. LINT 54 sets have been operated since the 2020 timetable change. There are additional |
. According to the 2012 census, the ward has a total population of 7,120. References Wards of Same District Wards of Kilimanjaro | of , and has an average elevation of . According to the 2012 census, the ward has a |
genus from the family of Hymenobacteraceae with on known species (Botryobacter ruber). | Hymenobacteraceae with on known species (Botryobacter ruber). Botryobacter ruber has been isolated from |
of Eritrea.One of the things that is usually missed on our father holy Antonio’s life,is that abune antionios entered the abune Andrew monetary at the age of 5,and has being a server to the church for his whole life,he was elected to the monasteries Abbot,leader of the monastery, at the young age of 28!He is still and only the patriarch of Eritrea,and is now known as a holy saint to all | Orthodox Church in the world still condemned the doing of the government and has our father Abune Antonios as the rightful patriarch of Eritrea.One of the things that is usually missed on our father holy Antonio’s life,is that abune antionios entered the abune Andrew monetary at the age of 5,and has being a server to the church for his whole life,he was elected |
the remains of a Sassanian palace in Qasr-e Shirin, Iran.The Palace was built on the order of Khosrow II for his Christian wife, Shirin. It was | order of Khosrow II for his Christian wife, Shirin. It was listed among the national heritage sites of Iran with the number 32 on |
and releases that happened in 2022 in African music. Events Albums released in 2021 Deaths February 15 – Vivi l'internationale, | Rick, 34, South African rapper (suicide) See also 2022 in music References Africa African music 2022 in |
planned to build a nuclear plant in Sidi Boulabra since 1983 with assistance from the French Company for Nuclear Studies and Achievements. Agreements have also been concluded with the Atomic Energy Commission. The Moroccan nuclear program initially provides for the construction of 6,600 MW, then it will be reduced to a single reactor with a capacity of 900 MW by 2005–2007. From this perspective, the Mamoura Center for Nuclear Studies was equipped with an American research reactor in the early 2000s. The site was approved by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in December 2005. However, on May 29, 2006, Energy Minister Mohamed Boutaleb confirmed that "Morocco does not have a nuclear program and | 29, 2006, Energy Minister Mohamed Boutaleb confirmed that "Morocco does not have a nuclear program and does not intend to build thermonuclear power plants to obtain its electricity needs." In March 2007 the Russian group Atomstroyexport asserted in a press release that "Moscow is entering international competition, which sees many multinational companies providing Rabat with the technology to build a nuclear complex." In 2015, an IAEA delegation made an eight-day visit to assess Morocco's ability to operate its nuclear power plants. In 2016, Morocco considered incorporating nuclear energy into its energy mix by 2030, in order to reduce its dependence on energy. According to the Moroccan newspaper Akhbar Al-Youm, construction work began on the Boulabra site in June 2016. |
later became a security guard with securex and security plus Uganda where among other areas he manned included Akamwesi hostel that near Makerere University business school. In 2011 he joined the boda boda industry as a rider(motorcycle taxi operator) Career During his time as a boda boda rider, Rapa decided to start a city tours company, he founded his first business “Kampala boda boda city tours” in 2013. In the same year, Rapa lost a friend and fellow boda boda rider in an accident, this prompted him to be an advocate for road safety by actively promoting helmet wearing among motorcycle taxi riders and their passengers. It was through this initiative that he met Maxime Dieudonne and Alastair Sussock and together co-founded Safe Boda in 2015. Safe Boda was started with safety in mind. Today Safe boda operates an academy that teaches motorcycle taxi operators safe riding.Safe Boda at | among 30 of the most promising young entrepreneurs in 2018. Early life and education Rapa was born in Northern Uganda and attended Catrin primary school and Amuca SDA secondary school where he dropped out of school in 2006 owing to financial challenges. In 2007, Rapa moved to the capital city Kampala in search of employment. In Kampala, he first did odd jobs and later became a security guard with securex and security plus Uganda where among other areas he manned included Akamwesi hostel that near Makerere University business school. In 2011 he joined the boda boda industry as a rider(motorcycle taxi operator) Career During his time as a boda boda rider, Rapa decided to |
a total population of 6,154. References Wards of Same District Wards of | , and has an average elevation of . According to the 2012 census, the ward has a total population of |
1912. The same year, Eulitz became the staff officer of XII (1st Royal Saxon) Corps commanded by Karl Ludwig d'Elsa. In 1914, Eulitz became chief of staff of XII (1st Royal Saxon) Corps. He participated in battles in the Western Front. On 14 September 1916, he became the commander of 45th Infantry Brigade. After two months, he became chief of staff of Armeeabteilung A. Then in 1917, he was deployed in the Saxon headquarters. And in May of that year, Eulitz became orderly ADC in Friedrich August III's court. On 6 November 1917, he was promoted | 1917, he was deployed in the Saxon headquarters. And in May of that year, Eulitz became orderly ADC in Friedrich August III's court. On 6 November 1917, he was promoted to Generalmajor. During the meeting with Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff, he said that armistice was necessary. And on 4 July 1919, he |
unsportsmanlike behavior during their second-round matchup against Perpetual Altas. Letran officials then filed a temporary restraining order from Manila Regional Trial Court to prevent the enforcement of suspending Rodriguez. NCAA Mancom chairman Michael Del Mundo blasted the Letran administration for questioning its judgment to suspend Rodriguez. Rodriguez did not play in their next game against the Mapua Cardinals. Letran guard Ronjay Enrile was suspended for one game after a skirmish with San Sebastian's Leo Najorda in their final game date of the elimination round. Enrile was also sidelined after allegedly spitting on Perpetual's Noy Javier in their first round matchup. He sat out in the Final Four match against PCU Dolphins. NCAA Season 80 games results Elimination games were played in a double round-robin format. All games were aired on Studio 23. Source: ABS-CBN | the double round-robin eliminations at third place with 9 wins against 5 losses. The Knights, holding a twice-to-beat disadvantage in the Final Four against PCU Dolphins, won the first game thus forcing a knockout match. They were eliminated in the next game by the eventual champions Dolphins. Roster Depth chart Depth chart Suspensions The NCAA Management Committee (Mancom) slapped Letran center Eric Rodriguez with a one-game suspension for an unsportsmanlike behavior during their second-round matchup against Perpetual Altas. Letran officials then filed a temporary restraining order from Manila Regional Trial Court to prevent the enforcement |
Shusha fortress being related to the site occupied by Meydan (the main square of the city). The Ashaghy Meydan square is also known as Torpag Meydany (Earthen square), since, unlike other areas of Shusha, it had an earthen cover, not a stone one. On the general plan of Shusha, the attention is drawn to the adjoining public buildings in the western part of Ashaghy Meydan, none of which survive. Due to the fact that no explanations or comments are given in the plan, it is not known what functions they performed. According to the Karabakh historian Baharly, the bathhouse of Gazi Mirza Ali was located on the square. Peculiarities The square is located in the center | "Earthen Square") is one of the oldest squares in the city of Shusha being located in the lower part of the Shusha fortress. History The name of the Ashaghy Meydan square is connected with its location in the lower part of the Shusha fortress being related to the site occupied by Meydan (the main square of the city). The Ashaghy Meydan square is also known as Torpag Meydany (Earthen square), since, unlike other areas of Shusha, it had an earthen cover, not a stone one. On the general plan of Shusha, the attention is |
the Federal Ministry of Economy. The data are made available online since 2000 by the Kultusministerkonferenz, a round table of the Secretaries of Education of all 16 German federal states. The database provides documentation of the education systems jn 180 countries and offers detailed insights about there existing third-level education systems and degrees and how they value in comparison to the German system. With this source, the owner of a foreign degree can have a first assessment about the possible accreditation of it in Germany. For many employers this database is the first reference checking the validity of foreign degrees. Accreditation Anabin accredites in two steps: First, foreign institutions itself. This list provides insight whether a foreign institution is rated as providing equivalent education and research skills as the standard German institution. The institutions are put into three brackets: H+ means the institution is seen as equivalent to a German Hochschule (institute of higher education). H- means the accreditation is neither not yet or never will be rated as equivalent to a German institution of higher education. H+/- means the institution’s degrees | third-level degrees. It is the binding reference for German administrations, employers and private individuals to validate degrees. Within the European Union, all degrees by all member countries are inter-acceptable therefore Anabin is a reference mostly for non-European degrees. History The database was first launched as a cooperation of three German-speaking countries: Germany, the Hessian Ministry of Higher Education, Research and the Arts together with the former Central Agency for Foreign Education (ZAB), Austria, the Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs, and Luxembourg, the Federal Ministry of Economy. The data are made available online since 2000 by the Kultusministerkonferenz, a round table of the Secretaries of Education of all 16 German federal |
Adorno (1340 – 1398), Doge of the Republic of | the Republic of Genoa (1378, 1384-1390, 1391-1392, 1394-1396) Antoniotto II Adorno ( 1479 – 1528), Doge of the |
satellite ESSA-9, the ninth | first ESSA satellite ESSA-9, |
following the abdication of emperor Pedro I due to the growing popular dissatisfaction with his rule, Lima e Silva was elected regent by General Assembly in the provisional triumviral regency, as the heir to the throne, emperor Pedro II, was still a minor. The other two members of the regency were José Carneiro de Campos, the 1st marquis of Caravelas, and Nicolau Pereira de Campos Vergueiro. On 17 June 1831, he was again elected as regent, this time for a permanent triumviral regency, together with João Bráulio Muniz and José da Costa Carvalho. Lima e Silva was granted the title of baron of Barra Grande by imperial letter on 18 July 1841, which he rejected, although it appears in the archives of the Notary of Nobreza e Fidalguia. The title refers to the town of Barra Grande, on the border between Alagoas and Pernambuco, where imperial troops were concentrated at the time of the Confederation of | in his family. He studied in the Royal Academy of Artillery, Fortification and Design, later transferring to the Academy of Arithmetic, Practical Geometry, Fortification, Design and French Language, created for the training of artillery officers. He joined the troops loyal to prince Pedro, who was regent on the occasion of the independence of Brazil. In 1801 he married Mariana Cândida de Oliveira Belo, with whom he had three children: Luís Alves de Lima e Silva, the future Duke of Caxias, José Joaquim de Lima e Silva Sobrinho, the future Count of Tocantins, and Carlota Guilhermina de Lima e Silva, who married her uncle, Manuel da Fonseca de Lima e Silva, the Baron of Suruí. In 1824, with the rank of brigadier in the Imperial Army, he commanded a brigade in the suppression of the Confederation of the Equator. He had disagreements with then emperor Pedro I for having tried to negotiate a surrender with the rebels. Once the rebellion was suppressed, Lima e Silva was nomidated interim president of the province of Pernambuco and of the military commission that was assembled to carry on the trial of the confederate rebels from 1824 to 1825, being accused of trying to retardate the execution of their sentences. He received no promotions for that campaign. On 7 April 1831, following the abdication of emperor Pedro I due to the growing popular dissatisfaction with his rule, Lima e Silva was elected regent by General Assembly in the provisional triumviral regency, as |
as Jat State of Gohad was a Hindu kingdom in India. It was found by Jat King Singhadev II. The state was ruled by Bamraulia Jats. History Raja Singhadev II established Jat rule on Gohad near gwalior on 1505 and found kingdom. The bhim Singh rana was most famous ruler of gohad. He defeat mughals and capture gwalior under his empire 331 | included. Bhim singh rana also defeat marathas. After his death the chatar singh recapture gwalior from marathas on 1780. He ruled on gwalior till 1785. In 1785 Maratha ruler mahadji Sindhia again capture gwalior and also capture gohad. After 18 years ago Maharaja Kirat Singh Jat became ruler of Gohad. |
2012 census, the ward has a total population of 4,790. References Wards of | average elevation of . According to the 2012 census, the ward has a total population of 4,790. |
state comptroller until 1966. Dempsey appointed him to be commissioner of consumer protection from 1967 to 1970. He was on the Democratic State Central Committee (1954–1975). Governor John Dempsey appointed Casey to serve as Connecticut State Comptroller on July 19, 1966, to fill the unexpired term of Raymond S. Thatcher, who had resigned to become the state's public utilities commissioner. Casey served until January 1967 and did not run for a full term. Casey moved to coastal Connecticut circa | Casey (September 6, 1926 – July 12, 1989) was an American politician and civil servant who served as Connecticut State Comptroller from July 1966 to January 1967. Life and career Born in Winchester, Connecticut, Casey attended Housatonic Valley Regional High School and the Hartford Institute of Accounting. He was selectman (1953–1963) and mayor (1957–1961) of Winsted and deputy state comptroller until 1966. Dempsey appointed him to be commissioner of consumer protection from 1967 to 1970. He was on the Democratic State Central Committee (1954–1975). Governor John Dempsey appointed Casey to serve as Connecticut State Comptroller on July 19, 1966, to fill the unexpired |
at the University of Grenoble II and developed existential psychoanalysis in his teaching from 1989 to 1992. He was then offered a position as Professor at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne where he developed within his teachings the principles and techniques of existential psychoanalysis. From 1992 to 2018, he directed the teaching of psychotherapy and psychoanalysis at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne to psychology master's degree students. He is one of the first French psychologists to have been invited to the People's Republic of China and to have been published in the newspaper Le Monde with an information article on psychoanalysis entitled Freud, Buddha of psychoanalysis (1984). TV and journalistic chronicles In addition to his teaching activities, Claude Lorin is called upon as a psychologist to intervene across various media outlets. In France, he created on the public channel France 2 the first weekly column of child and adolescent psychology, which he hosted from 1985 to 1988 with William Leymergie, Roger Zabel and Julien Lepers. The television programmes, together with its columns in the monthly Parents, Enfants Magazine and the weekly review Le | University of Reims Champagne Ardenne. Education Lorin began studying biochemistry at the National School of Chemistry and Biology in Paris (1968). Subsequently, he obtained a “Brevet de Technicien Supérieur de Biophysique” at the École Supérieure du Laboratoire (Paris, 1971). He then deepened his studies in the history of sciences and arts by completing a thesis in philosophy under the supervision of Pierre Kaufmann, entitled The aesthetic problem of unfinished works (1979). The following year, he defended a doctoral thesis in psychology under the supervision of Didier Anzieu entitled Identifications in a psychodrama of children (1980). He also defended a state doctoral thesis in Letters and Human Sciences under the co-supervision of Didier Anzieu and Tobie Nathan, entitled Ferenczi: from medicine to psychoanalysis (1993). Academic background Returning from Hungary in 1976 with unpublished texts by psychoanalyst Sándor Ferenczi, Lorin translated them in collaboration with Hungarian colleagues. He published extracts from them in The young Ferenczi in1983. He then late published the entire texts in The Writings of Budapest (1994) and in his state thesis Ferenczi: from medicine to psychoanalysis. From 1980 to 1989, he was a lecturer in psychology at the University of Paris X. In 1989, he accepted a post of Lecturer at the University of Grenoble II and developed existential psychoanalysis in his teaching from 1989 to 1992. He was then offered a position as Professor at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne where he developed within his teachings the principles and techniques |
commander 1925 – Commander 1931 – Captain 1936 – Rear admiral 1945 – Vice admiral Awards and decorations Swedish Commander Grand Cross of the Order of the Sword (15 November 1945) Commander 1st Class of the Order of the Sword (15 November 1937) Knight 1st Class of the Order of the Sword (1922) Knight of the Order of the Polar Star (1933) Knight 1st Class of the Order of Vasa (1925) Foreign Grand Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta (between 1945 and 1947) Commander of the Order of Polonia Restituta (between 1931 and 1940) Order of the German Eagle (between 1937 and 1940) Commander of the Order of the Dannebrog (between 1925 and 1931) Commander of the Order of the White Rose of Finland (between 1931 and 1940) Knight of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus (between 1909 and 1915) Honours Member of the Royal Swedish Academy of War Sciences (1931) Member of the Royal Swedish Society of Naval Sciences (1917) Honorary member of the Royal Swedish Society of Naval Sciences (1938) References 1880 births 1965 deaths Swedish Navy vice admirals People from Mellerud Municipality Members of the Royal Swedish Academy of War Sciences Members of the Royal Swedish Society of Naval Sciences Commanders Grand Cross of the Order of the Sword Knights First Class of the Order of Vasa Knights of the Order of the | and was promoted to captain in 1931. Simonsson then served as flag captain from 1932 to 1933 and as head of the Military Office of the Naval Defence (Sjöförsvarets kommandoexpedition) from 1933 to 1938. He was promoted to rear admiral in 1938 and was appointed Commanding Admiral of the South Coast Naval District in 1938, serving until 1942. During this time, Simonsson also served as President of the Royal Swedish Society of Naval Sciences (1939–1942) and as chairman of the Committee on the Status and Organization of the Swedish Coastal Artillery in 1940. He was Commanding Admiral of the East Coast Naval District from 1942 to 1945 when he retired and was promoted to vice admiral. Personal life In 1912, Simonsson married Märta Margareta (Greta) Holm (1890–1971), the daughter of slottsfogde, captain Carl Holm and Märta Brunau. He was the father of Lennart Simonsson (1913–1993), Director General of the National Swedish Authority for Testing, Inspection and Metrolog between 1964 and 1971, and Lars Simonsson (1916–1990), Justice in the Supreme Administrative Court of Sweden between 1967 and 1983. Death Simonsson died on 16 July 1965 and was interred on 24 July 1965 at Galärvarvskyrkogården in Stockholm. Dates of rank 1901 – Underlöjtnant 1903 – Sub-lieutenant 1910 – Lieutenant 1920 – Lieutenant commander 1925 – Commander 1931 – Captain 1936 – Rear admiral 1945 – Vice admiral Awards and decorations Swedish Commander Grand Cross of the Order of the Sword (15 November 1945) Commander 1st Class of |
after the latter retired in the final after the first set. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half References | defeating top seed Greet Minnen after the latter retired in the final after the first set. Seeds Draw |
the final, 6–2, 6–3. Seeds Draw Draw References Main Draw Nur-Sultan International | Timofeeva in the final, 6–2, 6–3. Seeds Draw Draw References Main Draw Nur-Sultan International Tournament - |
officer and former Andhra Pradesh DGP. He is an Indian Police Service (IPS) officer from the 1986 batch of the Andhra Pradesh cadre. He was appointed as DGP on 1 July 2018 and served in the position till 1 June 2019. He is a B.Tech graduate from IIT Kanpur joined the Indian Police Service in 1986. Police Appointments RP Thakur joined the service as Additional Superintendent of Police at National Police Academy in Hyderabad in 1986. He later worked as ASP in Guntur, Warangal districts, Suryapet, | promoted to DIG rank and posted to head Anantapur range and later worked as Central Industrial Security (CISF) Patna DIG from 2002 to 2007 on central deputation. Thakur was promoted to Inspector General and worked as Rayalaseema and Warangal regions IG from 2007 to 2011. He was then promoted as Additional Director General in 2011 served as ADGP (Technology Services), DG (Drugs & Copyright), Controller legal metrology, DG Vigilance and Enforcement and law and order till 2016. RP Thakur On promotion as Director General in 2016, he was posted as Director General of state ACB (Anti-Corruption Bureau) in November 2016, and was appointed Director General of Police, Head of Police Force (DGP, HoPF) on 30 June 2018 and served in the position until 1 June 2019. He later worked as Commissioner of Printing, Stationery and Stores Purchase & and was apponted as vice-chairman and managing director of AP State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC) and took charge on 19 Jan 2021. Ram |
the pedal tones to the highest reaches, and his extraordinary use of breath, pushed through the horn at varying volumes. Granted, this is not easy listening, and there are few melodies or conventional signposts. Listening to all these hours of solo Dixon takes self-discipline and might be compared to hearing a long postmodern poetry recital. But, for those willing to make the effort, and who can appreciate the contributions of an extraordinary talent, this boxed set will bring endless hours of pleasure." The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz awarded the album 3½ stars, and stated: "These mostly lo-fi recordings are a valuable record of [Dixon's] progress as a solo performer... The box set... is for specialists only but it's a rewarding experience... for anyone interested in his self-determined and sometimes lonely career... it's to Dixon's eternal credit that every piece... seems to have its own logic and purpose." Writing for Burning Ambulance, Phil Freeman commented: "Odyssey remains a landmark in Bill Dixon's artistic journey, and in the history of what he referred to as 'this music,' meaning post-bebop Black creative music... this is extraordinarily beautiful music, capable of captivating anyone who listens with even the most casual curiosity... It's not the easiest thing to find... but there are still some copies floating around, and it's absolutely worth the search." Track listing All compositions by | 3:57 "Long Alone Song" – 6:34 "Shrike" – 0:57 Disc 3 "Jerusalem" – 26:50 "Umbra E Luce - For Sid Makay" – 11:31 "The Somnambulist" – 4:08 "Conncordde" – 4:37 "Fortunata" – 8:13 "Graffiti Sui Soffiti" – 1:51 Disc 4 "Postcards" – 5:56 "For Wallace Thurman" – 4:22 "Pensieroso" – 1:01 "Masai" – 1:04 "Sttretta" – 1:40 "Chalk Circle - Blue" – 2:39 "Shadowland" – 6:25 "Spaces" – 1:18 "The Cloisters" – 2:06 "Chromma" – 1:34 "Sketch For Ernie Chritchlow" – 3:56 "More Than Something" – 1:36 "Manuscripts For Fathers & Sons" – 4:22 "Poemm Per I Delicati" – 1:48 "Circle Chalk - Red" – 5:26 "Hush" – 3:59 Disc 5 "Relay - Dance #1" – 9:41 "Relay - Dance #3" – 2:10 "Relay - Dance #4" – 2:45 "Relay - Dance #5" – 3:21 "Relay - Dance #6" – 4:35 "Relay - Dance #7" – 6:20 "Relay - Dance #8" – 5:53 "Relay - Dance #2" – 1:47 "Chiasmus" – 7:17 "Shards" – 1:50 "Pasquinade" – 6:00 Disc 6 "Introduction To The Questions" – 1:03 "How Do You Call The Music You Play?" – 6:26 "Does Your Music Express A General Conception?" – 1:54 "Do You Think Before Or During Improvisation?" – 0:47 "Is Swing Important?" – 0:45 "Do You Enjoy Playing?" – 1:08 "Is Beauty Your Goal?" – 0:36 "What Is Freedom In Music?" – 2:28 "Are You Able To Make A Living From Music?" – 0:54 "What Would You Like To Do In The Near Future?" – 2:08 "How Do You See The Future?" – 2:05 "Odyssey Preface" – 2:19 "Teaching" – 14:25 "The Solo" – 0:32 "The Odyssey Solo Work" – 2:42 "Teaching In Madison, 1971-72" – 11:57 "Genesis Of The Solos" – 3:45 "Solos: Craft And Language" – 1:35 "Solos: Notation And Spatiality" – 3:19 "Solos: Composing Oneself And Composition" – 3:25 "Solos: Philosophy And Communication" – 4:25 "Conclusion" – 1:46 Personnel Bill Dixon – trumpet, flugelhorn, piano, voice Lawrence Cook – percussion (disc 1, track 12) David Moss – percussion (disc 1, track 12) William R. Dixon, II – voice (disc 1, |
Futbalnet profile Fortuna Liga profile 1996 births Living people Czech footballers Czech expatriate footballers Place of birth missing (living people) Association football midfielders FC Baník Ostrava players MFK Vítkovice players MFK Frýdek-Místek players FC Vratimov players FK Pohronie players Czech First League players Czech National Football League players Moravian-Silesian Football League players Slovak Super Liga players Expatriate footballers in Slovakia Czech expatriate sportspeople in | Pohronie. Club career Baník Ostrava Ožvolda made his professional debut for Baník Ostrava against Sparta Prague on 6 December 2015. He appeared in the starting line-up and was replaced by Jakub Šašinka after 77 minutes. Baník lost 0-1 following David Lafata's first-half goal. FK Pohronie Ožvolda joined Fortuna Liga's Pohronie arriving from Vratimov. He debuted in first possible league fixture |
editor. He has been the editor of Amazing Stories since 2012. Amazing Stories Davidson acquired Amazing Stories in 2012, and restarted it as a website. The magazine was revived as a print publication in 2018 following a Kickstarter campaign, which raised over $30,000. Anthologies The Best of Amazing Stories: The 1926 Anthology (2014) with Jean Marie Stine The Best of Amazing Stories: The 1927 Anthology (2015) with Stine The Best of Amazing Stories: The 1940 Anthology: | The 1927 Anthology (2015) with Stine The Best of Amazing Stories: The 1940 Anthology: Special Retro-Hugo Edition (2015) with Stine The Best of Amazing Stories: The 1928 Anthology (2016) with Stine The Best of Amazing Stories: The 1929 Anthology (2017) with Stine The Best of Amazing Stories: The 1930 Anthology (2018) with Stine The |
Bushehri left Iran for Europe due to his fear of being arrested by the Shah. He could come Iran only after the abdication of Reza Shah. Then Bushehri was appointed governor of the Fars province and then, was made the minister of agriculture in the cabinet of Prime Minister Abdolhossein Hazhir in 1948. The same year he was also elected to the Senate, but resigned from the post soon. Bushehri was the minister of roads in the cabinet led by Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh in the period 1951–1952. He also served as the spokesman of the Mosaddegh government. In 1960 he was vice president of the celebration committee established for the anniversary of the Persian Empire and a senator. Personal life and death Bushehri was related to the Pahlavi family | Senate and also, served as the governor of the Fars province. Early life and education Javad Busehri was born in Bushehr in 1893. His father was a businessman, Haj Mohammad Moin Al Tajjar. After receiving education in his hometown Javad Busehri attended a German school in Tehran. Then he studied trade and economics in England and Switzerland. Career and activities Following his return to Iran Bushehri involved in business and politics. During the reign of Reza Shah he was a member of the Majlis representing Tehran. His relationship with Reza Shah became strained, and Bushehri left Iran for Europe due to his fear of being arrested by the Shah. He could come Iran only after the abdication of Reza Shah. Then Bushehri was appointed governor of the Fars province and then, was made the minister of agriculture in the cabinet of Prime Minister Abdolhossein Hazhir in |
hospitality, media business and finance. Hotel business Vertex Hotel Group manages hotel facilities: "Bristol", "Londonskaya" in Odesa and "President Hotel" in Kyiv. Media business In June 2013, Vertex United acquired the media project "Focus" (magazine "Focus", "Focus. Beautiful Country", website focus.ua) from the media | It has a number of assests in hospitality, media business and finance. Hotel business Vertex Hotel Group manages hotel facilities: "Bristol", "Londonskaya" in Odesa and "President Hotel" in Kyiv. Media business In June 2013, Vertex United acquired the media project "Focus" (magazine "Focus", "Focus. Beautiful Country", website |
J. D. Taylor, 2008 References Taylor J. & Glover E. (2021). Biology, evolution and generic review of the chemosymbiotic bivalve family Lucinidae. London: The Ray Society [Publication 182]. 319 pp. External links | bivalves in the subfamily Leucosphaerinae belonging to the family Lucinidae. Species Pseudolucinisca japonica (Habe, 1958) Pseudolucinisca kantori Glover & J. D. Taylor, 2016 Pseudolucinisca lacteola |
Parliament of the Kabardino-Balkarian Republic of the 3rd and 4th convocations. In 2011 he was elected deputy of the 6th State Duma from the Kabardino-Balkaria constituency. Gekkiyev ran with the United Russia. In 2016 and 2021, he was re-elected for the 7th and 8th State Dumas respectively. References 1961 births Living people United Russia politicians 21st-century | State Duma from the Kabardino-Balkaria constituency. Gekkiyev ran with the United Russia. In 2016 and 2021, he was re-elected for the 7th and 8th State Dumas respectively. References 1961 births Living people United Russia politicians 21st-century Russian politicians Sixth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) Seventh convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) Eighth |
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