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Aubrey Sinden | 75,678,807 | Outside of sport, Sinden was by profession an accountant. He was also involved in local politics in East Grinstead, and was a candidate for election in 1953. Sinden died in January 1988 at Copthorne, Sussex. |
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Omar Keshelashvili | 75,678,809 | Omar Keshelashvili (Georgian: ომარ ქეშელაშვილი or ომარა ქეშელაშვილი, Russian: Омар Кешелашвили) is an Economist, Political scientist, Professor and the founder of the Georgia Business University with his brother Nikoloz Keshelashvili. Omar graduated from The Agricultural Institute of Georgia in 1963, he became a senior Scientist, sector Manager and deputy director at the Scientific Research Institute of Agricultural Economy and Organization. Omar worked in the agriculture industry like his father, Grigol Keshelashvili [ka]. |
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Omar Keshelashvili | 75,678,809 | In 1991 Omar and his brother Nikoloz Keshelashvili founded the Georgian Business Univeristy, Omar has been the director of the Institute of Economics and Business LLC based on the base of the university. |
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Omar Keshelashvili | 75,678,809 | Life | Omar was born in the capital Tbilisi in the Georgian SSR of the Soviet Union. His parents were both scientists and professors, his father Grigol Keshelashvili was an Agricultural scientist and professor of the field while his mother, Elisabed Mkheidze, was a professor of International politics and world affairs. Omar graduated from the Faculty of Economics and Organization of the Agricultural Institute of Georgia in 1963. |
Omar Keshelashvili | 75,678,809 | Life | Since 1966, he worked in the Scientific Research Institute of Agricultural Economy and Organization: as a senior scientist, sector manager, deputy director, director; In 1968, he defended the scientific degree of Candidate of Economic Sciences, and in 1978, Doctor of Economic Sciences; His doctoral dissertation was recognized as a new scientific direction in the field of economic evaluation of agricultural chemicalization, during which, as an innovative approach, the author used the possibilities of information technology. He has been awarded the scientific title of professor, he also wrote various books and investigations on economics and agricultural science. |
Omar Keshelashvili | 75,678,809 | Life | 1991-2011 For 20 years, Omar was the rector of the private higher education institution he founded - Georgia Business University; Since 2011, he has been the director of the Institute of Economics and Business LLC based on the base of this university; 2007-2011 Director of the newly established Institute of Agrarian Economics of the State Agricultural University, and then the Chairman of the Scientific Council; Since 2008, the chairman and chief editor of the editorial-scientific board of the international, refereed, scientific-methodological and practical journal "Agrarian-Economic Science and Technology" founded by him; With his research, he created new directions in Georgian agrarian-economic science; He was the first to develop a very specific methodology, with a computer program, and based on it, he gave us an economic assessment of the use of chemical means in Georgian agriculture and its scientific foundations, taking into account zonal features; laid the foundation for research on the problems of agricultural risk management in farms and was the first (2008-2009) to determine the economic shifts in the appropriateness of risk and the optimal levels of return, taking into account the zonal characteristics of farms; In 2009, the territory of Georgia was divided into 13 zones and 8 subzones in terms of agricultural production specialization; In 2019, following the development of the integration of production processes, which led to the functional convergence and connection of agriculture and the food industry, it made some changes to this scheme, and it adapted to the development of the food industry for the first time in a period of almost 70 years since 1950; Since 1980, he has been giving lectures at Tbilisi State University and Georgian State Agrarian University; 31 postgraduate and doctoral students have been educated; has taken part in 5 world congresses; He has published 1050 scientific works, including 230 books, of which 53 monographs, 9 textbooks, 136 brochures, 275 newspaper scientific - publication works, the total number of scientific and scientific - publication works is 1325. In 2013, he was awarded the "Best Scientist of the Year" honor in the agricultural field rank in the field of economy, in 2018 he was awarded with an honorary certificate of the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of Georgia for long and fruitful scientific and educational activities in the field of higher education and science. Doctor of Economic Sciences, Professor. |
Omar Keshelashvili | 75,678,809 | Notable works | Below is a list of books and parts of books which were fully or partially writen by Omar Keshelashvili. |
Kálmán Hamar | 75,678,828 | Kálmán Hamar (October 12, 1928 – June 11, 1989) was a Hungarian historian from Slovakia. |
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Kálmán Hamar | 75,678,828 | Biography | From 1960 to 1963, Hamar was the head of the Hungarian editorial office of the Slovakian Pedagogical Book Publisher (textbook publisher) in Bratislava where he taught Hungarian. |
Kálmán Hamar | 75,678,828 | Biography | Hamar was a professor at the Marx-Lenin Institute of the Bratislava College of Economics. |
Kálmán Hamar | 75,678,828 | Biography | He was first a member of the Bratislava city committee of Csemadok, and then its president. From 1970, he was the first president of the Hungarian Historical Society of Czechoslovakia. |
Kálmán Hamar | 75,678,828 | Biography | Hamar primarily dealt with labor movement topics considered important at the time, |
Kálmán Hamar | 75,678,828 | Biography | He rests in the urn cemetery in Lamac. |
Kálmán Hamar | 75,678,828 | Critics | Some of the critics was related to his works failing to comply with archived materials. |
John Wellington Grabiel | 75,678,833 | John W. Grabiel should link here |
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John Wellington Grabiel | 75,678,833 | John Wellington Grabiel (1868-1928) was a lawyer and politician in Arkansas. He was a lawyer in Fayetteville and was a Republican candidate for governor of Arkansas in 1922 and 1924. |
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Madhulita Mohapatra | 75,678,850 | Madhulita Mohapatra (born 1978) is a dancer from India. She is one of the exponents of Indian classical dance Odissi. She is also a Sambalpuri folk dancer for more than 20 years. She has been performing and teaching Odissi and Sambalpuri folk dance since the last 15 years. She started an Odissi school at Bengaluru in June 2008. She is also a performer, choreographer and trainer. |
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Madhulita Mohapatra | 75,678,850 | Early life | Mohapatra is born in Bhawanipatna, Kalahandi district, Odisha. She did her post-graduation in Commerce and Business Administration. She learnt her basics from Guru Krushna Chandra Sahoo at Kalahandi Kala Kendra, Bhawanipatna before receiving her Nrutya Acharya from Odisha Dance Academy under the guidance of Padma Shri Guru Gangadhar Pradhan, Padma Shri Guru Aruna Mohanty and Guru Pabitra Kumar Pradhan. She married Imaraan. After marriage, with the support of her husband, she quit her job and moved to Bengaluru in 2008 and later started a dance school, Nrityantar Academy of Performing Arts, to spread the Odissi dance culture in South India. |
Madhulita Mohapatra | 75,678,850 | Performances | She choreographed 'Colours of Krishna', the 12th edition of 'Naman', held at ADA Rangmandira in Bengaluru in September 2023. In March 2021, she performed at Jagriti Theatre in Bengaluru. In April 2020, she performed along with her students at the International Dance Day celebrations at Bhubaneshwar. In September 2019, SPIC Macay, North Kerala Chapter, featured her Odissi show at the Amritavidyalaya Institute campus. She regularly conducts SPIC-Macay classes in schools and colleges. In 2018, she performed in London along with her ward Gairika Mathur. In 2017, she performed Harirabhisarati on ashtapadi, Madhave ma kuru manini manam aye from Geeta Govinda at the sixth Kelucharan Guna Keertanam at Gyan Manch in Kolkata. For the sixth anniversary of Nrityantar, an annual dance festival, Naman was organised at the ADA Rangamandira, Bengaluru on 2 August 2016. In 2010, Odisha Dance Academy founder Guru Gangadhar Pradhan inaugurated Naman and since then it is being organised every year. One of her first shows was at the 1st Odissi International on 21 December 2010, where she was felicitated Guru Daksha Mushruwala from Mumbai. For the first time, she performed in Kerala in 2012 at the famous Guruvayoor Temple and now she regularly visits the southern state not only for shows but teaches in schools. |
Madhulita Mohapatra | 75,678,850 | Performances | In October 2023, under her tutelage Nrityantar Dance Ensemble performed a free show title Eternal Enchantment... timeless charm of Odissi dance. The new show was performed at Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Mylapore, Chennai. |
Madhulita Mohapatra | 75,678,850 | Performances | She is an empanelled artiste of Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) and she is also a graded performer on Doordarshan. |
Madhulita Mohapatra | 75,678,850 | Fusion of Odissi and Manipuri dance forms | Mohapatra started performances featuring a fusion of Odissi and Manipuri dance forms after collaborating with popular Manipuri artiste Bimbavati Devi from Kolkata titled Odissi-Manipuri Jugalbandi in November 2023. |
2024 Brisbane International – Men's doubles | 75,678,863 | Marcus Daniell and Wesley Koolhof were the reigning champions from 2019, when the men's event was last held, but Koolhof chose to compete in the United Cup instead. Daniell partners Michael Venus. |
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2024 Brisbane International – Men's doubles | 75,678,863 | Seeds | All seeds received a bye into the second round. |
1918 in Finland | 75,678,881 | Events in the year 1918 in Finland. |
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1918 in Finland | 75,678,881 | Events | Ongoing - Finnish Civil War |
2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | The 2024 Solheim Cup is the 19th edition of the Solheim Cup matches, held 13–15 September at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Virginia, United States. The Solheim Cup is a biennial team competition between the top women professional golfers from Europe and the United States. The Solheim Cup returns to even-numbered years in 2024, the first time since 2002 after the Ryder Cup returned to an odd-year schedule after 2020, as competition was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. |
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2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | The previous U.S. competition in 2021 was won by Europe, 15 points to 13. Europe retained the cup in Spain in 2023 after a tie of 14 points to 14. |
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2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | Format | The competition was a three-day match play event between teams of 12 players with a similar format to the Ryder Cup, with each match worth one point. The format is as follows: |
2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | Format | With a total of 28 points, 141⁄2 points are required to win the Cup, and 14 points are required for the defending champion to retain the Cup. All matches are played to a maximum of 18 holes. If the score is even after 18 holes, each team earns one-half point. |
2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | Team qualification and selection | In order to be eligible to be a member of the European team, players were required to: |
2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | Team qualification and selection | Team Europe was made up of eight automatic qualifiers – the top two players from the LET Solheim Cup standings, followed by the top six LET members on the Women's World Golf Rankings who were not already qualified via the Solheim Cup standings – and four captain's selections. |
2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | Team qualification and selection | In order to be eligible to be a member of the United States team, players were required to be current members of the LPGA Tour and meet one of these three citizenship criteria: |
2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | Team qualification and selection | Team USA was made up of nine automatic qualifiers – the leading seven players from the LPGA Solheim Cup points rankings and the top two players in the Women's World Golf Rankings not already qualified via the points rankings – and three chosen by the team captain. LPGA Solheim Cup points were earned for top-20 finishes on the LPGA Tour over a two-year period. |
2024 Solheim Cup | 75,678,886 | Teams | 2023 captains Stacy Lewis and Suzann Pettersen will reprise their roles at the 2024 cup. |
Stadionul Soda | 75,678,923 | Stadionul Soda nicknamed Stadionul Dragostei is a romanian multi-use stadium in Ocna Mureș, Alba County is mostly used for football matches and is the home ground of CS Ocna Mureș. In 2015 the stadium was renovated. Also in 1936 the stadium was opened and there was the first football match at nightime in Romania. The stadium holds 2.000 seats where 500 of them are covered. |
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2024 ATP Hong Kong Tennis Open – Singles | 75,678,941 | Juan Carlos Ferrero was the reigning champion from 2002, when the men's event was last held, but he retired from professional tennis in 2012. |
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2024 ATP Hong Kong Tennis Open – Singles | 75,678,941 | Seeds | The top four seeds received a bye into the second round. |
Terry Small | 75,678,965 | Terence Frank Small (6 January 1927 – 10 December 1983) was an international motorcycle speedway rider from England. He earned one international cap for the England national speedway team. |
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Terry Small | 75,678,965 | Biography | Small, born in Southampton, raced grasstrack in Egypt, while serving with the British Army. He began his British leagues career riding for Poole Pirates during the 1949 Speedway National League Division Three season. He quickly became a regular in the team and made significant progress over the following two seasons, averaging an impressive 9.60 during the 1951 season. The 1951 season ended with honours as Poole won the league title. |
Terry Small | 75,678,965 | Biography | Poole moved up a division in 1952 and Small was an integral part of the team when they won the league and cup double with relative ease. He became a fans favourite and was still with the club when they won another league and cup double during the 1955 season. |
Terry Small | 75,678,965 | Biography | He rode once for for Rayleigh Rockets in 1957 before deciding to take a break form speedway. He returned to Poole for two more seasons from 1958 to 1959. When he retired, he had ridden 296 times for Poole and scored 2165 points. He was inducted into the Poole Hall of Fame in 1994. |
Nadia Fadhil | 75,678,979 | {{Infobox football biography |name = Nadia Fadhil |image = |full_name = |birth_date = |birth_place = Iraq |height = |position = [[Midfielder |currentclub = |clubnumber = |years1 = |clubs1 = Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya |nationalteam1 = Iraq }} Nadia Fadhil (Arabic: نادية فاضل) is an Iraqi footballer who plays as a midfielder for the Iraq women's national football team. |
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Nadia Fadhil | 75,678,979 | Early life | Fadhil is a native of Wasit Governorate, Iraq. |
Nadia Fadhil | 75,678,979 | Education | Fadhil attended the University of Baghdad in Iraq. |
Nadia Fadhil | 75,678,979 | Career | Fadhil was the top scorer of the Iraq She played for Saudi Arabian side Al-Himma, helping the club achieve promotion. |
Nadia Fadhil | 75,678,979 | Personal life | Fadhil mainly operates as a midfielder or striker. |
Nadia Fadhil | 75,678,979 | Personal life | Fadhil has regarded Iraq international Hawar Mulla Mohammed as her football idol. |
John Rubino | 75,678,993 | John Battista Rubino (26 June 1945 – 16 January 2023) was a prominent Western Australian businessman in the engineering and construction industry. After he emigrated from Sicily to Australia in 1966, Rubino co-founded the engineering company UGL, and later acquired Monadelphous, a company which he helped to revive. |
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John Rubino | 75,678,993 | Early life | Rubino was born on 26 June 1945, in Delia on the island of Sicily in Italy. He was a surveyor in Italy. In 1966, at 21 years old, Rubino emigrated to Western Australia. |
John Rubino | 75,678,993 | Career | Embarking on his Australian career as a trade assistant, Rubino found a pivotal opportunity in 1970 when he became a sub-contractor on the Ord River Dam project, marking the commencement of his influential career in engineering and construction. Collaborating with fellow migrants John Trettel, Charlie Bontempo and Sam Castelli, Rubino played a crucial role in establishing UGL, a major player in the Australian contracting industry. |
John Rubino | 75,678,993 | Career | In 1987, UGL acquired a stake in Monadelphous, which faced receivership shortly after. Undeterred, Rubino, alongside his partners, embarked on salvaging their investment. Despite facing challenges during the early 1990s recession, Rubino assumed the role of managing director at Monadelphous. Rubino's leadership was initially panned to be temporarily, but lasted for over 30 years in the positions of chairman or managing director. Under his adept leadership, Monadelphous underwent revitalization, and by the 2010s was one of Australia's largest contracting companies. |
John Rubino | 75,678,993 | Legacy | Rubino was featured in The West Australian's WA Rich List in 2012, and was recognised as one of the most influential Western Australian businesspeople in the newspaper's 2013 list of the 100 most influential. |
John Rubino | 75,678,993 | Legacy | Rubino retired from Monadelphous in October 2022 due to health reasons, and died a few months later on 16 January 2023. |
Ogbomosho Baptist Church | 75,678,995 | Ogbomoso Baptist church nestled in the bustling heart of Ogbomoso at Oba Jimoh Oladunni Oyewumi Street, Okelerin, Ogbomoso and can be described metaphorically as the hub of the Baptist Christian Faith in Nigeria from which the spokes of the gospel radiated to other towns like Ajawa, Iluju, Ikoyi, Igbon, Iresa, Ejigbo, Ede, Iree, Iresi, Igbajo, etc. , in the West and Ilorin, Offa, Jebba, Minna, Zungeru, Zaria, Jos, Gombe, Kano, Sokoto, Bauchi, Bida, Kafanchan, Keffi, Gusau and other towns in the North. |
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Ogbomosho Baptist Church | 75,678,995 | Tragically, the 1862 Yoruba Civil War engulfed Ijaye town, leaving its First Baptist Church in ruins. This destruction propelled the First Baptist Church of Okelerin, Ogbomoso as one of the oldest standing Baptist churches in Nigeria today. |
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Ogbomosho Baptist Church | 75,678,995 | Founder | Driven by the spirit of faith, Thomas Jefferson Bowen, a pioneering missionary from the Southern Baptist Convention of the U.S., planted the seeds of Christianity in Nigeria by establishing the church in Ogbomoso in 1855. This bold step, undertaken during the reign of Baale Odunaro the ruler of Ogbomoso then, marked a turning point in the religious landscape of the region. |
Ogbomosho Baptist Church | 75,678,995 | Schools | Nurturing young minds and fostering faith, the church proudly operates two schools in Ogbomoso: Okelerin First Baptist Church Nursery and Primary School, and Premier Baptist Academy. Additionally, their commitment to higher education extends to Bowen University in Osun State, where they stand as a pillar of financial support. |
Dawlis Mill–Spring Mills Historic District | 75,678,999 | The Dawlis Mill–Spring Mills Historic District is a 134-acre (54 ha) historic district located at 525 and 530 NJ 31 in the townships of East Amwell and West Amwell in Hunterdon County, New Jersey, United States. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on October 27, 2004, for its significance in architecture, commerce, industry, and settlement. The district includes six contributing buildings, two contributing sites, and one contributing object. |
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Dawlis Mill–Spring Mills Historic District | 75,678,999 | External links | |
Jamila Bio Ibrahim | 75,679,012 | Jamila Bio Ibrahim is a Nigerian medical doctor and politician who is currently serving as Nigeria's Minister of Youth. She was appointed to the position by President Bola Tinubu in September 2023. Prior to her appointment, she served as the president of the Progressive Young Women Forum (PYWF). She has also served as the Senior Special Assistant to the Kwara State Governor on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). |
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Jamila Bio Ibrahim | 75,679,012 | Early life and education | Jamila Jummai Bio Ibrahim was born on February 7, 1986. Her father is Ibrahim Isa Bio, a former minister of transportation in Nigeria, who hailed from Baruten LGA, Kwara state. She attended NEPA Staff School in New-Busse, Borgu LGA, Niger state, for her primary education. She proceeded to Federal Government Girls' College, Bwari, Abuja where she had her secondary education, and graduated in 2002. She obtained a bachelor of medicine and bachelor of surgery (M.B.B.S) from the University of Lorin in 2010, and later pursued a six-month course on health management and leadership at the University of Washington. |
Jamila Bio Ibrahim | 75,679,012 | Career | After her brief study stint in the US in 2017, Ibrahim established a non-governmental organisation (NGO) named Yon Seno Foundation in November of that same year. She was then named a member of the think-tank of the national policy summit in 2017. She volunteered on the presidential committee on the north-east initiative (PCNI) established by former President Muhammadu Buhari to serve as the primary national strategy, coordination and advisory body for all humanitarian interventions, and transformational and developmental efforts in the region. She worked with the PCNI for two years, conducting assessments of major health facilities in Maiduguri to identify gaps in manpower and mass casualty response. |
Jamila Bio Ibrahim | 75,679,012 | Career | In 2019, she served as the secretary of the subcommittee on health, women's affairs, population, and environment of the transition committee of AbdulRahman AbdulRasaq, governor of Kwara state. After completing her assignment in AbdulRasaq's transition committee, she was appointed the senior special assistant to the governor on sustainable development goals (SDGs). She became Kwara's focal person for both the National Human Capital Development Programme and the African Union Development Agency-New Partnership for Africa's Development (AUDA-NEPAD). She was also the secretary of the Kwara state "tractorisation" programme and was named the national vice president of the All Progressives Congress Young Women Forum (APC-PYWF) in June 2021. In preparation for the 2023 elections, she was appointed a member of the APC presidential campaign committee on sustainable development. |
Jamila Bio Ibrahim | 75,679,012 | Personal life | Ibrahim is the daughter of Ibrahim Bio, a former minister of transportation in Nigeria. She is an avid fan of Polo and serves as a non-executive director of the Emirates Equestrian Club in Ilorin. |
2024 ATP Hong Kong Tennis Open – Doubles | 75,679,014 | Jan-Michael Gambill and Graydon Oliver were the reigning champions from 2002, when the men's event was last held, but they have since retired from professional tennis. |
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Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Edith Helen Pratt OBE (1882 – 1959) was a British civil servant and Women's Army Auxiliary Corps and Women's Royal Air Force officer. In 1917, she received her OBE in recognition of her service during the First World War, and later achieved the rank of deputy commander. |
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Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Early life and education | Pratt was born 20 December 1882 at the family home of Prattshayes, Littleham, Devon. She attended Southlands School, Exmouth, which carries a blue plaque for her. Educated at Girton College, Cambridge, she gained her BA (Hons) from the University of London in 1905. Between 1909 and 1917, she was a teacher of modern languages and philosophy. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Service during First World War | During the First World War, Pratt held the posts of Staff Inspector of National Filling Factories (August 1915 – March 1917) and Deputy Chief Controller In France for the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (March 1917 – 1918), during which time she was awarded the OBE in the first honours list in 1917. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Service during First World War | She became Deputy Commandant of the WRAF, but resigned in 1918 after mistreatment by Commandant Violet Douglas-Pennant. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Civil service and other positions | In 1920 Pratt was appointed general inspector of women's agricultural education at the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries. From 1921 to 1933 she was joint honorary secretary of the British Federation of University Women. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Civil service and other positions | She passed the bar examination in 1923. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Civil service and other positions | In the 1920s and 1930s, she published journal articles on the role of women in agriculture and campaigned for women's employment rights. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Civil service and other positions | She supported the domestic food production efforts of the Women's Land Army and the Women's Institute in World War II. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Civil service and other positions | After her retirement from the civil service, she became honorary secretary of the Associated Country Women of the World. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Death and legacy | Pratt died in London on 14 May 1959. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Death and legacy | From the 1920s, the Pratt family home, Prattshayes, had hosted camping trips for local children. Edith left Prattshayes to the National Trust in 1960, intending that it continue to be used for camping. |
Edith Helen Pratt | 75,679,023 | Death and legacy | In August 2017, the blue plaque commemorating Edith Pratt was unveiled at The Swallows Guest House, the former site of the Southlands School. The event took place exactly 100 years after news of her OBE was first published in The Times. |
Maakana Show | 75,679,059 | Maakana Show is a 3D computer-animated comedy in the Maldives directed by Yamin Rasheed. It was shown on Raaje TV. |
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Maakana Show | 75,679,059 | A’long-running animated political satire show over the use of “socially unacceptable” slang or obscene language.”, it facde censorship issues in 2019. |
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Agu (TV series) | 75,679,068 | Agu is a 2023 Nigerian Showmax Original legal television series directed by Anis Halloway, and written by Stephanie Dadet, Jemine Edukugho, Uchechukwu William, and Uche Ikejimba. The series stars Mofe Duncan, Iretiola Doyle, Nonso Odogwu, with Kanayo O. Kanayo, and Ruby Okezie, who finds themselves entangled in a court case for the murder of Jonathan, a close friend of Pius. |
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Agu (TV series) | 75,679,068 | Plot | Agu follows the lives of an estranged father, Etim Inyang, and daughter Victoria Atem as they battle on two opposing sides of the law. When a murder case is presented before the judge. Which raises the question: does witchcraft have a case in a court of law? |
Agu (TV series) | 75,679,068 | Episodes | Each episode was released weekly for six weeks, every Thursday on Showmax from 14 December 2023 to 18 January 2024. |
Agu (TV series) | 75,679,068 | Premiere and release | The series premiered on 14 December 2023 and was released to over 50 African countries via Showmax. |
2024 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship | 75,679,071 | The 2024 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship is scheduled to be the 94th staging of the All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1928. The championship is scheduled to run from 23 March to June 2024. |
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2024 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship | 75,679,071 | Clare wil be the defending champions. |
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2024 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship | 75,679,071 | Format change | On 30 September 2023, Special Congress voted to make some structural changes to the All-Ireland series, resulting in the creation of two new rounds of games. The preliminary quarter-finals will be played between the third and fourth-placed teams in Munster and Leinster, with the two teams from each province playing each other. The winners of those games advance to the All-Ireland quarter-finals against the beaten Munster and Leinster finalists. That draw will be subject to the avoidance of repeat pairings where possible. The Munster and Leinster champions progress straight into the All-Ireland semi-finals. |
PMSS Kashmir | 75,679,092 | PMSS Kashmir is the lead ship of the Kashmir-Class of Multipurpose Patrol Vessels (MPVs) that was commissioned on 20 July 2018 at Haungpu Shipyard, Guangzhou, China and was formally inducted into Pakistan Maritime Security Agency Fleet as part of OSRON-26 Squadron on 7 September 2018. This ship has been designed by China State Shipbuilding Corporation (CSSC)'s marine engineering subsidiary 708 Research Institute. It has been built by Huangpu Wenchong Shipbuilding in the Chinese city of Guangzhou. The second ship of the Kashmir-class patrol vessel, PMSS Kolachi was built locally by Karachi Shipyard and Engineering Works (KS&EW) with assistance from CSSC as part of a technology transfer agreement. It is one of six PMSA patrol vessels to be built under the agreement. The five other ships include Kolachi's near identical sister and the four smaller 600-tonne vessels of the Hingol-class. PMSS Kashmir is capable of undertaking multifarious missions such as surveillance, policing, anti-smuggling and anti-poaching operations, security and law-enforcement patrolling in maritime zones, pollution monitoring and control and search and rescue operations while operating independently or as part of a task force in a multi-threat environment for extended duration at sea due to having that capability of replenishment and shipboard helicopter operations. |
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2024 Brisbane International – Women's doubles | 75,679,108 | Hsieh Su-wei and Barbora Strýcová were the reigning champions from 2020, when the event was last held, but Strýcová has since retired from professional tennis. Hsieh partners Elise Mertens. |
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2024 Brisbane International – Women's doubles | 75,679,108 | Seeds | All seeds received a bye into the second round. |
Majid Vahid Barimanlou | 75,679,149 | Majid Vahid Barimanlou (Persian: مجید وحید بریمانلو; born 2 July 2000) is an Iranian Kurash And Judoka. |
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Majid Vahid Barimanlou | 75,679,149 | He participated at the 2023 World Kurash Championships winning a silver medal. He won a silver medal at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.. She won a silver medal at the World c'ship. |
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Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences | 75,679,154 | The Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences (ZAS) is a national academy of sciences in Zimbabwe, formed in 2004 by the Research Council of Zimbabwe (RCZ). It addresses subjects such as tropical resources, ecology, and environmental and climate studies. The academy is affiliated with the InterAcademy Partnership and the Network of African Science Academies. |
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Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences | 75,679,154 | History | ZAS was established in October 2004 after the RCZ conducted a study of global science academies. The RCZ held discussions with existing professional bodies to discuss the need for a national science academy in Zimbabwe. The formation of ZAS was supported by policymakers consulted by the foundation committee. |
Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences | 75,679,154 | History | By 2005, ZAS 10 fellows and 25 members, makinga total of 35 scientists. The academy was seeking funding from various sources, including the government, the private sector, and international donors. |
Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences | 75,679,154 | Objectives | ZAS's objectives include promoting scientific research in Zimbabwe and the region, providing advice on science-related issues, fostering cooperation among scientists and scientific institutions, recognising contributions to science and society, and disseminating scientific knowledge. |
Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences | 75,679,154 | Activities | ZAS conducts activities to achieve its objectives, such as organising scientific events, publishing scientific literature, participating in scientific networks, providing scientific advice, recognising scientists and researchers with awards, and promoting science education and outreach programs. |
Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences | 75,679,154 | Publications | ZAS publishes the Zimbabwe Journal of Science and Technology, a peer-reviewed journal that covers science and technology, including natural, applied, and social sciences, as well as engineering and mathematics. ZAS also produces the Zimbabwe Science News, a quarterly newsletter that includes news, events, and activities of ZAS and its members, and articles on current scientific issues. |
Zimbabwe Academy of Sciences | 75,679,154 | Membership | Current members of the ZAS include Christopher Magadza, David Simbi, Christopher Chetsanga, Francisca Mutapi and Idah Sithole-Niang. |
Júlio Maria dos Reis Pereira | 75,679,156 | Júlio Maria dos Reis Pereira ComIH (1 November 1902 – 17 January 1983), was a Portuguese painter and poet. He is better known by the two pseudonyms he used: Júlio, as a painter; and Saul Dias as a poet. He was an important artist of the second generation of Portuguese Modernism. His art features a strong expression of lyricism and artistic explorations that could be connected with the expressionist and surrealist movements. |
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