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ቅዱስ ኣቡነ እንጦንዮስBold text
ቅዱስ ኣቡነ እንጦንዮስ(abune Antonio’s
''' is the third and current Patriarch of the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church.
Abune Antonio’s is the only and right Patriarchatus of the Eritrea Orthodox Church.Even after his very,illegal revomal from the church by the Eritrean government in Jan 13,2006,every 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 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 of Eritrea.
References
Date of birth missing (living people)
Living people
21st-century Oriental Orthodox archbishops
Eritrean Oriental Orthodox Christians
Patriarchs of Eritrea |
Khosrow's Palace (Persian: کاخ خسرو) is 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 listed among the national heritage sites of Iran with the number 32 on 16 September 1931.
References
Tourist attractions in Kermanshah Province
Palaces in Iran |
The following is a list of events and releases that happened in 2022 in African music.
Events
Albums released in 2021
Deaths
February 15 – Vivi l'internationale, 75–76, Beninese singer
February 23 – Riky Rick, 34, South African rapper (suicide)
See also
2022 in music
References
Africa
African music
2022 in Africa |
Sidi Boulabra is a site that the Moroccan government has been considering building a nuclear plant since 1983. The site is located near the town of Sidi Ishaq, between Safi and Essaouira in the Essaouira province of Morocco.
History
The Moroccan government has 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 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.
References
Energy in Morocco
Nuclear technology |
Rapa Thompson Ricky is a Ugandan entrepreneur and businessman. He is the co-founder and director of Safe Boda, a ride hailing mobile application that links the user to nearby available motorcycle taxi operators. Forbes named Rapa 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 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 the moment operates in Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya and Nigeria. Through Safe Boda, motorcycle taxi operators have come to embrace and incorporate technology in their businesses.
In 2018, Rapa was named by forbes as one of the most promising young entrepreneurs in Africa for the year 2018. He was also the recipient of the 2017 young achievers Award for business from “Reach a hand Uganda”.
References
External links
www.safeboda.com
Living people |
Mshewa is an administrative ward in Same District of Kilimanjaro Region in Tanzania. The ward covers an area of , and has an average elevation of . According to the 2012 census, the ward has a total population of 6,154.
References
Wards of Same District
Wards of Kilimanjaro Region |
Hans Alfred von Eulitz (13 September 1866 - 28 November 1945) was a Saxon officer who served during World War I.
Life
He was born on 13 September 1866 in Kingdom of Saxony. He entered the military in 1886 as a Second-Lieutenant. In 1893, he was promoted to Premier Lieutenant, Hauptmann in 1899, Major in 1906, and Oberstleutnant in 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 to Generalmajor. During the meeting with Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff, he said that armistice was necessary. And on 4 July 1919, he retired from the army.
References
1866 births
1945 deaths
German Army generals of World War I
German untitled nobility
Major generals of Prussia |
The 2004 Letran Knights men's basketball team represented Colegio de San Juan de Letran in the 80th season of the National Collegiate Athletic Association in the Philippines. The men's basketball tournament for the school year 2004-05 began on June 26, 2004, and the host school for the season was University of Perpetual Help System DALTA.
The Knights, the Season 79 champions, finished 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 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 Pinoy Central
References
Letran Knights men's basketball team seasons |
Ashaghy Meydan or Torpag Meydany (in Azerbaijani - "Lower Square", "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 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 of Ashaghy Mekhelle (“Lower Quarter”). It was connected with the Yukhari Govhar Agha Mosque through the Ashaghy Bazaar Street. It had a flat relief, large sizes, a shopping complex was placed on it. Considering these factors, E. Avalov notes that Ashaghy Meydan was one of the oldest squares in the city and for a long time it was one of the main public and shopping centers of Shusha.
References
Literature
Squares in Azerbaijan
Shusha |
Anabin is a database of the German government that provides information about the accreditation and acceptance of foreign 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 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 are accredited on a case to case-basis and offers degrees that are equivalent to the German education standard and others that are not.
Practical implications might be that a German hospital may only hire and have working a medical professional with an accredited education from an accredited institution. The database is also a reference for public employees with foreign degrees to confirm their eligibility for higher positions. The database is also the first reference for applicants of a Blue Card. If individuals are unsure about the status of their degree they can request an official evaluation of their degree.
References
Academia Europaea
Accreditation
Accreditation organizations
Databases |
Antoniotto Adorno may refer to the following:
Antoniotto I Adorno (1340 – 1398), Doge of the Republic of Genoa (1378, 1384-1390, 1391-1392, 1394-1396)
Antoniotto II Adorno ( 1479 – 1528), Doge of the Republic of Genoa (1522-1527) |
ESSA-I may refer to:
ESSA-1, the first ESSA satellite
ESSA-9, the ninth ESSA satellite |
Francisco de Lima e Silva (8 July 1785 – 2 December 1853) was a Brazilian military officer and politician who served twice as regent of the Empire of Brazil during the minority of emperor Pedro II.
Biography
Lima e Silva was the son of field marshal José Joaquim de Lima e Silva, commander of the Order of Aviz, and Joana Maria da Fonseca Costa. Among his brothers were José Joaquim de Lima e Silva, who became the viscount of Majé, and Manuel da Fonseca Lima e Silva, who became the baron of Suruí.
Lima e Silva joined the army at the age of five, as was the tradition 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 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 the Equator. He also received the Grand Cross of the Imperial Order of the Cross.
References
Citations
Bibliography
Regents of Brazil
1785 births
1853 deaths |
Gohad State or Kingdom of Gohad also known 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 forts are 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. Kirat Singh exchange territory of Gohad with Dholpur.
Rulers
Singhandev II (1505-1518)
Devi Singh (1524-1535)
Udyaut Singh (1535-1546)
Anup Singh (1546-?)
Shambhu Singh (?-1604)
Abhaychandra (1604-1628)
Ramchandra (1628-1647)
Ratan Singh (1647-1664)
Uday Singh (1664-1685)
Bagh Raj (1685-1699)
Gaj Singh (1699-1704)
Jaswant Singh (1704-1707)
Bhim Singh Rana (1707-1756)
Girdhar Pratap Singh (1756-1757)
Chhatar Singh (1757-1785)
Kirat Singh (1803-1805)
See also
Dholpur State
References
External links
Gateways of Gohad Fort
History of India
Jat
Hindus |
Mhezi is an administrative ward in Same District of Kilimanjaro Region in Tanzania. The ward covers an area of , and has an average elevation of . According to the 2012 census, the ward has a total population of 4,790.
References
Wards of Same District
Wards of Kilimanjaro Region |
James Justin 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 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 1969 and worked for a Hamden engineering consulting firm until his death. He and his wife, Lois Mellor Casey, had co-owned a card shop in Madison for seven years prior to his death. Casey died at the Veterans Home and Hospital in Rocky Hill after a brief illness. He had a son and five daughters daughters with his first wife, Anne Serafini.
References
1926 births
1989 deaths
People from Winchester, Connecticut
People from Winsted, Connecticut
20th-century American politicians
Connecticut Democrats
Connecticut Comptrollers
Mayors of places in Connecticut |
Claude Lorin, born June 25, 1949 in Saint-Cloud, is a French psychologist and academic. He is an honorary professor of clinical and pathological psychology at the 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 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 Pèlerin were the subject of publications called respectively Listening to your child (1985) and Psychology of the child and of the adolescent (1990). He also participated in various television chronicles such as Femme-Femme, Le Jour du Seigneur and C'est pas Juste, animated by Vincent Perrot.
Awards and recognitions
Lorin was awarded the Gold Medal of the French Ministry of the Interior for his dedication to the hospitals in the public health system. In 2018 he was honored with the Knight of the National Order of Merit by the President of the French Republic. Due to his continued significant contribution to the field of psychology, Lorin was awarded the Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters in 2021.
References
1949 births
French psychologists
French academics
Living people
People from Saint-Cloud |
Vice Admiral Hans Viktor Simonsson (3 August 1880 – 16 July 1965) was a senior Swedish Navy officer. He served as head of the Military Office of the Naval Defence (1933–1938) and as Commanding Admiral of the South Coast Naval District (1938–1942) and of the East Coast Naval District (1942–1945). Simonsson was one of the founders of the Swedish Submarine Service.
Early life
Simonsson was born on 3 August 1880 in Holm Parish, Mellerud Municipality, Sweden, the son of Viktor Simonsson, a traffic director, and his wife Hanna Forssman. Simonsson became a sea cadet in 1895.
Career
Simonsson was commissioned as a naval officer in 1901 with the rank of underlöjtnant. He underwent submarine school in 1907 on Sweden's first submarine, Hajen which was completed in 1904 and delivered in 1905 delivered. Then followed many years of commands of ships and division commander on submarines of various types. He attended the Royal Swedish Naval Staff College from 1907 to 1909 and served as adjutant there between 1909 and 1913. Simonsson was commander of the submarines number 2 and 3 during the years 1909 and 1910 and division and ship commander of the submarine from 1912 to 1914, during which time he was also head of "Stockholm's Submarine Contingency". In 1913 he was sent to La Spezia, Italy to take part in trials with Fiat-type submarines.
During the entire World War I, or the years 1914–1918, he was division and ship commander on the submarine Svärdfisken, a naval command that uninterrupted lasted for forty-seven months. In 1914 he also assisted in certain investigations concerning the navy and was later that year appointed a member of a commission to investigate the question of the choice of new submarine types. He also published his opinions and assessments regarding the requirements for submarine types suitable for the Swedish Navy in print (1916). He was also an expert on the Submarine Service in the Swedish Defence Commission (Försvarsberedningen) in 1914 and in the committee in 1914 and 1916. His great tactical as well as ship and weapon technical insights were also used when it came to the choice and construction of Swedish submarine classes from Hajen II to Sjölejonet.
Simonsson was head of the Torpedo Department in Karlskrona from 1919 to 1923 and was promoted to lieutenant commander in 1920. He was made a member of the Royal Swedish Naval Materiel Administration and appointed head of its Torpedo Department in 1923, serving in this position until 1929, during which time he was promoted to commander in 1925. He served as Inspector of the Submarine Service from 1928 to 1933 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 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 Polar Star
Burials at Galärvarvskyrkogården |
This was the first edition of the women's event.
Qualifier Anzhelika Isaeva won her first pro title, defeating top seed Greet Minnen after the latter retired in the final after the first set.
Seeds
Draw
Finals
Top half
Bottom half
References
Main Draw
Nur-Sultan International Tournament - Singles |
This was the first edition of the women's event.
Ekaterina Makarova and Linda Nosková won the title, defeating Anna Sisková and Maria Timofeeva in the final, 6–2, 6–3.
Seeds
Draw
Draw
References
Main Draw
Nur-Sultan International Tournament - Doubles |
Ram Pravaesh Thakur is an Indian police 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, Grey Hounds, Sattenapalli sub-divisions, later as ASP Warangal district till 1992. He was promoted as Superintendent of Police and worked as SP of West Godavari, Kadapa, Krishna, Warangal districts and later as DCP west zone in Hyderabad till 2000.
He was 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 Prawesh Thakur appointed as a member of the Commissionerate of Inquiries on 5 September 2021.
References
Living people
Andhra Pradesh Police
Indian police officers
All India Services |
Odyssey: Solo Works is a six-CD album by Bill Dixon. It was recorded from 1970 to 1992 at a variety of locations, and was self-released in limited quantities in 2001, with distribution by Triple Point Records. The sixth disc contains commentary by Dixon on his music and life. The album also includes two booklets, one containing interviews and essays, and the other containing reproductions of some of Dixon's paintings.
Reception
In a review for AllMusic, Steve Loewy wrote: "While five hours of solo trumpet is exhausting to hear... there is no denying Dixon's original voice, individual style, and astonishing technique. Space plays an important role in his sound, the trumpeter knowing when to harness the power of silence. Purity of sound is another important element, Dixon's pristine tone a pure pleasure. Dixon occasionally adds reverb, giving his notes a slight echo. Other distinguishing characteristics include his use of the full range of the horn, from 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 Bill Dixon.
Disc 1
"When Winter Comes" – 8:15
"Webern Work / Study" – 1:14
"Tracings II" – 1:22
"The Long Walk" – 7:44
"Momenti" – 2:42
"Stanza" – 5:00
"I See Your Fancy Footwork – 1" – 8:05
"I See Your Fancy Footwork – 2" – 5:28
"I See Your Fancy Footwork – 3" – 2:52
"Mosaic" – 0:43
"Albert Ayler" – 0:59
"Summerdance For Judith Dunn – Pt. One" – 8:28
"Tracings" – 9:00
"The Long Line" – 5:44
"Swirls" – 2:29
Disc 2
"Requiem For Booker Little" – 5:07
"Masques I" – 8:38
"The End Of Silence" – 0:59
"Odyssey/Interruptus" – 5:35
"Murmurs" – 6:46
"Flame" – 3:09
"Meta-pedal" – 6:11
"Elegantissmo" – 9:51
"Changes" – 2:54
"Dominoes" – 2:52
"Pyramide" – 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, tracks 7–9)
Leslie Winston – keyboards (disc 2, track 8)
References
2001 albums
Bill Dixon albums |
Dan Ožvolda (born 11 October 1996) is a Czech professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for 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 on 12 February 2022 at na Sihoti against AS Trenčín. He completed the entirety of the 3–0 defeat, following a first half penalty goal by Jakub Kadák and two second-half strikes by Eduvie Ikoba.
He scored his first goal for the Žiar nad Hronom-based club against reigning champions Slovan Bratislava on 19 February 2022 during a 3-4 home defeat. While Pohronie was up by three at half-time following Ožvolda's third-minute goal and two penalty strikes by former Slovak international Jaroslav Mihalík, Pohronie lost the game and Ožvolda was replaced by Ladji Mallé after 83 minutes.
References
External links
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 Slovakia |
Steve Davidson is an American science fiction 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: 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 Best of Amazing Stories: The 1931 Anthology (2020) with Stine
References
External links
Davidson, Steve, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
Living people
Science fiction editors
Science fiction fans
American speculative fiction editors
Male speculative fiction editors
1958 births |
Javad Bushehri (Persian: جواد بوشهری), also known as Amir Homayun, (1893–1972) was an Iranian businessman and statesman who held several government posts. In addition, he served at the Majlis and 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 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 in that his nephew, Mehdi Bushehri, was the third husband of Princess Ashraf, sister of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. He died in 1972.
References
20th-century Iranian politicians
1893 births
1972 deaths
Government ministers of Iran
Members of the Senate of Iran
People of Pahlavi Iran
20th-century Iranian businesspeople
People from Bushehr
Agriculture ministers of Iran
Iranian governors |
Vertex United is an Ukrainian business group owned by Boris Kaufman and Alexander Granovskiy. 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 focus.ua) from the media holding UMH group. Until recently, Boris Kaufman and Oleksandr Granovsky controlled the Odessa RIAK TV channel, but, according to some sources, sold it to the former mayor of Odessa, Oleksiy Kostusev.
FC Chornomorets Odesa
From January 1, 2022, Vertex United is owner of the football club Chornomorets from Odesa. On January 9, 2022, the company's representative Volodymyr Heninson took part in a press conference of the club's new head coach Roman Hryhorchuk.
References
External links
Holding companies of Ukraine |
Pseudolucinisca is a genus of bivalves in the subfamily Leucosphaerinae belonging to the family Lucinidae.
Species
Pseudolucinisca japonica (Habe, 1958)
Pseudolucinisca kantori Glover & J. D. Taylor, 2016
Pseudolucinisca lacteola (Tate, 1897)
Pseudolucinisca wami Glover & 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
Lucinidae
Bivalve genera |
Zaur Gekkiyev (; born February 12, 1961, Lashkuta, Kabardino-Balkarian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 6th, 7th and 8th State Dumas.
In 2002 Gekkiyev was granted a Candidate of Economic Sciences degree. In 2000 he was appointed the Deputy Head of Administration of Nalchik. In 2002–2003, he was a Minister of Resorts and Tourism of the Kabardino-Balkaria. He was a deputy of the 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 Russian politicians
Sixth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Seventh convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Margot Bettauer Dembo (10 January 1928 - 10 July 2019) was a German-born American translator of fiction and non-fiction. She translated writing from German to English, and is known for her translations of works by Judith Hermann, Robert Gernhardt, Joachim Fest, Ödön von Horvath, Feridun Zaimoglu, and Hermann Kant. Her work has won her the Helen and Kurt Wolff Translator's Prize and the Goethe-Institut/Berlin Translator's Prize. She has translated multiple non-fiction memoirs and historical accounts of World War II, as well as several works of fiction.
Career
Dembo worked as a freelance editor and translator of works from German to English. Her editorial work included editing publications for W.W. Norton and the American Museum of Natural History.
As a translator, Dembo initially focused on works written in and about World War II, in German, especially non-fiction works and memoirs of the Holocaust. These included Jost Hermand's A Hitler Youth in Poland (1998), Ruth Elias' memoir, A Triumph of Hope: From Theresienstadt and Auschwitz to Israel (1999), Solomon Perel's Europa, Europa (1997) and Hans-Joachim Maaz's Behind the Wall – The Inner Life of Communist Germany (1995). She has translated books by Joachim Fest, Zsuzsa Bank, Kristina Dunker, Vicky Baum, Olaf G. Klein, and Anna Seghers. She also translated the scripts for two documentary films, The Restless Conscience: Resistance to Hitler Within Germany 1933-1945, which was nominated for an Academy Award in 1992, and The Burning Wall. Shorter translations by Dembo have appeared in Granta and No Man's Land.
Dembo translated writer Judith Hermann's debut book of stories, Sommerhaus, Später, and her translation won the Helen and Kurt Wolff Translator's Prize in 2003.
Biography
Dembo was born in Mannheim, Germany on 10 January 1928. Her family emigrated to the United States of America, and she lived in Toms River, in New Jersey, later moving to Ancramdale in New York state. She died on 10 July 2019, in New York.
Awards and Honors
2003 Helen and Kurt Wolff Translator's Prize for translating to English Judith Hermann's Summerhouse, later (Sommerhaus, Später)
1994 Goethe-Institut/Berlin Translator's Prize
Bibliography
Translations from German to English:
(1998) Ruth Elias, Triumph of Hope: From Theresienstadt and Auschwitz to Israel (John Wiley and Sons)
(1999) Olaf G. Klein, Aftertime (Northwestern University)
(2002) Judith Hermann, Summerhouse, Later (Ecco)
(2003) Roma Ligocka and Iris Von Finckenstein, The Girl in the Red Coat (Penguin)
(2004) Joachim Fest, Inside Hitler's Bunker:The Last Days of the Third Reich (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux)
(2005) Zsuzsa Bank, The Swimmer (Harcourt)
(2018) Anna Seghers, The Seventh Cross (New York Review of Books)
(2021) Anna Seghers, The Dead Girls' Class Trip (New York Review of Books)
References
1928 births
2019 deaths
American people of German descent
People from Mannheim
21st-century American translators |
Irai () is an Indian Tamil-language crime thriller web series produced as an Original for Aha Tamil, directed by Rajesh M. Selva. Produced by Radaan Mediaworks the series stars R. Sarathkumar in the lead role along with Nizhalgal Ravi, Abhishek Shankar, Sri Krishna Dayal and Gouri Nair. The series was based on the crime novel Birds of Prey written by Archana Sarat. The series comprised six episodes and was released on Aha Tamil on 18 February 2022.
Synopsis
ACP Robert Vasudevan investigates the mysterious disappearances of men from the city's affluent families and finds an inexplicable pattern in the abductions, leading him and his team to one common link. Upon conclusion of the investigation, only one woman is standing between Robert and justice.
Cast
R. Sarathkumar as Robert Vasudevan
Nizhalgal Ravi
Abhishek Shankar as Sivakumar
Sri Krishna Dayal as Ashok Kumar
Gouri Nair as Devi
Ravindra Vijay
Gokul Anand
Karuppu Nambiar as Manikandan
Shrisha as Anita Subramaniam
Sriranjani Prabhu
Rethika Srinivasan
Vaanmadhi
Reception
The series opened to positive reviews. Bhuvanesh Chandar of The New Indian Express rated the series with 3/5 stars, stating that, "What stands apart in this series is Sarath Kumar’s acting. The actor looks the part and is well-aware of what the role demands from him. Even in shots that can easily be tagged as ‘mass-y’, it is Robert who we see. Irai is also helped majorly by its splendid cinematography and editing. The transitions are creatively well done. If Irai goes on to tap into its enormous potential and rights its wrongs for the next season, it might just turn out to be our very own Happy Valley/Broadchurch. And we have waited long enough to deserve such content." OTTplay.com gave a rating of 2.5 out on 5 and wrote, "Irai is a web show that is appealing because of its genre and the lead. It offers viewers a crime thriller that is worth binging. However telling two stories simultaneously might throw off the audience a bit."
Episodes
References
External links
Aha (streaming service) original programming
Tamil-language web series
2022 Tamil-language television series debuts |
Vito Fabris (20 September 1954 – 10 April 2021) was an Italian basketball player. Nicknamed La Cavalla, he played several seasons in his native country, including in the top-tier Lega Basket Serie A.
Death
Fabris died on 10 April 2021 while waiting on a heart transplant.
References
1954 births
2021 deaths
Italian basketball players
People from Emilia-Romagna |
Olga Germanova (; born September 26, 1961, Peny, Belovsky District, Kursk Oblast) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 7th and 8th State Dumas.
From 1992 to 1999, she worked in the administration of the Kursk Oblast. In 1999-2009 she was Deputy Chairman of the Committee for Youth Affairs and Tourism of the Kursk Region. In 2009 she was appointed Deputy head of administration of Kursk. Simultaneously, she headed the youth headquarters of the Kursk regional branch of "United Russia". On October 14, 2012, she was elected deputy of the Kursk City Council of the 5th convocation. On November 8, 2012, Germanova was appointed the head of the Kursk City Administration. She left the post in 2016 as she was elected deputy of the 7th State Duma; she ran with the United Russia. In 2021, Germanova was re-elected for the 8th State Duma.
References
1961 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Seventh convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Anton Getta (; born April 29, 1980, Rostov-on-Don) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 7th and 8th State Dumas.
In 2005 he started his career in public service from the position of the leading specialist in the department of economic development, investment, industrial transport and communications in the administration of Tuapse. From 2008 to 2009, he headed the department of investments and project support of the Krasnodar Krai. In 2009, he moved to Moscow, where he was appointed head of the department of sectoral programs for the development of small and medium-sized enterprises under the department for the development of small and medium-sized businesses of the Ministry of Economic Development. In May 2013, he was assigned Appointed Advisor to the Minister of Transport of the Russian Federation Maksim Sokolov. He also became a member of the All-Russia People's Front, and, from 2013 to 2016, headed the anti-corruption project "For Fair Purchasing". In 2016 he was elected deputy of the 7th State Duma. In 2021, he was re-elected for the 8th State Duma from the Rostov Oblast constituency.
Awards
Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" (2019)
References
1980 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Seventh convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Dinar Gilmutdinov (; born August 10, 1969, Chebykovo, Mishkinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 8th State Duma.
In 1991, he started working as an inspector of the road patrol service. In 1996, he was appointed as a deputy head of the Main Directorate for Traffic Safety in Ufa. From 2005 to 2021, he was the chief of the UGIBDD of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Bashkortostan. He left the post in 2021 to become a deputy for the 8th State Duma from the Bashkortostan constituency.
References
1969 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Christine Gordon (born 16 May 1978) is a Hong Kong rugby union player. She represented Hong Kong at the 2017 Women's Rugby World Cup in Ireland, it was Hong Kong's first-ever World Cup appearance. She started in their game against New Zealand at Number 8.
Rugby Career
Gordon has represented Hong Kong in sevens and fifteens. She competed at the 2014 Hong Kong Women's Sevens. She was later selected in Hong Kong's squad for the 2014 Asia Women's Four Nations in May. Gordon was named in Hong Kong's sevens team in 2015, for a qualifier tournament in Ireland as they sought for one of two core team spots that was up for grabs. The winners would be one of the core teams in the 2015–16 Sevens Series.
She featured at the 2016 Hong Kong Women's Sevens, scoring a try in their match against Thailand. In 2017, she was named in the training squad ahead of their Sevens Series Qualifier. Gordon started in both of Hong Kong's matches against Japan at the Asian Championships a month before their World Cup debut.
References
1978 births
Living people
Hong Kong people
Hong Kong rugby union players
Hong Kong female rugby union players
Hong Kong female rugby sevens players |
Andrey Gimbatov (; born July 19, 1979, Volgograd) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 8th State Duma.
Gimbatov started his political career in 2007 when he was appointed the Deputy Chairman of the Land Resources Committee of the Volgograd Administration. Afterwards, he served as the head of the Volgograd Research Institute of Mechanical Engineering Technology. From 2016 to 2021, he was a deputy of the Volgograd Regional Duma. In 2019–2021, he was the first vice-chairman of the Volgograd Regional Duma. Since September 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma from the Volgograd Oblast constituency.
References
1979 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Rudolph Aronson (April 8, 1856February 4, 1919) was an American impresario and composer who was most notable for founding the Casino Theatre in New York City.
Biography
Early life and education
Aronson was born on April 8, 1856, in New York City to German immigrants. At age six, Aronson started playing piano while attending Grammar School No. 35. Aronson later attended the Packard Business College, looking to have a business career, but his music teacher Leopold von Meyer saw his potential in a music career, persuading his parents to start his education on violin and music theory.
On July 8, 1870, Aronson attended his first concert along with his brother Joseph at the Academy of Music which was under the direction of Patrick Gilmore. One of the composers included in the concert, was Johann Strauss II, who would largely influence Aronson to pursue composing.
At age sixteen, Aronson composed his first waltz called "Arcadian", which was first performed at the Arcadian Club. The waltz was published on September 7, 1873, and was first publicly played by Theodore Thomas's orchestra at Central Park Garden.
European study trip
After the success of his waltz, Aronson felt encouraged to go to a study trip throughout Europe. Accompanied by his three sisters, Aronson left for his trip shortly after his mothers death. After arriving in Paris in 1874, Aronson became a pupil of Émile Durand at the Conservatoire de Paris where he studied harmony, counterpoint, instrumentation and musical composition for three years. While in Paris, he completed numerous compositions which most notably included the "Marche Triomphale", which was performed at the Johann Strauss Monster Concert in Berlin on June 17, 1876. In August 1876, he then travelled to Bayreuth where he experienced the first Bayreuth Festival, and later reported his experiences to the American Register of Paris.
In May 1887, upon his return from his study trip, he performed numerous of his waltzes, which were originally composed for the Centennial Exposition, at a concert in Gilmore's Garden which was organized by Patrick Gilmore.
Founding of the Casino Theatre
On a trip crossing the Atlantic Ocean back to New York, he met Charles D. Lanier to which he suggested the idea of a concert hall called the "European Concert Garden", to which Lanier proposed the name "The Metropolitan Concert Hall". They then enlisted the help of Joseph Seligman to establish the "Metropolitan Concert Company". The Metropolitan Concert Hall was constructed in 1880 by architect George B. Post and was modelled after other concert halls in Berlin and Vienna.
After his successful waltz "Sweet Sixteen", which reached several hundred thousand copies, he started evolving a plan of building the Casino Theatre, which he wanted to have the world's first roof garden on. He then went on another trip to Europe, where he visited many gardens including the Kroll's Garten in Berlin and the Volksgarten in Vienna, to gain inspiration for his roof garden.
Aronson returned to New York in April 1881, and began raising capital by suggesting the idea to establish a European Casino to multiple wealthy businessmen. He then established the "New York Casino Company", gaining its name from the Newport Casino. The building was then planned and designed by Francis H. Kimball and Thomas Wisedell, who were originally skeptical about the idea of a roof garden, arguing that the weight of the people would be too much for the roof to hold, yet Aronson persisted. After eventually convincing the architects, they found a way to construct the building and construction was started in December 1881.
In January 1882, Aronson made another trip to Europe to further gain attraction for his theatre. He at first visited Johann Strauss II and then Émile Waldteufel, who both declined upon the request to perform at his theatre.
Returning from Europe in April 1882, Aronson wanted the building to be completed as fast as possible, hurrying the architects. The building was completed on September 11, 1882, and was visited multiple times by poet Edwin Arnold who said it "was the finest example of Moorish architecture he had encountered". On October 22, 1882, the first concert was held by Maurice Grau's opera companies and an orchestra consisting of sixty musicians under Aronson's conductorship.
Later life
Aronson built and managed hotels throughout New York and Puerto Rico until his death on February 4, 1919.
References and sources
References
Sources
1856 births
1919 deaths
American composers
Impresarios
Composers from New York City
19th-century American composers
20th-century American composers
Musicians from New York City |
Zahra Khatamirad () is an Iranian-German TV presenter and journalism born on December 17, 1981 in Aachen, Germany.
Biography
Zahra Khatamirad was born into an Iranian family in Aachen, Germany. She started her activity in Iran TV in 2004. She also holds a degree in agricultural engineering from the University of Tehran and a bachelor's degree in German literature from Shahid Beheshti University. He also has two sons, Mani and Nami.
TV activity
She is an official reporter and TV Host of the IRIB with over 15 years of experience in performance, journalism, design of television programs, narration, radio anchor and interior design of TV program decor. Also she has worked as a presenter in various Iranian television programs such as: Host Simaye Khanevadeh (2015-2016), Host Shahr Avard (2013), Host Khaneh Mehr (2020), Reporter, journalist and TV host at the national Iranian television broadcasting (2009-2017), special reporter of the live broadcast of Iran's presidential election (2013-2017), reporting and journalism in cinema and TV projects in Tehran, TV host and writer of women social program Dokhtaraneh (2006-2008).
Resignation
After 15 years of activity in Iran TV, she announced her resignation from Iran TV in 2019 due to the Ukrainian plane crash and the events of November 2019 in Iran through her official Instagram page.The publication of this news became so hot that it attracted the attention of Persian language news networks such as VOA, BBC and received a lot of coverage.
References
External links
Iranian television presenters
Iranian women television presenters
1981 births
Living people
People from Aachen |
Kakkaku dam is a gravity dam located in Saitama prefecture in Japan. The dam was constructed to control flood and to supply drinking water. The catchment area of the dam is 32.1 km2. The dam impounds about 56 ha of land when full and can store 10.25 million cubic meters of water. The construction of the dam was started on 1970 and completed in 2001.
The dam is located in the Yoshida River which is a tributary of Arakawa River. Before the construction of dam, the excavation revelied that the location was covered by ocean based on the fossiles found.
References
Dams in Japan |
Maurice Douglas Burnet Smith (November 30, 1909February 21, 1985) was an England-born Canadian journalist. He began working for the Winnipeg Free Press in 1927, became a sports journalist in 1930, then served as the paper's sports editor from 1944 to 1976. He wrote a regular sports column titled "Time Out", and reported on baseball, ice hockey, curling, and Canadian football, which included coverage of 33 consecutive Grey Cup championships. He helped establish the Canadian High School Curling Championships in 1951, and was the founding president of the Manitoba Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association in 1955. In retirement, he served on the selection committees of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame and the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. He was made a life member of the Manitoba Curling Association in 1970, inducted into the Football Reporters of Canada section of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1982, and was posthumously inducted into the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame in 1987.
Early life
Maurice Douglas Burnet Smith was born on November 30, 1909, in London, England. He immigrated to Winnipeg as a youth, where he worked as a paperboy and was rewarded for his service with a gold watch at age 10. He became a copy boy for the business department of the Winnipeg Free Press in 1927, then became a sports reporter in the early 1930s. He went to Scotland in 1937, where he wrote programs for the Scottish Ice Hockey Association, and met his wife Ann McKenzie in Perth. They married on October 13, 1939, moved to Winnipeg in 1940, then Smith resumed working for the Free Press.
Sports editor
Smith became sports editor of the Free Press in 1944, succeeding Ed Armstrong who vacated the position to become city editor. Smith wrote the sports column "Time Out", and reported regularly on baseball, ice hockey, curling, and Canadian football. He followed the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and covered 33 consecutive Grey Cup championships.
In collaboration with Ken Watson and others, Smith helped establish the Canadian High School Curling Championships in 1951. Smith was the founding president of the Manitoba Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association (MSSA) in 1955, which established an annual awards banquet to honour Manitoba's athletes as of 1956. He established the "Spirit of Christmas Fund" within the Free Press sports department in 1971, as a means to help the less fortunate in Winnipeg.
Smith retired from Free Press on March 27, 1976, and was given a testimonial dinner attended by 300 sportsmen at the Winnipeg Inn. He was succeeded as sports editor by Hal Sigurdson, who stated that Smith talked him into returning to Winnipeg from Vancouver to be his successor.
Personal life
Smith had one son and one daughter, and was a resident of the St. James neighbourhood of Winnipeg. His hobbies included golf, fishing, collecting coins and stamps. He was a Freemason and a member of lodges in Perth and Winnipeg. In retirement, he served on the selection committees of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame and the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum.
While on vacation in Hawaii, Smith died from heart failure on February 21, 1985. His remains were cremated and returned to Winnipeg.
Honours and legacy
The Manitoba Curling Association made Smith a life member in 1970. He was inducted into the Football Reporters of Canada section of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1982. The MSSA established the Maurice Smith Memorial Award in December 1985, to be given to the team of the year in Manitoba sports. He was posthumously named to the honour roll of the MSSA in 1986, and inducted into the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame in 1987.
Hal Sigurdson felt that Smith's writing style was fair, and that he kept personal feelings and news judgment separate. Sigurdson wrote that, Smith was a humble person who did not talk about his own exploits, and the Smith regularly said he was the "luckiest guy in the world" to make a living in journalism.
References
1909 births
1985 deaths
20th-century Canadian journalists
Canadian Football Hall of Fame inductees
Canadian Freemasons
Canadian male journalists
Canadian sportswriters
English emigrants to Canada
Journalists from London
Journalists from Manitoba
Writers from Winnipeg |
The 2022 Thomas & Uber Cup (officially known as the TotalEnergies BWF Thomas & Uber Cup Finals 2022 for sponsorship reasons) was the 32nd edition of the Thomas Cup and the 29th edition of the Uber Cup, the biennial international badminton championship contested by the men and women's national teams of the member associations of Badminton World Federation (BWF). The tournament will be hosted at Bangkok, Thailand in the Impact Arena from 8 to 15 May 2022. This marks the third time Thailand will host the Thomas Cup, and second time for the Uber Cup.
Indonesia are the defending champions for the men's team, and China for the women's team.
Host selection
Bangkok was named as the host in November 2018 during BWF Council meeting at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where the BWF also announced the host for 18 major events, including Thomas and Uber Cup, Sudirman Cup, BWF World Championships, BWF World Junior Championships, and BWF World Senior Championships from 2019 to 2025.
Qualification
Thomas Cup
Uber Cup
Note
Draw
The draw for the tournament will be conducted on 31 March 2022, at Arnoma Grand Bangkok in Bangkok, Thailand. The 16 men and 16 women teams will be drawn into four groups of four.
For the Thomas Cup draw, the teams were allocated to three pots based on the World Team Rankings of 22 February 2022. Pot 1 contained the top seed Indonesia (which were assigned to position A1), the second seed Japan (which were assigned to position D1) and the next two best teams, Denmark and Chinese Taipei. Pot 2 contained the next best four teams, and Pot 3 was for the ninth to sixteenth seeds.
A similar procedure will be applied for the Uber Cup draw, where top seed Japan (will be assigned to position A1), the second seed, South Korea (will be assigned to position D1), China and Thailand were in Pot 1.
Thomas Cup
Uber Cup
Tiebreakers
The rankings of teams in each group were determined per BWF Statutes Section 5.1, Article 16.3:
Number of matches won;
Match result between the teams in question;
Match difference in all group matches;
Game difference in all group matches;
Point difference in all group matches.
Thomas Cup
Uber Cup
References
External links
Tournament Link
Official Website – Thomas & Uber Cup
Qualification
International sports competitions hosted by Thailand
Thomas and Uber
Badminton tournaments in Thailand
Thomas & Uber Cup |
The Pune District Council ( Pune Jilla Parishad ) there are 13 Panchayat Samiti and 1408 Gram panchayat Functioning Under the Jurisdiction of Pune Zilla Parishad.
History
Zilla Parishad Pune was established in 1962 along with 13 Panchayat Samiti. In the year 2012, Pune Zilla Parishad was awarded ISO 9001:2008 certified.
Administration
Committees
Panchayat Samiti
Currently there are Tharteen Panchayat Samiti under jurisdiction Zilla Parishad Pune.
Jilla Parishad elections
Elections 2017
Jilla Parishad elections were held in February 2017 to elect a total 75 district council constituencies. The NCP won 44 seats and came to power in the Jilla Parishad. Vishwas Nana Deokate (NCP) and Vivek Walse-Patil (NCP) were elected as the ZP President and ZP Vice President respectively
Bypolls 2020
On 20 January 2020 General meeting of Zilla Parishad was held under the chairmanship of District Collector. As no application was received from the Opposition at that time, Nirmala Pansare was declared as the Zilla Parishad President and Ranjit Shivtare was elected as the ZP Vice President without any objection
References
External links
of Pune ZP.
Pune district
Government agencies established in 1962
Government of Pune |
João Pedro de Moura Siembarski (born 8 February 2002), known as João Pedro, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Athletico Paranaense.
Club career
Born in São Miguel Arcanjo, São Paulo, João Pedro was an Athletico Paranaense youth graduate. He made his first team debut on 1 September 2021, coming on as a second-half substitute for Fernando Canesin in a 1–1 Campeonato Paranaense home draw against FC Cascavel.
Career statistics
Honours
Athletico Paranaense
Copa Sudamericana: 2021
References
External links
Athletico Paranaense profile
2002 births
Living people
Sportspeople from São Paulo (state)
Brazilian footballers
Association football midfielders
Campeonato Paranaense players
Club Athletico Paranaense players |
An Irish dresser (Hiberno English), sometimes known as a kitchen dresser, is a piece of wooden Irish vernacular furniture consisting of open storage or cupboards in the lower part, with shelves and a work surface, and a top part for the display of crockery, but also any objects of monetary or sentimental value.
History
The Irish dresser is distinct from the Welsh dresser as it is traditionally one piece, rather than two pieces (the top and bottom sections), and would have cupboards or an area of open storage in the base. The open area at the bottom would consist of 1 or 2 open cupboards, at times with a central upright. The dressers were typically made of pine and earlier ones were stained. As bright colour gloss paint became more easily available in the 20th century, dressers were often painted and repainted frequently. The inside shelves of the top part were generally painted a different, lighter colour, to further highlight the objects on display. In some kitchens, the dresser was constructed in the room as a piece of built-in furniture with some dressers back boards forming part of the wall behind. In other examples, the dresser worked as a room divider, or was used as a structural support for a loft space above. Dressers were often a gift from the groom to the bride upon marriage, either made or purchased by the groom. Before the construction of these wooden dressers from the late 1700s onwards, traditional Irish houses would have had stone shelves which were built into the walls of the house. Some shelves were made using slate and had wooden doors.
According to the National Museum of Ireland, the Irish dresser was traditionally the most important item of domestic furniture in homes in Ireland. It was used to display the status and wealth of the family through the display of items, primarily ceramic objects known in Ireland as "Delph" or "ware". In the 1700 and 1800s it was common for some households to be so poor as to not have any eating utensils at all, so the display of all the household's utensils and crockery in a dresser denoted a higher status to all those who saw it. Even damaged objects would be kept and retained, with some repaired by "tinkers", primarily from the Irish Traveller community. The shelves, with bars to hold the plates in place, were in varying heights to allow for the display of plates from large serving platters down to saucers, while maximising the light thrown onto the reflective surfaces of the plates and minimising the dust and dirt that could accumulate on them. In the southern areas of Ireland, the large plates would be stored on the bottom shelf, but in the north the order was reversed with the largest plates displayed on the top shelf. Dressers would have between 2 and 4 shelves, which would feature wooden moulding, or if the household could not afford that it was substituted with paper or oil cloth cut and draped over the edge of the shelf. Early dressers were more likely to have open storage at the bottom, which would have held containers of milk, butter, and fresh water. The earlier forms of the dresser would feature feet known as sleigh, shoe or boot feet. These feet helped to spread the weight of the dresser, especially on uneven earthen floors. Attached by dovetails, these feet could be removed if the rotted away in the potentially damp conditions of Irish farm houses. The feet show an influence from English and Scottish planted settlers in Ireland, and it primarily found in the northern parts of Ireland.
In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the dressers were used less as functional pieces of kitchen storage for everyday use, and were used more to display souvenirs and other sentimental objects. The use of the traditional Irish dresser fell into steep decline with the adoption of built-in modern kitchens in Irish homes from the 1970s onwards.
Variations
Coop dresser
The coop dresser was a variation of the Irish dresser, in which the bottom section was used to hold hens or other fowl. Keeping the fowl indoors kept the birds at a warmer temperature ensuring a supply of eggs year round or to protect them from predators. The section to hold the birds often featured a slatted structure as an enclosure.
Hanging dresser
The hanging dresser was a precursor to the full dresser, and in poorer homes was a smaller, more affordable piece of furniture. The hanging dresser consisted of just the top part of the full dresser, hung from a wall with no lower storage. It was sometimes called a cup rack, tin rail, tin rack or just the rack. Some, more elaborate hanging dressers, featured fretwork, and drawers mimicking the full size dresser, with simpler versions more akin to a rack to hand items from. These kept more delicate and expensive pieces of homeware safe and on display.
See also
Hoosier cabinet
Hutch (furniture)
Sideboard
References
External links
The Irish Dresser Project
Furniture
Serving and dining |
Hugh Niblock (September 1949 – 18 February 2022) was a Northern Irish Gaelic footballer who played for club sides Magherafelt and St. Gall's and at inter-county level with the Derry senior football team. He usually lined out as a forward.
Career
Niblock first played Gaelic football at juvenile and underage levels with the Magherafelt club. He progressed onto the club's senior team and won a Derry SFC title in 1975, in what was the club's first ever championship success at inter-county level. Niblock first appeared for the Derry minor football team in 1967 before later joining the under-21 side. As a member of the Derry senior football team, he won Ulster Championship titles in 1970 and 1975. Niblock subsequently became involved with the St. Gall's club in Belfast.
Personal life and death
Niblock was born in Magherafelt in September 1949. His family had a strong association with sport, with his uncle, Frank Niblock, lining out for Derry when they won the National League in 1947. Niblock's brother, Mickey, was a contemporary on the Derry team, while his nephew, David Niblock, won a Munster Championship title with Cork. Niblock qualified as a teacher and spent the majority of his working life in St Patrick's College in Belfast.
Niblock died on 18 February 2022, at the age of 72.
Honours
Magherafelt
Derry Senior Football Championship: 1978
Derry
Ulster Senior Football Championship: 1970, 1975
References
1949 births
2022 deaths
Magherafelt Gaelic footballers
St Gall's Gaelic footballers
Derry inter-county Gaelic footballers
Gaelic football forwards |
Pseudomphalus is a monotypic genus of large, air-breathing land snails, pulmonate gastropods in the subfamily Rhytidinae of the family Rhytididae.
Species
Pseudomphalus megei (Lambert, 1873): endemic to New Caledonia.
References
External links
Hausdorf B. (2013). Revision of the endemic genera Diplomphalus and Pseudomphalus from New Caledonia (Gastropoda, Rhytididae). Zoosystema. 35(1): 69-88.
Rhytididae |
Stephen Krecklo is a Canadian musician. He is most noted as a two-time Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Original Score, receiving nods at the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020 for James vs. His Future Self and at the 10th Canadian Screen Awards in 2022 for Between Waves.
His other credits have included the films The Go-Getters, Queen of the Morning Calm and Killing Daniel. He is usually, but not always, credited in collaboration with Ian LeFeuvre.
References
External links
21st-century Canadian composers
Canadian film score composers
Canadian television composers
Musicians from Toronto
Living people |
Jacqueline Guest is a Métis writer and activist from Alberta, Canada. Guest is a literacy advocate and a writers of books for children and young adults. In 2017 she was inducted into the Order of Canada.
Selected works
Lorimer Sports Stories
Historical fiction
PathFinders series
Sam Stellar Mystery series
Tourond series
Other
Notes
References
External links
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
21st-century Canadian women writers
Canadian women children's writers
Canadian writers of young adult literature
Members of the Order of Canada
Métis writers |
Barry Levinson is a writer, director and producer.
He is known for his work in film and television. He has received various awards and nominations including six Academy Award nominations winning for Best Director for Rain Man (1988). He also received nominations for ...And Justice for All (1979), Diner (1982), Avalon (1990), and Bugsy (1991). He received three Golden Globe Award for Best Director nominations for Rain Man, Avalon, and Bugsy. He has received eleven Primetime Emmy Award nominations winning four times for his work on The Carol Burnett Show and Homicide: Life on the Street. He also received nominations for his work on various HBO television films including You Don't Know Jack (2010), Phil Spector (2013), The Wizard of Lies (2017), and Paterno (2018).
Major associations
Academy Awards
Golden Globe Awards
Primetime Emmy Awards
Guild awards
Directors Guild Awards
Producers Guild Awards
Writers Guild Awards
References
Barry Levinson |
Mekapati is an Indian family name. Notable people with the family name include:
Mekapati Rajamohan Reddy (born 1944), Indian politician
Mekapati Goutham Reddy (1971–2022), Indian politician and son of Rajamohan Reddy |
Raí da Silva Pessanha (born 21 April 2002), simply known as Raí, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Botafogo.
Club career
Born in the neighborhood of Maré, Rio de Janeiro, Raí joined Botafogo in 2015, aged 13. After impressing with the under-20s in the 2022 Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior, he made his first team debut on 30 January of that year, coming on as a late substitute for Breno in a 2–0 Campeonato Carioca home win over Bangu.
Raí scored his first senior goal on 3 February 2022, scoring his team's fourth in a 4–2 home win over Madureira.
Career statistics
References
2001 births
Living people
Footballers from Rio de Janeiro (city)
Brazilian footballers
Association football midfielders
Botafogo de Futebol e Regatas players |
Sokode is a community in the Ho municipality in the Volta region of Ghana. It is made up of five communities which include Sokode-Ando, Sokode-Etoe, Sokode-Bagble, Sokode-Gborgame and Sokode-Lokoe. The community has an estimated population of more than 40,000 people.
Institution
The main campus of the University of Health and Allied Sciences (UHAS) is located in Sokode-Lokoe.
References
Communities in Ghana |
Hostages in the Barrio () is a 1987 Spanish quinqui film directed by Eloy de la Iglesia, consisting of an adaptation of the stage play La estanquera de Vallecas by José Luis Alonso de Santos. It stars Emma Penella, José Luis Gómez, José Luis Manzano and Maribel Verdú.
Plot
After two criminals attempt to rob a tobacco retailer in Vallecas, they are trapped inside and eventually develop a sort of friendly relationship with their hostages (the clerk and her niece).
Cast
Production
An adaptation of the stage play La estanquera de Vallecas by José Luis Alonso de Santos, the screenplay was penned by , Eloy de la Iglesia and Alonso de Santos. An Ega Medios Audiovisuales production, the film was shot in Madrid in 1986. The soundtrack was composed and performed by Patxi Andión. The budget amounted to 83 million ₧.
Release
The film premiered on 9 April 1987.
Accolades
|-
| align = "center" | 1988 || 2nd Goya Awards || Best Editing || Julio Peña || || align = "center" |
|}
See also
List of Spanish films of 1987
References
1987 films
Spanish films based on plays
Spanish films
Spanish comedy-drama films
1987 comedy-drama films
Films set in Madrid
Films shot in Madrid
1980s Spanish-language films |
Barry Levinson is a director, writer, and producer known for his work in film and television
Filmography
Films
Executive producer only
Kafka (1991)
Wilder Napalm (1993)
A Little Princess (1995)
Donnie Brasco (1997)
The Perfect Storm (2000)
Analyze That (2002)
Deliver Us from Eva (2003)
Acting roles
Television
Executive producer only
Acting roles
Other works
References
Levinson, Barry |
The Chusovoy constituency (No.59) is a Russian legislative constituency in Perm Krai. Until 2007 the constituency was more compact, covering half of Perm and several rural districts to the north of the city. However, after 2015 redistricting the constituency gave several parts of Perm to Kungur constituency, while gaining districts in eastern Perm Krai.
Members elected
Election results
1993
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:#0085BE"|
|align=left|Viktor Pokhmelkin
|align=left|Choice of Russia
|
|37.49%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Zotin
|align=left|Independent
| -
|11.30%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1995
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:#3A46CE"|
|align=left|Viktor Pokhmelkin (incumbent)
|align=left|Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats
|
|25.21%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nail Salakhov
|align=left|Independent
|
|16.57%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Zotin
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|9.85%
|-
|style="background-color:#2C299A"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Reshetnikov
|align=left|Congress of Russian Communities
|
|8.06%
|-
|style="background-color:#E98282"|
|align=left|Irina Novikova
|align=left|Women of Russia
|
|6.59%
|-
|style="background-color:#D50000"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Smirnov
|align=left|Communists and Working Russia - for the Soviet Union
|
|5.44%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Stanislav Parkhomenko
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|4.60%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yelena Bacheva
|align=left|Independent
|
|3.53%
|-
|style="background-color:#CE1100"|
|align=left|Valentin Markovsky
|align=left|My Fatherland
|
|3.38%
|-
|style="background-color:#1C1A0D"|
|align=left|Aleksey Chernykh
|align=left|Forward, Russia!
|
|3.04%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Russkikh
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.41%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Noskov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.83%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Gennady Musalimov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.35%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Pozdeyev
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.29%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|8.58%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
1999
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:#1042A5"|
|align=left|Viktor Pokhmelkin (incumbent)
|align=left|Union of Right Forces
|
|22.40%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Levitan
|align=left|Independent
|
|18.27%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Lyubov Zotina
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|8.58%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Ivan Yurov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|8.47%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nina Anikina
|align=left|Independent
|
|7.98%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vitaly Zelenkin
|align=left|Independent
|
|5.60%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Durbazhev
|align=left|Independent
|
|4.35%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Belorusov
|align=left|Independent
|
|3.28%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Igor Korolev
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.21%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Ilyinykh
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.16%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Andrey Mishkin
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|1.46%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|12.70%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2003
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:#004090"|
|align=left|Viktor Pokhmelkin (incumbent)
|align=left|New Course — Automobile Russia
|
|22.34%
|-
|style="background-color:#1042A5"|
|align=left|Aleksey Chernov
|align=left|Union of Right Forces
|
|16.97%
|-
|style="background-color:#FFD700"|
|align=left|Oleg Borovik
|align=left|People's Party
|
|9.49%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anastasia Maltseva
|align=left|Independent
|
|7.33%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Mikhail Kasimov
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|7.23%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Levitan
|align=left|Independent
|
|7.01%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Kholoimov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|2.65%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Dmitry Chumachenko
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.38%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Konstantin Lezhnev
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.93%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Stanislav Otmakhov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.49%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|20.24%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2016
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Aleksey Burnashov
|align=left|United Russia
|
|45.50%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Irina Volynets
|align=left|A Just Russia
|
|10.98%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Sivtsev
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|10.08%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Gennady Storozhev
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|8.61%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Yury Pimkin
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|5.91%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Irina Sadilova
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|5.40%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Raisa Simonova
|align=left|People's Freedom Party
|
|1.93%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Stepan Podaruyev
|align=left|Rodina
|
|1.49%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksey Ruban
|align=left|Patriots of Russia
|
|1.48%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
2021
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Roman Vodyanov
|align=left|United Russia
|
|30.51%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Marina Zimina
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|17.89%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Irina Zlobina
|align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth
|
|14.69%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Postnikov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|11.40%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Aleksey Ivchansky
|align=left|New People
|
|8.24%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Aleksey Mikhaylov
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|5.93%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Svetlana Ivanova
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|2.86%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
Notes
References
Russian legislative constituencies
Politics of Perm Krai |
Pseudonatica is a genus of predatory sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Zerotulidae .
Species
Pseudonatica ampullarica Simone, 2018
Pseudonatica antarctica Simone, 2018
References
External links
Simone, L. R. L. (2018). Convergence with naticids: phenotypic phylogenetic study on some Antarctic littorinoideans, with description of the zerotulid new genus Pseudonatica, and its presence in Brazil (Mollusca, Caenogastropoda). Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. 98(6): 1365-1381
Zerotulidae |
The Mendoubia or Mandubiyya () refers to the former residence and office of the Mendoub, the representative of the Sultan of Morocco in the Tangier International Zone from 1924 to 1956. It now houses the commercial court () of Tangier. Its surrounding gardens are open to the public.
History
In the early 19th century, the consul of Sweden in Tangier acquired a villa on the hill just outside the Medina. In 1872, the newly established German Empire decided to establish a consulate in Tangier and acquired the former Swedish legate's villa which it promptly remodeled and expanded, giving the building its current appearance. The first German consul-general, , arrived in 1873. In the late 19th century, it was the only European consulate outside of the walls of the Medina quarter.
That German legation was the site of Kaiser Wilhelm II’s address on , supporting Moroccan independence and criticizing France’s encroachments, which triggered the First Moroccan Crisis. Less than a decade later, the German consul was expelled and expropriated by the French authorities in August 1914, at the outset of World War I.
From the mid-1920s, the governance of the Tangier International Zone entrusted the affairs of the Muslim and Jewish communities to a personal representative of the Sultan of Morocco known as the Mendoub. The Mendoub's office was established in the former German legation, which thus became known as the Mendoubia.
During World War II, Tangier fell under Spanish military administration. On , the Spanish authorities terminated the mandate of the Mendoub, who subsequently left the city. The next day, diplomat took possession of the building as Nazi Germany's consul. The German consulate remained there until , when the Spanish authorities, under Allied pressure, forced it to leave. Mendoub Muhammad at-Tazi returned on board the French cruiser Duguay-Trouin on .
On , Mohammed V gave a landmark address on Moroccan sovereignty in the Mendoubia's gardens, which (together with another address given the next day at the Grand Mosque of Tangier) became known as the Tangier Speech.
After Moroccan independence in 1956, the nearby Grand Socco was later renamed to commemorate that event. Following the termination of the Mendoub’s office, the palace was repurposed to become the city's commercial court. A monument was erected in its gardens, featuring the full text of the Tangier Speech. The gardens were renovated and opened to the public in the 2010s. They include a large banyan tree, said to be 800 years old.
A cemetery was established on the Mendoubia's grounds in the 19th century and remained there until 1911.
See also
Mendoub Palace (Tangier), another property of the Mendoub, in the Marshan neighborhood of Tangier
Marshan Palace, Tangier in the former building of the Tangier International Zone's Legislative Assembly, which was chaired by the Mendoub
Royal Palace of Tétouan, former seat of the Khalifa who had similar duties in the Spanish protectorate in Morocco as the Mendoub in Tangier
Notes
Palaces in Morocco
Buildings and structures in Tangier
Spanish North Africa
Tourist attractions in Tangier |
Circuladô is an album by the Brazilian musician Caetano Veloso. It was released in 1991. Circuladô was Veloso's third album to be widely distributed in the United States.
Production
The album was produced by Arto Lindsay, who also cowrote "Ela Ela". It was recorded in New York and Rio de Janeiro. "Circuladô De Fulô" was inspired by a Haroldo de Campos poem. Melvin Gibbs played bass on the album; Ryuichi Sakamoto and Gilberto Gil also contributed.
Critical reception
The New York Times praised the "mixture of pointed observation and fatalistic acceptance [that] typifies Mr. Veloso's world view ... More than a diarist or a social commentator, at his best he is a true poet." Newsday called "Santa Clara, Padroeira Da Televisão" "a stunning, satirical blend of spiritual imagery and media criticism."
The Edmonton Journal wrote that "the music on Circulado takes an impressionistic course that's more quietly experimental, working touches of jazz improvisation among the guitar and percussion lines." The Gazette stated that "there is folk, jazz, samba, bossa nova, new age and funk all rolled into one ... Sensuous and seductive, the spirit of tropicalismo is alive and well."
AllMusic wrote that "Itapuã" "is a modern elegy for the beautiful beach, where Veloso is backed by a contemporary arrangement for string quartet and rhythmic section." Stephen Holden, of The New York Times, listed Circuladô as the second best album of 1992.
Track listing
References
Caetano Veloso albums
1991 albums
Elektra Records albums |
Hasan Raheem (Urdu/) is a Pakistani singer, songwriter and rapper. He is known for his "subtle, laid-back R&B", hip hop and indie pop styles of music.
Personal life
Raheem was born in 1998. He belongs to a Shina family hailing from Gilgit, located in northern Pakistan's Gilgit-Baltistan region. He is the eldest of three siblings, born to a father who served in the Pakistan Army and a mother who is a housewife. Rahim describes himself as a "rebel" child while growing up, who had a taste for music. His first ever on-stage performance was in his fifth grade of school, when he performed a popular dance track by British-Indian musical group RDB.
Raheem moved to Karachi in order to pursue a career in medicine, graduating from the Bahria University Medical and Dental College.
Career
Raheem started writing, recording and releasing singles in 2019 while still in medical school. He began weaving melodies and lyrics together using his semi-acoustic guitar. His tracks such as "Aisay Kaisay", "Joona", "Aarzu", "Sar Phira" and "Sun Le Na" garnered millions of hits on YouTube and he quickly began to be noticed in the Pakistani music scene. In his early days, he collaborated with the Young Stunners.
In 2020, he won the Breakthrough Artist of the Year award for music at the 1st Pakistan International Screen Awards in Dubai.
He made his Coke Studio debut in season 14 in 2022, where he featured in a dance track titled "Peechay Hutt" in collaboration with Talal Qureshi and the Justin Bibis.
Artistry
Raheem's music is mainly R&B, hip hop and indie pop, with influences of soul. He has a free-flowing experimental approach to music with a "soft, mumbling rap-verse style" voice, and his lyrical style has been characterised for its simplicity; according to Raheem, he likes to pour his feelings into his music and prefers to "keep it as simple as possible so that anyone who listens to my songs can connect with them". He is also known for infusing "Gilgiti-inspired dance moves" in his music videos and occasionally incorporates lyrics in his native language, Shina, into his songs.
References
1998 births
Living people
Bahria University alumni
Pakistani pop singers
Pakistani rappers
Pakistani rhythm and blues singers
Pakistani singer-songwriters
People from Gilgit
Shina people |
Chantal Hagel (born 20 July 1998) is a German footballer who plays as a central midfielder for 1899 Hoffenheim and the Germany women's national team.
Career
Hagel made her international debut for Germany in the 2022 Arnold Clark Cup on 20 February 2022, coming on as a substitute in the 82nd minute for Fabienne Dongus against Canada. The match finished as a 1–0 loss.
Career statistics
International
References
External links
Chantal Hagel at tsg-hoffenheim.de
1998 births
Living people
People from Calw
Footballers from Baden-Württemberg
German women's footballers
Germany women's international footballers
Women's association football forwards
SC Freiburg (women) players
TSG 1899 Hoffenheim (women) players
Frauen-Bundesliga players
2. Frauen-Bundesliga players |
Boris Gladkikh (; born February 16, 1983, Olovyannaya) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 7th and 8th State Dumas.
Gladkikh started his career in public service in 2010 as he was appointed assistant to the deputy of the 5th State Duma Viktor Pleskachevsky. From 2014 to 2016, he served as a deputy of the Legislative Duma of Khabarovsk Krai. On September 18, 2016, he was elected to the 7th State Duma from the Khabarovsk constituency. In September 2021, he was re-elected for the 8th State Duma.
References
1983 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Seventh convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Jisha-ryō (寺社領) were territories controlled by Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples in Japan. Existing since the ancient times until 1875, they served as a financial foundation for the shrines and temples.
The manorial territories were governed by a daikan magistrate chosen among the clergy, and were largely independent from outside authority and taxation. However, they gradually lost their independence starting in the 16th century, and in 1875, all land outside the shrine and temple grounds were seized by the Japanese government.
History
The jisha-ryō territories originated from the shrine fields (kanda) and the temple fields (terada) in ancient times before the Taika Reform in 645. After the Taika Reform, the shrine and temple fields were granted the right of tax exemption (fuyu no ken) under the ritsuryō system and the shrines and temples were given new vassal households (futo) by the Imperial Court.
In the mid-8th century, shrines and temples developed undeveloped regions into fields establishing feudal manors under their control. However, by the 9th and 10th century, most of these initial manors lost their original form and were developed by regional magnates as a form of contribution to the shrines and temples. These new contribution-type manors would become the most common type of jisha-ryō territory along with the manorialization of the vassal households. However, by the late 11th century, income from the court-issued vassal households was ceased, and powerful shrines and temples reorganized themselves to become economically self-reliant and independent from the central government.
The shrine and temple manors were independent from provincial governors. They were granted the right of tax exemption and the right of no-entry by outside authorities (funyū no ken), and sent their clergyman to govern the territory as a daikan magistrate (azukaridokoro). Local magnates were appointed as manorial officers to manage the manor.
In the 13th century, following the example of the Imperial family and court nobility, shrines and temples implemented a system of provincial fiefdoms with state authority. The provincial fiefdoms were funded by national-like scale construction budgets, just like during the division of Suō Province as part of the reconstruction of Tōdai-ji temple.
After the 13th century, the number of manors decreased due to samurai invasions and the shitaji chūbun (physical division of land). Instead, in response to the growing monetary economy, toll fees were collected by establishing tolls at important river and port locations, gradually becoming an ordinary part of jisha-ryō.
Since the Muromachi period, manors and provincial territories decreased, and under the Oda and Toyotomi administrations, all jisha-ryō became the target of land surveying and lost their political independence. Ever since, throughout the Edo period, the jisha-ryō became shuinchi (temple territory authorized by the Edo Shorgunate) and kokuinchi (shrine and temple territory authorized by the Daimyo), and thus came under the control of the Shogunate or a Daimyo.
After the Meiji Restoration in 1875, all land owned by shrines and temples, apart from the shrine and temple grounds, were seized by the Japanese government in accordance to the 1873 Land Tax Reform.
See also
Shōen
Shake (social class)
References
Shinto shrines in Japan
Buddhist temples in Japan
Feudal Japan
Government of feudal Japan |
Exposé is an album by drummer Paul Murphy and pianist Larry Willis. It was released by Murphy Records in 2008.
Reception
In a review for All About Jazz, Lyn Horton wrote: "An improvisation this clean can only arise through expertise, confidence and vision. Murphy and Willis do not intend to throw the listener out of the park, rather have come together to deliver a message that glistens... The ease with which they construct more than take apart lends nothing but forward motion to the music... On the whole, the ride through this recording is headstrong, without deviation and is breathtakingly lyrical in several captivating instances... The music is irrevocably consistent, melodically large and often comes across as being played by a quartet rather than by a duo... A complete and fulfilling sound burns through every moment of musical time when Willis and Murphy interact instrumentally. One sure-fired stroke after another."
In a separate All About Jazz article, Francis Lo Kee commented: "On 'Titanium'... Willis and Murphy soar together before they are even a minute into the piece. When Murphy moves away from the cymbals and towards a drum that sounds like a bongo, Willis responds by getting softer and thinning out the texture: fewer notes, pointillism in sound until the piece ends with a single bongo note. Willis' lines here are very focused and the energy with which both musicians play recalls the sound of Murphy with [Jimmy] Lyons. But even one of the strongest altos on the planet could only play one note at a time; 'Night Shapes' starts out quietly, but begins to increase in energy as Willis finds two-fisted chords to urge Murphy forward. The aural hurricane by this excellent pairing of musicians is intense."
Track listing
"Titanium" – 3:40
"Exposé" – 6:02
"Liquid Dance" – 5:58
"Swing Check" – 5:33
"Labryinth" – 5:00
"Introspectus" – 4:58
"Night Shapes" – 6:08
"West Lens" – 3:37
"Deeply Embraced" – 6:44
"Soft Pursuit" – 5:16
"Exit 25" – 5:37
Personnel
Larry Willis – piano
Paul Murphy – drums
References
2008 albums
Paul Murphy (musician) albums
Larry Willis albums |
Orlee Buium is a Canadian film editor. She is most noted for the film All My Puny Sorrows, for which she and Michelle Szemberg received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Editing at the 10th Canadian Screen Awards in 2022.
The duo also won the Directors Guild of Canada's award for Best Editing in a Feature Film in 2021. She previously won the Canadian Cinema Editors Student Merit Award in 2012 for her work on Jeff Garneau's short film Young Love.
Her other credits have included the films Queen of the Morning Calm, The Corruption of Divine Providence, Run Woman Run and The Retreat.
References
External links
Canadian film editors
Canadian women film editors
Living people
Canadian Film Centre alumni |
Saiqa Akhtar, also known as Saiqa (Urdu:سائقہ) is a Pakistani actress. She acted in both Urdu and Punjabi films and is known for her roles in films Baharo Phool Barsao, Mela, Ranga Daku, Jahan Tum Wahan Hum, Ghulami, Angara and Chambaili.
Early life
Saiqa was born in 1958 on 8th September in Lahore, Pakistan. She completed her studies from University of Lahore.
Career
Saiqa made her debut as an actress in 1967 in Punjabi film Hamraz. She worked in Lollywood films. She appeared in films Jeera Blade, Taxi Driver, Rangeela, Dil Aur Duniya, Dard, Dhian Nimanian and Meri Zindagi Hay Naghma. Then she changed her name to Saiqa and later she appeared in films Tera Gham Rahay Salamat, Parda Na Uthao, Pyar Ka Mousam, Teray Meray Sapnay and Ajj Dian Kurrian. Since then she appeared in films Heera Tay Basheera, Aas Paas, Aap Say Kya Parda, Aag Ka Samundar, Aakhri Nakha and Mera Insaf. In 1970 she starred in film Rangeela with Munawar Zarif, Rangeela and Sultan Rahi the film was a hit and she won Nigar Award of Best Supporting Actress. Saiqa then stopped working in films after the decline of Pakistan Film Industry. Saiqa then started to work in dramas and appeared in dramas Laa, Raiq Zar, Bol Kaffara and Teri Raah Main.
Personal life
Saiqa married film and television actor Khayyam Sarhadi and they had three children together. Saiqa's father-in-law Zia Sarhadi was a screenwriter and her niece Zhalay Sarhadi is a model. Saiqa husband Khayyam Sarhadi died in 2011.
Filmography
Television
Film
Awards and nominations
References
External links
1958 births
20th-century Pakistani actresses
Living people
Pakistani television actresses
Nigar Award winners
21st-century Pakistani actresses
Pakistani film actresses |
Jorge Garciarce Dávila (born 29 December 2004), also known as George Garciarce, is a Mexican racing driver. He currently competes in the U.S. F2000 National Championship with Jay Howard Driver Development in 2022. Garciarce previously competed in the Italian Formula 4 Championship with Jenzer Motorsport in 2021.
Racing record
Career summary
† As Garciarce was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points.
Complete Italian F4 Championship results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
American open-wheel racing results
U.S. F2000 National Championship
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) (Races with * indicate most race laps led)
* Season still in progress.
References
2004 births
Living people
Mexican racing drivers
Formula 4 drivers
ADAC Formula 4 drivers
U.S. F2000 National Championship drivers |
Michelle Szemberg is a Canadian film editor. She is most noted for the film All My Puny Sorrows, for which she and Orlee Buium received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Editing at the 10th Canadian Screen Awards in 2022.
The duo also won the Directors Guild of Canada's award for Best Editing in a Feature Film in 2021.
Her other credits have included the films For Dorian, No Stranger Than Love, Full Out, Natasha, Below Her Mouth, Kiss and Cry and Queen of the Morning Calm, and the television series Between, Backstage and Northern Rescue.
References
External links
Canadian film editors
Canadian women film editors
Canadian television editors
Living people |
"Bam Bam" is an upcoming song by Cuban-American singer Camila Cabello, featuring vocals from English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran. It is set to be released through Epic Records as the third single from Cabello's upcoming third studio album, Familia, on March 4, 2022, a day after Cabello's 25th birthday. "Bam Bam" is a tropical-inspired pop song that marks the second collaboration between Cabello and Sheeran, following Sheeran's single, "South of the Border", which also features American rapper Cardi B, from Sheeran's fourth studio album, No.6 Collaborations Project (2019). The cover art sees Cabello sitting on a curb with ruined make up.
Release and promotion
On February 6, 2022, Cabello posted a video of her sitting in a car and lip-syncing the lyrics to "Bam Bam". She announced the song on February 21, 2022, referring to Sheeran as "one of my favorite people and artists ever". Six days later, she shared another snippet on the video-sharing app TikTok, which saw her singing in both English and Spanish.
Credits and personnel
Camila Cabello – lead vocals, songwriting
Ed Sheeran – featured vocals, songwriting
David Stewart – production, songwriting
Ricky Reed – production, songwriting
Edgar Barrera – production, songwriting
Scott Harris – songwriting
Checle Alara – songwriting
References
2022 singles
2022 songs
Camila Cabello songs
Ed Sheeran songs
Songs written by Camila Cabello
Songs written by Ed Sheeran
Songs written by Ricky Reed
Songs written by Edgar Barrera
Songs written by Scott Harris (songwriter)
Song recordings produced by Edgar Barrera
Epic Records singles
Syco Music singles
Upcoming singles |
Michael Jonathan Pitre (born January 3, 1985) is an American football coach and former player who is the running backs coach for the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League (NFL). Pitre was previously the running backs coach for the Chicago Bears.
College career
After graduating from El Modena High School, Pitre chose to attend UCLA. While at UCLA, Pitre played fullback, where he was a three-year starter and a team captain.
Coaching career
After graduating from UCLA, Pitre coached at the high school level, becoming a coach for Rancho Santa Margarita and Servite High School. After four years at the high school level, Pitre became an assistant coach for Colorado. Pitre would later become a running backs coach at the collegiate level, being hired for the position at Montana State. After four years at Montana State, Pitre became the running backs coach at a higher level, becoming the running backs coach for Oregon State. Following three years at Oregon State, Pitre would become a running backs coach in the NFL, becoming the running backs coach for the Chicago Bears. After one year with the Chicago Bears, Pitre became the running backs coach for the Atlanta Falcons.
References
Living people
1985 births |
The 1918 Ohio Green and White football team represented Ohio University as a member of the Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC) during the 1918 college football season. Led by first-year head coach Frank Gullum, the Green and White compiled an overall record of 4–0–1 with a mark of 1–0–1 in conference play, placing sixth in the OAC.
Schedule
References
Ohio
Ohio Bobcats football seasons
College football undefeated seasons
Ohio Green and White football |
The Staudte Family Murders case, also known as "The Antifreeze Murders", was a series of killings and attempted killings within the Staudte Family of Springfield, Missouri during a five-month period in 2012. Family matriarch Diane Staudte and her daughter, Rachel Staudte, committed the crimes together using antifreeze purchased off the internet, with the rationale that antifreeze sold online would not contain the added bittering agent in commercial chemicals making the ethylene glycol poison detectable. Diane's husband, Mark Staudte, was murdered first, followed five months later by her autistic 26-year-old son, Shaun Staudte. 24-year-old daughter Sarah Staudte had also been poisoned with the antifreeze, being taken to hospital in critical condition. Sarah survived the poisoning and later recovered, albeit with physical and neurological damage. Diane Staudte was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in 2016, while Rachel Staudte pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in May 2015 as part of a plea deal in exchange for testifying against her mother at her trial, eventually being sentenced in March 2016 to life in prison with the possibility of parole.
Background
Diane and Mark Staudte were a married couple living in a modest home in Springfield, Missouri with four children: Shaun Staudte (age 26), Sarah Staudte (age 24), Rachel Staudte (age 22) and Briana Staudte (age 9). The Staudte children had varying special needs, with Shaun being on the autism spectrum and still living at home, and Briana, then a fourth-grade student, having learning disabilities. In addition, Sarah Staudte, a university graduate with high grades but an inability to secure employment, had incurred a high amount of student loan debt and was also living at home with her parents. Diane favoured Rachel over the other siblings, and would routinely make a habit of praising Rachel and uploading photos of her onto social media. The family was musically talented and enjoyed religious-themed contemporary music; Diane was a church organist and trained nurse, and also the main source of income for the family, while Mark was the lead singer and guitarist of a local blues band called Messing With Destiny. Mark only brought in minimal income, sometimes taking odd jobs related to the band for extra earnings.
Diane and Rachel, after being arrested for the murders, claimed that the targeted family members were burdens on them. Diane alleged that Mark was lazy, would throw objects when angry, and that by the point of killing him, she "hated his guts". She claimed that Shaun was "worse than a pest" as he was always in the home and had trouble socializing with people due to his autism, leading her to kill him as well, although Rachel claimed that she initially had felt that her brother's death was unfair, arguing that her mother should have placed Shaun in assisted living instead. The murders of Mark and Shaun Staudte occurred within five months of each other. Both victims were found with a suspicious ring of blood around their mouths, but the deaths were not investigated any further, owing in part to Mark's lifestyle, which included alcohol consumption on a regular basis. Both bodies were cremated. Diane went further when she considered killing Sarah as well, owing to her not wanting to pay Sarah's student debt. The 24-year-old was poisoned, then later brought to a hospital by Diane because, according to Diane, she did not want the house to smell bad if Sarah died in it (by that point, Diane had used Mark's US$20,000 life insurance policy to move the family into another house with more space). Rachel was also bothered by the prospect of Sarah dying in the house, because she had moved into the room where Shaun had died, and claimed that it was unsettling to her. Sarah was admitted in critical condition, with organ failure and neurological damage presenting.
Investigation
An anonymous tip, later revealed to be from the Staudte Family's local church pastor, alerted police to the deaths of Mark and Shaun Staudte possibly being connected with Sarah's acute symptoms. Multiple people who knew the Staudtes had observed that Diane was not expressing any grief for the loss of Mark and Shaun; instead, Diane frequented the social media platform Facebook and appeared aloof about the deaths. Family relative Michael Staudte revealed that there had not been any formal services to commemorate Shaun, and that he had only been informed of Shaun's passing after another relative had discovered it. Robert "Rob" Mancuso of Messing With Destiny recalled that Diane was behaving "like she was hosting a party! There was no sadness. I thought it was just her way of grieving."
When police investigated the case, Diane had been planning a future vacation to Florida and was still residing with Rachel in the house where Shaun had died and Sarah had fallen ill. Diane revealed that she and Rachel had poisoned their family members with antifreeze. They had sneaked the substance into energy drinks that Mark regularly consumed, as well as into Shaun's favourite soda pop, and had specifically bought it online so as to ensure that there was no noticeable taste to it when hidden. Unlike most antifreeze sold commercially for the general public, the antifreeze purchased by Diane and Rachel lacked an added bittering agent that would have left a foul taste to anything poisoned by it. A note was discovered in Rachel's purse, which Rachel had written a bizarre poem on that read, "Only the quiet ones will be left, my mother, my little sister and me." A hidden diary kept by Rachel revealed that Rachel herself had been involved directly with the murders, and that she had been aware of Mark's impending poisoning at least two months beforehand. Rachel and Diane also admitted that Briana Staudte was to be poisoned after Sarah's death because of the burden of her learning disabilities. Rachel Staudte pleaded guilty in May 2015 to two counts of second-degree murder and one count of first-degree assault. Her mother, Diane Staudte, pleaded guilty to two counts of murder in January 2016 and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Both Rachel and Diane have since appealed to vacate their pleas, with Rachel arguing, "when lawyers were appointed, my fear of men was not accommodated, leading to miscommunication, coercion (and) mental duress. Being in an interview room alone with a male detective was like being flayed alive."
Remaining family members
It is unclear what happened to Briana Staudte after the arrest of Diane and Rachel. Briana, then a fourth-grade student and minor child, had not yet been poisoned by her mother or sister. The girl, whose new name has not been identified by news sources due to her age, was placed in foster care. Sarah Staudte survived, but suffered severe organ damage and neurological damage as a result of the antifreeze. Her symptoms, initially thought to be flu-like, were later revealed to be caused by the poisoning. Sarah maintains a Facebook profile with information about the murder case, as well as a profile banner photo of her father performing in Messing With Destiny. Sarah was given the opportunity to read the following statement in court: "I prefer to be a survivor than a victim. I forgive my mom for what she did to me. But she not only took away my dad and brother, but she took away my lifestyle, livelihood and my independence." Sarah, who had been on the Dean's List during her years in university, was said by Greene County Prosecuting Attorney Dan Patterson to require "a guardian, and living in an assisted living facility" due to the effects of the poison on her body and mental state.
Public response
The public and media expressed disgust over Diane's favouritism towards Rachel, as well as her view of her disabled children as burdens. In particular focus was Rachel's attitude towards the murders; Rachel had written in her diary, prior to her father's death, "It’s sad when I realized how my father will pass on in the next two months... Shaun, my brother, will move on shortly after... it will be tough getting used to the changes but everything will work out." After Shaun's murder, Rachel had posted a selfie on Facebook of herself sitting cross-legged and smiling, with a post that read, "don't think I've seen Mom [Diane] so chilled out like this in a long time." The Staudte Family Murders case was covered extensively by various national and local news agencies. Additionally, the case was discussed at length in multiple true crime YouTube videos, and featured in a segment of 20/20, where Sarah Staudte was interviewed in recovery from her poisoning.
References
Murder in Missouri
People murdered in Missouri
2012 murders in the United States |
Jeremy Boot (born 1948) is a South Australian wildlife artist, known particularly for detailed, ornithologically accurate, portraits of birds.
Boot was born in Java and arrived in Australia in 1949. He is a self-taught artist
His work has been reproduced a great number of times on playing cards, calendars, notepads, china plates and other high quality media, including limited edition art prints.
Publications
foreword by Sir Mark Oliphant.
also marketed as Birds of Australia
References
20th-century Australian painters
Australian bird artists
Australian commercial artists
1948 births
Living people |
Anđele () is the debut studio album by Croatian singer-songwriter Antonija Šola. It was released in November 2007, by Dallas Records. Special edition of the album came out a month later, with inserted song dedicated to her muti-collaboration Toše Proeski, after his death. The album has released six singles with a total of sixteen songs, many of which have won awards at various festivals. Šola wrote all the songs on the album.
The album achieved gold certification for selling more than 10,000 copies in the first three months. Later album archived platinum certification for selling more than 25,000 copies. It was named one of the most successful albums of the 2000s.
Track listing
Standard edition
Anđele
Zovem Da Ti Čujem Glas
Stradam
Neka Bude Zauvijek
Nisam Anđeo"
Skidam Te Pogledom
Zabranjena Pjesma (Volim Te)
Volim Osmijeh Tvoj
Adios
Reci Mi Please (Red Light Oriental Remix)
Sepcial edition/Re-Release
Anđele
Zovem Da Ti Čujem Glas
Stradam
Neka Bude Zauvijek
Nisam Anđeo
Skidam Te Pogledom
Zabranjena Pjesma (Volim Te)
Volim Osmijeh Tvoj
Adios
Reci Mi Please (Red Light Oriental Remix)
Pada Tiha Noć
Ja Ću Kupit
Reci Mi Please
Nebu Pod Oblak
Angelu" (Macedonian Version)
Anđele" (New Version)
Zabranjena Pjesma (Volim Te) (Instrumental)
References
External links
2007 debut albums
2007 albums
Croatian-language albums |
Sumaya Komuntale (born 3 August 2003), also spelled Sumayah Komuntale, is a Ugandan footballer who plays as a left back for FUFA Women Super League club Tooro Queens FC and the Uganda women's national team.
Early life
Komuntale was raised in Kyenjojo and belongs to the Toro people.
Club career
Komuntale has played for Tooro Queens in Uganda.
International career
Komuntale capped for Uganda at senior level during the 2022 Africa Women Cup of Nations qualification.
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
People from Kyenjojo District
Ugandan women's footballers
Women's association football fullbacks
Uganda women's international footballers
Toro people |
Walter Birmingham (January 4, 1913 - August 16, 2004) was an educationist and economist who served as the warden of Toynbee Hall. He also worked on economic planning for West Africa in the post-colonial era.
Early life
Birmingham was born in Firozpur, India, in 1913.
He took night classes at the London School of Economics, obtaining a degree in economics.
Career
Birmingham taught at several British, African, and American universities and was involved in economic development planning for West Africa.
He was professor of economics at the University of Lesotho.
Toynbee Hall
In 1964, Birmingham was appointed warden of the Victorian charity Toynbee Hall, which had fallen on hard times.
Soon after taking post, he took on the disgraced former government minister John Profumo as a volunteer. Profumo would continue to support Toynbee Hall for decades, eventually becoming chairman of the charity.
Personal life
He married twice with a son and a daughter from his first marriage and two sons and one daughter from the second.
A sculpture of Birmingham by Betty Jukes is housed at Toynbee Hall.
References
1913 births
2004 deaths |
Rodrigo Henrique Santos de Souza (born 5 June 2003), commonly known as Rodriguinho, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for América Mineiro.
Career
Born in Contagem, Minas Gerais, Rodriguinho was an América Mineiro youth graduate. He was promoted to the first team in December 2021, and made his senior debut on 25 January 2022, starting in a 1–2 Campeonato Mineiro away loss against Caldense.
Career statistics
References
2003 births
Living people
People from Contagem
Brazilian footballers
Association football midfielders
América Futebol Clube (MG) players |
Phymaturus laurenti is a species of lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is from Argentina.
References
querque
Lizards of South America
Reptiles of Argentina
Endemic fauna of Argentina
Reptiles described in 2010 |
The Conference on Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science is an academic conference about theoretical computer science. The conference was initiated by Andrew Yao in 2010, and was originally called Innovations in Computer Science. The proceedings were hosted online in 2010 and 2011, were published in the ACM Digital Library from 2012 to 2016, and were published as open access in the LIPIcs collection from 2017 onwards.
As of 2022, the conference is listed by Google Scholar as the 8th venue in theoretical computer science according to the h5-index metric. It is indexed by the DBLP bibliographical database.
External links
Website
DBLP entry
References
Theoretical computer science conferences
Recurring events established in 2010 |
Sean Cisterna is a Canadian film director and producer from Orillia, Ontario, most noted for his 2019 film From the Vine.
Cisterna directed a number of direct-to-video comedy and horror films before making the YTV television film King of the Camp, in 2008. He followed up with the feature film Moon Point in 2011, the documentary 30 Ghosts in 2013, and the feature films Full Out (2015) and Kiss and Cry (2017).
His latest film, Boy City, entered production in 2021.
References
External links
21st-century Canadian screenwriters
21st-century Canadian male writers
Canadian film producers
Canadian male screenwriters
Film directors from Ontario
People from Orillia
Living people |
María Eugenia Catalfamo (born 4 October 1987) is an Argentine journalist and politician currently serving as a National Senator for San Luis Province. A member of the Justicialist Party, Catalfamo was elected in 2017. She belongs to the Justicialist Party and currently sits in the Frente de Todos parliamentary bloc.
Early life and education
Catalfamo was born on 4 October 1987 in San Luis, Argentina. She finished high school at Instituto Aleluya, and later studied social communication at the National University of Córdoba (UNC), graduating 2012. From 2012 to 2013, she worked as a journalist for Agencia de Noticias San Luis, San Luis Province's state-owned news agency. She was also a writer for Vivir Urbano magazine from 2013 to 2015. From 2015 to 2017, she headed the press department of the Universidad de La Punta.
Political career
From 2013 to 2015, she was chief of press and protocol of the San Luis Province Ministry of Security. Later, in May 2017, she was appointed as State Secretary of Youth of San Luis by Governor Alberto Rodríguez Saá.
That same year, Catalfamo was the second candidate in the Justicialist Party list to the National Senate in San Luis, behind Adolfo Rodríguez Saá. The PJ list was the most voted in the province, with 55.48% of the vote, and took the two seats for the majority. She originally formed part of the dissident Justicialist Unity bloc, alongside Rodríguez Saá. In March 2019, she broke away from the Justicialist Unity bloc, forming a single-member bloc by the name of "San Luis Justicialism". Following the 2019 general election, both Rodríguez Saá and Catalfamo became part of the Frente de Todos bloc.
As a national senator, she formed part of the parliamentary commissions on Industry and Commerce, Rights and Guarantees, Population and Human Development, Science and Technology, Women's Affairs, and General Legislation. During the 2018 vote on the Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy Bill, which would have legalised abortion in Argentina, Catalfamo was the only senator to be absent in the session. Two years later, when the bill was once again debated by the Senate, Catalfamo was present and voted in favour.
References
External links
1987 births
Living people
People from San Luis, Argentina
Argentine women journalists
Members of the Argentine Senate for San Luis
Women members of the Argentine Senate
Justicialist Party politicians
Argentine women in politics
National University of Córdoba alumni
21st-century Argentine politicians
21st-century Argentine women politicians |
The Moroccan Debt Administration (), formally known as the Contrôle de la dette from 1904 to 1910 and after that as the Administration du Contrôle de la dette publique mahghzénienne (referring to the Moroccan monarchy as the Makhzen), was an entity set up by the French government in 1904 to administer the sovereign debt of the Moroccan Monarchy.
History
The Moroccan Debt Administration originated in 1904, as Morocco's sovereign debt, which had increased significantly following the Hispano-Moroccan War (1859–1860) and the First Melillan campaign of 1894, was restructured by the Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas in coordination with the French government. The loan contract was signed on by Moroccan Foreign Minister Si Abdelkrim Ben Slimane, Moroccan Finance Minister Si Mohammed Tazi, and the banque's representative Georges Zangarussiano. The loan amount was 62,5 million francs, divided in 125.000 bonds of nominal value 500 francs each, for an interest rate of 5 percent. It was guaranteed by revenue from the Moroccan customs. A further loan was negotiated in 1910.
The administration acted on behalf of the private debt consortium, under the auspices of the French government but free from hierarchical authority of the French Consul in Tangier. It was initially led by French diplomat , then by Gaston Guiot under whom its expanded into an increasing number of state-like functions, until the Treaty of Fes formally established the French protectorate in Morocco in March 1912. It kept receiving Morocco's customs revenue until 1918, and was still in activity in 1925.
Building
A dedicated building was erected for the debt administration and completed in 1910, on a major new thoroughfare in Tangier which was then in the process of being created and was thus initially known as the ; it became the in 1915. It was built in Moorish Revival architecture by the local firm of Desforges & Rousseau.
With the establishment of the Tangier International Zone, the building initially hosted the offices of the zone's International Administration, which stayed there until 1937. Shortly after Moroccan independence in 1957, it was the seat of the , an association of businessmen for the improvement of the Tangier economy that issued a monthly publication titled Tanger.
As of 2022, the building, also known as Dar el-Salaf and located at 29 boulevard Pasteur, is the seat of the Regional Tourism Authority (). It also houses the personal library donated in 1985 to the City of Tangier by influential scholar Abdellah Guennoun, whose volumes were transferred there after his death in 1989.
See also
Caisse de la Dette in the Khedivate of Egypt
Ottoman Public Debt Administration in the Ottoman Empire
International Financial Control in Greece
Notes
Palaces in Morocco
Buildings and structures in Tangier
Spanish North Africa
Moorish Revival architecture |
Oleg Golikov (; born October 21, 1968, Chesma, Chelyabinsk Oblast) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 8th State Duma.
From 1996 to 1998, Golikov worked at the administration of the Kalininsky district in Chelyabinsk. In 2012–2019, he was the deputy director of the All-Russian Scientific Research Institute Of Technical Physics. From 2005 to 2021, he was the deputy of the Legislative Assembly of Chelyabinsk Oblast. In September 2021, he was elected to the 8th State Duma from the Rostov Oblast constituency.
References
1968 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
The following is an incomplete list of starting quarterbacks that have started a regular season or post-season game for the Edmonton Eskimos / Elks of the Canadian Football League (CFL). They are listed in order of appearance during the regular season or post-season, since 1996. Prior years do not include post-season starts and list number of starts from greatest to fewest.
Starting quarterbacks by season
Where known, the number of games they started during the season is listed to the right:
References
2021 CFL Guide
Stats Crew Edmonton Elks
CFLdb Statistics
Edmonton Elks
Starting quarterbacks |
Phymaturus rahuensis is a species of lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is from Argentina.
References
rahuensis
Lizards of South America
Reptiles of Argentina
Endemic fauna of Argentina
Reptiles described in 2016 |
Erna Walter (11 August 1893 in Bonn – 2 January 1992) was a German botanist, ecologist, botanical collector and bryologist.
Life and work
The daughter of the botanist Heinrich Schenck, Erna studied botany, physics and chemistry in Darmstadt and Heidelberg. She received her doctorate in 1918 under the direction of botanist Georg Albrecht Klebs at the University of Heidelberg. Her dissertation was titled: Bacteriocine von Clostridium perfringens.
She then worked as a scientific assistant at the Botanical Institute of the University of Heidelberg with Ludwig Jost and as an intern at the Biological Reich Institute in Berlin-Dahlem. She was also an assistant at the Klein Wanzleben sugar factory and at the Oppenheim am Rhein wine school.
In 1924 she married the geobotanist Heinrich Walter. With him, she undertook numerous research trips to many vegetation zones, during which she concerned herself in particular to lichens and mosses. The couple endeavored to "personally investigate each floral kingdom and climatic zone in the world to obtain comparative material on a global scale." She played a large part in her husband's research and he credited her for that in print.
In addition to her husband, her co-collectors included Kamil Karamanoglu (1920-1976), Charles Killian (1887-1957) and R.P. Maire (fl. 1921). She is credited with 584 specimens collected from at least 16 countries.
Her plant finds are kept in the Munich Herbarium and include, among others, mosses and lichens from Argentina, Australia, Chile, Germany, Finland, France, Greece, Italy, Yugoslavia, Canada, Namibia, New Zealand, Norway, Austria, Spain, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, from the British Isles and Venezuela.
Selected publications
Erna contributed to many of her husband's publications and he mentions her sizeable contributions in some of them even though she was not named a co-author.
Walter, E. (1918). Bacteriocine von Clostridium perfringens
Walter, H., & Walter, E. (1929). Ökologische Untersuchungen des osmotischen Wertes bei Pflanzen aus der Umgebung des Balatons (Plattensees) in Ungarn während der Dürrezeit 1928. Zeitschrift fur wissenschaftliche Biologie. Abteilung E: Planta, 571-624.
Walter, H., & Walter, E. (1953). Das Gesetz der relativen Standortskonstanz: Das Wesen der Pflanzengesellschaften. Ber. Dtsch. bot. Ges, 66, 228-236.
References
External links
20th-century botanists
20th-century German botanists
20th-century German women scientists
Botanists active in Europe
German phytogeographers
Heidelberg University alumni
People from Bonn
1893 births
1992 deaths |
Nikolay Goncharov (; born January 13, 1984, Verkhnemakeevka, Kasharsky District) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of the 8th State Duma.
From 2006 to 2010, he worked as an assistant prosecutor and a lawyer. In 2010 he was appointed the CEO of "Donskoy Khleb". In 2014 he was elected deputy of the Assembly of deputies of the Kasharsky District of the 5th convocation. In September 2021, he was elected to the 8th State Duma from the Belokalitvinsky District constituency.
References
1984 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Phymaturus robustus is a species of lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is from Argentina.
References
robustus
Lizards of South America
Reptiles of Argentina
Endemic fauna of Argentina
Reptiles described in 2021 |
The 1993 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament was the tournament held by the NAIA to determine the national champion of men's college basketball among its Division II members in the United States and Canada for the 1992–93 basketball season.
Willamette defeated Northern State (SD) in the championship game, 63–56, to claim the Bearcats' first NAIA national title.
The tournament was played at the Montgomery Fieldhouse at Northwest Nazarene University in Nampa, Idaho.
Qualification
The tournament field remained set at twenty teams. The top eight teams received seeds, while the eight lowest ranked teams were placed in a preliminary first round.
The tournament utilized a single-elimination format.
Bracket
See also
1993 NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament
1993 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament
1993 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament
1993 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament
1993 NAIA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament
References
NAIA
NAIA Men's Basketball Championship
1993 in sports in Idaho |
Dorow is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Al Dorow (1929–2009), American gridiron football quarterback
Dorothy Dorow (1930–2017), English operatic soprano
Jan-Lucas Dorow (born 1993), German footballer
Ryan Dorow (born 1995), American professional baseball infielder
Tracey Dorow, American basketball coach |
The 2022 Oregon Ducks baseball team represents University of Oregon in the 2022 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Ducks play their home games at PK Park and are members of the Pac-12 Conference. The team is coached by Mark Wasikowski in his 3rd season at Oregon.
Preseason
The Ducks entered the season ranked in the Top-25 by Collegiate Baseball and were picked to finish fifth in the Pac-12 preseason coaches poll.
Schedule and results
! style="" | Regular Season
|- valign="top"
|-bgcolor=ffbbbb
| Feb 18 || at * || || Fowler Park • San Diego, CA || 1–11 || Rennie (1–0) || Maier (0–1) || None || 0–1 ||
|-bgcolor=ffbbbb
| Feb 19 || at San Diego* || || Fowler Park • San Diego, CA || 4–10 || Mautz (1–0) || Mosiello (0–1) || Hyde (1) || 0–2 ||
|-bgcolor=ffbbbb
| Feb 20 || at San Diego* || || Fowler Park • San Diego, CA || 4–5 || Thurman (1–0) || Ciuffetelli (0–1) || Romero (1) || 0–3 ||
|-bgcolor=bbffbb
| Feb 21 || at San Diego* || || Fowler Park • San Diego, CA || 21-11 || Britton (1–0) || Frize (0–1) || None || 1–3 ||
|-bgcolor=bbffbb
| Feb 25 || vs. * || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || 23–5 || Maier (1–1) || Murphy (0–1) || None || 2–3 ||
|-bgcolor=bbffbb
| Feb 26 || vs. St. John's* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || 16–3 || Mosiello (1–1) || Adams (0–1) || Gordon (1) || 3–3 ||
|-bgcolor=bbffbb
| Feb 27 || vs. St. John's* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || 13–1 || Ayon (1–0) || McCarthy (0–1) || None || 4–3 ||
|-bgcolor=bbffbb
| Feb 28 || vs. St. John's* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || 6–0 || Brandenburg (1–0) || Bianchi (0–1) || None || 5–3 ||
|-
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 4 || vs. * || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 5 || vs. UC Santa Barbara* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 5 || vs. UC Santa Barbara* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR|| || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 6 || vs. UC Santa Barbara* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 8 || vs. * || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 11 || at Stanford || || Klein Field at Sunken Diamond • Stanford, CA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 12 || at Stanford || || Klein Field at Sunken Diamond • Stanford, CA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 13 || at Stanford || || Klein Field at Sunken Diamond • Stanford, CA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 18 || vs. || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 19 || vs. Utah || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 20 || vs. Utah || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 22 || at * || || Washington Trust Field and Patterson Baseball Complex • Spokane, WA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 25 || vs. USC || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 26 || vs. USC || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 27 || vs. USC || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 29 || vs. * || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Mar 30 || vs. Nevada || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 1 || at UCLA || || Jackie Robinson Stadium • Los Angeles, CA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 2 || at UCLA || || Jackie Robinson Stadium • Los Angeles, CA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 3 || at UCLA || || Jackie Robinson Stadium • Los Angeles, CA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 8 || vs. * || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 9 || vs. Ball State* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 9 || vs. Ball State* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 10 || vs. Ball State* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 14 || at || || Husky Ballpark • Seattle, WA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 15 || at Washington || || Husky Ballpark • Seattle, WA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 16 || at Washington || || Husky Ballpark • Seattle, WA || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 19 || at Portland* || || Joe Etzel Field • Portland, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 22 || vs. || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 23 || vs. Washington State || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 24 || vs. Washington State || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 26 || vs. Oregon State* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 29 || vs. California || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| Apr 30 || vs. California || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-
|-bgcolor=
| May 1 || at Utah || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 3 || vs. Oregon State* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 6 || at Oregon State || || Goss Stadium at Coleman Field • Corvallis, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 7 || at Oregon State || || Goss Stadium at Coleman Field • Corvallis, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 8 || at Oregon State || || Goss Stadium at Coleman Field • Corvallis, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 10 || vs. * || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 11 || vs. UC San Diego* || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 13 || at Arizona State || || Phoenix Municipal Stadium • Phoenix, AZ || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 14 || at Arizona State || || Phoenix Municipal Stadium • Phoenix, AZ || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 15 || at Arizona State || || Phoenix Municipal Stadium • Phoenix, AZ || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 17 || vs. * || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 19 || vs. Arizona || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 20 || vs. Arizona || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
|-bgcolor=
| May 21 || vs. Arizona || || PK Park • Eugene, OR || || || || || ||
Rankings
References
Oregon Ducks baseball seasons
Oregon
2022 in sports in Oregon |
Ronald "Ronnie" Merle McNutt was a Toyota plant employee, Iraq War veteran and streamer who committed suicide on August 31, 2020, while livestreaming on Facebook being motivated by his suffering from PTSD and depression.
Early life
Ronald "Ronnie" Merle McNutt was born on May 23, 1987, to Elaine and Cecil Ronald McNutt. He had 2 siblings, Joey and Mindy. Ronnie was described by friends and family as "caring and loyal". He would regularly attend Celebration Church in Tupelo, Mississippi and help anyone if they needed it. He enjoyed and performed theater plays. He was a part of a Comic Con club and wrote comic book reviews. Ronnie co-hosted the Justice Geeks podcast with his friend Joshua Steen. He was employed at the Toyota plant in Blue Springs, Missouri. Ronnie had a Facebook account where he made streams talking about theology and pop culture. He served in the Iraq War from June 2007 to March 2008. When he returned to the United States, he suffered from PTSD and depression. His girlfriend broke up with him and his father died on February 27, 2018, in the hospital. Ronnie celebrated what would've been his father's 69th birthday on August 14, 2020.
Suicide
On August 31, 2020, McNutt posted an image on his Facebook timeline that read "Someone in your life needs to hear that they matter. That they are loved. That they have a future. Be the one to tell them." Later that day, he started a livestream on Facebook. He garnered 200 people on Facebook Live including his friends and family members, as well as his mother. McNutt talked about taking his own life, people messaged him on his phone begging him not to. Police evacuated neighbors and set up a brigade outside his house. They pleaded to McNutt over a loudspeaker. He put a single-shot rifle to his chin around 10:32 P.M. and pulled the trigger.
Aftermath
The stream was reported by people and Facebook responded 2 hours later saying the video did not violate community guidelines, they eventually took the video down 8 hours later however. McNutt's stream went viral the next day and people gave it a fake backstory saying he killed himself because his girlfriend broke up with him over the phone, these were debunked by his friend Steen. The video of his McNutt's suicide was reuploaded to multiple social media platforms including Twitter and TikTok, the video would be disguised as a music clip or cooking video and then cut to his death. Many trolls also sent bait and switch videos of McNutt's death to his family. McNutt's family have tried to take down the video from social media by using the hashtag #ReformForRonnie.
References
1987 births
2020 deaths |
Phymaturus roigorum is a species of lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is from Argentina.
References
roigorum
Lizards of South America
Reptiles of Argentina
Endemic fauna of Argentina
Reptiles described in 2007 |
Antonín Šetela (12 April 1882, date of death unknown) was a Czech footballer who played as a forward.
Club career
During his playing career, Šetela played for Smíchov.
International career
On 1 April 1906, Šetela made his debut for Bohemia in Bohemia's second game, starting in a 1–1 draw against Hungary. In the 63rd minute, Šetela assisted Jindřich Valášek to score Bohemia's second international goal. It was Šetela's only cap for Bohemia.
Notes
References
1884 births
Date of birth unknown
Sportspeople from Prague
Association football forwards
Czech footballers
Czechoslovak footballers
Bohemia international footballers |
Alyth Town Hall is a municipal structure in Albert Street in Alyth, Scotland. The structure, which is currently used as a community events venue, is not yet listed.
History
The building was commissioned as a result of a local initiative to raise money for a burgh hall in 1884. The site chosen by the burgh leaders was open land at the corner of Albert Street and Alexandra Street. The foundation stone for the new building was laid by the Earl of Airlie on 2 September 1886 and a bazaar was held in the local school to celebrate the event. It was designed by Andrew Heiton and his nephew, Andrew Granger Heiton, in the Tudor Revival style, built in red sandstone and was officially opened on 29 April 1887.
The design involved an asymmetrical main frontage facing onto Albert Street; the central bay featured three arched doorways with architraves separated by brackets supporting a canted balcony. There was a central five-part window on the second floor and a half-timbered gable above. The left-hand bay featured a three-stage bell tower with a lancet window in the first stage, a three-part window in the second stage and half-timbered section which was slightly jettied out in the third stage. The tower was surmounted by a pyramid-shaped roof and a weather vane. The right-hand section, which was slightly recessed and only single-storey, comprised two bays each with casement windows. Internally, the principal rooms were the grand hall, the council chambers and the lesser hall.
A bell from the French frigate La Nécessité, which had been captured by the crew of the fifth-rate, HMS Horatio, on 21 February 1810 during the Napoleonic Wars, was installed in the bell tower. It had been recovered by the former purser of HMS Horatio and carefully preserved by his family, who lived locally, for much of the 19th century.
After the Earl of Airlie was killed in action at the Battle of Diamond Hill on 11 June 1900 during the Second Boer War, a meeting was hastily held in the town hall later that month, at which local people demanded, contrary to advice from the war office that no memorials should be commissioned until after the end of the war, that an obelisk be erected in the Market Square immediately.
Ownership of the town hall was vested in trustees until 1905 when it was presented to the burgh council. The building continued to serve as the meeting place of the burgh council for much of the 20th century but ceased to be the local seat of government when the enlarged Perth and Kinross District Council was formed in 1975. While ownership of the building was retained by the district council, the management of the town hall was passed to the Alyth Halls Association at that time and the administration of the building was passed to a local management committee in 1996. The bell, which had become damaged over time, was moved to the foyer of the town hall in 2000.
Works of art in the town hall include three landscape paintings by the painter, John Geddes.
References
Government buildings completed in 1887
1887 establishments in Scotland
City chambers and town halls in Scotland |
Andrey Gorokhov (; born January 13, 1960, Balkhash, Karaganda Region) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of 8th State Duma.
In 1987, he was appointed the head of the department at the Ministry of General Machine Building. From 1990 to 2001, he was the CEO of the JSC Mashcenter. In 2001–2007, he was the Senior Lecturer at the Moscow Institute of Economics and Law. Since 2011, he has been first a docent and, later, a professor, at the Moscow State University of Technology and Management, named after K.G Razumovsky. In 2011 he was also elected as a deputy of the Kaliningrad Regional Duma of the 5th convocation. Since September 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma from the Kaliningrad Oblast constituency.
References
1960 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
Pappalardi is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Felix Pappalardi (1939–1983), American music producer
Gail Collins Pappalardi (1941–2013), American songwriter
Italian-language surnames |
Shamirah Nalugya (born 12 September 2003) is a Ugandan footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for FUFA Women Super League club Kawempe Muslim Ladies FC and the Uganda women's national team.
Early life
Nalugya was raised in Bweyogerere and belongs to the Baganda.
Club career
Nalugya has played for Kawempe Muslim Ladies in Uganda.
International career
Nalugya capped for Uganda at senior level during the 2022 Africa Women Cup of Nations qualification.
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
People from Wakiso District
Ugandan women's footballers
Women's association football midfielders
Uganda women's international footballers
Ganda people |
Ibn Yamin (also spelled Ibn-i Yamin; ; 1286/87–1368) was a Persian poet who served under the Ilkhanate, Sarbadars, and Kartids.
Biography
Ibn Yamin was born in 1286/87 in the town of Faryumad in western Khorasan. He belonged to a family of local landowners, a status they had seemingly held since ancient times. His father was the mustawfi (director of finance) of the governor of Khorasan, Khwaja Ala al-Din Muhammad. Ibn Yamin was educated in his hometown, which was then a center of culture. He had a typical education, being primarily related to medicine and literature. At a young age, Ibn Yamin became interested in poetry due to his father also being a poet. Following his father's death in 1323/24, Ibn Yamin was appointed court poet, financial official, and later mustawfi of Khwaja Ala al-Din Muhammad. He also eventually received the title of amir. Ibn Yamin disliked the court life, and fell into a conflict with his Khwaja Ala al-Din Muhammad, who was replaced by Tari Tagha'i between 1327–1329. The new governor was a tyrant who initially confiscated most of Ibn Yamin's property, and then later took the rest. In 1337, Ibn Yamin went to the city of Gurgan, where he served as the court poet of Togha Temür (died 1353), a claimant to the Ilkhanate throne. In 1341, Ibn Yamin entered into the service of the Sarbadars.
Ibn Yamin died at Faryumad in 1368.
A Shia Muslim, Ibn Yamin was one of the first poets to write about the Twelve Imams and the Battle of Karbala.
References
Sources
Further reading
14th-century Iranian people
1280s births
1368 deaths
Ilkhanate-period poets |
Phymaturus sinervoi is a species of lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is from Argentina.
References
sinervoi
Lizards of South America
Reptiles of Argentina
Endemic fauna of Argentina
Reptiles described in 2012 |
Andrey Gurulyov (; born October 16, 1967, Moscow) is a Russian political figure and a deputy of 8th State Duma.
From 2016 to 2019, he served as Deputy Commander of the Southern Military District. He took part in the Russian military intervention in the Syrian civil war. In 2019 he left the military service and was appointed Deputy Governor of Zabaykalsky Krai. Since September 2021, he has served as a deputy of the 8th State Duma.
References
1967 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21st-century Russian politicians
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
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