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of nuclear weapons is not included, however, as only the capacity for conventional warfare is calculated. A score is calculated from all indicators, the PowerIndex (PwrIndx). The lower the PwrIndx, the greater the estimated capacity for conventional warfare. The best theoretical score a country can achieve in the Global
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military, demographic, financial, logistical and geographic factors are included in the index, but not nuclear warfare capacity. The index has received coverage in various media, including in The Times of India, CNBC, Newsweek, Inquirer and Handelsblatt. Methodology More than 50 statistical indicators are included in the index. These include the manpower, equipment, military budget, natural resources and other factors. The number
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of awards and nominations received by South Korean reality-variety show 2 Days &
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received by South Korean reality-variety show 2 Days
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footballer who plays as a forward for Derby County. Club career Cybulski made his debut for Derby County as a substitute in a 2–0 FA Cup loss to Chorley on 9 January 2021. He was one of fourteen players from
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County as a substitute in a 2–0 FA Cup loss to Chorley on 9 January 2021. He was one of fourteen players from Derby County's academy to make their debut in the game, after the entirety of Derby's first team squad and coaching team were forced to isolate due to a COVID-19 outbreak. He made his league debut as a substitute in a 1–0 win against Peterborough United on 19 February 2022. International career Cybulski was born in Poland and moved
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Gedrosia of ancient authors), which literally means "living or dwelling by the sea." History Inscription of King Darius I: “I am Darius, the great king, the king of kings, the king of multi-tribal countries ... By the will of Ahuramazda, these are the countries that I had to rule, except for Persia: ... Media, Elam,
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History Inscription of King Darius I: “I am Darius, the great king, the king of kings, the king of multi-tribal countries ... By the will of Ahuramazda, these are the countries that I had to rule, except for Persia: ... Media, Elam, Parthia, Areia, Bactria, Sogdiana, Khorezm, Drangiana, Arachosia,
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the Master of the High Court since 2001. Early life Honohan is from Glasnevin and is the brother of Patrick Honohan. He was called to the Bar in 1975 and became a senior counsel in 1995. He was involved with Fianna Fáil early in his career, where he assisted with the writing of the party's manifesto for the 1977 general election. Bertie Ahern was selected ahead of him to contest the 1977 election in Dublin Finglas. He advised the Minister for Economic Planning and Development Martin O'Donoghue between 1977 and 1979. He acted in cases involving company law, judicial review, chancery, employment law and personal injuries. Master of the High Court He was interviewed for the position of Master of the High Court in 2001 and was appointed in May 2001. He succeeded Harry Hill. He unsuccessfully asked to be nominated to the European Court of Justice in 2008 and the Supreme Court of Ireland in 2014. He criticised the regulation of solicitors in 2005. In 2018, he used a hammer to a break a window in the Four Courts due to
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chancery, employment law and personal injuries. Master of the High Court He was interviewed for the position of Master of the High Court in 2001 and was appointed in May 2001. He succeeded Harry Hill. He unsuccessfully asked to be nominated to the European Court of Justice in 2008 and the Supreme Court of Ireland in 2014. He criticised the regulation of solicitors in 2005. In 2018, he used a hammer to a break a window in the Four Courts due to his concerns over the ventilation in the Master's Court. Debt cases Since the post-2008 Irish economic downturn, much of his case load has involved debt enforcement and repossession cases, often dealing with up to 200 cases a week. According to the Business Post, he has been considered a "debtors' champion". The President of the High Court
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few months before being convinced by Virat Vachirarattanawong to comeback after he bought him as debt clearance from the Porntawee gym owner. Ruengsak then became the first ever Petchyindee gym fighter. Titles and accomplishments Lumpinee Stadium 1974 Lumpinee Stadium 112 lbs Champion 1981 Lumpinee Stadium 130 lbs Champion (one defense) Rajadamnern Stadium 1974 Rajadamnern Stadium 112 lbs Champion Muay Thai record |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1983-10-10 || Loss ||align=left| Inseenoi Sor.Thanikul || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1983- || Loss ||align=left| Samart Prasarnmit || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1982-12-24 || Loss ||align=left| Samingnoom Sitiboontham || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#c5d2ea;" | 1982-04-02 || No Contest ||align=left| Nongkhai Sor.Prapatsorn|| Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || ||5 || 2:40 |- ! style=background:white colspan=9 | |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1981- || Win ||align=left| Krongsak Sakkasem || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1981-11-03 || Win ||align=left| Krongsak Sakkasem || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || KO (Punches)||1 || |- ! style=background:white colspan=9 | |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1981-10-05 || Win ||align=left| Nakhonsawan Suanmisakawan || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || KO (Punches)|| 3 || |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1981- || Loss ||align=left| Kengkaj Kiatkriangkrai || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1981-01-23 || Win ||align=left| Pornsak Sitchang || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- ! style=background:white colspan=9 | |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1980-08-14 || Loss ||align=left| Nakhonsawan Suanmisakawan || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1980-01-22 || Loss ||align=left| Tawanlek Sitpoonchai || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1979-10-11 || Loss ||align=left| Nongkhai Sor.Prapatsorn || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1979- || Loss ||align=left| Khaosod Sitpraprom || || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1979-01-17 || Loss ||align=left| Seksan Sor.Thepitak || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision ||
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|- style="background:#cfc;" | 1981-10-05 || Win ||align=left| Nakhonsawan Suanmisakawan || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || KO (Punches)|| 3 || |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1981- || Loss ||align=left| Kengkaj Kiatkriangkrai || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1981-01-23 || Win ||align=left| Pornsak Sitchang || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- ! style=background:white colspan=9 | |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1980-08-14 || Loss ||align=left| Nakhonsawan Suanmisakawan || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1980-01-22 || Loss ||align=left| Tawanlek Sitpoonchai || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1979-10-11 || Loss ||align=left| Nongkhai Sor.Prapatsorn || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1979- || Loss ||align=left| Khaosod Sitpraprom || || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1979-01-17 || Loss ||align=left| Seksan Sor.Thepitak || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#c5d2ea;" | 1978-12-05 || Draw ||align=left| Khaosod Sitpraprom ||Lumpinee Stadium|| Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1978-08-11 || Loss ||align=left| Kaopong Sitchuchai || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5|| 3:00 |- ! style=background:white colspan=9 | |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1978-06-29 || Win ||align=left| Padejsuk Pitsanurachan ||Rajadamnern Stadium|| Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1978-05-25 || Win ||align=left| Prawit Sritham || Rajadamnern Stadium|| Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1978-04-11 || Loss ||align=left| Seksan Sor.Thepithak ||Lumpinee Stadium|| Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1978-02-24 || Win ||align=left| Nueusila Na Bankhod|| Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 ||3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1977-12-06 || Loss ||align=left| Wangwon Lukmatulee || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1977-07-29 || Loss ||align=left| Jitti Muangkhonkaen || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1977-07-06 || Win ||align=left| Narongnoi Kiatbandit || || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 ||3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1977-06-02 || Win ||align=left| Net Saknarong || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 ||3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1977-04-28|| Win||align=left| Fakaew Surakorsang || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || KO (Punches)|| 3 || |- style="background:#c5d2ea;" | 1977-03-31|| Draw||align=left| Fakaew Surakorsang || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1977-02-24 || Win ||align=left| Amnuaydej Devy || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 ||3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1977-01-27 || Loss ||align=left| Narongnoi Kiatbandit || || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 ||3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1976-12-07 || Loss ||align=left| Jitti Muangkhonkaen || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1976-11-11 || Win ||align=left| Nongkhai Sor.Prapatsorn || Rajadamnern Stadium|| Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1976-10-01 || Win ||align=left| Jocky Sitkanpai || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Referee Stoppage|| 5 || |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1976-05-04 || Loss ||align=left| Weerachat Sorndaeng || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1976-01-30 || Loss ||align=left| Jitti Muangkhonkaen || Huamark Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || KO (High Kick)|| 2 || |- style="background:#cfc;" | 1975-10-08 || Win ||align=left| Jitti Muangkhonkaen || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1975- || Loss ||align=left| Bundit Singprakarn || Lumpinee Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 || 3:00 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1975-06-30 || Loss ||align=left| Narongnoi Kiatbandit || Rajadamnern Stadium || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || 5 ||3:00 |- ! style=background:white colspan=9 | |- style="background:#fbb;" | 1975-05-02 || Loss ||align=left| Pudpadnoi Worawut || Lumpinee Stadium ||
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all bishops of Essen. In the following ceremony, Genn thanked him for his service to the diocese over a long time. Grave then served as parish priest in St. Mariae Geburt in Mülheim. Grave was focused on intercultural dialogue with Latin America, and projects aimed at fighting unemployment and helping young people in difficult situations. He initiated the Bündnis für Erziehung NRW, a statewide collaboration for education. He worked for the curatorium of the Fasel-Stiftung foundation in Duisburg from 2001 to 2018, as president from end of 2009. On 24 July 2011, he spoke, with others, at the central ecumenical memorial service for the victims of the Love Parade disaster. Grave died in Essen on 19 February 2022, at the age of 89. Publications Heilige unserer Heimat – Anregungen – Hilfen – Vorschläge – Bistum Essen, Diocese of Essen 1974 Nahe bei den Menschen , Echter-Verlag 1996, with Ulrich Engelberg: Kuba, Kirche im Aufbruch, Echter-Verlag 1998, with Dorothea Meilwes: Reichtum der Armen, Armut der Reichen, Don Bosco Medien 2001, (ed.) Ulrich Theodor Timpte: In der Bannmeile von Buenos Aires: Eine Gemeinde entsteht (Pastorale Impulse aus Lateinamerika), Don Bosco Medien 2004, Leuchtende Spuren. Gemeinsam auf dem Weg in eine solidarische Welt., Don Bosco Medien 2007, Awards 1989: Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany 2001: Honorary doctorate of the Catholic University Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz (Universidad Católica de Honduras Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz, UNICAH) in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, in the faculty of pastoral theology 2006: Order of Merit of North Rhine-Westphalia 2010: Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany for merits in the Ruhr area, especially the ecumenical social work (GSA) in mining and industries, and his engagements when workshops were closed
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priest in St. Mariae Geburt in Mülheim. Grave was focused on intercultural dialogue with Latin America, and projects aimed at fighting unemployment and helping young people in difficult situations. He initiated the Bündnis für Erziehung NRW, a statewide collaboration for education. He worked for the curatorium of the Fasel-Stiftung foundation in Duisburg from 2001 to 2018, as president from end of 2009. On 24 July 2011, he spoke, with others, at the central ecumenical memorial service for the victims of the Love Parade disaster. Grave died in Essen on 19 February 2022, at the age of 89. Publications Heilige unserer Heimat – Anregungen – Hilfen – Vorschläge – Bistum Essen, Diocese of Essen 1974 Nahe bei den Menschen , Echter-Verlag 1996, with Ulrich Engelberg: Kuba, Kirche im Aufbruch, Echter-Verlag 1998, with Dorothea Meilwes: Reichtum der Armen, Armut der Reichen, Don Bosco Medien 2001, (ed.) Ulrich Theodor Timpte: In der Bannmeile von Buenos Aires: Eine Gemeinde entsteht (Pastorale Impulse aus Lateinamerika), Don Bosco Medien 2004, Leuchtende Spuren. Gemeinsam auf dem Weg in eine solidarische Welt., Don Bosco Medien 2007, Awards 1989: Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany 2001: Honorary doctorate of the Catholic University Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz (Universidad Católica de Honduras Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz, UNICAH) in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, in the faculty of pastoral theology 2006: Order of Merit of North Rhine-Westphalia 2010: Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany for merits in the Ruhr area, especially
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than 1,200 shops. There are several clothing, jewelry, shoe, cosmetics, etc. shops here. From the beginning of Ramadan, crowds starts gathering at Chandni Chowk for Eid-ul-Fitr shopping. On October 21, 2020, a fire
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New Market Thana. It is closed on Tuesdays of the week. About 10,000 people work here and there are more than 1,200 shops. There are several clothing, jewelry, shoe, cosmetics, etc. shops here. From the beginning of Ramadan, crowds starts gathering at Chandni Chowk for
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its publication. The magazine became one of the most popular publications and enjoyed higher levels of circulation selling 54,000 copies particularly in the period 1937–1948. In 1937 Yedigün was one of two publications represented the Republic of Turkey at the Balkan Print and Publication Congress portraying the urban modernism. The other one was Yeni Adam (New Man for Turkish) which displayed the rural modernism in Turkey. Yedigün was closed down by Sedat Simavi in 1950 after producing 911 issues. References 1933 establishments in Turkey 1950 disestablishments in Turkey Defunct magazines published in Turkey General interest digests Lifestyle magazines published in Turkey Magazines established in 1933 Magazines disestablished in 1950
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of each home. History and profile Yedigün was first published on 15 March 1923, and its founder and editor was Sedat Simavi. Sadri Etem Ertem was the founding publisher and owner of the magazine until 1937 when Simavi acquired it. Ertem designed Yedigün as a family-oriented magazine, targeting the Westernized elites, intellectuals, the bureaucrats and those living in cities. However, from 1937 Yedigün became a magazine addressing youth and young adolescents. Then, the magazine was modelled on the German weekly Die Woche (The week) and the French magazine 7 Jour (Seven Days). It was published in broad format and covered both color and black and white pages. Yedigün had a wide range of contributors, including Ercüment Ekrem Talu, Nurullah Ataç, Peyami Safa, Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar, Abdülhak Şinasi Hisar, Cemal Nadir Güler and Hüseyin Cahit Yalçın. The magazine published articles on politics, travel and relationships focusing on modernity and interviews with notable figures of the period. It also presented a projection for the Turkish family and home decor based on modernism. In addition, it frequently featured short stories and novels, including a novel by Sedat Simavi, namely Nankörlerin Romanı (Turkish: The Novel of
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the winter of 1952-53 when she was 25, and married with two young children. Publication and content Prison and Chocolate Cake was first published in 1954 by Victor Gollancz Ltd (London), and by Alfred A. Knopf (New York). Both have over 200 pages beginning with a dedication to Sahgal's parents. There is a preface, contents page, a listing of the eight illustrations in the book, and a glossary. The Alfred A. Knopf version has an additional index and a section on who is who in the book. The book has 20 chapters and regularly interspersed are footnotes with explanations, some cited with references. It was translated into Hindi, and French in 1957. The book includes Sahgal's memoirs, accounts of her sisters Gita and Chandralekha, and that of her family during the Indian independence movement. She describes what it was like to grow up with both parents focussed on the Gandhian philosophy of non-violent civil disobedience during India's freedom struggle in the 1940s. In her words "our growing was India's growing up into India's political maturity - a different kind of political maturity from any that the world had seen before, based on an ideology inspired by self-sacrifice, compassion and peace". It includes her childhood memories of several generations of the Nehru family, encounters with Gandhi, who sometimes visited Sahgal's family home, and the politicians that visited them. Synopsis Sahgal begins the story in 1943, mid-World War II when she was in her teens, and en-route to the United States to complete her education. At the time, her parents and several others of her family were in prison for opposing British rule. She questions her parents courage to send her and her sister abroad at such a time. On the ship, she hears experiences from Polish refugees from Russia, and US soldiers returning from the Pacific War, one of who was surprised that she could be Indian, as she spoke English like he did. She describes several encounters on the ship and then later in the US, with people intrigued to know about India from her. Sahgal says herself that she writes in the order that she remembers events rather than chronologically. An account then follows of political life at Swaraj Bhavan, their family mansion in Allahabad, and daily routines at the newer Anand Bhawan in the 1930s, and how the non-cooperation movement changed life for the Nehru family. Politicians in her memoirs include Sir Stafford Cripps, Maulana Azad and Sarojini Naidu. Included is her first encounter with Gandhi, dropping her elder sister to boarding school, parties at home, life at Woodstock School and her uncle Nehru who she calls Mamu. Her parents and Nehru are central to her story and were jailed several times. She explains it was voluntary, occasions to be congratulated upon and family and friends patted them on their backs on their way. Sahgal, as a young child, wanting to be old enough to go to prison too, was expected to be proud, not show sorrow, but hold a stiff upper lip; crying was in secret she writes. Recollections of increasing time spent with servants include one of Hari, who is given an encouraging send off when he too is arrested and sent to prison. Later visits to prison to see her parents are unpleasant and after the announcement of the Quit India Movement, contact by letter and in person becomes almost none. Sahgal is 12 when war breaks out in 1939. In a series of letters she discusses with her father, then in prison, several political topics including whether India should help Britain, non-violent disobedience and communism. In 1944, after the death of her father, her mother joined her in the US. There, she made several connections including Paul Robeson, Helen Keller, Margaret Sanger and Pearl S. Buck. In the US, Sahgal describes the celebrity status they experienced as the 'Nehru nieces'. After completing her studies at Wellesley, Massachusetts, Sahgal returned to India in October 1947, shortly after India's independence. The book ends with the assassination of Gandhi. Reviews In 1954, The New York Times described the book as a "relaxed account of life in both worlds". W. F. Whyte in International Affairs noted
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of the 1930s and 40s in India affected the Nehru children. It was followed by A Time to be Happy (1958). Background and title Nayantara Sahgal, an educated, widely-travelled member of the Indian elite of the 1940s, is the daughter of the classic scholar Ranjit Sitaram Pandit, and former ambassador to the United Nations Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, niece of India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and cousin of India's third prime minister Indira Gandhi. The title Prison and Chocolate Cake comes from an incident in the early 1930s which Sahgalher describes as her earliest political memory, one day at tea when she was age three. Chocolate cake was a treat that day as usually they would have bread and butter. When her elder sister Lekha asked their mother why police had arrived at their home during tea, their mother "explained that they had come to take Papu [their father] to prison, but that it was nothing to worry about, that he wanted to go. So we kissed him goodbye and watched him leave; talking cheerfully to the policeman". Describing the incident as "far from unpleasant", she recounts in the book that "We ate our chocolate cake and, in our infant minds, prison became in some mysterious way, associated with chocolate cake". The book is the first of Sahgal's autobiographies, one of two of her early works based on her childhood memories covering the years 1943 to 1948. It was written during the winter of 1952-53 when she was 25, and married with two young children. Publication and content Prison and Chocolate Cake was first published in 1954 by Victor Gollancz Ltd (London), and by Alfred A. Knopf (New York). Both have over 200 pages beginning with a dedication to Sahgal's parents. There is a preface, contents page, a listing of the eight illustrations in the book, and a glossary. The Alfred A. Knopf version has an additional index and a section on who is who in the book. The book has 20 chapters and regularly interspersed are footnotes with explanations, some cited with references. It was translated into Hindi, and French in 1957. The book includes Sahgal's memoirs, accounts of her sisters Gita and Chandralekha, and that of her family during the Indian independence movement. She describes what it was like to grow up with both parents focussed on the Gandhian philosophy of non-violent
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is a genus of air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the subfamily Bradybaeninae of the family Camaenidae. Species Pseudobuliminus buliminoides (Heude, 1882) Pseudobuliminus buliminus (Heude, 1882) Pseudobuliminus certa (Zilch, 1938) Pseudobuliminus conoidius (Heude, 1890) Pseudobuliminus cylindrus (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus franzhuberi Thach, 2018 Pseudobuliminus gracilispira (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus incertus'' (L. Pfeiffer, 1866) Pseudobuliminus krejcii (Zilch, 1938) Pseudobuliminus maestratii Thach, 2017 Pseudobuliminus meiacoshimensis (A. Adams & Reeve, 1850) Pseudobuliminus nanchongensis M. Wu, 2002 Pseudobuliminus obesus Thach & F. Huber, 2018 Pseudobuliminus ovoideus Thach & F. Huber, 2018 Pseudobuliminus piligera (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus pinguis (Ancey, 1882) Pseudobuliminus pseudobuliminus (Heude, 1882) Pseudobuliminus quaternarius (Heude, 1890) Pseudobuliminus soleniscus (Möllendorff, 1901) Pseudobuliminus subcylindrica (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus subdoliolum (Haas, 1935) Pseudobuliminus takarai (Kuroda, 1960) Pseudobuliminus thachi
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family Camaenidae. Species Pseudobuliminus buliminoides (Heude, 1882) Pseudobuliminus buliminus (Heude, 1882) Pseudobuliminus certa (Zilch, 1938) Pseudobuliminus conoidius (Heude, 1890) Pseudobuliminus cylindrus (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus franzhuberi Thach, 2018 Pseudobuliminus gracilispira (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus incertus'' (L. Pfeiffer, 1866) Pseudobuliminus krejcii (Zilch, 1938) Pseudobuliminus maestratii Thach, 2017 Pseudobuliminus meiacoshimensis (A. Adams & Reeve, 1850) Pseudobuliminus nanchongensis M. Wu, 2002 Pseudobuliminus obesus Thach & F. Huber, 2018 Pseudobuliminus ovoideus Thach & F. Huber, 2018 Pseudobuliminus piligera (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus pinguis (Ancey, 1882) Pseudobuliminus pseudobuliminus (Heude, 1882) Pseudobuliminus quaternarius (Heude, 1890) Pseudobuliminus soleniscus (Möllendorff, 1901) Pseudobuliminus subcylindrica (Möllendorff, 1899) Pseudobuliminus subdoliolum (Haas, 1935) Pseudobuliminus takarai (Kuroda, 1960) Pseudobuliminus thachi F. Huber, 2018 Pseudobuliminus turrita (Gude, 1900) Synonyms Pseudobuliminus incerta (L. Pfeiffer, 1866): synonym of Pseudobuliminus incertus (L. Pfeiffer, 1866) (specific epithet is not in agreement with generic name) Pseudobuliminus obesa Thach & F. Huber, 2018: synonym
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village in the municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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census, its population was 3,045. References Populated places in
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Léger in Paris. She associated with Paul Valéry, Robert and Sonia Delaunay and also Pablo Picasso, whom she drew. She was married to Paul Arnold Hallgarten (born 7 December 1902 in Frankfurt am Main, died 1930 in Salzburg), the son of Fritz Hallgarten and Yella Bonn, a cousin of Moritz Julius Bonn, who in turn was a cousin of the
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Robert and Sonia Delaunay and also Pablo Picasso, whom she drew. She was married to Paul Arnold Hallgarten (born 7 December 1902 in Frankfurt am Main, died 1930 in Salzburg), the son of Fritz Hallgarten and Yella Bonn, a cousin of Moritz Julius Bonn, who in turn was a cousin of the art historian Aby Warburg. Works in museums and collections The Musée
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According to the 2013 census, its population was 303.
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village in the municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and
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in the Basketligan Swedish top basketball league. Home games are played in the
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Basketligan Swedish top basketball league. Home games are played in the Fryshuset Sporthall. References External links Official website Basketball teams established
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of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census,
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in the municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According
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book by Talbot Brewer in which the author tries to re-examine the history of ethics from ancient Greek philosophy to the present and “retrieve” the strengths of the Ancients in order
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re-examine the history of ethics from ancient Greek philosophy to the present and “retrieve” the strengths of the Ancients in order to provide a radical reconception of moral philosophy and its role
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It is located in a bend of the River Bosna. Demographics According to
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Dolac is a village in the municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located in
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in 1836. It is now a Category B listed building. The church was designed by local architect William Macdonald Mackenzie. James Smart made additions to the building in 1891, including the apse to the west which includes colourful high Victorian stained glass. See also List of
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the apse to the west which includes colourful high Victorian stained glass. See also List of listed buildings in Perth, Scotland References Category B listed buildings in Perth and Kinross Listed churches in Scotland Leonard's Parish 1836 establishments in Scotland Listed buildings in Perth,
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Football League for Everton and Stockport County. References 1902 births 1985 deaths English footballers Association football defenders English Football League players
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was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Everton and Stockport County.
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area without adherence to the instrument landing system approach dictated by existing weather conditions in an attempt to make a visual approach. They found that Flight 285 had descended prematurely and to a low and unsafe altitude in an attempt to approach the airport visually. It did not conform to the ISL glide path, flying nearly 189 feet below the glide path centerline and 165 feet to the right of the localizer centerline. A descent occurred which was not recognized by the pilots in time for corrective action, resulted in the plane striking trees and crashing about 4,000 feet short of the runway threshold. References Airliner accidents and incidents in Massachusetts Aviation accidents and incidents in 1957 Northeast Airlines accidents and incidents 1957 in Massachusetts New Bedford, Massachusetts February 1958
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was Northeast Airlines Flight 823) and was followed by another deadly crash the following year. Flight The flight, which carried freight, mail, and passengers, departed from Boston for Hyannis at 5:50 pm with 21 passengers on board. The aircraft, a Douglas DC-3, departed Hyannis at 6:35 pm for Nantucket. It left Nantucket at 7:30 pm for Martha's Vineyard. The plane missed its first landing approach at Martha's Vineyard due to poor weather conditions, but landed safely on the second approach at 8:07 p.m. All of the original passengers deplaned at these stops. Seven new passengers boarded at Nantucket and fourteen more boarded at Martha's Vineyard. At 8:18 pm, the plane, which was 50 minutes behind schedule, took off from Martha's Vineyard for New Bedford, where one passenger was scheduled to get off. The rest were bound for the flight's final stop at LaGuardia. Crash Around 8:45 pm, the plane, made a normal approach to the field. On its final approach to New Bedford, smashed a 400-foot path through trees and went
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Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is located on the
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on the western banks of the River Bosna. Demographics According to
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She competed at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games in Manila, Philippines. Results CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand
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Indonesian figure skater. She competed at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games in Manila, Philippines. Results CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior
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at the university from 1971 until 1993. Alvre was Vice Dean at the university from 1979 until 1991. In 1993, he became professor emeritus with the university, but continued to teach. During his years of work, he taught courses in the history, semantics, phraseology and historical morphology of the Finnish written language, Votic language, the comparative grammar of the Finnic languages, the vocabulary and morphology of the Uralic languages. Under his supervision, fifteen dissertations were completed. In his research, Alvre focused primarily on the morphology and vocabulary of the Finnic languages. He published nearly 550 research papers. He also compiled a number of original teaching aids for students. Personal life and death In 1977, Alvre married medical scientist Lea Boston (née Tiikmaa). Alvre died on 18 November 2008, aged 87. He was buried at Maarja Cemetery in Tartu. Recognition Honorary member of the Finno-Ugric Society (1990) Honorary Doctor of the University of Helsinki (1994) Order of the White Star, Class IV (1998) Publications Soome keele õpik iseõppijaile (1967) Soome keeleõpetuse reeglid (1969) Soome-eesti vestlussõnastik (1969) Soome sõnakonstruktsioone ja väljendeid I–VII (1977–1979) Udmurdi ja eesti keele kõrvutavaid tekste ja väljendeid (1985, one of the compilers) Soome keele võõrsõnad (1988) Eesti-soome-eesti eksitussõnastik (1993, with Raul Vodja) References 1921 births 2008 deaths
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doctoral degree in philology at the University of Tartu. In 1968, Alvre became lecturer at the Department of Finno-Ugric Languages at Tartu State University, and a professor at the university from 1971 until 1993. Alvre was Vice Dean at the university from 1979 until 1991. In 1993, he became professor emeritus with the university, but continued to teach. During his years of work, he taught courses in the history, semantics, phraseology and historical morphology of the Finnish written language, Votic language, the comparative grammar of the Finnic languages, the vocabulary and morphology of the Uralic languages. Under his supervision, fifteen dissertations were completed. In his research, Alvre focused primarily on the morphology and vocabulary of the Finnic languages. He published nearly 550 research papers. He also compiled a number of original teaching aids for students. Personal life and death In 1977, Alvre married medical scientist Lea Boston (née Tiikmaa). Alvre died on 18 November 2008, aged 87. He was buried at Maarja Cemetery in Tartu. Recognition Honorary member of the Finno-Ugric Society (1990) Honorary Doctor of the University of Helsinki (1994) Order of the White
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together she left in 1956 after a disagreement. and founded the Lil Cumber Attraction Agency for African American actors. She was the first African American woman to represent actors in the film industry. In 1958, Jet reported she closed her booking agency to enter UCLA Law School. Also in 1958, she was engaged to
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music group booking agent, and an agent for actors in Hollywood. She represented African American actors. She was inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame in 1974. Cumber worked as a secretary for Walter L. Gordon and then was a newspaper columnist for 25 years. She worked with Art Rupe, booking
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on 27 December 2020 and ended on 23 August 2021. Stadiums and locations Source: League table References Sudan Premier League seasons Sudan football
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Sudan Premier League, the top-tier football league in Sudan. The season started on 27 December 2020 and ended on 23 August
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was Minister of Public Health and Social Welfare during Carlos Ibáñez del Campo's second government. Later, he was Undersecretary of State in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs. During Salvador Allende's overthrow, he was ambassador to Italy. Similarly, during the first years of Augusto Pinochet's regime,
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as minister and ambassador. Biography Vasallo Rojas was Minister of Public Health and Social Welfare during Carlos Ibáñez del Campo's second government. Later, he was Undersecretary of State in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs. During Salvador Allende's overthrow, he was ambassador to Italy. Similarly, during the first years of
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do so and submitted a letter of resignation, but was instead relocated to Saigon Post Office. The event deepened his patriotic and anti-colonialism sentiments. The successful 1945 August Revolution further encouraged Thiếu Sơn to take part in revolutionary and patriotic activities. He cooperated for Justice, a newspaper of French Socialist Party who supported Vietnam's independence, and joined the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO) on 15 December 1945, worked as Secretary for Vietnamese SFIO members. He pressed for the proper execution of the Temporal Agreement of 14 Sep 1946. Thiếu Sơn wrote another letter of resignation to protest the Oath of Allegiance Ceremony enforced by the pro-France Autonomous Republic of Cochinchina in December 1946, and the third one on 19 December 1946 when First Indochina War broke out, openly refused to be a collaborator of French government. As a journalist for the Justice, Thiếu Sơn wrote many articles sharply crictizing France's policy in Vietnam, which was collected in the compilation Giữa hai cuộc cách mạng 1847 và 1945 (Betweern the 1847 and 1945 revolutions, 1947). In 1948, the pro-French Provisional Central Government of Vietnam attempted to propose Thiếu Sơn a ministerial post, but he refused categorically. In 1949, accepting the invitation of Viet Minh general Nguyễn Bình, Thiếu Sơn made a visiting tour in Viet Minh's controlled area in Đồng Tháp Mười and met many well-known Vietnamese intellectuals there, including Phạm Thiều and Ca Văn Thỉnh. He also arranged the meeting of French socialist leader Alain Savary, member of French Union Council, with the Viet Minh's Administrative Committee of Resistance Forces in Southern Vietnam, in the same year. As a result the pro-French authorities arrested Thiếu Sơn, accused him as a "Communist agent", but was forced to release him under the pressure of leftist activitists. Thiếu Sơn continued his patriotic and anti-colonialism activities after his release. He established the Association of Intellectual Labourer in Southern Vietnam. Together with Trịnh Đình Thảo, he arranged the meeting of Georges Duhamel with 100 well-known Vietnamese intellectuals to informed the French people about patriotic war of Vietnamese people against French invasion. The meeting attracted hostile attention from the pro-French authorities and Thiếu Sơn was summoned by the Security Department for further interrogation. Seeing Justice as a threat to France's activities in Vietnam, the authorities enforced a suppression against the newspaper. Progressive members like Valère and Hervochon was sent back to France. Unable to cooperate with the pro-French remaining members, Thiếu Sơn together with Vũ Tùng, Dương Tử Giang and other colleagues decided to left Saigon for Viet Minh. He and arrived at Viet Minh's controlled area in July 1949 and worked at Viet Minh's Voice of Southern Vietnam, then became the editor of newspaper Cứu quốc (National Salvation) in 1950. His articles received positive acclaim from the readers and was frequently invited by the local people to discuss about contemporary events or to attend important ceremonies. Thiếu Sơn's articles was publsihed by the Central Office for South Vietnam in the 1951 compliation Những người làm nên lịch sử (The people who make history). Revolutionary and patriotic activities during the Vietnam War Thiếu Sơn was tasked to continue his work in South Vietnam after the 1954 Geneva Accord, and he arrived at Saigon in May 1955. Together with Vũ Tùng, Dương Tử Giang, Lý Văn Sâm and others, Thiếu Sơn published many articles praising the Viet Minh leaders and their deeds during the Indochina War. His activities again attracted the hositility of anti-communist regime of Ngô Đình Diệm who arrested him in 1956. Thiếu Sơn quickly resumed journalism after his release in 1960, using a variety of pseudonyms, with his familiar leftist and patriotic theme. Under constant threat of anti-communist Saigon authorities, Thiếu Sơn was known to always carry a full set of neccessary living materials to prepare for the case of being arrested. In 1968, Thiếu Sơn and other Saigon intellectuals joined the Alliance of National Democratic and Peaceful Forces of Vietnam, a political group associated with the communist-led National Liberation Front of South Vietnam (NLF). He took part in the human rights and national culture movement, and was a member of Commitee for Improvement of Imprisonment's Condition. After the death of North Vietnam president Hồ Chí Minh, in September 1969 Thiếu Sơn published an article which openly praised president Hồ as a great personality, praised Hồ's leadership during Vietnam's resistance war against France and the United States, and predicted U.S. inevitable failure in the Vietnam War. On 22 November 1970, Thiếu Sơn made a famous speech at Saigon Literature University about Vietnam's literature from before 1945 to the contemporary times. Alarmed by Thiếu Sơn's activities, Saigon government arrested him again in 1972, accused him as an espionage agent. He was exiled to Côn
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in Hải Dương, French Indochina. Other documents claimed his birthplace was Hanoi. Due to distance in time and a spatial turbulence childhood, even Lê Sĩ Quý and his relatives failed to remember his exact birthday and birth place. Lê Sĩ Quý was a son government officer worked as a verbal translator for the Palace of Resident-Superior of Tonkin, specialized in the Mountainous Area. Lê Sĩ Quý's father was not a faithful husband, he abandoned Quý's birth mother and married two more times. Due to work demands, Quý's family frequently relocated accross mountainous provinces in northern Vietnam, disrupting his education many times. Moreover, Quý's health in his childhood had always been poor, and his father's income as a petty government officer was mediorce. Therefore, despite being a bright student, he only managed to finish upper primary school in 1927 and failed to finish highschool education. Nonetheless, Quý passed the 1929 bureucrat examination with flying colors and began worked at Gia Định Post Office in 1930. Lê Sĩ Quý began his active literary activities in the 1930s, during the blooming of literary movement in Southern Vietnam, with the penname Thiếu Sơn (少山), meaning "Mountain of Youth" or "Young Mountain". The penname "Thiếu Sơn" expressed his favour for a stability and eternal "like a mountain" but also for the vividity and vigor "of the youth". From the very beginning, Thiếu Sơn's literary reviews was highly praised by the literary experts and appeared on many popular newspaper at that time, including the famous Phụ nữ tân văn (婦女新聞, Newspaper of Women) who published his reviews about its own editor. In 1933, Thiếu Sơn published his magnum opus, Phê bình và cảo luận (Criticism and rough dissertation), a collection of his early review essays. The collection received critical acclaim from the readers and established Thiếu Sơn as not only the pioneer of modern literary critics in Vietnam but also the pioneer of personality reviews of notable writers. Encouraged by the early successes, Thiếu Sơn proceeded his career in literature critics and continued to produce valuable reviews, later compiled in an equally acclaimed collection Câu chuyện văn học (The story of literature, 1943). A notable review of Thiếu Sơn, "Two opinions in literature" (1935), unintentionally sparked a heated debate between the "two opinions" Art for art's sake and Art for life's sake in Vietnam during the late 1930s. Thiếu Sơn nominally supported the "Art for art's sake", but he himself had no enthusiasm in the debate and quickly diverted his attention to other issues. Beside literarure, Thiếu Sơn also wrote reviews about social life and human personality like the work Đời sống tinh thần (The Spiritual Life, 1945) which received
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address to the jury in the latter trial, and in 1899 wrote the history of the case. He resigned from the District Attorney's office shortly after the trial and began a private practice. In 1899, when a new city charter shortened county office terms to one year, he was attorney for sheriff Henry S. Martin. An ardent Republican, he was secretary of the California delegation of the 1900 Republican National Convention and an alternate delegate to the Convention. Peixotto had a number of clients from the theater, including Nat Goodwin, Lillian Nordica, Édouard de Reszke, Antonio Scotti, E. H. Sothern, and Michael B. Leavitt. Active in various civic and promotional movements, he was an executive committee member of the 1909 Portola Festival and a member of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition Company. Peixotto was attorney of the Downtown Association of San Francisco for fifteen years and a member of the Freemasons, the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, the American Bar Association, the California State Bar Association, the San Francisco Bar Association, the Bohemian Club, and the Olympic Club. In 1905, he married Malvina Estelle Nathan. Their children were Edgar R. and Nathan M. Peixotto died at home following an operation on June 24, 1925. References 1867 births 1925 deaths Lawyers from San Francisco 19th-century
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Henry S. Martin. An ardent Republican, he was secretary of the California delegation of the 1900 Republican National Convention and an alternate delegate to the Convention. Peixotto had a number of clients from the theater, including Nat Goodwin, Lillian Nordica, Édouard de Reszke, Antonio Scotti, E. H. Sothern, and Michael B. Leavitt. Active in various civic and promotional movements, he was an executive committee member of the 1909 Portola Festival and a member of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition Company. Peixotto was attorney of the Downtown Association of San Francisco for fifteen years and a member of the Freemasons, the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, the American Bar Association, the California State Bar Association, the San Francisco Bar Association, the Bohemian Club, and the Olympic Club. In 1905,
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International Airport. It lies from Cardiff and from London. This area is represented in the Welsh Parliament by James Evans (Conservative) and in the United Kingdom Parliament by Fay Jones
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in the community of Penybont, in Powys, mid Wales, United Kingdom. It is the location of the hoax Llandegley International Airport. It lies from Cardiff
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an issue of Weekly Shōnen Jump in September 2019. The game was released in Japan for Microsoft Windows, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on March 12, 2020. It was released internationally on the same platforms the next day. On February 15, 2022, the game was released on Google Stadia. Various characters have been added to the game after its release via paid paid DLC, with the first being Hawks. In June 2020, English voice-overs were added via a free update. Reception Spencer Still from Screen Rant praised the characters and the combat system, while also noting that the game can be very similar to its predecessor. Suriel Vazquez from IGN praised the characters and their special abilities, while also expressing criticism that the game doesn't pay attention to some of its finer details in the combat system. Jeremy Peeples from Hardcore Gamer praised the
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game was released in Japan for Microsoft Windows, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on March 12, 2020. It was released internationally on the same platforms the next day. On February 15, 2022, the game was released on Google Stadia. Various characters have been added to the game after its release via paid paid DLC, with the first being Hawks. In June 2020, English voice-overs were added via a free update. Reception Spencer Still from Screen Rant praised the characters and the combat system, while also noting that the game can be very similar to its predecessor. Suriel Vazquez from IGN praised the characters and their special abilities, while also expressing criticism that the game doesn't pay attention to some of its finer details in the combat system. Jeremy Peeples from Hardcore Gamer praised the visuals and gameplay improvements over the first game, while also criticizing the game as hard to understand for someone
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Switzerland and appeared on the Swiss Spotify chart at numbers 66. Music video An accompanying music video for "Pow" was uploaded to Gjata's official YouTube channel on 10 June 2021 at 23:59 (CET). It was directed by Albanian photographer Erald Kraja, who was also credited as the director of photography along Lasha Nebieridze. Filmed in New York City, the video contains scenes of Gjata performing at different locations across the city, including at the York Street station. Illyrian Pirates's reviewer noted the video as "stunning" and commended the Gjata's fashion as "stylish". Giannis Dimitrellos from Mikropragmata similarly complimented the singer's appearance, describing it a "fresher" version of American singer Fergie during her Black Eyed Peas period. Albanian-language website Njeshi further praised Gjata's fashion, while newspaper Gazeta Metro similarly lauded her fashion noting the use of springtime colors. Credits and personnel Credits adapted from Tidal and YouTube. Elvana Gjatacomposing, songwriting, vocals Andy Grammcomposing, songwriting Denkcomposing, songwriting Koen Heldensmastering, mixing Pandaproducing Toniccomposing, songwriting Track listing Digital download "Pow"2:55 Charts Release history References 2022 singles 2022 songs Albanian-language
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Music Matters released it as a single for digital download and streaming on 11 February 2022. "Pow" is an Albanian-language R&B and urban song exploring the story of a heartbroken woman who has been disappointed by love. Music critics applauded the song upon its release, commending the music video, Gjata's appearance as well as her vocal delivery. The music video for the song was uploaded to the singer's YouTube channel on 10 June 2021, depicting her in different settings in New York City. Commercially, the song peaked at number three in Albania and reacher number 98 in Switzerland. Background and composition On 2 February 2022, Gjata uploaded a preview on her social media in which she teased "Pow". In the description, the singer announced the single's release date scheduled for 11 February 2022. Then, "Pow" was made available as a single for digital download and streaming on the announced date by Loudcom Media under exclusive license from East Music Matters. It was written by Gjata along Denk and Tonic, while produced by Andy Gramm and Panda. Musically, "Pow" was noted by a critical commentary as a "melancholic" Albanian R&B and urban song with a "charming retro vibe". Its Albanian-language lyrics tell the story of a heartbroken woman who has been disappointed by love. Reception Upon its release, "Pow" received generally positive reviews from music critics. In a review for Illyrian Pirates, the writer praised the song's nature as well as Gjata's "smooth" and "passionate" vocal delivery. The latter reviewer pointed out that its her "beautiful" voice, which makes the song
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Pseudocyclotus crinitus Thiele, 1928 Pseudocyclotus debilior Iredale, 1941 Pseudocyclotus exiguus Iredale, 1941 Pseudocyclotus flavus (Leschke, 1912) Pseudocyclotus globosus (E. A. Smith, 1897) Pseudocyclotus hermitensis Thiele, 1928 Pseudocyclotus incendium Clench, 1957 Pseudocyclotus infans (E. A. Smith, 1884) Pseudocyclotus laetus (Möllendorff, 1895) Pseudocyclotus levis (L. Pfeiffer, 1855) Pseudocyclotus liratulus (E. von Martens, 1864) Pseudocyclotus lorentzi (Schepman, 1919) Pseudocyclotus novaehiberniae (Quoy & Gaimard, 1832) Pseudocyclotus parvus (Hedley, 1891) Pseudocyclotus rugatellus (Tapparone Canefri, 1883) Pseudocyclotus rutilus van Benthem Jutting, 1963 Pseudocyclotus tristis (Tapparone Canefri, 1883) Pseudocyclotus tunicatus (Tapparone Canefri, 1886) Pseudocyclotus wegneri van
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Bank, R. A. (2017). Classification of the Recent freshwater/brackish Gastropoda of the World. Last update: January 24th, 2018. OpenAccess publication External links Thiele, J. (1894). Ueber die Zungen einiger Landdeckelschnecken. Nachrichtsblatt der Deutschen Malakozoologischen Gesellschaft. 6(1-2): 23-25 Tapparone Canefri, C. (1886). Fauna malacologica della Nuova Guinea i delle isole adiacenti. Parte I. - Molluschi estramarini. Supplemento 1. Annali del Museo civico di Storia Naturale di Genova, Series 2. 24: 113-200. Fukuda H. & Ponder W.F. 2003. Australian freshwater assimineids, with a synopsis of the Recent genus-group taxa of the
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across 14 songs, the rapper extensively collaborated with Kosovo-Albanian producers Pellumb and Rzon on the record. It was classified as an hip hop, pop and R&B album, comprising songs performed mainly in Albanian with limited lines in English, French, and German. Upon release, Lamboziki saw a moderate commercial success, reaching number 42 in Switzerland. Three singles released throughout October 2021 to January 2022 preceded the record, including "" featuring Noizy, "" and "" with Elvana Gjata. The former three were all accompanied by music videos and entered the single charts in Albania and Switzerland. Background and composition Preceded by a teaser in October 2021, Mozzik announced Lamboziki as his second studio album on his social media accounts and revealed the record's title and cover art. The latter depicts a golden portrait of the rapper positioned in a black coat of arms, resembling the logo of Italian manufacturer Lamborghini, with lettering displayed in gold above the coat. The tracklist and release date as 13 February 2022 were unveiled through the rapper's social media on another occasion in early February. The record was ultimately issued in various countries on the announced date by 2 Euro Gang and Urban, a subsidiary of Universal. Lamboziki contains 14 songs and lasts for 43 minutes and 35 seconds. For the record, Mozzik collaborated with Kosovo-Albanian producers Pellumb and Rzon, while also being involved in the writing process of all the songs. Critical commentary noted the record to incorporate hip hop, pop and R&B music, with funk, rock, urban elements. The record's songs are predominantly performed in Albanian, with several songs encompassing German, English and French lyrics, as well. Promotion Lamboziki was supported by three singles, including its accompanying music videos, which premiered from October 2021 to January 2022. "" was released as the record's first
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rock, urban elements. The record's songs are predominantly performed in Albanian, with several songs encompassing German, English and French lyrics, as well. Promotion Lamboziki was supported by three singles, including its accompanying music videos, which premiered from October 2021 to January 2022. "" was released as the record's first single on 21 October and featured the Albanian rapper Noizy. Described as a hip hop, R&B and urban song, it lyrically focuses on pleasure and passion, and is concentrated on a desire to attract the attention of an independent woman. Commercially, the recording reached number 14 on Switzerland's Top 100 chart in late October. The record's second single, "", followed on 24 November, and entered the top five on Albania's Top 100 chart in early December. Musically a pop song with funk and rock components, its video game-inspired music video was well received by reviewers, who lauded Mozzik's appearance, and noted the retro and science-fiction visuals. This was followed on 27 January 2022 by the premiere of the record's third single "", an urban and R&B recording delving into the concepts of empowerment and self-love. Collaborating with Albanian singer and songwriter Elvana Gjata, it reached number three in Albania and peaked at number 33 in Switzerland. To further promote the record's premiere, a single music video for "Patrolla" and "Kriminela" was released during the record's release. Upon release, Lamboziki experienced a moderate commercial success, debuting and peaking at number 42 on the Swiss albums charts.
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municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics
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Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was
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Lumpar, on 10 September 1998. Competing at the Jamaican senior level, Lewis paired with Nigella Saunders to win the ladies' doubles in 2005, 2006, and 2007. She won the ladies' singles in 2010. In 2011, she paired with Christine Leyow-Mayne to win the ladies' doubles and with Bradley Graham to win the mixed doubles. Pairing with Garron
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2007. She won the ladies' singles in 2010. In 2011, she paired with Christine Leyow-Mayne to win the ladies' doubles and with Bradley Graham to win the mixed doubles. Pairing with Garron Palmer, Lewis won the mixed doubles final in 2009 and 2010. Lewis was the number one ranking women's Badminton player in Jamaica for most of 2012. Between 1997 and 2010, she played 38 matches in her international badminton career, winning
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Ameloblastic fibroma Ameloblastic fibrodentinoma Ameloblastic fibro-odontoma
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Mixed odontogenic tumor may
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and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 445.
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is a village in the municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and
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Roberts University during the 1983–84 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Titans, led by 2nd year head coach Dick Acres, played their home games at the Mabee Center and were members of the Midwestern City Conference. They finished the season 21–10, 11–3 in MCC play to be crowned regular
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City Tournament to receive an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 11 seed in the Midwest region. The Titans lost to No. 6 seed Memphis State in the opening round. Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Exhibition |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| MCC Tournament |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament
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its junction with George Inn Lane, it is adjoined to the south by Perth's Municipal Buildings. It was completed in 1887, the work of Hippolyte Jean Blanc, and is now a Category B listed building. See also List
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on Tay Street, at its junction with George Inn Lane, it is adjoined to the south by Perth's Municipal Buildings. It was completed in 1887, the work of Hippolyte Jean Blanc, and is
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Idyll for 12 violas (1978); Dedictated to Dr. Thomas Tatton. Kammersymphonie Nonet for 9 violas (1956) Legend for viola and piano (1985) Metamorphsen for viola and string orchestra (1981) Moonlit Apples for viola and piano (1979) Phantasy of Light, Phantasy-Scherzo for 4 violas (1990) Poem No. 1 for viola and piano (1931); Comus Edition. Written for Bernard Shore. Renata da Capo for 10 violas (1987); Comus Edition Rondo Capriccio for 6 violas (1986); Corda Music Publications Scherzo (Enigma) for violin and viola (published 1950); J. & W. Chester Sonata for viola and piano (1979); Comus Edition Sonatina for 2 violas (1951); Comus Edition Suite for 3 violas (1980); Five movements: Rigaudon & Interlude, Tempo di Sarabande, Gavotte, Swallow Falls (Sound Picture) and Gigue. The work was composed as an act of gratitude for three violists, Harry Danks, John White and Eric Sargon, who had organised a concert of Harding's works at the Royal College of Music in London. Sunset Paradise for 7 violas (1986) Where the Willows Meet, a symphonic study (based on a poem by James Joyce) for viola and piano (1990) Orchestral works Valse The Fairy Palace Symphony no. 1. (First performed by the National Orchestra of Wales at Cardiff City Hall.) Scherzo (1922). Performed 1925, Harlech Castle, Caernarvonshire Festival. Conducted by Harding. Prelude in A minor Overture in A major to the opera Giulio Cesare (Handel), orchestrated by Kenneth Harding (1924) Passacaglia (1925) Sohrab and Rustum, a symphonic poem. (1926) Phaethon, a symphonic poem. (1927) Rhapsody, a double concerto for violin and cello with accompaniment for orchestra.(1928). Received its first performance by the National Orchestra of Wales under Warwick Braithwaite in 1929. The Sun Descending in the West (words, William Blake), a choral symphonic poem for baritone solo, chorus and orchestra. (1944) Children's Phantasy (on tunes composed by pupils of the Margaret Hardy County Secondary School, Brighton), for string orchestra. (1946) Concerto for Oboe and Strings Instrumental and chamber music Passacaglia for String Trio Passacaglia for Piano Quartet Trio in one movement for piano, violin and cello, op. 7. Variations on the Welsh Hymn tune Llydaw. (1939) Humoreske, for violin and piano. (1923) Slumber Song, for violin and piano. Three Miniature String Quartets (second group), comprising Prelude, Scherzo and Dawn. (1923) Pianoforte Quintet. Phantasy on the Welsh Melody Hobed o hilion. Sonata for two violins. (1950) 'For my colleagues Kathleen Washbourne and Patricia Lovell'. First broadcast performance by the dedicatees on 27 Sept 1960. Quartet for two violins, viola and cello. (1960) Commissioned by the BBC Sonata for unaccompanied violin. (1961) Dedicated to Patricia Lovell. Six Miniature Tone Pictures: Six progressive pieces for string players in the early grades, for three violins with optional piano and cello. (1967) Piano music Study on the White Keys. (1923) Minuet in D minor. (1923) Valse. (1923) Toccata. (1924) Berceuse. (1935). 'For my wife' Songs Shall I Compare (words, Shakespeare), for voice and piano. 'For my wife'. Three Songs (words, Edwin Stanley James. I 'Roundel', II 'Willowford', III 'Moulin Huet'), for voice and piano. Three Songs: A Lament (words, P. B. Shelley), Oh, Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast (words, Robert Burns), The Dying Adrian to his Soul (words, M. Prior), for voice and piano. Ah, Me! When shall I marry me? (words, Oliver Goldsmith), for voice and piano. (1934) Winter (words, Shakespeare), for soprano or tenor and piano. (1934) 'For my dear Wife' Cradle Song (words, Sarojini Naidu), for voice and piano. (1935) The Best is yet to be (words, Browning), No. 2 of 'Three Talks with God', for soprano and piano. Sleep, Holy Babe (words, Edward Caswall), for voice and piano. (1951) 'To my dear wife'. Wedding Song, (words, Shakespeare), for voice and organ. (1953) 'For Enid and Kenneth'. The "Caribbean" Lord's Prayer (traditional tune), No. 3 of 'Three Talks with God'. Komm Lieber Mai (words, A. Overbeck), for voice and piano. (1986) Carols The Christmas Message. Good People All
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Rondo Capriccio for 6 violas (1986); Corda Music Publications Scherzo (Enigma) for violin and viola (published 1950); J. & W. Chester Sonata for viola and piano (1979); Comus Edition Sonatina for 2 violas (1951); Comus Edition Suite for 3 violas (1980); Five movements: Rigaudon & Interlude, Tempo di Sarabande, Gavotte, Swallow Falls (Sound Picture) and Gigue. The work was composed as an act of gratitude for three violists, Harry Danks, John White and Eric Sargon, who had organised a concert of Harding's works at the Royal College of Music in London. Sunset Paradise for 7 violas (1986) Where the Willows Meet, a symphonic study (based on a poem by James Joyce) for viola and piano (1990) Orchestral works Valse The Fairy Palace Symphony no. 1. (First performed by the National Orchestra of Wales at Cardiff City Hall.) Scherzo (1922). Performed 1925, Harlech Castle, Caernarvonshire Festival. Conducted by Harding. Prelude in A minor Overture in A major to the opera Giulio Cesare (Handel), orchestrated by Kenneth Harding (1924) Passacaglia (1925) Sohrab and Rustum, a symphonic poem. (1926) Phaethon, a symphonic poem. (1927) Rhapsody, a double concerto for violin and cello with accompaniment for orchestra.(1928). Received its first performance by the National Orchestra of Wales under Warwick Braithwaite in 1929. The Sun Descending in the West (words, William Blake), a choral symphonic poem for baritone solo, chorus and orchestra. (1944) Children's Phantasy (on tunes composed by pupils of the Margaret Hardy County Secondary School, Brighton), for string orchestra. (1946) Concerto for Oboe and Strings Instrumental and chamber music Passacaglia for String Trio Passacaglia for Piano Quartet Trio in one movement for piano, violin and cello, op. 7. Variations on the Welsh Hymn tune Llydaw. (1939) Humoreske, for violin and piano. (1923) Slumber Song, for violin and piano. Three Miniature String Quartets (second group), comprising Prelude, Scherzo and Dawn. (1923) Pianoforte Quintet. Phantasy on the Welsh Melody Hobed o hilion. Sonata for two violins. (1950) 'For my colleagues Kathleen Washbourne and Patricia Lovell'. First broadcast performance by the dedicatees on 27 Sept 1960. Quartet for two violins, viola and cello. (1960) Commissioned by the BBC Sonata for unaccompanied violin. (1961) Dedicated to Patricia Lovell. Six Miniature Tone Pictures: Six progressive pieces for string players in the early grades, for three violins with optional piano and cello. (1967) Piano music Study on the White Keys. (1923) Minuet in D minor. (1923) Valse. (1923) Toccata. (1924) Berceuse. (1935). 'For my wife' Songs Shall I Compare (words, Shakespeare), for voice and piano. 'For my wife'. Three Songs (words, Edwin Stanley James. I 'Roundel', II 'Willowford', III 'Moulin Huet'), for voice and piano. Three Songs: A Lament (words, P. B. Shelley), Oh, Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast (words, Robert Burns), The Dying Adrian to
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Gras, The Rains of Ranchipur, Three Came to Kill, On the Threshold of Space, Everything's Ducky and Hong Kong Confidential. Death Calder died in June 1964 of a heart attack at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 67. He was buried in Ferncliff Cemetery. References External links Rotten Tomatoes profile 1898 births 1964 deaths People from Baltimore Male actors from Baltimore Male actors from Maryland American male film actors American male television
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credit was in 1951. Career Calder began his film and television career in 1949, where he appeared in the anthology television series The Clock. He starred in the crime drama television series Martin Kane, Private Eye from 1952 to 1954, in which he played the role of "Lt. Gray". Calder also co-starred in playing the role of "Joe Armstrong" in the 1956 film Time Table. He guest-starred in television programs, including, The Fugitive, Trackdown, Man with a Camera, Bat Masterson, Tales of Wells Fargo, The Virginian, The Twilight Zone, Rawhide, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Mr. Lucky, State Trooper and The Untouchables. His film credits includes, Wall of Noise, Mardi Gras,
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mail, before being reissued by Rubric Records. Production The album includes covers of songs by Richard Thompson, Big Star, and the Magnetic Fields, among others. Lord recorded the album on a newly purchased portable DAT recorder, which she returned within 30 days for a refund. The songs were captured at Park Street station, in Boston, and at Harvard Square. A studio recording of "Speeding Motorcycle", a cover of the Daniel Johnston song, was included on the reissue. Critical reception No Depression wrote that "Lord proves a particularly strong interpreter of Richard Thompson’s work, jangling through '1952 Vincent Black Lightning' and delicately rendering 'Beeswing'." Entertainment Weekly noted that the highlights include "a pair of motorcycle odes by Richard Thompson and Daniel Johnston, and a languid take on Springsteen's 'Thunder Road' that recasts it as the daydream it probably
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within 30 days for a refund. The songs were captured at Park Street station, in Boston, and at Harvard Square. A studio recording of "Speeding Motorcycle", a cover of the Daniel Johnston song, was included on the reissue. Critical reception No Depression wrote that "Lord proves a particularly strong interpreter of Richard Thompson’s work, jangling through '1952 Vincent Black Lightning' and delicately rendering 'Beeswing'." Entertainment Weekly noted that the highlights include "a pair of motorcycle odes by Richard Thompson and Daniel Johnston, and a languid take on Springsteen's 'Thunder Road' that recasts it as the daydream it probably always was." Trouser Press declared that "the performances, unembellished and heartfelt, are perfect." The Boston Globe thought that "her
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Owens was involved in the newspaper and real estate businesses. He died on February 4, 2022, at the age of 75. References 1946 births 2022 deaths People from Framingham, Massachusetts Politicians from Worcester, Massachusetts Businesspeople from Massachusetts Military personnel from Massachusetts Harvard
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from Harvard College in 1968. He served in the United States Navy during the Vietnam War in 1969. In 1972, he served as an administrative aide to Massachusetts state senator Ed Burke. Owens served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1973 to 1975 and was a Democrat. Owens then served as an administrative assistant to United States Representative Robert Drinan. Owens was involved in the newspaper and real estate businesses. He died on February
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from time to time until they merged with the DB in 1994. On their narrow-gauge lines, however, steam locomotives continued to be used on a daily year-round basis, mainly for tourist reasons. The largest of these is the Harzer Schmalspurbahn (Harz Narrow Gauge Railways) network in the Harz Mountains, but the lines in Saxony and on the coast of the Baltic Sea are also notable. Even though all former DR narrow-gauge railways have undergone privatisation, steam operations are still commonplace there. Today, the fastest steam locomotive worldwide is the German DR 18 201 (BR 18.201, Baureihe 18.201). The German express locomotive, number 18 201 of the Deutsche Reichsbahn in East Germany, appeared in 1960–61 at Meiningen Steam Locomotive Works as a conversion of the Henschel-Wegmann train locomotive 61 002, the tender from 44 468 and parts of H 45 024 and Class 41. It is the fastest operational steam locomotive in the world. Russia In the USSR, although the first mainline diesel-electric locomotive was built in USSR in 1924, the last steam locomotive (model П36, serial number 251) was built in 1956; it is now in the Museum of Railway Machinery at the former Warsaw Rail Terminal, Saint Petersburg. In the European part of the USSR, almost all steam locomotives were replaced by diesel and electric locomotives in the 1960s; in Siberia and Central Asia, state records verify that L-class s and LV-class s were not retired until 1985. Until 1994, Russia had at least 1,000 steam locomotives stored in operable condition in case of "national emergencies". Other countries In Finland, the first diesels were introduced in the mid-1950s, superseding steam locomotives by the early 1960s. State railways (VR) operated steam locomotives until 1975. In the Netherlands, the first electric trains appeared in 1908, making the trip from Rotterdam to The Hague. The first diesels were introduced in 1934. As electric and diesel trains performed so well, the decline of steam started just after World War II, with steam traction ending in 1958. In Poland, on non-electrified tracks, steam locomotives were superseded almost entirely by diesels by the 1990s. A few steam locomotives, however, operate in the regularly scheduled service from Wolsztyn. After ceasing on 31 March 2014, regular service resumed out of Wolsztyn on 15 May 2017 with weekday runs to Leszno. This operation is maintained as a means of preserving railway heritage and as a tourist attraction. Apart from that, numerous railway museums and heritage railways (mostly narrow gauge) own steam locomotives in working condition. In France, steam locomotives have not been used for commercial services since 24 September 1975. In Spain, the first electric trains were introduced en 1911, and the first diesels in 1935, just one year before the Spanish Civil War. National railway company (Renfe) operated steam locomotives until 9 June 1975. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, some steam locomotives are still used for industrial purposes, for example at the coal mine in Banovići and ArcelorMittal factory in Zenica. Asia China China continued to build mainline steam locomotives until the late 20th century, even building a few examples for American tourist operations. China was the last main-line user of steam locomotives, with use ending officially on the Jitong line at the end of 2005. Some steam locomotives are still in use in industrial operations in China. Some coal and other mineral operations maintain an active roster of China Railways JS (建设, "Jiànshè") or China Railways SY (上游, "Shàngyóu") steam locomotives bought secondhand from China Railway. The last steam locomotive built in China was SY 1772, finished in 1999. at least six Chinese steam locomotives exist in the United States – 3 QJs bought by the Rail Development Corporation (Nos. 6988 and 7081 for IAIS and No. 7040 for R.J. Corman), a JS bought by the Boone and Scenic Valley Railroad, and two SYs. No. 142 (formerly No. 1647) is owned by the NYSW for tourist operations, re-painted and modified to represent a 1920s-era US locomotive; No. 58 is operated by the Valley Railroad and has been modified to represent New Haven Railroad number 3025. Japan Owing to the destruction of much of the nation's infrastructure during the Second World War, and the cost of electrification and dieselisation, new steam locomotives were built in Japan until 1960. The number of Japanese steam locomotives reached a peak of 5,958 in 1946. With the booming post-war Japanese economy, steam locomotives were gradually withdrawn from main line service beginning in the early 1960s, and were replaced with diesel and electric locomotives. They were relegated to branch line and sub-main line services for several more years until the late 1960s, when electrification and dieselisation began to increase. From 1970 onwards, steam locomotion was gradually abolished on the JNR: Shikoku (April 1970) Kanto area (Tokyo) (October 1970), Kinki (Osaka, Kyoto area) (September 1973) Chubu (Nagoya, Nagano area) (April 1974), Tohoku (November 1974), Chugoku (Yamaguchi area) (December 1974) Kyushu (January 1975) Hokkaido (March 1976) The last regular steam passenger train, pulled by a C57-class locomotive built in 1940, departed from Muroran railway station to Iwamizawa on 14 December 1975. It was then officially retired from service, dismantled and sent to the Tokyo Transportation Museum, where it was inaugurated as an exhibit on 14 May 1976. It was moved to the Saitama Railway Museum in early 2007. The last Japanese main line steam train, D51-241, a D51-class locomotive built in 1939, left Yubari railway station on 24 December 1975. That same day, all steam main line service ended. D51-241 was retired on 10 March 1976, and destroyed in a depot fire a month later, though some parts were preserved. On 2 March 1976, the only steam locomotive still operating on the JNR, 9600–39679, a 9600-class locomotive built in 1920, made its final journey from Oiwake railway station, ending 104 years of steam locomotion in Japan. Today steam passenger trains are operated by JR companies on an infrequent excursion/nostalgia basis, their services always prefixed with the letters SL (for steam liner). Examples are SL Hitoyoshi and SL Ginga. South Korea The first steam locomotive in South Korea (Korea at the time) was the Moga (Mogul) 2-6-0, which first ran on 9 September 1899 on the Gyeong-In Line. Other South Korean steam locomotive classes include the Sata, Pureo, Ame, Sig, Mika (USRA Heavy Mikado), Pasi (USRA Light Pacific), Hyeogi (Narrow gauge), Class 901, Mateo, Sori and Tou. Used until 1967, the Pasi 23 is now in the Railroad Museum. India New steam locomotives were built in India well into the early 1970s; the last broad-gauge steam locomotive to be manufactured, Last Star, a WG-class locomotive (No. 10560) was built in June 1970, followed by the last meter-gauge locomotive in February 1972. Steam locomotion continued to predominate on Indian Railways through the early 1980s; in fiscal year 1980–81, there were 7,469 steam locomotives in regular service, compared to 2,403 diesels and 1,036 electrics. Subsequently, steam locomotion was gradually phased out from regular service, beginning with the Southern Railway Zone in 1985; the number of diesel and electric locomotives in regular service surpassed the number of steam locomotives in service in 1987–88. The first electric trains were introduced in India as part of the Bombay suburban railway system on 3 February 1925. The first metre gauge diesel locomotives were introduced in 1955 and broad gaue in 1957. All regular broad-gauge steam service in India ended in 1995, with the final run made from Jalandhar to Ferozpur on 6 December. The last meter-gauge and narrow-gauge steam locomotives in regular service were retired in 2000. After being withdrawn from service, most steam locomotives were scrapped, though some have been preserved in various railway museums. The only steam locomotives remaining in regular service are on India's heritage lines. Other countries In Thailand, all steam locomotives were withdrawn from service between the late 1960s and early 1970s. Most were scrapped in 1980. However, there are about 20 to 30 locomotives preserved for exhibit in important or end-of-the-line stations throughout the country. During the late 1980s, six locomotives were restored to running condition. Most are JNR-built steam locomotives with the exception of a single . Indonesia has also used steam locomotives since 1876. The last batch of E10 rack tank locomotives were purchased in 1967 (Kautzor, 2010) from Nippon Sharyo. The last locomotives – the D 52 class, manufactured by the German firm Krupp in 1954 – operated until 1994, when they were replaced by diesel locomotives. Indonesia also purchased the last batch of mallet locomotives from Nippon Sharyo, to be used on the Aceh Railway. In Sumatra Barat (West Sumatra) and Ambarawa some rack railways (with a maximum gradient of 6% in mountainous areas) are now operated for tourism only. There are two rail museums in Indonesia, Taman Mini and Ambarawa (Ambarawa Railway Museum). In the Philippines, the Manila Railroad retired its entire steam locomotive fleet from mainline service by August 1956 as part of the agency's efforts towards dieselisation. All but three tank locomotives were scrapped by its successor, the Philippine National Railways. The last of such engines ordered were ten Manila Railroad 300 class
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is operated by the Valley Railroad and has been modified to represent New Haven Railroad number 3025. Japan Owing to the destruction of much of the nation's infrastructure during the Second World War, and the cost of electrification and dieselisation, new steam locomotives were built in Japan until 1960. The number of Japanese steam locomotives reached a peak of 5,958 in 1946. With the booming post-war Japanese economy, steam locomotives were gradually withdrawn from main line service beginning in the early 1960s, and were replaced with diesel and electric locomotives. They were relegated to branch line and sub-main line services for several more years until the late 1960s, when electrification and dieselisation began to increase. From 1970 onwards, steam locomotion was gradually abolished on the JNR: Shikoku (April 1970) Kanto area (Tokyo) (October 1970), Kinki (Osaka, Kyoto area) (September 1973) Chubu (Nagoya, Nagano area) (April 1974), Tohoku (November 1974), Chugoku (Yamaguchi area) (December 1974) Kyushu (January 1975) Hokkaido (March 1976) The last regular steam passenger train, pulled by a C57-class locomotive built in 1940, departed from Muroran railway station to Iwamizawa on 14 December 1975. It was then officially retired from service, dismantled and sent to the Tokyo Transportation Museum, where it was inaugurated as an exhibit on 14 May 1976. It was moved to the Saitama Railway Museum in early 2007. The last Japanese main line steam train, D51-241, a D51-class locomotive built in 1939, left Yubari railway station on 24 December 1975. That same day, all steam main line service ended. D51-241 was retired on 10 March 1976, and destroyed in a depot fire a month later, though some parts were preserved. On 2 March 1976, the only steam locomotive still operating on the JNR, 9600–39679, a 9600-class locomotive built in 1920, made its final journey from Oiwake railway station, ending 104 years of steam locomotion in Japan. Today steam passenger trains are operated by JR companies on an infrequent excursion/nostalgia basis, their services always prefixed with the letters SL (for steam liner). Examples are SL Hitoyoshi and SL Ginga. South Korea The first steam locomotive in South Korea (Korea at the time) was the Moga (Mogul) 2-6-0, which first ran on 9 September 1899 on the Gyeong-In Line. Other South Korean steam locomotive classes include the Sata, Pureo, Ame, Sig, Mika (USRA Heavy Mikado), Pasi (USRA Light Pacific), Hyeogi (Narrow gauge), Class 901, Mateo, Sori and Tou. Used until 1967, the Pasi 23 is now in the Railroad Museum. India New steam locomotives were built in India well into the early 1970s; the last broad-gauge steam locomotive to be manufactured, Last Star, a WG-class locomotive (No. 10560) was built in June 1970, followed by the last meter-gauge locomotive in February 1972. Steam locomotion continued to predominate on Indian Railways through the early 1980s; in fiscal year 1980–81, there were 7,469 steam locomotives in regular service, compared to 2,403 diesels and 1,036 electrics. Subsequently, steam locomotion was gradually phased out from regular service, beginning with the Southern Railway Zone in 1985; the number of diesel and electric locomotives in regular service surpassed the number of steam locomotives in service in 1987–88. The first electric trains were introduced in India as part of the Bombay suburban railway system on 3 February 1925. The first metre gauge diesel locomotives were introduced in 1955 and broad gaue in 1957. All regular broad-gauge steam service in India ended in 1995, with the final run made from Jalandhar to Ferozpur on 6 December. The last meter-gauge and narrow-gauge steam locomotives in regular service were retired in 2000. After being withdrawn from service, most steam locomotives were scrapped, though some have been preserved in various railway museums. The only steam locomotives remaining in regular service are on India's heritage lines. Other countries In Thailand, all steam locomotives were withdrawn from service between the late 1960s and early 1970s. Most were scrapped in 1980. However, there are about 20 to 30 locomotives preserved for exhibit in important or end-of-the-line stations throughout the country. During the late 1980s, six locomotives were restored to running condition. Most are JNR-built steam locomotives with the exception of a single . Indonesia has also used steam locomotives since 1876. The last batch of E10 rack tank locomotives were purchased in 1967 (Kautzor, 2010) from Nippon Sharyo. The last locomotives – the D 52 class, manufactured by the German firm Krupp in 1954 – operated until 1994, when they were replaced by diesel locomotives. Indonesia also purchased the last batch of mallet locomotives from Nippon Sharyo, to be used on the Aceh Railway. In Sumatra Barat (West Sumatra) and Ambarawa some rack railways (with a maximum gradient of 6% in mountainous areas) are now operated for tourism only. There are two rail museums in Indonesia, Taman Mini and Ambarawa (Ambarawa Railway Museum). In the Philippines, the Manila Railroad retired its entire steam locomotive fleet from mainline service by August 1956 as part of the agency's efforts towards dieselisation. All but three tank locomotives were scrapped by its successor, the Philippine National Railways. The last of such engines ordered were ten Manila Railroad 300 class locomotives in 1951. However, steam locomotives continue to operate in Negros Island for much of the later 20th and the 21st centuries. One sugar mill operates two 0-6-0 steam locomotives as of 2020. Pakistan Railways still has a regular steam locomotive service; a line operates in the North-West Frontier Province and in Sindh. It has been preserved as a "nostalgia" service for tourism in exotic locales, and is specifically advertised as being for "steam buffs". In Sri Lanka, one steam locomotive is maintained for private service to power the Viceroy Special. Africa South Africa In South Africa, the last new steam locomotives purchased were Garratts from Hunslet Taylor for the gauge lines in 1968. Another class 25NC locomotive, No. 3450, nicknamed the "Red Devil" because of its colour scheme, received modifications including a prominent set of double side-by-side exhaust stacks. In southern Natal, two former South African Railway gauge NGG16 Garratts operating on the privatised Port Shepstone and Alfred County Railway (ACR) received some L.D. Porta modifications in 1990, becoming a new NGG16A class. By 1994 almost all commercial steam locomotives were put out of service, although many of them are preserved in museums or at railway stations for public viewing. Today only a few privately owned steam locomotives are still operating in South Africa, including the ones being used by the 5-star luxury train Rovos Rail, and the
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me a graduate fellowship, because history obviously could only be my avocation, not my vocation. They didn't think I could be serious, so I spent two years as a teaching assistant without pay, in order to get my teaching credits." Career In 1971, Struever, a professor of history at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, was awarded an American Council of Learned Societies fellowship that she would use to take a sabbatical from 1972 to 1973 in Italy to research for her second book. In 1974, Struever became a professor at Johns Hopkins University. In 1990, Struever was the president of the . In March 1998, the humanities center at Johns Hopkins sponsored a symposium in honor of her retirement. Personal life In 1974, Struever moved to Tuscany-Canterbury, Baltimore. Struever's sons Bill and Fred are real estate developers in Baltimore. She owns a home in Maine. Struever and her daughter, Molly, shared ownership of the Children's Bookstore in Baltimore with JoAnn Fruchtman. By 1999, Fruchtman reported that she bought the Struevers out a few years after opening. Selected works References Living people 1928 births People from LaSalle, Illinois University of Rochester alumni Hobart and William Smith
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Bruni, and Poggio Bracciolini. The dissertation became the basis of her first book published in 1970. At the time she completed her doctorate, Struever had a daughter and son in college and her youngest son was a freshmen in high school. In a 1971 interview, Struever shared of her experiences as a doctoral student that, "...attitudes among the faculty ranged from encouraging to horrified. My worst problem was that U of R would not give me a graduate fellowship, because history obviously could only be my avocation, not my vocation. They didn't think I could be serious, so I spent two years as a teaching assistant without pay, in order to get my teaching credits." Career In 1971, Struever, a professor of history at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, was awarded an American Council of Learned Societies fellowship that she would use to take a sabbatical from 1972 to 1973 in Italy to research for her second book. In 1974, Struever became a professor at Johns Hopkins University. In 1990, Struever was the president of the . In March 1998, the humanities center at Johns Hopkins sponsored a symposium in honor of her retirement. Personal life In 1974, Struever moved to Tuscany-Canterbury, Baltimore. Struever's sons Bill and Fred are real estate developers in Baltimore. She owns a home in Maine. Struever and her daughter, Molly, shared ownership of the Children's Bookstore in Baltimore with JoAnn Fruchtman. By 1999, Fruchtman reported that she bought the Struevers out a few years after opening. Selected works References Living people 1928 births People from LaSalle,
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Moscow and started publishing literary critical articles and reviews in Moscow newspapers and magazines, most often in the Novy Mir literary journal. Between 1950 and 1960, Svetov published hundreds of articles and reviews, as well as four scientific papers, including the monograph Mikhail Svetov (; 1967). Svetov spoke in defence of Andrei Sinyavsky, Yuli Daniel and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. In 1974, Solzhenitsyn's collection was published in France, in which Svetov published the Russian Fates () article under the pseudonym F. Korsakov (). Svetov was married to the writer Zoya Krakhmalnikova. In 1978, Svetov's novel "Open the Doors to Me" () was published in Paris. At that time, he and his wife were no longer published in official Soviet publications, they were subjected to pressure from the authorities. In 1982, Svetov was expelled from Union of Soviet Writers, and on 23 January 1985 he was arrested after a search of his apartment. He was convicted for his "defamatory" allegations that "innocent people [were]
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pseudonym F. Korsakov (). Svetov was married to the writer Zoya Krakhmalnikova. In 1978, Svetov's novel "Open the Doors to Me" () was published in Paris. At that time, he and his wife were no longer published in official Soviet publications, they were subjected to pressure from the authorities. In 1982, Svetov was expelled from Union of Soviet Writers, and on 23 January 1985 he was arrested after a search of his apartment. He was convicted for his "defamatory" allegations that "innocent people [were] thrown into prison" in the USSR. The government perceived it as anti-Soviet propaganda. After a year in the Matrosskaya Tishina prison, he was sentenced to 5 years of exile and sent to Altai to his wife. While being exiled they were asked to write a "statement requesting a pardon", but they refused to do so. In 1987, Svetov and Krakhmalnikova were released and returned to Moscow as part of Gorbachev's democratic campaign to free political prisoners. In 1990, Svetov was reinstated in Union of Soviet Writers. Many of his works have been published in the West, such as: Open the Doors to Me, Mother Mary: poetry, ministry, cross, hope and others. In Russia, he was published in the magazines Frontiers, Syntax and Nadezhda. Svetov was a member of the Russian PEN Club. Since 2000 he also was a member of the pardon commission under the president of Russia, but in 2001 Vladimir Putin closed the commission. Svetov said that "Putin is
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were collected. On June 1, 2018, during a charity marathon on Children's Day, Moseichuk helped raise UAH 650,000 to open a Superhero School class in the Intensive and Efferent Therapy Department for Acute Intoxication at the Okhmatdyt National Children's Clinic. The money was used for repairs, equipment and funds to pay for the teachers of the future school. Moseichuk is the curator of the School of Superheroes. Moseichuk told the story of two eight-year-old friends on TSN. His friend Luka wanted to help Mykyta Fedorenko with a serious illness. He looked for donors among his classmates and organized a fair at the school to raise money. 35,000 euros were collected in a few days after the story on TSN. The operation was successful. On the air of the talk show "Right to Power" she addressed President Volodymyr Zelensky regarding the tragic death of two parents-doctors from the coronavirus. She asked to take personal control of the fate of their son, 13-year-old Anton, who was in the ventilator at the time, as well as the affairs of all doctors who suffered a disaster during the pandemic. Opening of classes of the School of Superheroes in the Dnipro In August 2020, Nataliia Moseichuk opened the School of Superheroes Online in the Oncology Department of the Kherson Children's Regional Clinical Hospital. In December 2020, she opened a new School of Superheroes for Children in the hospital KP "Dnepropetrovsk Regional Clinical Treatment and Prevention Association "Phthisiology" in Dnipro. This is the second school for young patients in the Dnepropetrovsk Oblast. In November, in the oncology department of the regional children's clinician in the region School of Superheroes. In March 2021, she opened a new, already third class of the School of Superheroes in Okhmatdyt. There are currently eight Superhero Schools in Ukraine: three classes and a library at the Okhmatdyt National Hospital in the capital, two schools in Zhytomyr, Kherson and two in Dnipro. A school has also been opened in the cremation center in Kyiv. Global Teacher Prize Ukraine In 2021, Nataliia Moseichuk will award two teachers as part of her own nomination "Choice with the Heart" at the Global Teacher Prize Ukraine. The first prize will be awarded to a teacher who works at the school at the hospital. The second prize, for the first time and together with the charity Vostok-SOS, will be awarded to a teacher or volunteer who teaches children at a school in
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Zhytomyr, Kherson and two in Dnipro. A school has also been opened in the cremation center in Kyiv. Global Teacher Prize Ukraine In 2021, Nataliia Moseichuk will award two teachers as part of her own nomination "Choice with the Heart" at the Global Teacher Prize Ukraine. The first prize will be awarded to a teacher who works at the school at the hospital. The second prize, for the first time and together with the charity Vostok-SOS, will be awarded to a teacher or volunteer who teaches children at a school in the front line. Achievement Laureate of the All-Ukrainian Award "Woman of the III Millennium" in the nomination "Rating" (2006). Journalist of the Year in the field of electronic media. 2013 — Teletriumph Award in the nomination "Leader / host of the information program". 2018 — Teletriumph Award in the nomination "Leader / host of the information program". Views and assessments YuriI Stets, the general producer of 5 Kanal, commented on Moseichuk's transition to 1+1 as follows: “I know for sure that this is not a desire to earn more and not a desire to actually leave 5 Kanal. She had a dream to work for 1+1 and, in my opinion, this is the reason to look for reasons." Moseichuk, in an interview with Lviv Portal, said that the reason was the dismissal from the channel of several significant figures for her — in particular, the presenter, "teacher and friend" Roman Skripin. She also expressed the opinion that by that time the "honest news channel" had noticeably changed: "It was no longer the news that we did in 2004...". According to FOCUS magazine, Moseichuk is one of the 20 most successful TV presenters in Ukraine and one of the 100 most influential women in Ukraine. In 2017, she initiated the Right to Education movement and works with a team of like-minded people to introduce quality schooling in all children's hospitals. In 2021 — entered the ranking of the Top 100 successful
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Hong Kong University. Education and career Lam graduated from the Diocesan Girls' School in Hong Kong in 1969 and graduated from the University of Hong Kong medical school in 1976. She received additional training at Queen Mary Hospital in Hong Kong, St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, and Tufts Medical Center in the United States. Lam was the first president of Diabetes Hong Kong, and has been the honorary president since 2014. She was the first women to lead the department of medicine at Hong Kong University, a position she holds as of 2022. She was named the Rosie T.T. Young Professor in Endocrinology and Metabolism
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in Endocrinology and Metabolism at Hong Kong University. Education and career Lam graduated from the Diocesan Girls' School in Hong Kong in 1969 and graduated from the University of Hong Kong medical school in 1976. She received additional training at Queen Mary Hospital in Hong Kong, St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, and Tufts Medical Center in the United States. Lam was the first president of Diabetes Hong Kong, and has been the honorary president since 2014. She was the first women to lead the department of medicine at Hong Kong University, a position she holds as of 2022. She was named the Rosie T.T. Young Professor in Endocrinology and Metabolism in 2005, and she is director of clinical trials at Hong Kong University. Research Lam's research centers on diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases, with a particular focus on hormones in fat cells. A portion of her research examines adipocyte fatty acid binding protein from fat cells, where
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building. See also List of listed buildings in Perth, Scotland References Category C listed buildings in Perth and Kinross Listed churches in Scotland Andrew's, Saint 1885 establishments in Scotland Listed buildings in
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Church is a former church building located in Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. Standing on Atholl Street, one block east of St Ninian's Cathedral, it was completed in 1885,
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from her grandmother in a department store, then mistakenly running into the arms of a stranger. Incidents like this made Durant wary and scared through much of her childhood. With effort and strategically positioned lighting sources, Durant has recounted being able to laboriously read books. She also used memorization and other mental methods to navigate her surroundings without assistance. During her interviews, Durant has also discussed being ostracized and bullied by other children growing up. During her teenage years, an eye doctor casually mentioned to Durant the possibility of an operation that might improve her vision, but it was cost prohibitive. Later Years During her early thirties, the prospect of undergoing an operation to increase Olivia Durant’s eyesight became more probable after the onset of cataracts. Insurance would not cover the restorative surgery due to her being legally blind, but could cover the cataract operation. Fortunately, the other surgery could be included along with. Durant has described the risks this surgery entailed due to her having a deformed retina that, if damaged, could cause her to lose what little eyesight she had. Nevertheless, she was willing to take this risk. She searched for nearly a year to find the right surgeon. After the surgery proved successful, Durant has discussed the unique identity crisis she underwent from being legally blind to having eyesight. Seeing her reflection in a mirror for the first time was revelatory and also disorienting. Not accustomed to her own image, Durant would automatically say “hello” to mirrors she passed in stores and other locations she experienced for the first time as a sighted person. Present Day Durant described in a series of TikTok
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running into the arms of a stranger. Incidents like this made Durant wary and scared through much of her childhood. With effort and strategically positioned lighting sources, Durant has recounted being able to laboriously read books. She also used memorization and other mental methods to navigate her surroundings without assistance. During her interviews, Durant has also discussed being ostracized and bullied by other children growing up. During her teenage years, an eye doctor casually mentioned to Durant the possibility of an operation that might improve her vision, but it was cost prohibitive. Later Years During her early thirties, the prospect of undergoing an operation to increase Olivia Durant’s eyesight became more probable after the onset of cataracts. Insurance would not cover the restorative surgery due to her being legally blind, but could cover the cataract operation. Fortunately, the other surgery could be included along with. Durant has described the risks this surgery entailed due to her having a deformed retina that, if damaged, could cause her to lose what little eyesight she had. Nevertheless, she was willing to take this risk. She searched for nearly a year to find the right surgeon. After the surgery proved successful, Durant has discussed the unique identity crisis she underwent from being legally blind to having eyesight. Seeing her reflection in a mirror for the first time was revelatory and also disorienting. Not accustomed to her own image, Durant would automatically say “hello” to mirrors she passed in stores and other locations she experienced for the first time as a sighted person. Present Day Durant described in a series of TikTok videos how
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Sporting Club () is a Bangladeshi football club based in Gopalganj. It competes in the Bangladesh Championship League,
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football. References Football clubs in Bangladesh 2021 establishments in Bangladesh
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years, Rita worked on minority and human rights inspired by her family's experiences with discrimination. She obtained a law master's degree at the Pázmány Péter Catholic University in Budapest, Hungary. She assumed the role as the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Minority Issues on 1 August 2011 after being appointed by the UN Human Rights Council, a position in which she was renewed in 2014 and that she held until 31 July 2017. During her tenure, Rita urged for the protection of minorities in Iraq, Colombia, Sri Lanka, and Cameroon, as well as of homosexuals in Moldavia. At the 27th Meeting of States parties to the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) in 2017, she was elected to become a member of the United Nations Committee
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the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD), as position that she assumed on 20 January 2018 with a term of four years. Izsák-Ndiaye has also served as senior human rights consultant for the UN Secretary-General's Envoy on Youth office in 2020, personal representative on Children and Security of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, and as member of the Global Centre International Advisory Board. Personal life Rita speaks Hungarian, English, French and German. References External links Expert Voices on Atrocity Prevention Episode 1: Rita Izsák-Ndiaye - 22
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to: Wu Yan (general) ( 3rd century), general during
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Jin periods Wu Yan (footballer) (born 1989),
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his first team – and Série A – debut on 16 November 2021, coming on as a second-half substitute for Pedro Rocha in a 0–1 home loss against Atlético Mineiro. He scored his first senior goal on 23 January 2022, netting a last-minute winner in a 1–0 Campeonato Paranaense home win
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against Atlético Mineiro. He scored his first senior goal on 23 January 2022, netting a last-minute winner in a 1–0 Campeonato Paranaense home win over Paraná. On 19 February 2022, Rômulo scored a hat-trick in a 5–1 home routing of Cianorte. Career statistics Honours Athletico Paranaense Copa Sudamericana: 2021 References External links Athletico Paranaense profile 2002 births Living people People from Paraná (state) Brazilian
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Biography He was born in Militello in Val di Catania, the eldest son to Fabrizio, 3rd prince of Butera and his wife Caterina Barresi Branciforte, marchesa of Militello. He was raised in Spain, in the household of a paternal grandmother Dorotea Barresi Santapau, married to the Prince of Pietraperzia. In 1605, Francesco inherited the title of Marchese di Militello. Francesco spent much of his life in Militello, marrying Giovanna d'Austria, daughter of
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of Butera, as well as a notable patron of the arts and sciences in Sicily. Biography He was born in Militello in Val di Catania, the eldest son to Fabrizio, 3rd prince of Butera and his wife Caterina Barresi Branciforte, marchesa of Militello. He was raised in Spain, in the household of a paternal grandmother Dorotea Barresi Santapau, married to the Prince of Pietraperzia. In 1605, Francesco inherited the title of Marchese di Militello. Francesco spent much of his
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Romanian; the language, literature and history of the Jews, as well as religion to be taught in Hebrew; Hungarian language and literature in this language, and other objects in Romanian or Hebrew. The operation of the high school is confirmed by the authorizations no. 51, 52 and 53/1928 issued by the Ministry of National Education. Another major problem was securing its own premises. For this purpose, steps were taken at the town hall to purchase a plot of land of about 8,000 m2, a block currently located between Constantin Diaconovici Loga Boulevard, 20 December 1989 Street, Mihai Eminescu Boulevard and Patriarch Miron Cristea Street. There, on the north side, towards Mihai Eminescu Boulevard, the high school building was built, financed from offertories and donations of the Jewish community. The architects were Jaques Klein and Gideon Neubauer. Initially, in the form put into operation in 1923, the building had a single level and had 16 classrooms, one for gymnastics, one for drawing, a physics and chemistry laboratory, a 1,600-volume library, a chancellery and a principal's office. In 1928 the building was raised. On the ground floor there was a girls' gymnasium and a boys' theoretical high school, and on the first floor there was a boys' commercial high school. Also in 1928, on the south side, towards Constantin Diaconovici Loga Boulevard, built the boarding school building. The building is made in an eclectic style, with elements of Secession and classicism. The boarding school was planned to accommodate 60 students. Israelite High School during World War II In 1936, the Ministry of Cults and Public Instruction banned religious education for Jewish students in state school buildings. On 29 August 1940, the Gigurtu Cabinet limited the access of Jewish students to high schools and universities to 6%. The decree-law of 11 October 1940 excluded Jews from all state schools, but left open the possibility of establishing their own primary and secondary schools, with exclusively Jewish teachers and students. Under these conditions, the Israelite High School in Timișoara continued its activity during the Antonescu regime, receiving students excluded from other schools. But in the autumn of 1940, the high school building was requisitioned. In 1941, the German military hospital was installed upstairs. In 1942, the entire high school was evacuated, the building becoming the headquarters of the Timișoara Police Headquarters. The courses of the boys' high school continued in the premises of the Israelite Primary School in Fabric (1 Ion Luca Caragiale Street) and in the premises of the Fabric Synagogue, of the commercial high school in the yard of the Fabric Synagogue, and of the girls' gymnasium in the community premises (5 Gheorghe Lazăr Street) or in different private homes. Some of the students, born in 1925, were sent to work detachments as early as April 1943. However, they did not drop out of school, but continued to attend classes in the hours after work. The school, in turn, facilitated this by the fact that the lessons were scheduled after 2 p.m. On 24–26 December 1939, the Israelite High School in Timișoara hosted the 16th and last Conference of the National Jewish Union in Transylvania (, abbreviated ZsNSz). After 23 August 1944 After the coup d'état of 23 August 1944, the high school regained its headquarters and the right to advertise. At the 1945 Politehnica entrance exam, out of the first 20 admitted, 19 were among the graduates of the Israelite High School. The high school ceased its activity in 1948 as a result of the education reform, through which the private and confessional schools were abolished, its patrimony being transferred to state ownership. Until 1948, the high school functioned with four classes of girls' gymnasium, eight classes of boys' theoretical high school and eight classes of boys' commercial high school. After 1948, the Sports High School and the High School of Fine Arts operated in its premises. Retrocession and subsequent evolutions In November 2003, based on Law no. 501/2002 on the restitution of real estate belonging to religious denominations in Romania, the high school buildings were returned to the Caritatea Foundation, which manages the cultural and spiritual heritage of Jews in Romania. The High School of Fine Arts was allowed to function here until 2008 on lease. Due to a significant increase in rent, in 2011 the city hall decided to relocate the high school. Faced with strong opposition from teachers and students' parents, the city hall refused to pay for high school's utilities to force its relocation. The High School of Fine Arts was eventually relocated in 2013. In 2010, the Caritatea Foundation announced its intention to sell the property. All potential buyers were only interested in the land and not in the buildings they sought to demolish. Because it is located in a historic area designated for conservation, in 2014 the municipality was asked by Caritatea to remove this classification of buildings. In 2014, the Caritatea Foundation sold the buildings and adjacent plots to a Cluj-Napoca-based private company for five
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their rapid assimilation. The desire to avoid complete assimilation and some anti-Semitic manifestations led to the need to establish their own secular schools, but in which the Hebrew language, Judaism and the tradition of the Jewish holidays were taught. But the Jewish society was divided, there were three currents, which had different positions: the Neolog faction (modernist – which recognized the decisions of the Congress of Jewish Communities in Hungary and Transylvania, held in Pest in 1868–1869), the Orthodox one (traditionalist – which rejected these decisions) and the status quo ante one, which ruled in favor of maintaining the pre-congress situation. The teaching of specific subjects, especially religion, differed, so that the schools of each community could only be confessional, which deprived them of the support that state schools received. However, in 1917, on the initiative of teacher Marmorek and with the support of the Hatikva Society, the first Jewish kindergarten was established, and in the following year, the first Israelite primary school (the one in the Iosefin district), under the direction of . Establishment of Israelite high schools At the end of World War I, the Jews of Banat and Transylvania organized themselves into the National Union of Jews of Banat and Transylvania, a body aimed at recognizing Jews as a national minority. This, based on the , created the premise of training in one's own language, in this case Hebrew. At the request addressed to the Resort of Cults and Instruction within the Governing Council by the president of the community, Adolf Vértes, and on the basis of an oral authorization (written approval – authorization no. 23527/1919 – will come only on 2 January 1920), on 4 October 1919, the Israelite Confessional High School began its activity, with 650 students, 401 boys and 249 girls (in mixed classes, co-education system). Of these, 70 were non-Jews. As the mother tongue of all the students was Hungarian, it was designated as the language of instruction, and there were also Hebrew classes. The director of the high school was Victor Déznai. Not yet having its own premises, the courses were held in various places: Lloyd Palace, the headquarters of the Jewish community in Cetate, the Politehnica building on Carol Telbisz Street and other schools. From the beginning there were discussions, the rabbis demanded separate religious classes for the three communities, a requirement that was rejected, but a single program was adopted. However, confessional schools did not have the right to advertise (diplomas issued by them were not recognized). This right was reserved for state schools; as a result, efforts were made to make the high school state-owned. Since Banat now belonged to Romania, in order to become a state high school, it had to comply with Romanian legislation in the field of education. The requirements were: giving up co-education (separate classes for boys and girls), the state language (Romanian) as the language of instruction (there were classes for other languages: Hebrew, Hungarian, German and French, studied as foreign languages), teachers to be Romanian citizens, the Romanian language to be taught by state teachers, to respect the state curriculum and the regulations in force, to teach according to the approved textbooks, to ensure the salaries and pensions of non-state teachers and to have their own premises. The most difficult task was the language of instruction. The students did not know enough Romanian or Hebrew to study the various subjects. The Romanian language was considered useful for the future in Romania, and the Hebrew language for contacts abroad, and the
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Russian philology. 1974–1997 she worked as a cultural editor, critic and reporter at the newspaper Estonija (). 1996–2008 she worked at Russian Theatre. Since 1991 she is a member of Estonian Writers' Union. In
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Tartu University in Russian philology. 1974–1997 she worked as a cultural editor, critic and reporter at the newspaper Estonija (). 1996–2008 she worked at Russian Theatre. Since 1991 she is a
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War Memorial stands on Wetherby Bridge in Wetherby, West Yorkshire. It was erected as a memorial to those who had fallen in the First World War. The memorial was designed by Louis Frederick Roslyn. Memorials The war memorial commemorates those from Wetherby who were casualties of the First World War. The inscription upon it reads 'IN HONOUR AND EVERLASTING MEMORY OF THE MEN OF WETHERBY WHO FELL IN THE GREAT WAR 1914-1918'. There are plaques below with the names of the casualties; the plaques on the front of the memorial
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added to either side for the casualties of the Second World War. Listing The memorial has been Grade II listed since 1966. Remembrance Sunday The Remembrance Sunday parade concludes by the war memorial. On the morning the Bridge is closed to traffic. Wreaths are placed at the memorial. See also Listed buildings in Wetherby Notes
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Budapest. Israelite Cemetery on Kozma Street: 4-10-3. In May 1912, the Ernst Museum was opened in Budapest, at Nagymező u. Under 8, on the first floor of an apartment building built at the time. There were permanent exhibitions in 14 halls, and temporary exhibitions were held in the others. Ernst continued to organize retrospective exhibitions. Demanding catalogs of the exhibitions - edited by Béla Lázár - were published. At the time of the boom in works of art, he began organizing auctions in 1917. They held an auction twice a year, until the end of Ernst's life. The economic situation changed dramatically in the late 1920s - as a result of the economic crisis and excessive purchases, Lajos Ernst collapsed financially. His collection was encumbered with a mortgage, so an exhibition of works deposited in the Hungarian National Museum in 1933 was presented. His wife was Erzsébet Ekler, with whom she married in Budapest on September 8, 1901. [2] They divorced in 1918. In the late 1920s he went bankrupt. He killed himsel in April 1937. After his death, his collection was auctioned off and his name was almost forgotten outside the narrow professional circles of art historians and cultural
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had good contacts with the Hungarian painters. He recognized that the sketches were also valuable, so he collected them as well. In the following years he often arranged exhibitions. By 1894 he had founded of the National Salon, and from 1901 to 1909 he was its executive director. In this capacity, he organized several oeuvre exhibitions (Pál Szinyei Merse, Mihály Zichy, Viktor Madarász, János Vaszary). After being removed from his position, he founded the first private museum in Hungary. In 1912 he founded the first Hungarian private museum. From 1917 he held auctions. He had good relations with the artists (including Viktor Madarász, Bertalan Székely, Mór Than, Oszkár Glatz). The tomb of Lajos Ernst in Budapest. Israelite Cemetery on Kozma Street: 4-10-3. In May 1912, the Ernst Museum was opened in Budapest, at Nagymező u. Under 8, on the first floor of an apartment building built at the time. There were permanent exhibitions in 14 halls, and temporary exhibitions were held in the others. Ernst continued to organize retrospective exhibitions. Demanding catalogs of the exhibitions - edited by Béla Lázár - were published. At the time of the boom in works of art, he began organizing auctions in 1917. They held an auction twice a year, until the end of Ernst's life. The economic situation changed dramatically in the late 1920s - as a
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Affairs, University of Kashmir . He has MSc from AMU, Aligarh and PhD from Industrial Toxicology Research Centre, Lucknow. He remained associated with Department of Biochemistry, University of Kashmir as faculty since 1988. He was appointed vice-chancellor of
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and Kashmir. Before Joining Baba Ghulam Shah Badshah University, Masood served as Dean Academic Affairs, University of Kashmir . He has MSc from AMU, Aligarh and PhD from Industrial Toxicology Research Centre, Lucknow. He remained associated with Department of Biochemistry,
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there. It is a boys high school. Reference See also Education in Bihar Education in India External links Darbhanga Bihar School Examination Board Location on Wikimapia Darbhanga Boys' schools in India High schools and secondary schools in Bihar Schools in Bihar Education
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In Darbhanga Bihar, India. Was established in 1949. It is located in Nehra village of Manigachhi block of Darbhanga district of Bihar. It is the only high school serving the villages near Nehra, and students from the outlying villages travel to Nehra to study there. It is a boys high school. Reference See
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Governors Island in New York, as well as at Tours, France. In 1920, he was made a Colonel of the Inspector General’s Department, during the pursuit of draft dodger Grover Cleveland Bergdoll who was later arrested for evading Article 58 of the Selective Service Act of 1917. Final years Donaldson was put in charge of Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas in 1928. Due to his ill health, he was replaced the same year
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was born into a military family at Greenville, South Carolina. After basic education through local schools, he enrolled at Patrick Military Institute. In 1887, he graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point. Wounded Knee and Indian wars Donaldson was a veteran of the American Indian Wars, having served in the 7th Cavalry Regiment under James W. Forsyth during the 1890 South Dakota Wounded Knee Massacre, and the ensuing White Clay Creek massacre. Donaldson subsequently provided a multi-page hand-written account of the battle at Wounded Knee. Later military service He was a veteran of the 1898 Spanish–American War, and saw World War I service at Governors Island in New York, as well as at Tours, France. In 1920, he was made a Colonel of the Inspector General’s Department, during the pursuit of draft dodger Grover
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musical in Melbourne in 2003 and becoming the understudy for the Rafiki shaman character. In 2006, she joined The Lion King cast in Hamburg, still as the Rafiki understudy, and later joined the Paris cast as the Rafiki main character. She features in the 2007 recording of the Paris production. She later performed at Rafiki in the Madrid production of the musical. From 2019
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singer for Busi Mhlongo before auditioning for The Lion King musical in Melbourne in 2003 and becoming the understudy for the Rafiki shaman character. In 2006, she joined The Lion King cast in Hamburg, still as the Rafiki understudy, and later joined the Paris cast as the Rafiki main character. She features in the 2007 recording of the Paris production. She later performed at Rafiki in
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his goal of establishing a national day of recognition for home front heroes. Luckadoo was a B-17 Flying Fortress pilot and is the last living original member of the World War II Eighth Air Force 100th Bomb Group, also known as The Bloody 100th. He is the subject of Damn Lucky: One Man's Courage During the Bloodiest Military Campaign in Aviation History by Kevin Mauer. The first official recognition of the date of May 9 as Home Front Heroes Day was on May 9, 2019, in Dallas, Texas. The inaugural event was created for residents of
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was a B-17 Flying Fortress pilot and is the last living original member of the World War II Eighth Air Force 100th Bomb Group, also known as The Bloody 100th. He is the subject of Damn Lucky: One Man's Courage During the Bloodiest Military Campaign in Aviation History by Kevin Mauer. The first official recognition of the date of May 9 as Home Front Heroes Day was on May 9, 2019, in Dallas, Texas. The inaugural event was created for residents of Luckadoo's
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males are odd. The first identity number (seventh overall) is coded in line with the century of birth, according to the following table. For people with a birth year ending in 40–54, and where I3 is 9, this has been allocated to two centuries. For those born between 1940 and 1954 this is held as a reserve that may to used to allocate numbers to new immigrants born in those years. Because immigration numbers for these age groups is low, it is estimated that the reserve series will never be used. Check digits The last two digits of the ID number are check digit, or checksums. The check digit algorithm is the weighted sum modulo 11. The first check digit is calculated based on the first nine digits, while the second includes the first check digit in its calculation. The two use different weights. The first had been optimized to catch common errors, while the latter was IBM's default values. In its initial use, it was presumed that a resident would say their ID number to a clerk, who would write the number down in a form. There were two errors that could happen at this stage—the resident could remember their number wrong, alternatively the clerk would misunderstand the person. At the time of data processing, the form would be transferred to a punch card and there was a further chance of a punching error by the operator. A preliminary survey with Oslo residents recording their own tax number showed that common errors including the clerk misunderstanding the 9th and 10th ("niende" and "tiende") and people switching their birth day and birth month. The error correction was therefore optimized to avoid these errors. Estimates from 1964 showed an expected error rate of 50 in 100,000 transactions with one digit used for error correction, and 1 in 100,000 if two digits were used. Of this reason, two were selected. A major restriction of the algorithm was that it needed to be supported by the IBM 402 tabulating machines used by Statistics Norway at the time. The advantages of using modulo 11 is that it is able to capture all single-digit errors and all transposition errors. The downside is that this formula produces a checksum of between 0 and 10. Because only single-digit checksums are allowed, seventeen percent of potential ID numbers are discarded, reducing the pool of available ID numbers. Today, the numbers are normally typed in directly by the resident themselves. Increased use also means that people are more likely to remember their number, significantly reducing the need for control digits. Of this reason, a new series of ID numbers issued from 2032 will allow more valid checksums, allowing for increased range of numbers to be issued. D-number A D-number is issued to people who have to interact with Norwegian authorities, but are not regarded as resident in the country. D-numbers are built up with the same structures as ordinary ID numbers, with two notable differences. The first is that 4 is added to the first digit. Secondly, the century issue with digit seven is different, with people born before 1 January 2000 being issued 0 through 4, and people born on or after that day being issued 5 through 9. Commonly D-numbers are issued to European Economic Area citizens who are working in Norway or in other ways have obligations to pay tax or receive welfare benefits, without being resident; refugees while awaiting processing of the resident applications; people who open bank accounts in Norwegian banks; people who have to be registered in certain public registers; people who own securities deposited in Norway; people who own real estate in Norway; people resident in Svalbard; and people seeking authorization as health personnel. As of 2014 there were 1.3 million D-numbers issued. That year there were being issued more
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odd numbers). Increased immigration rates combined with a policy of not reusing numbers will gradually deplete the pool of available numbers. From 2032 additional numbers will become available and the gender coding will be removed. History The initiative for the National Identity Number came from the business sector. As both the Tax Administration and the National Insurance Service were increasingly using computers for their data processing, they introduced various identification and serial numbers of people and employees. These were different across government agencies, and also between municipalities and could even change from year to year. The population register in Oslo, introduced in 1959, was at the time using an eight-digit ID-number, consisting of six digits representing the birth date and two individual numbers. The Ministry of Finance took initiative to establish a common government identity number, and the process was led by Statistics Norway. Two main systems were considered, one which encoded the person's birth date and gender, and an eight-digit number that did not carry any information. An important inspiration was the Swedish personal identity number, which had been introduced in 1947. It had a nine-digit number, led by a six-digit birth date, then had a number based on the county of birth, and a gender-encoded number. At the time a major advantage of this approach was that because the birth date and gender were encoded, it was possible to record this information without additional fields during data processing. Because it was desirable that any resident remember their own identification number, adding five digits to the end of their birth date was deemed easier for people to remember than eight arbitrary digits. The decision to introduce the numbering scheme was taken by Statistics Norway in 1964, with the backing of the Ministry of Finance, but without any legislation. Numbers were assigned to everyone who had been part of the 1960 census, even if they had died in the meantime. The oldest person to be issued a number was born in 1855. However, people who were born or immigrated after the census but had died before 1964 were not issued numbers. From the onset, the responsibility to maintain the actual registers was placed with the municipalities, who had traditionally held a register of all residents. The central register was merely an index of issued numbers. This changed in 1991, after the registers had been fully digitized and the responsibility for the content transferred to the Tax Administration. In the 1970s there was an increasing number of people with a temporary connection to Norway. Initially this was mostly sailors working on Norwegian ships, and who were therefore liable to pay taxes to Norway. D-numbers were issued from 1978, for which people who had tax or welfare obligations to Norway were issued, even though they were not residents. The "D" term refers to the Directorate of Sailors. From the 1990s D-numbers were increasingly issued to more groups of people who needed to be identified in Norway. Issuing An ID number is issued to a person when they are registered in the National Population Registry, which is operated by the Norwegian Tax Administration. Everyone born in Norway is registered and issued a number, as is everyone who later becomes a resident for more than six months. Finally, non-resident Norwegian citizens are issued a number when processing their first passport. People who emigrate from Norway retain their number for life. People who are first issued D-numbers get a new, ordinary identity number if they later become full residents. If ID numbers are issued with incorrect information, a new number is issued. Similarly, a person who undergoes a judicial sex change is issued a new ID number. Both of these issues can cause problems as the person can have documents issued to two different ID numbers. ID numbers are never reused, as they would then lose their value as a unique identifier. Numerical components The National Identity Number is eleven digits. The first six digits correspond to the person's birth date in the format DDMMYY. These six digits are referred to as the birth date. The last five digits, called the person number (), consists of three identity digits and two check digits. In human-readable places, the ID number is often written with a space between the birth date and the person number. The last identity digit (ninth overall) is coded with the person's gender: females are even and males are odd. The first identity number (seventh overall) is coded in line with the century of birth, according to the following table. For people with a birth year ending in 40–54, and where I3 is 9, this has been allocated to two centuries. For those born between 1940 and 1954 this is held as a reserve that may to used to allocate numbers to new immigrants born in those years. Because immigration numbers for these age groups is low, it is estimated that the reserve series will never be used. Check digits The last two digits of the ID number are check digit, or checksums. The check digit algorithm is the weighted sum modulo 11. The first check digit is calculated based on the first nine digits, while the second
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of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its
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municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census,
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occurs outside of Eurasia. The type specimen was collected by Clifford Wetmore in a rocky valley in Big Bend National Park, Texas, at an elevation of ; here the lichen was discovered growing on
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in the United States, the lichen was described as a new species in 2005 by Othmar Breuss. It is the only member of genus Neocatapyrenium that occurs outside of Eurasia. The type specimen was collected by Clifford Wetmore in a rocky valley in Big Bend National Park, Texas, at
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in particular were prone to witch hunts. Historians at University of Edinburgh have created a database survey of Scottish Witchcraft to record the men, women and their trials. References Scottish writers Scottish women writers Scottish novelists Living people 1975 births Alumni of the University
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and studied at University of Glasgow, She won the Guardian newspaper’s Not the Booker popular prize in 2013 for her first novel 'Anywhere's Better Than Here'. She leads the Witches of Scotland campaign with Claire Mitchell QC, teaches creative writing workshops and is a teacher of Support
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Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census,
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the municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According
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USSR Ministry of Energy. In 1983, he became a senior researcher at the Vladivostok Branch of the Institute for Economic Research of the Far Eastern Branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences. From 1983 to 1987, he was a postgraduate student at the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the USSR Academy of Sciences. From 1987 to 1990, he was a researcher, and the deputy director of the Institute of Economic and International Problems of Ocean Development of the Far Eastern Branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences. From 1990 to 1991, he was the Chairman of the executive committee of the Primorsky Regional Council of People's Deputies. On 8 October 1991, Kuznestov became the first Governor (Head) of Primorksy Krai. He left office on 23 May 1993. Between 1993 and 1997, Kuznestov became the Consul General of Russia in San Francisco. In the fall of 1995, Kuznetsov unsuccessfully fought for a deputy mandate of the State Duma on the federal list from the Party of Beer Lovers. From 1997 to 2002, he was the Director for the Western States of the United States, as part of the Presidential Programs Foundation. In 2002, Kuznestov ran for the State Duma, but was not
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he was a researcher, and the deputy director of the Institute of Economic and International Problems of Ocean Development of the Far Eastern Branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences. From 1990 to 1991, he was the Chairman of the executive committee of the Primorsky Regional Council of People's Deputies. On 8 October 1991, Kuznestov became the first Governor (Head) of Primorksy Krai. He left office on 23 May 1993. Between 1993 and 1997, Kuznestov became the Consul General of Russia in San Francisco. In the fall of 1995, Kuznetsov unsuccessfully fought for a deputy mandate of the State Duma on the federal list from the Party of Beer Lovers. From 1997 to 2002, he was the Director for the Western States of the United States, as part of the Presidential Programs Foundation. In 2002, Kuznestov ran for the State Duma, but was not elected. From 2002 to 2007, he was a professor of the Far Eastern State University. From 2007 to 2011, Kuznetsov was an Aadvisor to the President of Chuvashia. Between 2011 and 2014, he was the Director of the FEFU School of Regional and International Studies. In 2013, he headed the Public Expert Council for attracting investments to the Primorsky Krai From 2015 to 2016, he taught political science at FEFU. Family He was
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municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its
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Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the
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C.G. Boerner Forty-four works were placed with the storage firm Erhardt Schneider. Therese Clara Kirstein committed suicide in 1939 after her escape to the United States was blocked. Family Kirstein's marriage produced two daughters, who emigrated from Germany at an early age, Gabriele (born 1905) and Marianne (born 1907). Resitution of Nazi-looted art In 1964 the Kirstein family requested compensation for seizures under the Nazis but their request was rejected by authorities. However, in 1998 44 countries endorsed guidelines to re-examine museum collections and archives to search for the lost assets of Nazi Holocaust victims at the Washington Conference On Holocaust-Era Assets and the attitude of the authorities changed. In 2000, two German museums returned more than 80 works of art to Kirstein's heirs. Restituted paintings included The Lute Player by Max Klinger and Walchensee, Johannisnacht by Lovis Corinth In 2020, a provenance researcher at the Georg Schäfer Museum in northern Bavaria, in Germany, quit her job in a protest against the museum's failure to be serious about returning artworks with tainted provenances. Works from the Kirstein family's collection were among those that caused her concern. Writings (selection) Max Liebermann zum 60. Geburtstage. Vol. Neue Folge, 18. Jahrgang. E.A. Seemann. 1907. p. 237. Neuere Arbeiten von Georg Kolbe. E. A. Seemann. 1908. p. 199. Das Leben Adolph Menzels. E. A. Seemann. 1919 As publisher Die Welt Max Klingers. Furche. 1917. Max Klinger : sechs farbige Wiedergaben seiner Werke. E. A. Seemanns Künstlermappen. E.A. Seemann. 1921. Literature Raubkunst: Peinliche Verzögerungen. In: Der Spiegel. Nr. 40, 2000 (online). Kirstein, Gustav. In: Joseph Walk (Hrsg.): Kurzbiographien zur Geschichte der Juden 1918–1945. Saur, München 1988, ISBN 3-598-10477-4, S. 194. External links Geschäfts- und Gesellschaftsverträge zwischen E. A. Seemann und Gustav Kirstein („Am 1. Juli 1933 wurde der Gesellschaftsvertrag zwischen Elert Seemann und Gustav Kirstein für das Unternehmen E. A. Seemann gelöst. Letzterer musste die Firma verlassen und wurde mit dem Verlag Seemann & Co., der auf den Druck von Kunstblättern spezialisiert war, abgefunden.“ – archiv.sachsen.de) BINDING OPINION REGARDING THE DISPUTE ABOUT RESTITUTION OF THE DRAWING JEWISH QUARTER IN AMSTERDAM, BY MAX LIEBERMANN, CURRENTLY IN THE POSSESSION OF AMSTERDAM CITY COUNCIL Drawing Jewish Quarter in Amsterdam by Max Liebermann Leipzig: Cläre und Gustav Kirstein (Trufanowstraße 8) Schriften von Kirstein, Gustav in der Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Dresden Literatur von und über Gustav Kirstein in der Sächsischen Bibliografie References 1934 deaths 1870 births People from Berlin Art collectors Booksellers (people) Patrons of the arts Jewish art collectors Persecution of Jews Nazi-looted art Art and cultural repatriation after World War
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was blocked. Family Kirstein's marriage produced two daughters, who emigrated from Germany at an early age, Gabriele (born 1905) and Marianne (born 1907). Resitution of Nazi-looted art In 1964 the Kirstein family requested compensation for seizures under the Nazis but their request was rejected by authorities. However, in 1998 44 countries endorsed guidelines to re-examine museum collections and archives to search for the lost assets of Nazi Holocaust victims at the Washington Conference On Holocaust-Era Assets and the attitude of the authorities changed. In 2000, two German museums returned more than 80 works of art to Kirstein's heirs. Restituted paintings included The Lute Player by Max Klinger and Walchensee, Johannisnacht by Lovis Corinth In 2020, a provenance researcher at the Georg Schäfer Museum in northern Bavaria, in Germany, quit her job in a protest against the museum's failure to be serious about returning artworks with tainted provenances. Works from the Kirstein family's collection were among those that caused her concern. Writings (selection) Max Liebermann zum 60. Geburtstage. Vol. Neue Folge, 18. Jahrgang. E.A. Seemann. 1907. p. 237. Neuere Arbeiten von Georg Kolbe. E. A. Seemann. 1908. p. 199. Das Leben Adolph Menzels. E. A. Seemann. 1919 As publisher Die Welt Max Klingers. Furche. 1917. Max Klinger : sechs farbige Wiedergaben seiner Werke. E. A. Seemanns Künstlermappen. E.A. Seemann. 1921. Literature Raubkunst: Peinliche Verzögerungen. In: Der Spiegel. Nr. 40, 2000 (online). Kirstein, Gustav. In: Joseph Walk (Hrsg.): Kurzbiographien zur Geschichte der Juden 1918–1945. Saur, München 1988, ISBN 3-598-10477-4, S. 194. External links Geschäfts- und Gesellschaftsverträge zwischen E. A. Seemann und Gustav Kirstein („Am 1. Juli 1933 wurde der Gesellschaftsvertrag zwischen Elert Seemann und Gustav Kirstein für das Unternehmen E. A. Seemann gelöst. Letzterer musste die Firma verlassen und wurde mit dem Verlag Seemann & Co., der auf
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also List of law enforcement agencies in Wyoming References External links Albany County Sheriff's Office at Facebook Wyoming's first Black sheriff fired White deputy over alleged racism, lawsuit says Sheriffs'
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enforcement agencies in Wyoming References External links Albany County Sheriff's Office at Facebook Wyoming's first Black sheriff fired White deputy over
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form and was instrumental in getting St. Cloud to the program's first NCAA championship appearance. For his senior season, Perbix continued to increase his scoring output and was firing at a point per game pace for most of the year. After the NHL announced that they wouldn't be sending any players to the Winter Olympics, Perbix was selected as a member of the team. Unfortunately, he couldn't stop the team from losing in the quarterfinal round and finishing 5th. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs International References External links 1998 births Living people American men's ice hockey defensemen Ice hockey people
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States national team at the 2022 Winter Olympics. Playing career Perbix was a star player for Elk River High School, scoring well over a point per game as a senior and being a finalist for the Mr. Hockey Award. After being selected by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the NHL Draft, he played a season of junior hockey for the Omaha Lancers before he began attending St. Cloud State University. He made an immediate splash in the college ranks, helping the Huskies finish atop the NCHC standings, and was named to the
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and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013
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Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was
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was initially focused on the economic improvement of rural people. Later, realizing that the more urgent and immediate concern is the unavailability of clean drinking water and toilet facilities, the NGO shifted their focus to water and sanitation. Gramalaya aims to eradicate open defecation by providing eco-friendly toilets. Gramalaya is now an important resource center of the Ministry of Jalshakti, Govt of India. The NGO has been functioning with the support of Government, donors and corporate groups under CSR initiatives. It was Gramalaya's efforts that helped transform the Thandavampatti village in Tiruchy into
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been functioning with the support of Government, donors and corporate groups under CSR initiatives. It was Gramalaya's efforts that helped transform the Thandavampatti village in Tiruchy into the first open-defecation free village in India in 2003. Damodaran secured BA degree in Corporate Secretaryship in 1984, MCom degree in 1986 and MBA in Project Management in 2011. Recognition:
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Robert Camm (1919/20–1920/21) : R. H. J. Camm William Cockroft (1914/15) : W. E. Cockroft Arthur Cutler (1954/55) : A. S. H. Cutler D James Darragh (1919/20) : J. F. Darragh Garth Dawson (1977/78–2005/06) : G. J. Dawson David Dixon (1919/20) : D. C. Dixon Jack Doig (1914/15–1920/21) : J. A. Doig Bradleigh Donelan (1988/89–1989/90) : B. T. P. Donelan Alfred Driscoll (1914/15–1929/30) : A. Driscoll Jacob Duffy ((2011/12–2017/18) : J. A. Duffy Ryan Duffy (2009/10–2019/20) : R. M. Duffy Desmond Dunnet (1936/37) : D. M. Dunnet F Robert Fogo (1914/15–1919/20) : R. H. B. Fogo Shaun Fitzgibbon (2005/06–2019/20) : S. M. Fitzgibbon G Alan Gilbertson (1954/55–1960/61) : A. W. Gilbertson James Gilbertson (1910/11–1920/21) : J. Gilbertson John Gilbertson (1914/15–1918/19) : J. H. Gilbertson Jim Gill (1954/55) : J. A. Gill Horace Gleeson (1917/18–1920/21) : H. A. Gleeson Thomas Groves (1914/15-1920/21) : T. G. Groves H I Kassem Ibadulla (1983/84–1990/91) : K. B. K. Ibadulla J H. Jackson (1918/19) Robin Jefferson (1965/66) : R. G. Jefferson K Edward Kavanagh (1910/11-1920/21) : E. J. Kavanagh Albert Keast (1929/30) : A. W. E. M. Keast Ernest Kemnitz (1914/15) : E. J. Kemnitz Richard King (1990/91–1992/93) : R. T. King George Kingston (1917/18) : G. R. Kingston Ronnie Kotkamp (2011/12) : R. Kotkamp L Michael Lamont (1987/88–1991/92) : M. J. Lamont John Lindsay
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: M. L. McEwan Brian McKechnie (1971/72–1986/87) : B. J. McKechnie Alexander Mahoney (1973/74) : A. J. Mahoney Evan Marshall (1989/90) : E. J. Marshall Peter Marshall (1981/82) : P. G. Marshall Geoffrey Murdoch (1972/73–1974/75) : G. H. Murdoch O Kevin O'Connor (1964/65–1976/77) : K. J. O'Connor Geoffrey Osborne (1981/82) : G. C. Osborne Guy Overton (1954/55) : G. W. F. Overton Horace Owles (1917/18) : H. E. Owles N Kenneth Nicholson (1970/71–1976/77) : K. A. Nicholson P Bill Patrick (1934/35–1936/37) : W. R. Patrick Francis Petrie (1920/21) : F. R. S. Petrie Arthur Poole (1910/11–1920/21) : A. V. Poole Thomas Pope (1920/21) : T. R. W. Pope Robert Prouting (1965/66) : R. H. Prouting John Purdue (1938/39) : J. W. Purdue R Stanley Raines (1919/20) : S. V. Raines William Robertson (1960/61–1968/69) : W. A. Robertson Phil Robinson (1987/88) : P. E. Robinson Robert Roy (1969/70) : R. A. Roy S Jack Scandrett (1934/35–1936/37) : J. C. Scandrett Peter Sharp (1960/61) : P. A. Sharp Cliff Shirley (1954/55) : C. V. Shirley Craig Smith (2009/10–2015/16) : C. M. Smith Edward Smith (1917/18) : E. H. Smith T Cecil Tapley (1914/15–1929/30) : C. B. Tapley Graeme Thomson (1968/69–1980/81) : G. B. Thomson Neale Thompson (1954/55–1978/79) :
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of Yerevan. Biography Son of Shahen Yeritsyan, the founder of winemaking in Armenia, Martin was born in Yerevan, Armenia. He graduated from the Komitas State Conservatory of Yerevan and soon entered the Armenian Philharmonic Quartet as a second violinist. In 1969, as a member of the quartet, he participated in the Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels. He toured in France, Italy, Russia and other
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and other countries. He taught at the chair of the quartet of the Yerevan Komitas State Conservatory (professor). In 1985 he left for Czechoslovakia, where he worked with the famous winemaker Vladimir Pilarji in his workshop. Yeritsyan made many different stringed musical instruments, mainly focusing on violins. He wrote in Latin inside the musical instruments: "Martin Yeritsyan, son of Shahen", also indicates "Made in
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season standings, Nevada won the Big Sky Tournament to receive an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 11 seed in the West Region. The Wolf Pack was beaten by No. 6 seed Washington in the opening round, 64–54. The team finished with a record of 17–14 (7–7 Big Sky). Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular season |-
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automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 11 seed in the West Region. The Wolf Pack was beaten by No. 6 seed Washington in the opening round, 64–54. The team finished with a record of 17–14 (7–7 Big Sky). Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular season |- !colspan=9 style=| Big Sky Tournament |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament Source References Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball seasons Nevada Nevada Nevada Wolf Pack Nevada Wolf
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municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the
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the municipality of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the
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station was subject to a renovation, during which the platforms were raised and the underpass was upgraded. Train services and movements Regular passenger services to the station are regionale, regionale veloce, Intercity and Frecciabianca services, that use the Tirrenica line to connect to Pisa Centrale, Roma Termini, Grosseto, Florence SMN, Piombino and further afield such as Genova. Gallery See also History of rail
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of the Tirrenica line, and opened on the same day as the Cecina-Volterra railway. After significant damage to the station building during the Second World War, the station building was rebuilt. From 2020 to 2021, the station was subject to a renovation, during which the
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Early Coaching Career O'Hara began his coaching career as a student assistant at Temple. He followed Al Golden to Miami in 2011 and worked as a student assistant there for two years. The next season he continued to work at Miami this time as a graduate assistant. Jaguars (first stint) O'Hara then made the jump to the NFL in 2014 becoming an offensive coaching
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followed Al Golden to Miami in 2011 and worked as a student assistant there for two years. The next season he continued to work at Miami this time as a graduate assistant. Jaguars (first stint) O'Hara then made the jump to the NFL in 2014 becoming an offensive coaching
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Fortambek Glacier is located in the Sangvor District
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Peak Ozodi. The glacier is about 27km in length. References Glaciers of
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of Zavidovići, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its
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a village in the municipality of
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In June 2021, the church's bell rang out for the first time in thirty years, completing a £2.2-million restoration of the church into an outdoor performance space. St Paul's Square The square in which the church stands is also part of the Category B listing. Perth band Fiction Factory frequented Bandwagon Music Supplies, which was located behind the church in St Paul's Square. "They would come into my shop wanting to hear their recording on my wee cassette recorder that turned out to be a number six single that still gets played today," said Pete Caban, the shop's owner. "I still see the guys, they still come in." The shop closed in 2020 after 37 years in business, with Caban blaming the delayed work on the church
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The church closed in 1986, and fell into a state of dereliction. In June 2021, the church's bell rang out for the first time in thirty years, completing a £2.2-million restoration of the church into an outdoor performance space. St Paul's Square The square in which the church stands is also part of the Category B listing. Perth band Fiction Factory frequented Bandwagon Music Supplies, which was located behind the church in St Paul's Square. "They would come into my shop wanting to
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Pora may refer to: People Rizky Pora (born 1989), Indonesian football player Rodney Pora, rugby player Teina Pora,
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Ponta Porã, Brazil Other PORA, Ukrainian civic youth organization PORA (Russian youth group)
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(2 March 1900–1984) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Barnsley and Stockport County. References 1900 births 1984 deaths English
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the Football League for Barnsley and Stockport County. References 1900 births 1984 deaths English footballers Association football midfielders English Football League players
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were physicist and former president of the Academy of Sciences of the ESSR Karl Rebane, physicist , and mathematician . She graduated from Tartu State University Tartu with a degree in theoretical mathematics in 1971. From 1972 until 1973, she worked in the department of logic and psychology at the university. Later she studied logic at Moscow University. In Moscow, she was
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she won a prize in the story competition run by the literary journal Noorus. Works 1986 story "Väike kohvik". Eesti Raamat, 110 pp 2011 "Город на Альтрусе: фантастическая повесть и рассказы". Воронеж, 2011. 207 pp 2017 "50 рассказов". Москва: Ridero, 288 pp 2017 "Кот в лабиринте: рассказы". Москва: Ridero, 207 pp 2021 story "Õige valik". Fantaasia, 181 pp References Living people 1948 births Estonian women writers 20th-century Estonian women writers 21st-century Estonian women writers Estonian women short story writers
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1931 – 13 July 1986) was a French professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Honours Lille Division 2: 1963–64 Coupe de France: 1954–55 Coupe Charles Drago runner-up: 1956 References
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Honours Lille Division 2: 1963–64 Coupe de France: 1954–55 Coupe Charles Drago runner-up: 1956 References 1931 births 1986 deaths
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de Carilès is a French-language children's book written by Joséphine Colomb and published by Hachette editions in Paris, 1874. The story first appeared in one of Hachette's magazines before reappearing in book form. Colomb received the Montyon Prize in 1875 for this work. Plot In the tale of La Fille de Carilès, Carilès is an old man who lives in a wretched garret, and gains his living by selling whirligigs of coloured paper well known that time to little children in France and England. He is alone in the world, very poor, slovenly and lazy, thoroughly contented with his lot until he
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of some mountebanks. The gradual interest which he feels in the orphan, the self-denying tenderness which underlies the crust of selfishness and idleness that has grown over the solitary old man, and the sunshine which his adopted daughter brings into his life is charming, recalling in a degree, Silas Marner. Not the least well-imagined part of the story is the way in which a family of the middle class, far from rich, lend a hand to bring up and educate "La fille de Carilès", who, does not turn out to be some stolen princess, and remains to make a home for the good old man when age comes upon him. References 1874 children's books
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can be set by any athlete with Welsh Qualification in worldwide competition. Key to tables Key: h = hand timing Outdoor Men Women Indoor Men Women Mixed Notes References General Welsh Outdoor Records – Men
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Outdoor Records – Men 31 October 2021 updated Welsh Outdoor Records – Women 31 October 2021 updated Welsh Road, Long Distance Track and Walking Records 27 April 2018 updated Welsh Ultra Distance Records 9 September 2012 updated Welsh Walking Records – Men 30 June 2021 updated
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of marriage, and then he emigrated to New York in 1973. Career Life In 1973. He started tending bar in New York City. He tended an Upper East Side bar in Manhattan, after which he became manager of the North Star Pub at South Street Seaport. After he worked as a bartender over 20 years, he started to write about booze, bars, and bartenders for FoodArts magazine. His first book The Bartender’s Bible was published in 1991, with his then-wife, Mardee Haidin Regan. Later, he became a cocktail columnist for Wine Enthusiast, Food & Wine and the San Francisco Chronicle. Regan expanded into the liquor business by developing Regans’ Orange Bitters No.6, made by the Sazerac Company. Health, Life, Death In 2003, Regan got a surgery and radiation treatment for cancer of the tongue, so no longer able to grow a full beard, he began wearing his hair long and adopted the Lancashire nickname for Gary, “Gaz.” In 2008, he got married with his last wife, Amy Gallagher. The relationship was continued until he died. He died due to pneumonia on November 15, 2019, at a hospital, in Newburgh, N.Y. Publication 1001 Mixed Drinks and Everything You Need to Know (1991) The
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City. He tended an Upper East Side bar in Manhattan, after which he became manager of the North Star Pub at South Street Seaport. After he worked as a bartender over 20 years, he started to write about booze, bars, and bartenders for FoodArts magazine. His first book The Bartender’s Bible was published in 1991, with his then-wife, Mardee Haidin Regan. Later, he became a cocktail columnist for Wine Enthusiast, Food & Wine and the San Francisco Chronicle. Regan expanded into the liquor business by developing Regans’ Orange Bitters No.6, made by the Sazerac Company. Health, Life, Death In 2003, Regan got a surgery and radiation treatment for cancer of the tongue, so no longer able to grow a full beard, he began wearing his hair long and adopted the Lancashire nickname for Gary, “Gaz.” In 2008, he got married with his last wife, Amy Gallagher. The relationship was continued until he died. He died due to pneumonia on November 15, 2019, at a hospital, in Newburgh, N.Y. Publication 1001 Mixed Drinks and Everything You Need to Know (1991) The Bartender's Bible: 1001 Mixed Drinks and
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during the 1917 college football season. Led by fifth-year head coach M. B. Banks, the Green and White compiled
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Athletic Conference (OAC) during the 1917 college football season. Led by fifth-year head coach M. B. Banks, the Green and White compiled an overall record of 3–5 with a mark
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a road designed mainly for cycle traffic
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a road designed mainly for cycle traffic CycleStreets,
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the Auxiliary Territorial Service and worked to interpret photographs for the intelligence services. Career In 1947, Aslin joined the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) as a research assistant in its Circulation Department. She was a member of a group that featured Peter Floud and she planned exhibitions that were in museums across the United Kingdom. Aslin was responsible for the furniture of the semininal exhibition "Victorian and Edwardian Exhibition" in 1952. Ten years later, she authored Nineteenth Century English Furniture, which was the first major study of Victorian furniture. Aslin joined the Bethnal Green Museum as a part-time assistant keeper in charge in 1964. She immediately began to redisplay the museum's continental furniture and undertook a preparation of British design in the 20th-century for designs in the 1920s and 1930s, incorporating displays popular with the local community. In 1968, Aslin was appointed assistant director to John Pope-Hennessy at the V&A. She was given the responsibility of liasing with the Ministry of Works and was responsible for the buildings, installations and redecorating. The following year, Aslin wrote The Aesthetic Movement: Prelude to Art Nouveau. Following the appointment of Roy Strong as director of the V&A in 1974, she returned to Bethnal Green Museum and was made Keeper in Charge until her retirement in 1981. After she retired, she dedicated herself to her interests as a life-long member of The Victorian Society. Aslin was a founder member of the Decroative Arts Society, and was a member of both the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society and the Victorian Arts Society. She was a committee member of the Brighton Society in Hove.
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life. Aslin was educated at the Slade School of Fine Art and later enrolled at the University of London. She did her wartime service in the Auxiliary Territorial Service and worked to interpret photographs for the intelligence services. Career In 1947, Aslin joined the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) as a research assistant in its Circulation Department. She was a member of a group that featured Peter Floud and she planned exhibitions that were in museums across the United Kingdom. Aslin was responsible for the furniture of the semininal exhibition "Victorian and Edwardian Exhibition" in 1952. Ten years later, she authored Nineteenth Century English Furniture, which was the first major study of Victorian furniture. Aslin joined the Bethnal Green Museum as a part-time assistant keeper in charge in 1964. She immediately began to redisplay the museum's continental furniture and undertook a preparation of British design in the 20th-century for designs in the 1920s and 1930s, incorporating displays popular with the local community. In 1968, Aslin was appointed assistant director to
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Zahid Ali Akbar Khan, Pakistani general and engineering officer Waqar Ahmed Khan, Pakistani politician Sultan Ali Lakhani, Pakistnai businessman Luis Carlos de León, Venezuela Pavlo Lazarenko, former Prime Minister of Ukraine Ronald Li, Hong Kong. Founder of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange Ferdinand Marcos, former President of the Philippines Imelda Marcos, former First Lady of the Philippines Hisham Talaat Moustafa, Egyptian real estate magnate Gamal Mubarak and Alaa Mubarak, sons of former President of Egypt Hosni Mubarak Sa'ad Khair, Jordanian intelligence chief Rana Mubashir, Pakistani journalist Khaled Nezzar, General and former Defense Minister of Algeria Akhtar Abdur Rahman, former Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee of Pakistan Billy Rautenbach, Zimbabwe Qosim Rohbar, Tajikistan Rodoljub Radulović, Serbian drug lord Hussein Salem, Egyptian businessman and advisor to Hosni Mubarak Eduard Seidel, Germany James Soong Taiwanese politician implicated in the Taiwan frigate scandal Omar Suleiman, former Vice-President of Egypt and former head of the Egyptian General Intelligence Directorate Nadezhda Tokayeva, former first lady of Kazakhstan Vasif Talibov, de facto leader of the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan Antonio Velardo, money launderer for two families of the calabrian 'Ndrangheta. ,
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bank giant. The data was evaluated by 48 media companies from all over the world, among them the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, The Guardian, The New York Times and Le Monde. Swiss news organisations did not participate in the investigation because a Swiss law concerning bank secrecy forbids the publication of banking secrets. A number of Credit Suisse clients are known to have been involved in crimes ranging from corruption and bribery to drug and human trafficking. The data covers accounts and transactions from the 1940s up to 2010. Notable people named King Abdullah II of Jordan and Queen Rania of Jordan Aliaksei Aleksin, Belarusian businessman blacklisted by the EU and USA, close associate of Alexander Lukashenko. Hashim Jawan Bakht, Pakistani politician Haji Saifullah Khan Bangash, Pakistani politician Louis Alphonse de Bourbon, Spanish-French aristocrat, and his wife Margarita Vargas. Anas el-Fiqqi, Egypt, former Minister of Information Ivan Guta, Ukraine Abdul Halim Khaddam, Syrian politician Zahid Ali Akbar Khan, Pakistani general and engineering officer Waqar Ahmed Khan, Pakistani politician Sultan Ali Lakhani,
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1988), Spanish paratriathlete and sprinter
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may refer to: Susana Rodríguez (artist) (born 1980), Mexican visual
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1942), Estonian politician and sports pedagogue Meeli Truu (1946–2013), Estonian architect Silvia Truu (1922–1990), Estonian writer
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Elmar Truu (born 1942), Estonian politician and sports
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or "finish" a female hostage was removed from Facebook and YouTube. The adverts are not representative of the gameplay. References 2018 video games Android (operating
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mobile game from Chinese developer Yotta Games. The gameplay involves constructing and levelling up buildings. In August 2018 an advert for the game in
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