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201617 Divisin de Honor has the first season of Divisin de Honor de Andalusia, Cdiz B and Juventud de Torremolinos won the season,Cdiz B,Puente Genil, Villacarrillo and Juventud de Torremolinos promoted.
Teams
Group 1
Football in Spain
Group 2
Group 1Western Andalusia
Results |
Fenghuangshan Subdistrict is a subdistrict in Baota District, Yan'an, Shaanxi, China. As of 2010, the subdistrict has a population of 44,294.
History
The area of contemporary Fenghuangshan Subdistrict is home to a series of centuries old yaodong complexes, most notably, Zhenxilou , which was built into the subdistrict's eponymous Fenghuang Mountain by Fan Zhongyan during the Northern Song dynasty.
From January 13, 1937 to November 1938, during the Chinese Civil War, the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party was based out of the foothills of Fenghuang Mountain.
The division was established as the Fenghuangshan People's Commune in March 1972. Fenghuangshan was changed to a subdistrict in September 1984, as people's communes were being phased out.
Geography
Fenghuangshan Subdistrict is located in the northwestern portion of Baota District, where the eponymous Fenghuang Mountain lies.
Administrative divisions
Fenghuangshan administers seven residential communities and two administrative vi |
llages .
Residential communities
The subdistrict administers the following seven residential communities
Beiyuan Community
Wenhuagou Community
Beiguan Street Community
Beimenkou Community
Fenghuangshan Community
Zhongxin Street Community
Xigou Community
Villages
The subdistrict administers the following two administrative villages
Wenyi Village
Wen'er Village
Demographics
As of the 2010 Chinese Census, Fenghuangshan has a population of 44,294, an increase from the 41,194 recorded in the 2000 Chinese Census. A 1996 estimate put the subdistrict's population at 29,000. In the 1982 Chinese Census, the Fenghuangshan People's Commune had a population of 19,667, comprising 4,312 households.
References
Baota District
Townshiplevel divisions of Shaanxi
Subdistricts of the People's Republic of China
Yan'an |
The Symphony No. 1 in Ebmajor was composed by musicologist and composer FranoisJoseph Ftis in 1862, finishing the symphony when he was 74 yearsold.
This symphony is one of only two symphonies completed during Ftis' lifetime.
Form
The Symphony prescribes to the developed symphonic form as was customary for symphonic compositions in the late 18th to early 19th centuries, where the threemovement form was expanded to four.
I Allegro animato
II Poco adagio
III Intermezzo, Allegro con moto
IV Rondo, Allegro con moto
External links
Recording 2013 on YouTube, Orchestre Symphonique de la RTBF, Brian Priestman conductor
Classical music stubs |
Artyom Kiryanov ; born January 12, 1977, Veliky Novgorod is a Russian political figure and deputy of the 8th State Duma. In 2006, he was granted a Candidate of Sciences in juridical sciences degree.
In 1997, Kiryanov joined the movement Our Home Russia. From 1990 to 2006, he worked at the State Duma of the Russian Federation and the Federation Council. In 20092013, he was the vicechairman of the Public Council of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Moscow Region. In 2009, he also was appointed head of the Youth Lawyers Union of the Russian Federation. From 2014 to 2021, Kiryanov was a member of the Civic Chamber of the Russian Federation. Since September 2021, he has served as deputy of the 8th State Duma from the Novgorod Oblast constituency.
References
1977 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
21stcentury Russian politicians
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma Russian Federation
People from Veliky Novgorod |
Chapman Products Company, is an American corporation with concentrations in hair care and color, skincare, media,
entertainment, and nonprofit areas. The company is headquartered in Fountain Inn, SC, registered in the United States.
History
From William Chapman's Grandma's Secret potion for damaged or thinning hair, Chapman Products were launched in 1991.
The company was founded by husband and wife team William P. Chapman Jr. and Kimberly Chapman.
The couple initially worked to mix the ingredients and package the hair potion in an 800squarefoot building located near their Greenville home. CPC was created to fill the void of healthy hair care products in underserved or diverse communities.
While William Chapman works in the lab developing and refining products, Kim Chapman oversees staff and training along with other frontofhouse duties. She has also contributed to product development, including a cradle cap remedy and hair serum.
Charitable Foundation
In 1999 the Chapmans felt it essential to expand in |
to community outreach, birthing the Chapman Foundation, INC. CFI is a charity that provides scholarships to high school students, delivers school supplies
to those in need, and toys to the less fortunate. CFI's charitable gifts have reached over 250,000.00 annually internationally.
Chapman Foundation was created to help stylists and barbers children attend school. It later grew to give to Historically black colleges and universities HBCU.
The Chapman Foundation Scholarship Awards began as an initiative to assist the continuation of education for graduating high school students. William and Kimberly Chapman had the innate desire to give back to the community and to students that exemplify excellence. Since 1999, the foundation has awarded many scholarships. This has assisted graduating high school students in the pursuit of their dreams for a higher education and donated funding to many colleges. In 2017, a partnership was established with Urban League of the Upstate to support more students through these o |
rganizations. In addition, the Chapman Foundation maintains community outreach programs.
Operations
CPC manufactures, packages, and ships all of its products from its corporate headquarters located in Fountain Inn, SC. Sheen Magazine was founded by Kimberly Chapman in 2006, and has since grown into digital and social media. CPC manufactures hair and skincare products for Nairobi Professional, Congo Professional, Pamper, Kerafena Natural Hair Smoothing System, Grandma's Secret Potion, Affair Pro, and Akura Wellness Skincare.
In a 2020 interview, Black Enterprise talked to Kimberly Chapman about how the pandemic has affected her business and how being a Black woman entrepreneur allowed her to set her own standards to succeed in business. Mrs. Chapman was selected to become a member of the Black Doll Affair, appearing in Vogue Magazine.
The company was profiled in 2022 by television station WYFF for Black History Month.
References
External links
Blackowned businesses |
Hariana Veras Victoria is an Angolan Journalist, Producer and TV Host, and a White House Correspondent for Africa. Hariana is also credentialed to cover the Pentagon, the U.S. Senate and the U.S. State Department.
Hariana covers the U.S. government, the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and other institutions in Washington D.C. and New York City.
In December 2021, Hariana pressed the Biden Administration on the Omicronlinked travel restrictions imposed on African countries.
Biography
Hariana Veras was born on July 22, 1984, in Malanje, Angola, where she lived before immigrating to the United States to work for the Angola Embassy in Washington, DC, as Press Assistant in 2007. She left after nine years to focus mainly on journalism.
Early career
Hariana began her journalism career at the age of 18 in Angola where she worked as a reporter at the newspaper Folha 8. She later worked for the newspaper Angolense. Her first steps in television started at ORION where she worked a |
s a TV reporter.
References
Journalism
Angolan journalists |
Otothyropsis biamnicus is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it occurs in tributaries of the Iguazu River and the Tibagi River, which are both in the Paran River basin of Brazil. It is noted to be commensal with midge larvae of the family Chironomidae, which attach to the gill openings or more rarely the cleithrum of the fish. It reaches 4 cm 1.6 inches SL. The specific epithet of this species, biamnicus, roughly translates to "inhabitant of two rivers", which refers to the species' distribution in tributaries of two different rivers.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 2013 |
Habib B is a former Senegalese footballer and manager.
Playing career
B began his career in his native Senegal, playing for US Gore. On 8 May 1955, B scored in a 70 win against ASEC Mimosas in the 1955 French West African Cup final. B later moved to Europe, signing for Monaco.
Managerial career
After his playing career, B returned to Senegal to manage US Gore. During the mid1960s, whilst still managing US Gore, B managed Senegal alongside Lybasse Diop. Under B's management, in their first appearance at the tournament, Senegal finished fourth at the 1965 African Cup of Nations.
References
Date of birth missing
Year of birth missing
Possibly living people
Senegalese footballers
US Gore players
AS Monaco FC players
Senegal national football team managers
Senegalese football managers
Senegalese expatriate footballers
Senegalese expatriate sportspeople in France
Expatriate footballers in France
Association footballers not categorized by position |
Sceloporus clarkii, Clark's spiny lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is found in New Mexico and Arizona in the United States and Mexico.
References
Sceloporus
Reptiles of Mexico
Endemic fauna of Mexico
Reptiles described in 1852
Taxa named by Spencer Fullerton Baird
Taxa named by Charles Frdric Girard |
Richard Steele born March 30, 2004 is a Northern Mariana Islands association footballer who currently plays the Walla Walla Wolves and the Northern Mariana Islands national team.
Youth career
As a youth Steele played for MP United for over ten years and won the top scorer award in local leagues multiple times. In 2019 he won the Golden Boot of the Northern Mariana Islands Football Association under15 league with twenty three goals.
Following the 2019 season his family moved to California where he competed with the Pirates of Santa Ynez Valley Union High School. He was named the team's Best Offensive Player after his first season as the team's top scorer with five goals. While in California he also played club soccer for Kickers Soccer Club in Los Olivos. He was also the club's U16 top scorer that season, scoring twelves times.
After one year in California Steele returned to the Northern Mariana Islands and resumed playing with MP United and the national team player pool.
College career
In February 2022, |
as a senior at Mount Carmel School, Steele committed to play college soccer in the United States for the Wolves of Walla Walla University of the NAIA.
International career
Steele was a member of the national under18 player pool. He made his senior international debut on 19 February 2022 in a friendly against Guam. As part of the same trip, he scored for the national under20 team in a 41 victory against the Guam national under17 team.
International career statistics
References
External links
National Football Teams profile
2004 births
Living people
Association football forwards
Northern Mariana Islands footballers
Northern Mariana Islands international footballers |
Otothyropsis piribebuy is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it is known to occur in the Piribebuy River and the Aguaray River, which are part of the Paraguay River basin in Paraguay. It is found in areas with marginal vegetation and reaches 2.9 cm 1.1 inches SL. The species is known to be collected for the aquarium trade, where it may be confused with fish of the genus Otocinclus, which are in the same family and are visually similar.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 2011 |
Felsner is a German language habitational surname for someone who lived in a rocky place or by a cliff Fels. Notable people with the name include
Brian Felsner 1972, American former professional ice hockey left winger
Denny Felsner 1970, American former professional ice hockey winger
Hermann Felsner 18891977, Austrian football player and manager
Johannes Felsner 1998, Austrian football player
References
Germanlanguage surnames
Toponymic surnames |
Thakur Akshay Singh Ratnub. 24 December 1910; d. 1 July 1995 was a Rajasthani, Brajbhasha Hindi poet from Rajasthan. His penned poems criticising the British policies of divide rule. He is considered as one of the modern traditionalist poets. He was a scholar of Hindi, Rajasthani, DingalOld Rajasthani, Urdu, Sanskrit and Prakrit. He has been awarded with epithets of Sahitya Bhushan, Sahitya Ratna, and Kavi Ratna.
Early Life Family
Thakur Akshay Singh Ratnu was born on 24 December 1910 at Kali PahariHanphawat village in Jaipur. His father was Thakur Jhujhar Singh Ratnu of Charanwas village in Nagaur, Rajasthan. His grandfather Thakur Jawahar Dan was well to do and affluent, his Hundicredit instrument used to operate from Kuchaman. His mother passed away while he was young. Akshay Singh was subsequently sent to Alwar where he was raised by his aunt. Thakur Akshay Singh has four sons and one daughter.
Education
Thakur Akshay Singh completed his education in Alwar under his guru Girdharilal Bhatt Tailang. |
He learned Kaumudi, Raghuvansh, Kuvalyananda, Chandralak, and Amarkosh. He became a scholar of Hindi, Dingal, Sanskrit, Urdu, Rajasthani, Brajbhasha, and Prakrit.
Career
Source
Akshay Singh began his career as a civil servant in the erstwhile princely state of Alwar. He was on good terms with the ruler Sawai Jaisingh. After Independence, Akshay Singh moved to Jaipur and served as Chief Reader in the Matsya Sangh, Sanyukt Rajasthan, and Jaipur Secretariat, finally retiring in 1968.
Alwar State was one of the first to declare Hindi as the official state langauge. Akshay Singh served as the Principal of the Hindi Training Center established to promote teach Hindi.
Poet
Source
Thakur Akshay Singh began composing poems at an early age. At the age of 6, he presented a poem to the Maharaja of Bikaner, Ganga Singh congratulating him on his Gang Nahar project to bring the river waters to the farmers in Ganganagar.
In 1939, Akshay Singh criticized the role of British Government for their divide rule policy wh |
en they incited the Meo community of Alwar surrounding regions which led to riots and the Maharaja of Alwar was banished to Abu later to Bombay by the British Government. Akshay Singh penned a poem Alwar me Ulatfer outlining the role of British. Akshay Singh also travelled to meet Maharaja Jai Singh who called on him during his banishment. He stayed with the ruler for 15 days at his request.
Akshay Singh criticized the move of removing Charans from the Walterkrit Charan Rajput Hitkarini Sabha.
He was given epithet of BrajRatan by the Brajbhasha Akademi. The academy publsihed a monograph on Thakur Akshay Singh Ratnu for his contribution in Brajbhasha literature.
Akshay Singh has also written on the themes of sacrifice of Jauhars of Chittor as well as Gandhian philoshphy.
Social Service
Akshay Singh led the efforts for the renovation of Karni Mata Temple in Mathura, originally built in 16th century by Lakhaji Barhath. In Alwar, Thakur Akshay Singh constructed a Charan Boarding HouseChatravas as well as G |
ujki Bhavan and Thabhawali Bhavan. In 1949, Akshay Singh moved to Jaipur and made efforts for the construction of a Charan Boarding House. He collected donations for the cause and was aided by Gulabdanji HampavatKot and Shishdanji PalawatKishanpura. The borading was inaugurated by the Revenue Secretary Hetudan Ujjwal.
Quote
, , , "Our language our dress, our culture our country, this is the essence of freedom, simple life and dignified thoughts."
Works
source
Akshaya kesar, pratpa caritra By Akshayasiha Ratn 1989
Akshay Bharat Darshan
Akshay Jan Smriti
Walterkrit Charan Rajput Sabha ke naye rulings par do shabd
Brajbhasha verse translation of the tenth skanda of Shrimad Bhagavad
Alwar Mein Ulatfer Khand Poetry
Akshay Tej Niti Samuchhay
Dasori Darshan
Rajasthan Vandana
Bhisam Grisam
Doha chhand aur uske vibbhin bhed
Anyokti Gulab Ikkisi
Farishte varo hazaro
Basant Varnan
Kashmir Vijay
Chittor ke teen Shake
Pat Parivartan
Jaipur ri Jhamal
References
Rajasthani peo |
ple
Hindi poet
Rajasthani poet
Indian poets
Charan |
The 2022 FA Women's League Cup Final is the 11th final of the FA Women's League Cup, England's secondary cup competition for women's football teams and its primary league cup tournament. It will take place on 5 March 2022, at Plough Lane, and contested by Chelsea and Manchester City.
Chelsea will make their third appearance in a League Cup final and their third consecutive appearance having won the previous two editions. Threetime winners Manchester City will contest their fifth League Cup final and their first since winning it in 2019, the last team to do so before Chelsea's back to back wins. It will be the first time the teams have met in a major cup final although they had previously met each other in three of the previous four League Cup knockout rounds at earlier stages.
Route to the final
Manchester City
In a change from previous years, teams competing in the UEFA Women's Champions League group stage were exempt from the League Cup group stage, earning a provisional bye to the quarterfinals. Howev |
er, following their elimination during the second qualifying round at the hands of Real Madrid after the League Cup draw had been made, Manchester City were placed in the only remaining Northern region group with only four teams. It contained three WSL teams Everton, Leicester City and Manchester United; as well as Championship side Durham. As a result of Manchester City no longer receiving a bye to the knockout stage, the bestplaced runner up during the group stage would now also advance.
Despite a poor start to the WSL season, losing three of their opening five matches and sitting in 9th place, Manchester City opened their League Cup campaign with an emphatic 51 win over Everton who were struggling to gel following a heavy offseason of recruiting and investment. Caroline Weir had opened the scoring in the 8th minute and although Everton had equalised through Grace Clinton within a couple of minutes, Khadija Shaw had put City ahead before the halftime break. As Everton pressed forward in the second half in |
search of way back into the game, City capitalised as Lauren Hemp doubled City's leading before substitute Jess Park added a fourth and Ellen White saw her header fumbled into the goal by goalkeeper Courtney Brosnan in the final minute. The match was Willie Kirk's last game as Everton manager as he was sacked three days later. City once again struck early to open the scoring against Durham, this time through summer signing Filippa Angeldal in the 16th minute. The Championship side surrendered much of the possession to City who were denied a second goal with both Janine Beckie and Angeldal hitting the frame of the goal. Substitute Weir, on her 100th appearance for the club, finally managed to give City the cushion they were pushing for in the 87th minute, firing into the roof of the net from the edge of the Durham box. Beckie also got on the scoresheet in stoppage time as City ran out 30 winners. Having played out a thrilling 22 draw in the league the previous month, City traveled to Manchester United for the |
third group game. City's fast starts continue as Hayley Raso latched on to an early turnover, rolling the ball to Vicky Losada who fired the ball past Sophie Baggaley from the edge of the box with fewer than two minutes played. Despite controlling most of the opening exchanges, United managed to level on the half hour mark when goalkeeper Karima Benameur Taieb spilled the ball against her own body under pressure from Kirsty Hanson who knocked it back to Ivana Fuso to fire home from ten yards. With chances few and far between in a tighter second half, United broke the deadlock eight minutes from time when Ona Batlle broke down the wing to feed the ball to Alessia Russo in the box. The forward's shot was parried by Taieb and fell to Demi Stokes who was pickpocketed by Batlle before the Spaniard calmly stroked the ball into the net, sealing a 21 derby defeat for City. The final group game against Leicester City scheduled for 15 December 2021 was delayed due to a COVID19 outbreak in the Manchester City squad. Wit |
h all other games played, a victory over Everton had put United top of the group on nine points. City were three points behind with the delayed game still to play, although United were assured of a place in the knockout stage either as a group winner or as the bestplaced runner up. City knew a win would send them top on goal difference while a win on penalties would send them through as the best secondplaced team. However, opponents Leicester were also still alive as they could progress as runnerup if they won outright while a penalty shootout win for Leicester would see both teams miss out and instead send Group C runnersup Charlton Athletic through. The game was eventually played on 12 January 2022. Sitting bottom of the WSL, newly promoted Leicester had made a change of manager the previous month, bringing in Lydia Bedford who had guided the team to their first win of the season in the final game before the winter break. Despite the uptick in form, City blew a youthful Leicester side away as Bedford handed |
out five debuts including four academy players. For the third time in four group games, City led inside 10 minutes as Jess Park delivered a perfect cross for White to tap in. Hemp and Georgia Stanway both netted braces as City ran riot to punch their ticket to the knockout stage as group winner with a 50 win as teenage goalkeeper Khiara Keating kept a cleansheet on her senior debut.
Manchester City were drawn against Bristol City for the quarterfinals. Bristol had been beaten in last season's League Cup final and relegated in summer. At the time of their visit to the Academy Stadium, Bristol were 5th in the Championship as they struggled with consistency in their bid to return to the WSL at the first time of asking but had topped Group D including a 10 win over topflight side Reading. Chelsea loanee Aggie BeeverJones gave Bristol the early lead against the run of play, riding a Lucy Bronze challenge to drive into the City penalty area and pulling the ball back to force Alex Greenwood into a lunging block, t |
urning the ball past Keating and into her own net. City's dominance was eventually rewarded through Shaw with the Jamaican twisting her way through the Bristol defence for the equaliser before latching on to the end of a Bronze cross to give City the lead a minute before halftime. A second half mix up between defender and goalkeeper gifted Losada a tap in as City kept control of the tie, seeing out a 31 win. For the semifinals, City received another home tie, this time against surprise WSL topthree challengers Tottenham Hotspur. Having won three out of three including an 110 win against Watford during the group stage, Spurs had edged a 10 win over Championship leaders Liverpool to reach the semifinals for the first time. City controlled the game from the start and tested Rebecca Spencer's goal early via Hemp and Shaw but were handed a warning when Jessica Naz dispossessed Keira Walsh to set up a one on one with the keeper only to drag it wide of the returning Ellie Roebuck's post. But for that chance, it was |
oneway traffic as Park eventually broke the deadlock with an enterprising dribble into the box capped by a deft far post finish before setting up Shaw for a tap in to double City's firsthalf lead. Bronze rattled the post from a corner before Hemp blazed over the rebound as City's refused to relent in the second half, finding a third goal in the 70th minute as Hemp rose highset to head home at the back post from Park's clipped cross and seal a comfortable 30 win.
Chelsea
In a change from previous years, teams competing in the UEFA Women's Champions League group stage were exempt from the League Cup group stage. Because Chelsea won the 202021 FA WSL title, they did not have to go through qualifying and were automatically entered into the Champions League group stage, subsequently giving them a bye to the knockout stage of the League Cup. As a result, Chelsea would only need to play two games to reach the final.
Entering at the quarterfinal stage, Chelsea were drawn away to West Ham United for the opening ga |
me of their League Cup defence. West Ham had topped a group of Birmingham City, Brighton Hove Albion and London City Lionesses, winning all three games without conceding. It was the first meeting of the season between the teams having had their league game in December postponed following a COVID19 outbreak in the Chelsea squad. It was also the first game Chelsea had played after the winter break having had two league games postponed due to COVID outbreaks at both Chelsea and Everton. Pernille Harder gave Chelsea a 25thminute lead when Jessie Fleming sprang Fran Kirby on the counter with West Ham committing players forward to attack a freekick. Having carried the ball from the halfway line, Kirby squared the ball to Harder who picked her spot past Anna Leat unchallenged. A wide open game, the teams went in at the break level when Kateina Svitkov received the ball on the left side of the box before cutting back inside on her right foot and shooting, catching a wrongfooted AnnKatrin Berger off guard. Chelsea ra |
mped up the intensity to begin the second half, retaking the lead from a 58th minute Erin Cuthbert header. Within eight minutes, West Ham had gone from level pegging to three goals down as Harder completed her hattrick, first by reacting quickest to the rebound as Leat parried a fizzing Kirby shot and then by cushioning a header back across goal and into the side netting. Not disheartened by the sudden deficit, West Ham battled back and scored a late concilation go through substitute Halle Houssein on her West Ham debut as Chelsea won 42. For the semifinal, Chelsea were drawn at home to Manchester United having handed them a bruising 61 WSL defeat in their only other previous meeting of the season. Chelsea won 31 with all four goals coming in a 13minute flurry. Harder again opened the scoring, racing on to a long through ball as the United defence was caught napping. Fleming doubled the lead five minutes later reacting to a deflection to head the ball into the ground and looping over Sophie Baggaley. Some sli |
ck interplay between Jackie Groenen and Vilde Be Risa sliced open the Chelsea defence as the Norwegian halved the deficit just one minute later but the two goal cushion was restored shortly after when Jess Carter made a tearing near post run to cut infront of Aoife Mannion and turn the ball in. Chelsea held United at bay in the second half before Baggaley saw a straight red card in the 77th minute for clearing out an onrushing Sam Kerr 30 yards from goal. After the game United manager Marc Skinner lamented the suspensions of two key players, Ella Toone and Hayley Ladd, who were both missing for accumulating two yellow cards during their fivegame run to the semifinals while Chelsea had only previously played one game in the competition, suggesting the rules should be changed for future seasons.
Match
Details
References
Cup
FA Women's Super League Cup finals
FA Women's League Cup Final
FA Women's League Cup Final 2022
FAWLC 2022 |
The Siam Rath Weekly Review was an Englishlanguage weekly newspaper whose first issue was published in Thailand on 10 July 1952. The contents of Siam Rath Weekly Review were mainly the translations of feature materials and editorials from the Thailanguage newspapers, especially the daily Siam Rath , , ; lit. 'Siamese State', also owned by M.R. Kukrit.
See also
Timeline of Englishlanguage newspapers published in Thailand
List of online newspaper archives Thailand
References
Defunct newspapers published in Thailand
Englishlanguage newspapers published in Asia
Mass media in Bangkok
Englishlanguage newspapers published in Thailand |
Rachela Suckewer or Roza Suckewer 19041905 1943 was a Polish impressionist and expressionist painter, best known for her paintings Social symbol 1930 and Strike on the New York Harbor 1935. She was of Jewish origin. She was a cousin of poet Abraham Sutzkever.
References
1904 births
1905 births
1943 deaths
Polish painters |
Hong Kong Garden may refer to
Hong Kong Garden Hong Kong, private housing estate in Hong Kong
Hong Kong Garden song, 1978 song by Siouxsie and the Banshees |
Parotocinclus adamanteus is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it occurs in the Paraguau River basin in the state of Bahia in Brazil. A phylogenetic analysis reportedly indicates that P. adamanteus is most closely related to three other species in the genus Parotocinclus P. jequi, P. prata, and P. robustus. The species was first described in 2019 by Edson H. L. Pereira, Alexandre Clistenes de A. Santos, Mrio C. C. de Pinna, and Roberto E. Reis. FishBase does not list this species.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 2019
Fish of Brazil |
Sceloporus consobrinus, the southern prairie lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is found in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona, Kansas, Colorado, and Nebraska in the United States.
References
Sceloporus
Reptiles described in 1854
Taxa named by Spencer Fullerton Baird
Taxa named by Charles Frdric Girard |
Arne Hygaard 15 January 1906 16 December 1981 was a Norwegian physician and Arctic explorer.
Biography
Hygaard was born in Lillesand. After completing school in 1924, he went to sea for one year. In 1925, he commenced his medical studies at Oslo University. He worked at Ullevl Hospital in Oslo, at Haukeland Hospital in Bergen, and at the physiological institute of Oslo University before gaining his doctorate in 1941.
Hygaard participated in several Arctic expeditions. In 1928, he want to Spitsbergen together with O.J. Broch and Eyvind Fjeld to study the island's geography. He returned the following year with Martin Mehren and Olav Staxrud. In 1931, Hygaard and Mehren crossed Greenland's ice sheet from Uummannaq to Nordfjord by dogsled. Together with his wife, Unni Munthe Wulfsberg, as well as Harald Waage Rasmussen and Edward FalsenKrohn, he spent the winter of 19361937 studying Inuits at Angmagssalik.
During the German occupation of Norway, Hygaard joined the farright Nasjonal Samling. He was charged wi |
th treason in 1948, after which he fled the country to Argentina, where he continued to work as a physician in the town of Cachi. In 1950, Hygaard took part in the first ascent of Nevado de Cachi, the second highest peak of which is now named after him. He died in 1981.
References
1906 births
1981 deaths
People from Lillesand
University of Oslo alumni
Norwegian physicians
Explorers of the Arctic
Members of Nasjonal Samling
Norwegian emigrants to Argentina |
Geertruida H. Springer 1895 1988 was a Dutch still life painter, best known for her paintings Stilleven met fles en boek, Stilleven met schedeldak en glazen potjes, and Stilleven met potje en Javaans beeldje among others. Her work is part of the permanent collections of Teyler Museum.
References
1895 births
1988 deaths
Dutch painters |
Nasiliu.net No To Violence is a Russian nonprofit organization founded in 2015, which supports women who experience domestic violence. Its director is Anna Rivina.
In 2020 Nasiliu.net offered consultations to 960 victims of domestic violence at their premises.
In December 2020 the Russian Justice Ministry declared Nasiliu.net to be a 'foreign agent'. In February 2021 the Justice Ministry threatened to dissolve the group entirely, alleging charter violations. That month Nasiliu.net received an unsigned demand, allegedly from the Federal Agency for State Property Management, to "urgently vacate the premises voluntarily".Their landlord subsequently showed up and told them that they needed to vacate the premises. In March 2021 the group's legal challenge to its foreign agent status was refused by the Zamoskvoretsky Court. In April 2021 a Russian court fined the organization 300,000 roubles for infringing the foreign agent legislation.
In August 2021 the group announced it would provide emergency accommodation |
in Moscow hotels and hostels for victims of domestic violence.
References
External links
Domestic violencerelated organizations
Domestic violence in Russia
Feminist organizations in Russia
Nonprofit organizations based in Russia
2015 establishments in Russia
Organizations established in 2015 |
Badreddine Assouar born May 5, 1974 is a physicist, currently Director of Research at CNRS and the University of Lorraine in France. His research focuses on metamaterials, metasurfaces, phononic crystals and SAW devices.
He is an Associate Editor of Physical Review Applied.
Career
Badreddine Assouar received his master's degree in 1998, his PhD in 2001 and his Habilitation to Supervise Research in 2007 from the University of Lorraine in France.
After a postdoctoral fellowship, he entered to the French National Center of Scientific Research CNRS in 2002.
From 2010 to 2012, he joined the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta as a visiting Professor in the international research unit CNRS Georgia Tech. In 2020, he became Director of Research at CNRS. He is the founder and the head of the Metamaterials and Phononics group at the Institut Jean Lamour CNRSUniversity of Lorraine.
Honors and Awards
In 2009, he received the first research prize from the Lorraine region.
In 2013, he won the Award of Scientifi |
c Excellence from CNRS.
References
1974 births
Living people |
Elguja Amashukeli Georgian ; 22 April 1928 10 March 2002 was a Georgian sculptor and painter. From 1981 to 1996 he was the chairman of the Georgian Association of Visual Artists.
Life
Elguja Amashukeli graduated from the Tbilisi State Academy of Arts in 1955.
Since 1996 he has been a corresponding member of the Department of Linguistics and Literature of the Georgian Academy of Sciences. In 1985 he became a member of the Soviet Academy of Arts. He designed subway stations, created memorials and monuments in Georgia.
Elguja Amashukeli died on March 10, 2002, and is buried in the Didube Pantheon Cemetery in Tbilisi.
He wrote two books The Seventh Sense 1981 and Art Letters 1984.
Works selection
Mother of Georgia, Tbilisi 1958
Monument to King Vakhtang I Gorgasali, Tbilisi 1967
Monument to Niko Pirosmani, Tbilisi 1975
Monument to the heroic sailors, Poti 1979
Monument to the Mother Tongue "Knowledge Bell", Tbilisi 1983
Monument to King David IV the Builder, Kutaisi 1994
Awards
USSR State Pr |
ize
Shota Rustaveli State Prize 1965
Prize of the World Competition in Sofia 1970
References
Sculptors from Georgia country
Rustaveli Prize winners
Painters from Georgia country
People's Artists of the USSR visual arts
Soviet painters
Modern painters
2002 deaths
1928 births
Recipients of the USSR State Prize
Members of the Georgian National Academy of Sciences |
Julia Curyo born 1986, in Warsaw is a Polish painter and art critic, best known for her art installation Lambs of God at the Marymont metro station in Warsaw. Between 2011 and 2016, her work has been displayed at eight individual exhibitions.
References
1986 births
Living people
Polish painters
Polish critics |
Lt Col Inka Niskanen is an officer and fighter pilot in the Finnish Air Force. She is notable as the first woman in Finland to qualify to pilot a fighter jet; the first to command an air force squadron; and the first to reach, upon her promotion in June 2018, the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
In 1997, Niskanen volunteered for national military service which for women is not mandatory in Finland at the Training Air Wing, Finnish Air Force, at Kauhava. Following that, in 1998, she was accepted as the first female cadet into the air force officer training programme at the National Defence University, which she completed in 2002, being commissioned as a flight officer, and qualifying to fly the Hornet fighter jets.
In January 2019, Niskanen took command of the Karelia Air Command 31 Squadron, as the first woman to hold such a post in Finland.
From August 2021, she has worked at the National Defence University as the lead lecturer in aerial warfare studies.
References
Finnish Air Force personnel
Women air force |
personnel
1974 births
Date of birth missing living people
Place of birth missing
Living people |
Oleg Anfimov 19372019; full name Oleg Grigoriyevich Anfimov was a Soviet engineer and politician who was the minister of electrical equipment industry of the Soviet Union between 1986 and 1991.
Biography
Anfimov was born in Shakhty on 19 February 1937. He was a graduate of the Riga Polytechnical Institute where he obtained a degree in electromechanical engineering. He was a member of the Communist Party. He served in different posts in the party, including the Riga Gorkom Party secretary and secretary of the central committee of the Communist Party of Latvia. He was general director of Riga electromachinery works from 1981 to 1983. He served as the minister of electrical equipment industry between 20 July 1986 and 24 August 1991. In the period 19861989 Anfimov was a deputy at the Supreme Soviet.
In November 1991 Anfimov was appointed president of a stateowned corporation. Then he was made a member of the coordinating council of the Russian Union of Mechanical Engineers. He also served as a member of the adv |
isory council of the Ministry of Industry and Trade of the Russian Federation.
Anfimov died on 9 July 2019.
References
20thcentury Russian engineers
21stcentury Russian engineers
1937 births
2019 deaths
Communist Party of the Soviet Union members
People from Shakhty
People's commissars and ministers of the Soviet Union
Riga Technical University alumni
Soviet engineers |
Ranunculus tripartitus, threelobed crowfoot, is a species of flowering plant in the family Ranunculaceae, which grows in pools and muddy hollows in coastal parts of Europe, North Africa and West Asia. It is rare and endangered throughout its range, and is considered to be an indicator of favourable environmental conditions.
Description
Ranunculus tripartitus is a procumbent annual to perennial herbaceous plant that grows in shallow water and on exposed mud or peat. Under water it has finely divided, threadlike submerged capillary leaves. Floating on the surface, or growing on exposed mud, it has flat, deeplylobed laminar leaves. Sometimes both leaf shapes are present on the same plant, but intermediate leaves are rare. The laminar leaves are reniform overall, divided more than halfway into three rarely 5 lobes which are broadest towards the tip, and which are themselves shallowly indented crenate at the end. They are 0.5 1.5 cm across, with the middle lobe narrower than the side ones. The submerged leaves a |
re 1 4 cm long, divided up to 5 times, with sometimes as many as 90 terminal segments. The leaves are opposite or alternate along stems that can be up to 50 cm long, with small stipules at the base of the petiole, which can be between 1 and 10 mm long. The stems and leaves are glabrous hairless.
The actinomorphic flowers are borne singly on long stalks pedicels from the leaf axils. Each flower has 5 petals and 5 sepals. The petals are white with a yellow patch towards to base, up to 4.5 mm long, and there is a small space between them. Towards the base of each petal is a small crescentshaped nectar pit. The sepals are up to 3 mm long, green with a blue tip, and recurved towards the flower stalk. There are 5 8 stamens and numerous more than 6 carpels. The receptacle is hairy. The fruits are hairless and, as they develop, the pedicel becomes recurved.
Taxonomy
Ranunculus tripartitus is included in the taxonomically difficult subgenus or "section" Batrachium of the buttercup family, which includes all the wa |
tercrowfoots. They are aquatic or amphibious species, with white petals, transversely ridged achenes fruits, and stipules at the base of the leaf stalk. It can be separated from other members of the section by the threelobed laminar leaves, the petals being about twice as long as the sepals and not contiguous, the reflexed pedicel and the hairy receptacle.
It was described by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in 1808. The type specimen, which was thought to be in Paris, is missing, so the plate and description in de Candolle's "Icones Plantarum" has been designated a typotype. Ranunculus petiveri W.D.J. Koch, which was later found in Germany, and Batrachium lutarium Revel France are considered to be the same species.
There are no subspecies of R. tripartitus, but it does form hybrids with other species in the section, including R. omiophyllus R. novaeforestae S.D. Webster which is only known in Britain; common watercrowfoot also only in Britain; and R. ololeucos R. felixii Segret only in France. A key featur |
e for the identification of hybrids is the presence of leaves that are intermediate between the capillary and laminar forms; such plants are also sterile.
The chromosome number of R. tripartitus is 2n 48.
Distribution
This is primarily a European plant, although it has been reported as far east as Turkey and as far south as Morocco, so it is perhaps present on three continents. Owing to the difficulty of identifying species in the section Batrachium, there is some uncertainty about its range. For example, the Turkish plants were recorded as R. kastamonuensis. It may occur on the Aegean Islands, but this is also unconfirmed.
In all parts of its range, R. tripartitus is considered to be rare and possibly endangered.
In Britain, it was first recorded as R. innominatus by C.C. Babington in 1848, "near Claremont House, Surrey", an area now known as Esher Commons. It still occurs in this part of the country. The other main populations in Britain are in the heaths of Sussex and Kent, the New Forest, the Lizard p |
eninsula, Pembrokeshire and Anglesey. Because populations fluctuate dramatically, it is difficult to assess its conservation status. In 1962 it was thought to be present in 28 places 10 x 10 km squares on the map. This had shrunk to 19 by 1987, as low as 10 by 1999, and back up to 27 by 2002. Given a Change Index of 1.09, it narrowly missed being classed as one of the 100 least successful plants in the British Isles.
Ecology
The habitat of R. tripartitus is in shallow pools and muddy hollows in heathland. It requires high levels of moisture and light, and low levels of nutrients. In Britain it is considered an axiophyte wherever it occurs, and it has been described as a useful bioindicator in the Mediterranean region. In the Doana National Park in Spain, it is found in speciesrich ponds of special conservation value.
Although it is typically found in coastal areas, it is not tolerant of saline conditions. Its Ellenberg values in Britain are L 9, F 10, R 6, N 3, and S 0.
Disturbance, such as trampling a |
nd grazing by livestock, is an important factor in its conservation.
It is mainly a lowland plant, recorded only as high as 300 m in Britain, at Belstone in Devon by William Keble Martin in 1934.
References
Flora of Europe
Flora of the United Kingdom
Plants described in 1808
Taxa named by de Candolle |
Sceloporus couchii, Couch's spiny lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is endemic to Mexico.
References
Sceloporus
Reptiles of Mexico
Endemic fauna of Mexico
Reptiles described in 1859
Taxa named by Spencer Fullerton Baird |
Pierre Singaravlou born 18 January 1977 is a French Global historian who is a British Academy Global Professor of History at Kings College London. He is also full Professor of Modern History at Paris 1 PanthonSorbonne University and director of the Center for Asian History Sorbonne. Professor Singaravlou is the former director of the Sorbonne University Press and an honorary fellow of the Institut universitaire de France IUF, Academic Institute of France.
Career
From 2009 to 2014, he was senior lecturer at the Paris 1 PanthonSorbonne University Sorbonne in the Department of history, and also taught at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland. He then became a Fellow at the Institut universitaire de France IUF, Academic Institute of France from 2013 to 2018. As of 2015, he is full professor of modern history at the Paris 1 PanthonSorbonne University. At the same time, he was appointed director of the Sorbonne University Press from 2015 to 2019. He is currently British Academy Global Professor at Kings Colle |
ge London.
Research
Pierre Singaravlou specialises in the modern period and has written extensively on global history and the history of colonial empires.
He is the author of several books, TV Documentaries and international exhibitions in French, English and Spanish. His particular focus has been on the ways in which empires exploit, adapt to, and are often disrupted by global movements. His works show how Globalisation was decisively shaped by nineteenthcentury imperialism.
He is coeditor of Mondes, French journal of Global history and the founding editor of the book series histoiremonde.
He occasionally writes opeds for the French newspaper Le Monde and Libration'.
Social Sciences in Colonial Context
Singaravlou began his research by proposing a social and political history of French Orientalism in Asia from the end of the 19th century to the 1950s. In his first book on the French School of the Far East, he demonstrated both the continuing archaeological predations in Indochina and the decisive rol |
e of asian intellectuals in the elaboration of knowledge. Then Pierre Singaravlou brought together the social and intellectual history ion the social sciences with imperial history. His book Professing Empire, he understood the ways in which French academic culture interacted with colonial expansion, through the institutionalisation of the colonial sciences between 1880 and 1940.
Counterfactual Thinking
In his book, written with Q. Deluermoz and published by Yale University Press in 2021, Pierre Singaravlou examines counterfactual history, futures past, and alternate histories of the future. A Past of Possibilities. A History of What Could Have Been explores the limits and potentials of counterfactual thinking, providing a survey of its uses, methodological issues on the possible in history and social sciences, and practical proposals for using counterfactual history in research and the wider public.
Imperial Globalisation in China
His book Tianjin Cosmopolis 2017 is focused on a short period of time, b |
etween 1900 and 1902, when an international government took over the Chinese city of Tianjin.
Singaravlou studies also the establishment of nine imperial powers in the city and its agglomeration, in the form of foreign concessions, which quickly became, under the modernising influence of Chinese elites, a unique place for interaction between natives and foreigners. His work shows how part of the Chinese elites were able to meet the challenges of internationalisation at the end of the nineteenthcentury.
France in the World
Pierre Singaravlou was one of the coordinators of France in the World. A New Global History published in 2017 under the direction of Patrick Boucheron. The book was released during the French presidential election and became a bestseller in France. The authors were attacked by Eric Zemmour and farright intellectuals. This work had a great influence in almost all European countries where historians explicitly draw on this French book to propose their own version Italy Storia mondiale dell |
Italia, Sicily Storia mondiale della Sicilia, Netherlands Wereldgeschiedenis van Nederland, Flanders Wereldgeschiedenis van Vlaanderen, Spain Historia mundial de Espaa, Catalonia Histria mundial de Catalunya and Germany Deutschland. Globalgeschichte einer Nation.
Books
In EnglishDecolonization with Karim Misk and Marc Ball; Other Press, 2022A Past of Possibilities A History of What Could Have Been with Quentin Deluermoz ; Yale University Press, 2021Mapping the World. Perspectives from Asian Cartography with Fabrice Argouns; Singapore National Library, 2021France in the World. A New Global History; Other Press, 2019 Coeditor with Patrick Boucheron as director
In FrenchL' cole franaise d'ExtrmeOrient ou L'institution des marges 18981956. Essai d'histoire sociale et politique de la science coloniale; L'Harmattan, 1999 CNRS ditions, 2019L'Empire des gographes. Gographie, exploration et colonisation 19e20e s.; Belin, 2008Au sommet de l'Empire. Les lites europennes dans les colonies du 16e au 20e sicle ; Peter |
Lang, 2009 CoeditorL'Empire des sports. Une histoire de la mondialisation culturelle; Belin, 2010 with Julien SorezTerritoires impriaux. Une histoire spatiale du fait colonial; Publications de la Sorbonne, 2011 with Hlne Blais and Florence DeprestProfesser l'Empire. Les Sciences coloniales en France sous la IIIe Rpublique; Publications de la Sorbonne, 2011Atlas des Empires coloniaux 19e20e sicles; Autrement, 2012 with JeanFranois Klein and MarieAlbane de SuremainLes Empires coloniaux. XIXeXXe sicle; ditions du Seuil, 2013Pour une histoire des possibles. Analyses contrefactuelles et futurs non advenus; ditions du Seuil, 2016 with Quentin DeluermozTianjin Cosmopolis. Une autre histoire de la mondialisation; ditions du Seuil, 2017Histoire du Monde au XIXe sicle; Fayard, 2017 Coeditor with Sylvain VenayreLe Monde vu d'Asie. Une histoire cartographique; ditions du Seuil, 2018 with Fabrice ArgounsDcolonisations; ditions du Seuil Arte ditions, 2020 with Karim Misk and Marc BallDictionnaire historique de la compar |
aison; ditions de la Sorbonne, 2020 CoeditorLe Magasin du Monde. La mondialisation par les objets du XVIIIe sicle nos jours; Fayard, 2017 with Sylvain VenayreLes Mondes dOrsay; ditions du Seuil Muse d'Orsay, 2021
Exhibitions The World Seen From Asia Guimet Museum Guimet National Museum of Asian Arts, 2018Another History of the World Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations Marseille, France, 20192022The Worlds of Orsay Muse d'Orsay Paris, 20202021Mapping the World. Perspectives from Asian cartography National Library, SingaporeSingapore, 20212022
Filmography Decolonizations'', TV documentary series 3 X 52 minutes, written with K. Misk and M. Ball, that presents an engaging overview of colonial history and broadcast on Arte European Public Service Channel, January 2020. The voiceover is spoken by the French actor Reda Kateb. the series was awarded 39th International URTI Grand Prix for Authors Documentary UNESCO in November 2020
External links
, personal page at the website of the British A |
cademy.
, personal page at the website of King's College London.
,Singaravlou was profiled in a long article published in L'Histoire, February 2021.
References
1977 births
Living people
French historians
Sciences Po alumni
Academics of King's College London |
Amina Ally Bilali is a Tanzanian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Yanga Princess and the Tanzania women's national team.
International career
Ally captained the Tanzania women's national team at the 2020 COSAFA Women's Championship and the 2021 COSAFA Women's Championship.
She was adjudged the man of the match of the final against Malawi which they won by 10 via a goal from Enekia Kasonga and later the player of the tournament.
Honours
CECAFA Women's Championship 2018
COSAFA Women's Championship 2021
COSAFA Women's Championship Player of the tournament 2021
References
External links |
WUIV 1580 AM was a radio station licensed to Icard, North Carolina. It operated on 1580 kHz with a power of 5,000 watts daytime.
History
WUIV signed on in March 1981. The station switched from soft rock by Olivia NewtonJohn, John Denver and Glen Campbell to gospel music on February 21, 1983. Jim Jacumin of Rutherford College, North Carolina was the primary owner. The gospel format included Southern gospel with quartets, harmony and piano, and contemporary gospel by artists such as Bob Dylan. The station was still losing money despite having more than twice as many advertisers, but over 2000 people signed petitions to make sure the new format stayed. Many listeners were shutins but there were also young people.
References
Radio stations established in 1981
Defunct radio stations in the United States
1981 establishments in North Carolina
UIV
UIV |
Priscilla Almodovar currently serves as president and chief executive officer of Enterprise Community Partners, a missionbased affordable housing operator, capital provider, investment manager, and policy and capacity building platform across the United States.
Career at Enterprise
Almodovar joined Enterprise Community Partners as its president and chief executive officer in 2019. Named by Fortune magazine as one of the 50 Most Powerful Latinas, she oversaw the creation of Enterprise's Equitable Path Forward in 2020, a fiveyear 3.5 billion racial equity initiative, designed to invest in affordable housing providers of color across the country.
In 2021, under her leadership, Enterprise partnered with Morgan Stanley to launch the Disaster Recovery Accelerator Fund, a 25 million program to reduce by up to two years the time it takes for government relief dollars to reach owners of multifamily affordable rental properties after natural disasters.
Since 2021, Almodovar serves on United States Secretary of En |
ergy Jennifer Granholms Energy Advisory Board, and is a member of its placebased working group to address the energy transition of underserved communities.
Private sector and government career
Before joining Enterprise, Almodovar was a managing director at JPMorgan Chase, overseeing two of the companys national real estate businesses. Named one of the most influential women in the real estate industry by Affordable Housing Finance Magazine in 2016, she is credited with being instrumental in the firms commitment to Detroits economic recovery.
A Columbia Law School graduate, Almodovar started her career at the law firm White Case. She served as deputy policy director for Eliot Spitzers 2005 New York gubernatorial campaign and took leadership of New York State Housing Finance Agency in January 2007. During her tenure, she spearheaded the negotiation of maintaining affordability at Starrett City in Brooklyn, NY, one of the largest and most economically and raciallymixed housing complexes in the country.
Al |
modovar served as cochair of the New York State Health Innovation Council and has been honored by the United Hospital Fund for her work to create stable, healthy communities.
Personal life
Born to Puerto Rican parents, Almodovar grew up in Sunset Park, Brooklyn and Freeport, Long Island. She is married to Eric Dinallo, New York State's superintendent of insurance from 2007 to 2010. They have two children.
References |
Dianthus bicolor, the bicolour pink, is a species of flowering plant in the family Caryophyllaceae, native to Ukraine, south European Russia, the northern Caucasus, and Kazakhstan. It is found growing in a wide variety of habitats, including forests, grasslands, cliffs, and mountain peaks.
References
bicolor
Flora of Ukraine
Flora of South European Russia
Flora of the North Caucasus
Flora of Kazakhstan
Plants described in 1805 |
AAA Invades WrestleCon is an upcoming professional wrestling event that will be promoted and produced by the Mexican professional wrestling promotion Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide AAA or Triple A. The event will be held on March 31, 2022, and take place at the Fairmont Hotel in Dallas, Texas as part of the WrestleCon convention.
The event will be the first AAA event held in the United States since the start of AAA's lawsuit with Lucha Libre FMV and will feature wrestlers from AAA's U.S. partner the National Wrestling Alliance.
Storylines
AAA Invades WrestleCon will feature an six professional wrestling matches, with different wrestlers involved in preexisting scripted feuds, plots and storylines. Wrestlers will portray either heels referred to as rudos in Mexico, those that portray the "bad guys" or faces tcnicos in Mexico, the "good guy" characters as they engage in a series of tensionbuilding events, which will culminate in a wrestling match.
Matches
See also
2022 in professional wrestling
References
2022 |
in Texas
Scheduled professional wrestling shows
Professional wrestling in Texas
April 2022 events in the United States |
Transfiguration Cathedral is Russian Orthodox church located inside the earthen rampart of the Belozersk' Kremlin in Vologda region. It is a threeapse fourpillar temple with five onionlike domes, and is the dominant building of Kremlin.
It's construction had started in 1668 and was fully completed only by the end of the 1670s. The architecture of the temple was designed in archaic forms as it was typical for the second half of the XVIIth century. However, the facades' decoration was developed in the style typical for more early period those of local architecture of the XVIth century. Currently the Transfiguration Cathedral functions as a museum and is managed by the Belozersky Local Museum. The museum is open to the public from May to October.
References
External links
Dimensional drawings, photographs of fragments. Historical photographs. The state of temple for the period 20102011. Building view after the building view of 2012. Dimensional plans in Russian.
Design proposals Facades of the templ |
e. Coloring options in Russian.
Transfiguration Cathedral in Russian web site ""."" "Cathedrals.ru"
Transfiguration Cathedral Belozersk in Russian web site Russian temples
Transfiguration Cathedral Belozersk Belozersk Local Museum's official site in Russian
spherical panoramas on the site Kremlin of Belozersk in Russian
Transfiguration
History museums in Russia
Religious museums in Russia
Churches completed in 1667
17thcentury Eastern Orthodox church buildings
Tourist attractions in Vologda Oblast |
Sakurako Mukogawa born 20 January 1992 is a Japanese alpine skier. She competed at the 2022 Winter Olympics, in Women's slalom, and Women's superG.
She competed in 202122 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup.
She graduated from Waseda University.
References
Living people
1992 births
Japanese female alpine skiers
Olympic alpine skiers of Japan
Alpine skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Waseda University alumni
Sportspeople from Akita Prefecture
People from Akita, Akita |
The Mineralnye Vody constituency No.67 is a Russian legislative constituency in Stavropol Krai. The constituency covers the entirety of Caucasian Mineral Waters resort in southern Stavropol Krai.
Members elected
Election results
1993
! colspan2 style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Candidate
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Party
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;" Votes
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;"
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVladimir Katrenko
alignleftIndependent
19.81
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftRoman Gavrilov
alignleftIndependent
15.60
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"3" style"textalignleft;" Total
100
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"4" Source
1995
! colspan2 style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Candidate
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Party
! style"backgroun |
dcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;" Votes
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;"
style"backgroundcolor1A1A1A"
alignleftStanislav Govorukhin
alignleftStanislav Govorukhin Bloc
23.41
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftSvetlana Umnyakova
alignleftCommunist Party
16.53
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftAleksandr Kashcheyev
alignleftIndependent
15.70
style"backgroundcolor1C1A0D"
alignleftRoman Gavrilov
alignleftForward, Russia!
10.64
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftYury Churekov
alignleftIndependent
6.96
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVladimir Gevorkov
alignleftIndependent
3.56
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftViktor Kaznacheyev
alignleftIndependent
2.45
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftAleksandr Porublev
alignleftIndependent
2.34
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftMikhail Snezhkov
alignleftLiberal Democratic Party
2.24
style"backgroundcolorF21A29"
alignleftAleksey Popov
alignleftTrade Unions and Industrialists Union of Labour
1.94
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVladimir Polyakov
alignleftIndepend |
ent
1.37
style"backgroundcolorDA2021"
alignleftSergey Prokopov
alignleftIvan Rybkin Bloc
1.28
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftYury Karakhanov
alignleftIndependent
0.94
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVasily Tovkan
alignleftIndependent
0.86
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVyacheslav Yegorov
alignleftIndependent
0.76
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVladimir Trufanov
alignleftIndependent
0.69
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVladimir Adelkhanov
alignleftRussian Party of Automobile Owners
0.63
style"backgroundcolor000000"
colspan2 against all
5.38
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"3" style"textalignleft;" Total
100
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"4" Source
1999
! colspan2 style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Candidate
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Party
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;" Votes
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;" |
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVladimir Katrenko
alignleftIndependent
21.83
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftYury Malyshak
alignleftCommunist Party
20.78
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftAnatoly Dyakov
alignleftIndependent
11.78
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftMaria Ivanova
alignleftIndependent
7.95
style"backgroundcolor020266"
alignleftNatalya Bryntsalova
alignleftRussian Socialist Party
6.24
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftArtemy Zakharenkov
alignleftYabloko
5.74
style"backgroundcolorC21022"
alignleftIlya Iliadi
alignleftParty of Pensioners
4.67
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftSergey Galkin
alignleftIndependent
4.01
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftSergey Kshov
alignleftLiberal Democratic Party
1.23
style"backgroundcolorFCCA19"
alignleftOleg Timofeyev
alignleftCongress of Russian CommunitiesYury Boldyrev Movement
1.10
style"backgroundcolorC62B55"
alignleftRoman Barbashov
alignleftPeace, Labour, May
1.07
style"backgroundcolorFF4400"
alignleftViktor Milenin
alignleftAndrey Nikolayev and |
Svyatoslav Fyodorov Bloc
0.90
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftNikolay Kurasov
alignleftIndependent
0.78
style"backgroundcolor000000"
colspan2 against all
9.78
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"3" style"textalignleft;" Total
100
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"4" Source
2003
! colspan2 style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Candidate
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Party
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;" Votes
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;"
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftVladimir Katrenko incumbent
alignleftUnited Russia
51.73
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftYury Malyshak
alignleftCommunist Party
13.15
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftIgor Golikov
alignleftLiberal Democratic Party
6.41
style"backgroundcolor1042A5"
alignleftVladimir Gevorkov
alignleftUnion of Right Forces
4.14
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftOleg Taran
align |
leftYabloko
3.84
style"backgroundcolor00A1FF"
alignleftOleg Timofeyev
alignleftParty of Russia's RebirthRussian Party of Life
1.57
style"backgroundcolor408080"
alignleftSergey Sadovnikov
alignleftFor a Holy Russia
1.43
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftYury Pechenov
alignleftIndependent
1.22
style"backgroundcolor164C8C"
alignleftSergey Shcherbakov
alignleftUnited Russian Party Rus'
1.13
style"backgroundcolor000000"
colspan2 against all
13.53
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"3" style"textalignleft;" Total
100
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"4" Source
2016
! colspan2 style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Candidate
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Party
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;" Votes
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;"
style"backgroundcolor "
alignleftOlga Kazakova
alignleftUnited Russia
52.80
style"backgroundcolor"
align |
leftAleksandr Sysoyev
alignleftLiberal Democratic Party
11.68
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftValery Smolyakov
alignleftCommunist Party
10.08
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftKirill Kuzmin
alignleftA Just Russia
8.06
style"background"
alignleftMarat Marshankulov
alignleftCommunists of Russia
3.33
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftYevgeny Nikitin
alignleftThe Greens
2.84
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftMikhail Serkov
alignleftRodina
1.84
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftAleksey Kursish
alignleftYabloko
1.79
style"backgroundcolor "
alignleftAndrey Petlitsyn
alignleftParty of Growth
1.44
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"3" style"textalignleft;" Total
100
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"4" Source
2021
! colspan2 style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Candidate
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignleft;verticalaligntop;" Party
! style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;" Votes
! style |
"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;textalignright;"
style"backgroundcolor "
alignleftOlga Kazakova incumbent
alignleftUnited Russia
62.04
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftAndrey Serdyukov
alignleftCommunist Party
13.23
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftOleg Shpunt
alignleftA Just Russia For Truth
4.99
style"background"
alignleftYelena Miloslavskaya
alignleftCommunists of Russia
4.90
style"backgroundcolor"
alignleftNadezhda Piltenko
alignleftLiberal Democratic Party
3.95
style"backgroundcolor "
alignleftIlya Revo
alignleftNew People
3.04
style"backgroundcolor "
alignleftYury Mirzoyev
alignleftParty of Pensioners
2.88
style"backgroundcolor "
alignleftNatalya Govor
alignleftCivic Platform
1.81
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"3" style"textalignleft;" Total
100
colspan"5" style"backgroundcolorE9E9E9;"
style"fontweightbold"
colspan"4" Source
Notes
References
Russian legislative constituencies
Politics of Stavropol Krai |
Adil Arsln 1880 23 January 1954 was an Ottoman politician, writer and poet from Syria. He was the older brother of the two princes Shakib Arslan and Nasib Arslan. He was a deputy for Lebanon in the Ottoman Parliament, Deputy Governor General in Syria 19181919 and adviser to King Faisal of Iraq and Syria 19191920.
Early life
Adil was born in 1880 in Beirut a city which was then under Ottoman rule. His father, Prince Hammoud ben Hassan Arslan, was descended from the princes of Mount Lebanon. Adil's brothers are Prince Nassib, Prince Shakib and Prince Hassan. He attended the American school of Choueifat where he was taught by the writer Boutros AlBustani. Later, he would settle again in his native Beirut, where he studied in his higher education. After which he traveled to the capital of the Ottoman Empire, Istanbul, where he will enroll in the Faculty of Law and Public Administration.
Career
Ottoman Empire
Between 1908 and 1912, he was appointed as a member of the Council of Ottoman Representatives for M |
ount Lebanon which made him the youngest member of the board. After which he will be appointed in 1913 1st Secretary attached to the Ministry of the Interior of Istanbul, then responsible for immigration for Syria in 1914, the equivalent of the Ministry the Interior.
In 1915, he was appointed deputy mayor of the Chouf region in Mount Lebanon and in 1916 Kaymakam of Chouf appointed by the Minister of the Interior.
In context of the Great Arab Revolt he then joined the Young Arab Society where he engage in secret organizations to demand the independence of Arab countries and the establishment of a United Arab State.
Syria
He assisted in the establishment in Damascus in King Faisal's government, of which he was appointed as a 'special secretary'. Then he was appointed administrative assistant to the Prime Minister until the prince's forfeiture.
In 1925, Arslan joined the Syrian revolutionaries alongside Sultan Pasha alAtrash to participate in the Great Syrian Revolt against French colonialism. But after the |
failure of 1926, he was forced to flee Syria, pursued by the French and sentenced to death in absentia.
In 1937, he was appointed head of the delegation of the Arab High Committee which sits in Geneva.
After Syria's independence in 1946, he returned to Damascus and was appointed into several governments as Minister of Education, Health and Social Affairs in 1948, and as Minister of Defense and Foreign Affairs. In 1948, he was elected representative of the Golan and Vicepresident of Syria. He was then appointed Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs 11 under the government of Hosni alZaeem.
References
Druze people of Lebanese nationality
Druze people of Syrian nationality
Druze people of the Ottoman Empire
1880 births
1954 deaths
Ottoman Arab nationalists
Syrian politicians |
4652 Tay Street is an historic row of buildings in Perth, Scotland. Believed to have been designed by local architect Andrew Heiton, the building is Category B listed, dating to 1870. Standing on Tay Street, the building has "Gowrie House" in stencilling on the southern portion of its faade, referencing where that building partially once stood.
See also
List of listed buildings in Perth, Scotland
References
1870 establishments in Scotland
Tay Street, 4652
Category B listed buildings in Perth and Kinross |
Pierre Ducasse may refer to
Pierre Ducasse footballer born 1987, French footballer
Pierre Ducasse politician born 1972, Canadian politician |
Polina Melnikova born 6 March 2001 is an Russian alpine skier. She competed at the 2022 Winter Olympics, in Women's slalom, and women's superG .
She competed in 202122 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup.
References
2001 births
Russian female alpine skiers
Living people
Alpine skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics |
The Kyiv Park is a public park located in the Kaleva district, city of Tampere, Finland.
Tampere and Kyiv have been twin cities since 1954 and for the city of Tampere Kyiv was the first twin city outside the Nordic countries.
In the middle of the park there is a statue called Ystvyyskaupunkiveistos literary "twin city sculpture" depicting two girls holding a hoop. The atelier house of Tampere is located at the edge of the park. A large part of the park is considered built cultural heritage.
References
Parks in Tampere
FinlandUkraine relations |
Eva Vukadinova born 23 March 2001 is a Bulgarian alpine skier. She competed at the 2022 Winter Olympics, in Women's slalom, and Women's superG.
She competed in 202122 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup.
References
Living people
2001 births
Bulgarian female alpine skiers
Olympic alpine skiers of Bulgaria
Alpine skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Sportspeople from Sofia |
Parotocinclus amazonensis is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it occurs in the Amazon River basin in areas with a pH of 6.0 to 7.0 and a dH range of 5 to 15. The species reaches 2.5 cm 1 inch in total length.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 1977 |
Corps
Divisions
Footnotes
Citations
References |
fi Amad Jaunpr , ; 1834 26 January 1899 was an Indian Muslim scholar, religious preacher and social worker. As the son and successor of Karamat Ali Jaunpuri, he led the Taiyuni reformist movement in Bengal.
Early life and family
Ahmad Jaunpuri was born in 1834, in the city of Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, to an Indian Muslim family that traced their ancestry to the Arab tribe of Quraysh. He was the 36th direct descendant of Abu Bakr, the first Rashidun caliph. His father, Karamat Ali Jaunpuri, migrated from Jaunpur in North India with the intention of reforming the Muslims of Bengal. Ahmad Jaunpuri's paternal grandfather, Abu Ibrahim Shaykh Muhammad Imam Bakhsh was a student of Shah Abdul Aziz, and his greatgrandfather Jarullah was also a shaykh.
Ahmad Jaunpuri completed his memorisation of the Qur'an at an early age, which led to him earning the title of Hafiz. He proceeded to gained more knowledge in Islamic studies in Lucknow and Jaunpur. Many of his family members were also Islamic scholars, for exampl |
e, his brother Abdul Awwal Jaunpuri.
Career
He established numerous madrasas and an eidgah in Daulatkhan in Bhola Island. He also provided black seed oil treatment to the locals. He represented the Taiyunis at a debate in 1879 in Madaripur against the Faraizis on the topic of the permissibility of the Friday prayer in British India. The Faraizis discarded Friday and Eid prayers as they considered British India as a Dar alHarb house of war. Over five thousand people attended this event and it was dubbed by Nabinchandra Sen as the Battle of Jumuah. In 1881, Nawab Abdul Latif gained permission for Jaunpuri to lead the Eid prayer at the Maidan of Calcutta. Over 70,000 Muslims joined the congregation, making it the largest gathering in Calcutta. He wrote a book on Hajera.
Jaunpuri had a cordial relationship with Munshi Mohammad Meherullah.
He set off to complete Hajj in 1882. During his stay in the Hejaz, he gained a great reception and was acclaimed as an orator. He brought up his nephew Abdur Rab Jaunpuri, a |
nd Yaqub Badarpuri of Sylhet was also his murid and one of his khalifahs successors. Another successor was Abdul Latif Taluqdar of Mirsarai.
Death
Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri died on 26 January 1899 in Sadarghat, Dacca. He was buried just south of the Chawkbazar Shahi Mosque in Old Dhaka. His biography was written by his nephew Abdul Batin Jaunpuri.
Spiritual genealogy
Prophet Muhammad
Ab Bakr
Salmn alFris
AlQsim bin Muammad
Jafar adiq
Ab Yazd ayfr alBism
Abu alasan Al alKharaqn
Ab Al Fal Farmad
Ab Yaqb Ysuf alHamadn
Abd alKhliq Ghijdawn
Muammad rif Riwgar
Mamd Anjr Faghnaw
Azzn Al Rmitn
Sayyid Amr Kull
Muammad Bb asSams
Sayyid Bah adDn Naqshband
Sayyid Mr Al adDn Ar
Yaqb Charkh
Khwjah Ubaydullh Arr
Khwjah Muammad Zhid Wakhsh
Khwjah Darwesh Muammad
Khwjah Muammad Amking
Khwjah Ra adDn Muammad Bq Billh
Amad alFrq asSirhind
Sayyid dam bin Nr
Sayyid Abdullh Akbarbd
Shh Abd arRam Dehlaw
Shh Walullh Dehlaw
Shh Abd alAzz Dehlaw
Sayyid Amad Shahd
Karmat Al Jaunpr
fi Amad Jaunpr
See als |
o
Abdul Latif Chowdhury Fultali, his student's student
References
Indian Muslim scholars of Islam
1834 births
1899 deaths
Indian revolutionaries
19thcentury Indian Muslims
19thcentury Indian educators
People from Jaunpur district
19thcentury Muslim theologians
Sunni Muslim scholars
Hanafis |