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External links
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, personal page at the website of the British Academy.
, personal page at the website of King's College London.
,Singaravélou 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 1–0 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 Newton-John, 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 shut-ins 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 mission-based 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 five-year $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 Energy Jennifer Granholm’s Energy Advisory Board, and is a member of its place-based 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 company’s 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 firm’s commitment to Detroit’s 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 Spitzer’s 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 racially-mixed housing complexes in the country.
|
Almodovar served as co-chair 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 pre-existing scripted feuds, plots and storylines. Wrestlers will portray either heels (referred to as rudos in Mexico, those that portray the "bad guys") or faces (técnicos in Mexico, the "good guy" characters) as they engage in a series of tension-building 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 three-apse four-pillar temple with five onion-like 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 XVII-th century. However, the facades' decoration was developed in the style typical for more early period - those of local architecture of the XVI-th 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 2010–2011. Building view after the building view of 2012. Dimensional plans (in Russian).
Design proposals Facades of the temple. Coloring options (in Russian).
Transfiguration Cathedral (in Russian) // web site ""Соборы.ру"" ("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
17th-century 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 super-G.
|
She competed in 2021–22 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
|
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Katrenko
|align=left|Independent
|
|19.81%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Roman Gavrilov
|align=left|Independent
| -
|15.60%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
|
1995
|
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:#1A1A1A"|
|align=left|Stanislav Govorukhin
|align=left|Stanislav Govorukhin Bloc
|
|23.41%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Svetlana Umnyakova
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|16.53%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Kashcheyev
|align=left|Independent
|
|15.70%
|-
|style="background-color:#1C1A0D"|
|align=left|Roman Gavrilov
|align=left|Forward, Russia!
|
|10.64%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Churekov
|align=left|Independent
|
|6.96%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Gevorkov
|align=left|Independent
|
|3.56%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Viktor Kaznacheyev
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.45%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Porublev
|align=left|Independent
|
|2.34%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Mikhail Snezhkov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|2.24%
|-
|style="background-color:#F21A29"|
|align=left|Aleksey Popov
|align=left|Trade Unions and Industrialists – Union of Labour
|
|1.94%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Polyakov
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.37%
|-
|style="background-color:#DA2021"|
|align=left|Sergey Prokopov
|align=left|Ivan Rybkin Bloc
|
|1.28%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Karakhanov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.94%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vasily Tovkan
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.86%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vyacheslav Yegorov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.76%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Trufanov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.69%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Adelkhanov
|align=left|Russian Party of Automobile Owners
|
|0.63%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|5.38%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
|
1999
|
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Katrenko
|align=left|Independent
|
|21.83%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Malyshak
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|20.78%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Anatoly Dyakov
|align=left|Independent
|
|11.78%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Maria Ivanova
|align=left|Independent
|
|7.95%
|-
|style="background-color:#020266"|
|align=left|Natalya Bryntsalova
|align=left|Russian Socialist Party
|
|6.24%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Artemy Zakharenkov
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|5.74%
|-
|style="background-color:#C21022"|
|align=left|Ilya Iliadi
|align=left|Party of Pensioners
|
|4.67%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Galkin
|align=left|Independent
|
|4.01%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Sergey Kshov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|1.23%
|-
|style="background-color:#FCCA19"|
|align=left|Oleg Timofeyev
|align=left|Congress of Russian Communities-Yury Boldyrev Movement
|
|1.10%
|-
|style="background-color:#C62B55"|
|align=left|Roman Barbashov
|align=left|Peace, Labour, May
|
|1.07%
|-
|style="background-color:#FF4400"|
|align=left|Viktor Milenin
|align=left|Andrey Nikolayev and Svyatoslav Fyodorov Bloc
|
|0.90%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nikolay Kurasov
|align=left|Independent
|
|0.78%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|9.78%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
|
2003
|
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Vladimir Katrenko (incumbent)
|align=left|United Russia
|
|51.73%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Malyshak
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|13.15%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Igor Golikov
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|6.41%
|-
|style="background-color:#1042A5"|
|align=left|Vladimir Gevorkov
|align=left|Union of Right Forces
|
|4.14%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Taran
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|3.84%
|-
|style="background-color:#00A1FF"|
|align=left|Oleg Timofeyev
|align=left|Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life
|
|1.57%
|-
|style="background-color:#408080"|
|align=left|Sergey Sadovnikov
|align=left|For a Holy Russia
|
|1.43%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yury Pechenov
|align=left|Independent
|
|1.22%
|-
|style="background-color:#164C8C"|
|align=left|Sergey Shcherbakov
|align=left|United Russian Party Rus'
|
|1.13%
|-
|style="background-color:#000000"|
|colspan=2 |against all
|
|13.53%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
|
2016
|
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Olga Kazakova
|align=left|United Russia
|
|52.80%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksandr Sysoyev
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|11.68%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Valery Smolyakov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|10.08%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Kirill Kuzmin
|align=left|A Just Russia
|
|8.06%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Marat Marshankulov
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|3.33%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Yevgeny Nikitin
|align=left|The Greens
|
|2.84%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Mikhail Serkov
|align=left|Rodina
|
|1.84%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Aleksey Kursish
|align=left|Yabloko
|
|1.79%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Andrey Petlitsyn
|align=left|Party of Growth
|
|1.44%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
|
2021
|
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Olga Kazakova (incumbent)
|align=left|United Russia
|
|62.04%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Andrey Serdyukov
|align=left|Communist Party
|
|13.23%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Oleg Shpunt
|align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth
|
|4.99%
|-
|style="background:"|
|align=left|Yelena Miloslavskaya
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|
|4.90%
|-
|style="background-color:"|
|align=left|Nadezhda Piltenko
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|
|3.95%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Ilya Revo
|align=left|New People
|
|3.04%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Yury Mirzoyev
|align=left|Party of Pensioners
|
|2.88%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Natalya Govor
|align=left|Civic Platform
|
|1.81%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
|
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
|
Notes
|
References
|
Russian legislative constituencies
Politics of Stavropol Krai
|
Adil Arslân (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 (1918-1919) and adviser to King Faisal of Iraq and Syria (1919-1920).
|
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 Al-Bustani. 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 Mount 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 al-Atrash 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 Vice-president of Syria. He was then appointed Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs 11 under the government of Hosni al-Zaeem.
|
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
|
46–52 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 façade, referencing where that building partially once stood.
|
See also
List of listed buildings in Perth, Scotland
|
References
|
1870 establishments in Scotland
Tay Street, 46–52
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 super-G .
|
She competed in 2021–22 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 Ystävyyskaupunkiveistos (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
Finland–Ukraine 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 super-G.
|
She competed in 2021–22 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
|
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