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Stanisław Komorowski
Diplomacy
With Minister Komorowski seated across the table from our negotiators during U.S.-Polish talks on a Status of Forces Agreement, we knew we would come up with an agreement that met both sides’ needs, and we did. His energy, his leadership and his mastery of security issues will be sorely missed by his American colleagues at the United States Departments of State and Defense. America mourns a true friend."
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Stanisław Komorowski
Interests
He was an avid skier and ski instructor as well as tennis player. During his university years, he was an active member of the Academic Ski Association (his father was a member of the International Ski Federation) and during his high school years he skied with members of the Catholic Intelligentsia Club (pol. Klub Inteligencji Katolickiej). One of his passions was parks and gardens and, for a short time in 1990, he had a small gardening company; with his wife Maria Komorowska they created three gardens before they closed the company. His other passion was French culture; as a student he spent his vacations in France with Dziadulski family.
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Stanisław Komorowski
Interests
Later, at the end of his life, he rebuilt the garden at the Komorowski’s "Dziewanna" villa on the outskirts of Warsaw. He was married three times and had three sons – Karol and Maciej with Irena Komorowska and Jerzy with Maria Komorowska. His third wife was Ewa Komorowska.
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Stanisław Komorowski
Death
He was listed on the flight manifest At the last moment he replaced Polish defense minister Bogdan Klich and traveled to Smolensk. He was buried on April 16, 2010 at Powązki Cemetery in Komorowski's family grave (#116/VI). During the church ceremony a tennis racket was placed on his coffin. Members of the government including prime minister and president of Poland were in attendance. He was decorated, posthumously, with the Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta.
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2010 Seguros Bolívar Open Pereira – Singles
Introduction
Alejandro Falla was the defending champion but did not compete this year.Santiago Giraldo won in the final 6–3, 6–3 against Paolo Lorenzi.
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Walter Newman Haldeman
Introduction
Walter N Haldeman (April 27, 1821 in Maysville, Kentucky – May 13, 1902 in Louisville, Kentucky) was an American newspaper publisher, owner, and businessman from Louisville, KY, in the 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1844 Mr. Haldeman founded the "Louisville Courier", a pro-secessionist newspaper both before and during the Civil War. It was shut down by Federal authorities in September 1861, but Haldeman fearing arrest as a traitor, removed to Bowling Green, Ky., where he continued publication. After the war, in 1868, the "Courier" merged with its cross-town rival -- the pro-Union Louisville Journal -- to form the "Louisville Courier-Journal".
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Walter Newman Haldeman
Introduction
Mr. Haldeman became president of the new corporation. The combined paper is still in circulation and currently owned by the Gannett Company. As a businessman, Mr. Haldeman is also known as the founder of Naples, Florida and the owner of the Major League Baseball team, the Louisville Grays; a charter member of the National League. His son, John Haldeman, played in one game for the Grays in 1877. Although a force in 19th Century U.S. newspaper business, Mr. Haldeman shied away from the spotlight, as a "New York Times" article from May 14, 1902 described him as "a man of unusual force of character, but remarkably modest, so that he resented any form of publicity about himself"; thus providing the spotlight for the Courier-Journal editor, Henry Watterson.
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Walter Newman Haldeman
Early years
Walter N. Haldeman was the son of John Haldeman and Elizabeth Newman, and was born in Maysville, KY where he spent his childhood years. He attended Maysville Academy with future prominent Americans' Ulysses S. Grant, William H. Wadsworth, Thomas H. Nelson, and William "Bull" Nelson under the tutelage of Professor William A. Richardson. At age 16 Mr. Haldeman moved with his family to Louisville, KY where he worked in a grocery store and commission house. In 1840 Mr. Haldeman started his newspaper career in a clerical position at the Louisville Journal, but within a few years he had opened his own bookstore and print shop.
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Clavaria fragilis
Introduction
Clavaria fragilis, commonly known as fairy fingers, white worm coral, or white spindles, is a species of fungus in the family Clavariaceae. It is synonymous with "Clavaria vermicularis". The fungus is the type species of the genus "Clavaria" and is a typical member of the clavarioid or club fungi. It produces tubular, unbranched, white basidiocarps (fruit bodies) that typically grow in clusters. The fruit bodies can reach dimensions of tall by thick. "Clavaria fragilis" is a saprobic species, growing in woodland litter or in old, unimproved grassland. It is widespread throughout temperate regions in the Northern Hemisphere, but has also been reported from Australia and South Africa.
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Clavaria fragilis
Introduction
The fungus is edible, but insubstantial and flavorless. There are several other small white coral-like fungi with which "C. fragilis" may be confused.
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Clavaria fragilis
History and taxonomy
"Clavaria fragilis" was originally described from Denmark in 1790 by Danish naturalist and mycologist Theodor Holmskjold, and was sanctioned under this name by Elias Magnus Fries in his 1821 "Systema Mycologicum". The Latin epithet "fragilis" refers to the brittle fruit bodies. The species was redescribed by Swedish mycologist Olof Swartz in 1811, using the name "Clavaria vermicularis" (the epithet meaning "wormlike"). Though it is a later synonym—and thus obsolete according to the principle of priority—the latter name is still frequently used today. There are several other names considered to be synonymous with "C. fragilis" by the online taxonomical database MycoBank (see the taxobox).
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Clavaria fragilis
History and taxonomy
In North America, the fungus has colloquially been called "fairy fingers" or "white worm coral". In the UK its recommended English name is "white spindles". British naturalist Samuel Frederick Gray called it the "worm club-stool" in his 1821 "A Natural Arrangement of British Plants".
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Clavaria fragilis
Description
The fruit bodies of "C. fragilis" are irregularly tubular, smooth to furrowed, sometimes compressed, very fragile, white, up to tall by thick, and typically grow in dense clusters. The tip of the fruit body tapers to a point, and may yellow and curve with age. There is no distinct stalk, although it is evident as a short, semitransparent zone of tissue at the base of the club. Microscopically, the hyphae of the flesh are swollen up to 12 µm wide and lack clamp connections. The spores are smooth, colourless, ellipsoid to oblong, measuring 5–7 by 3–4 µm. The spores are white in deposit.
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Clavaria fragilis
Description
The basidia (spore bearing cells) measure 40–50 by 6–8 µm, and lack clamps at their bases.
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Clavaria fragilis
Edibility
"Clavaria fragilis" is edible, but the fruit bodies are insubstantial and fragile. One field guide says "its flesh is tasteless and so delicate that it seems to dissolve in one's mouth." Its odor has been compared to iodine.
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Clavaria fragilis
Distribution and habitat
The species occurs throughout the Northern Hemisphere, in Europe, North America, and Asia. In North America, it is more common east of the Rocky Mountains. It has also been recorded from Australia and South Africa. In 2006, it was reported from the Arctic zone of the Ural Mountains, in Russia. The fungus grows in woodland and in grassland on moist soil, and is presumed to be saprobic, rotting fallen leaf litter and dead grass stems. The fruit bodies tend to grow in groups, tufts or clusters. Although they can grow singly, they are typically inconspicuous unless in clusters.
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Clavaria fragilis
Similar species
Similar fungi with simple, white fruit bodies include "Clavaria acuta", an equally widespread species that typically grows singly or in small groups rather than in dense clusters and can be distinguished microscopically by its clamped basidia and larger spores; the morphologically similar, but rare "C. atkinsoniana", found in the southwestern and central United States, which cannot be distinguished from "C. fragilis" by field characteristics alone but has larger spores—8.5–10 by 4.5–5 µm; "C. rubicundula", another North American species, which is similar in stature but has a reddish tint; and "Multiclavula mucida", a widespread lichenized species with smaller fruit bodies that occurs with its associated algae on moist wood.
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Clavaria fragilis
Conservation status
In North America, "Clavaria fragilis" has been called "by far our most common "Clavaria"". In northern Europe, it is one of a suite of "CHEG" fungi (CHEG standing for ""Clavarioid fungi-Hygrocybe-Entoloma-Geoglossaceae"") considered to be indicator species of old, unimproved grassland (permanent grassland that has not been cultivated for some years). Though such grasslands are a threatened habitat in Europe, "C. fragilis" is one of the commoner CHEG species. It is, nonetheless, on the national red list of threatened fungi in the Netherlands and Slovenia.
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Miyal Syedan
Introduction
Miyal Syedan is a village located in Rawalpindi Tehsil Punjab Pakistan. It is in Chountra region and it belongs to Potohar town. It is almost 21 kilometers from Chakbeli khan and about 75 kilometers from Rawalpindi on Rawalpindi Chakwal boundary.
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Chris Shaw (photographer)
Introduction
Chris Shaw (born 1961) is an English documentary photographer.
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Chris Shaw (photographer)
Career
Shaw studied at West Surrey College of Art & Design (now University for the Creative Arts) from 1986-89. In his 2006 monograph "Life as a Night Porter", Shaw published photographs taken over a ten-year period whilst working as a night porter at certain London hotels, "all the time he kept his camera with him, recording in black and white grainy photographs the many strange events that he witnessed, taking pictures." In 2004 Alexander McQueen and Nick Knight chose the pictures as the winning entry in an Independent on Sunday fashion photography competition. Shaw works with independent publishers and he has created small editions of several photographic series include: "Retrospecting Sandy Hill" (2015morelboks),"Life as a Night Porter" (Twinpalms–2006), "Weeds of Wallasey" (superlabo2012), horizon icons(adad publishers) (2015), Tokyo in HK (with Tokyo Rummando, (zenphoto2017), The Hunter gets captured by the game (Zenphoto2019).
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Chris Shaw (photographer)
Collections
Shaw's work is held in the following permanent collections:
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KTEE
Introduction
KTEE (94.9 FM, "The Tee") is a radio station broadcasting a Modern Adult Contemporary music format. Licensed to North Bend, Oregon, United States, the station is currently owned by Bicoastal Media Licenses III, LLC. The call letters KTEE were previously licensed to Idaho Falls, Idaho.
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R.S.V.P. (Rare Songs, Very Personal)
Introduction
R.S.V.P. (Rare Songs, Very Personal) is a 2004 album by Nancy Wilson, featuring Wilson in duet with George Shearing, Toots Thielemans, Phil Woods, and Gary Burton. At the 47th Grammy Awards, Wilson won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Album, for her performance on this album.
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R.S.V.P. (Rare Songs, Very Personal)
Performance
Alto Saxophone – Andres Boiarsky (tracks: 2, 5), Andy Snitzer (tracks: 2 5), Mike Tomaro (tracks: 2, 5) Arranged By [Strings] – Jay Ashby (tracks: 3) Backing Vocals – Jay Ashby (tracks: 4), Kim Nazarian (tracks: 4) Baritone Saxophone – Jim Germann (tracks: 2, 5) Bass – Dwayne Dolphin (tracks: 1, 3, 4, 6 to 11), Rufus Reid (tracks: 2, 5) Bass Clarinet – Jim Germann (tracks: 2, 5), Mike Tomaro (tracks: 7) Cello – David Premo (tracks: 3) Clarinet – Andy Snitzer (tracks: 2, 5, 7), Mike Tomaro (tracks: 2, 5) Drums – Jamey Haddad (tracks: 1, 3, 4, 6 to 11), Lewis Nash (tracks: 2, 5) Flute – Andres Boiarsky (tracks: 2, 5), Eric DeFade (tracks: 2, 5), Mike Tomaro (tracks: 7) Guitar – Marty Ashby (tracks: 2, 5, 8) Keyboards – Ivan Lins (tracks: 8), Jay Ashby (tracks: 6) Percussion – Jay Ashby (tracks: 6) Piano – Llew Matthews (tracks: 1 to 4, 6 to 11) Tenor Saxophone – Andy Snitzer (tracks: 2, 5), Eric DeFade (tracks: 2, 5) Trombone – Gary Piecka (tracks: 2, 5), Jay Ashby (tracks: 2, 5), Mike Davis* (tracks: 2, 5) Trombone [Bass] – Max Seigel (tracks: 2, 5) Trumpet – Dennis Reynolds (tracks: 2, 5), Jim Hynes* (tracks: 2, 5), Steve Hawk (tracks: 2, 5) Viola – Tatjana Mead Chamis (tracks: 3) Violin – Andrés Cárdenes (tracks: 3)
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Carlo Lotti
Introduction
Carlo Lotti (30 March 1916 – 6 March 2013) was an Italian engineer and professor of hydraulic construction. He created the C. Lotti & Associati engineering firm. He was born and died in Rome.
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Carlo Lotti
Biography
Lotti graduated from the Roman Institute of Technology at the top of his class. He served in World War II until the ceasefire of September 1943 and then decided to join the liberated southern Italy and became captain. Lotti lectured on “Methodology of hydraulic works” at the Roman Technical University. His professional career started in 1946 with Cidonio construction company. In 1957 he founded the engineering company bearing his name. Lotti married Marcella Bini MD and had two children. His daughter, Patrizia is the president of the Society and his son, Massimo, is a lawyer. In 1977 Carlo was nominated as a Knight of the Republic by the president of Italy.
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Carlo Lotti
Biography
He founded the association of civil engineers in Italy (OICE) and was the honorary president of the Italian Hydrotechnical Association.
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Carlo Lotti
Major projects
Lotti participated in numerous projects, from 1957 together with his associates and then as a company C. Lotti & Associati SpA.
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Carlo Lotti
Dams in Africa
The first project in Africa on behalf UNDP, concerned the economic feasibility of agricultural production and river transport. In 1973 the European Community entrusted Lotti for the construction of a dam on the Sankarani river, tributary to the Niger, near the town of Sélingué. The 35m high dam was completed under the supervision of the designer in 1980. The electric power generated non only covers the domestic demand but it is also exported to the neighboring countries. Furthermore, the dam controls the flood, and, above all, provides for a rich fishery. The creation of the Bakolori dam in the Northern Nigeria, in collaboration with Nuovo Castoro company, is of great importance.
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Carlo Lotti
Dams in Africa
The project includes a large dam equipped with 3MW hydropower plant and the irrigation scheme for 23000 ha. A second project in the area was the Goronyo Dam with a reservoir of one billion m³.
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Carlo Lotti
River basin planning
The complete basin planning requires the participation of experts from several sectors: hydrology, hydraulics, agriculture, economy, engineering and others. A mathematical is capable of handling all factors together. The methodology was developed at the Harvard University. Important project derived from the collaboration between Lotti and the Harvard group for optimal use of water resources. A first project concerned the Sava river, tributary to the Danube. The UNDP project was assigned jointly to Lotti and Hydroject of Prague. The model selected 32 reservoirs out of the 57 examined. The first application of the method within Italy was the Tiber project, under the direction of IRSA.
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Carlo Lotti
Messina bridge
Lotti participated in the international contest for the design of the bridge across the Messina strait. The area of relevant study regarded a new under water foundation procedure. The solution presented received a price but the final choice for construction is based a single span, which will be the longest in the world.
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Carlo Lotti
Flood control in China
Lotti went to China for the first time in 1971 with the Italian Foreign Commerce Ministry delegation. Successively, a project for flood control management started in 1982. The Italian Technical Cooperation financed the project. The aim of the projects was not only the development of the plan but included the training of the personnel and supply of a pilot measuring network. The study area was the river Han, tributary to Yangtze. A large dam was built for flood control and hydropower. The optimal management of the dam is of great economic and environmental significance. Another, similar project concerned the river Huai.
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Carlo Lotti
Municipal water network
The loss of water in municipal network represents and significant reduction of the available resources. The detection and repair of the losses is a convenient way of finding “new resources”. Lotti carried out several project with help instruments and mathematical models for the search of losses. In Messina, of pipe was examined and the relevant measuring instruments put in operation. Similar projects were carried in Reggio Calabria, Catania, in Aosta. Also outside of Italy, water networks were monitored, e.g., Bucharest in Romania, Durrës in Albania, in Ukraine, in Moldavia, and in Nkayi, Congo.
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Short-tooth moray eel
Introduction
The short-tooth moray ("Gymnothorax kontodontos") is a moray eel found in coral reefs in the eastern central Pacific Ocean around Fanning Island.
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Hugh Valentine
Introduction
Hugh Sutherland Valentine (1848 – 10 September 1932) was a 19th-century independent conservative Member of Parliament in Otago, New Zealand. He represented the Waikaia electorate from 1887 to 1890, and then the Tuapeka electorate from 1890 to 1893, when he retired. Valentine died in Dunedin on 10 September 1932, and he was buried in Gore Cemetery.
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Curacao (retail store)
Introduction
Curacao (pronounced Koo-ra-sao), formerly La Curacao, is a large-format retail store chain. Founded in 1978, Curacao is headquartered in Los Angeles with retail locations in California, Arizona and Nevada.
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Curacao (retail store)
Services
The company is said to be uniquely positioned to serve Hispanic and Latino Americans. The stores feature Spanish-language signs and bilingual salesclerks. Curacao sells most of its merchandise on credit to over two million private label cardholders. The company's services also include Curacao Travel, Curacao Money Transfer, Pasito (Internet service provider) and CuraTel (long-distance calling services).
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Curacao (retail store)
Founding
Jerry Azarkman opened La Curacao, a consumer-product door-to-door sales company, in Burbank, California. It became popular among Hispanic people who did not have access to credit. Salesmen allowed customers to buy their goods by placing a down payment and then returning to the customer's residence to collect payments on a regular basis. This service eventually evolved into Curacao's credi-card business. Azarkman's brother, Ron Azarkman, joined the company in 1980.
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Curacao (retail store)
Expansion
In 1983, La Curacao moved to the Pico-Union district in Los Angeles. By 1984, it had opened its export division, which allowed customers to shop for goods and have them shipped to their families in Mexico and Central America. During the Los Angeles Riots in 1992, the store was burned down and its inventory destroyed. Two weeks later, the business reopened near its previous location. In 1995, La Curacao opened its second store, in the Panorama City district of the San Fernando Valley. Inside the Panorama Mall, the new store featured Mesoamerican style decor and child care. The company also purchased the office tower at 1605 West Olympic Boulevard, now the La Curacao Business Center, where its headquarters are now situated.
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Curacao (retail store)
Expansion
By 2007, the Curacao stores had ten locations in the Southwestern United States, with nine stores in California and two in Arizona.
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Curacao (retail store)
Initiatives
The retailer has expressed plans to further expand into Nevada and Texas and market toward the English speaking communities as well.
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Curacao (retail store)
Export
Export is one of Curacao's services. Customers can purchase a product in the United States and have it delivered to Latin American countries. The company has its own warehouses in Mexico and Central America and operates a home-delivery program.
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Curacao (retail store)
Philanthropy
Curacao philanthropies include relief after the 1994 Northridge earthquake and an annual Children’s Fair.
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Curacao (retail store)
The La Curacao Foundation
The La Curacao Foundation, or "Fundacion La Curacao Para Los Niños," was established in 2002 to provide assistance to needy children by donating basic home products. It also gives to non-profit organizations.
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KTJN-LP
Introduction
KTJN-LP (101.1 FM) is a low-power radio station licensed to Gold Beach, Oregon, United States. The station is currently owned by Totally Jesus Network, Inc.
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Colin Rattray
Introduction
Colin Lewis Rattray (28 December 1931 – 19 February 2009) was an Australian politician. He was an Independent member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 1992 to 2004, representing first South Esk and then Apsley. Rattray was born in Scottsdale, and was elected Mayor of Ringarooma in 1981. In 1992 he was elected to the Legislative Council for South Esk, which he held until that seat was replaced by Apsley in 1999. He remained member for Apsley until 2004, when he retired; he was succeeded by his daughter, Tania Rattray. Rattray died in February 2009, aged 77.
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List of casualties of the Smolensk air disaster
Introduction
The Smolensk air disaster killed all 96 people on board, including Polish President Lech Kaczyński, his wife Maria Kaczyńska and dozens of other senior officials. The Polish delegation was heading to Katyn to attend a ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, in which the Soviet NKVD killed about 22,000 Polish military officers. Among those killed in the crash were former President-in-exile Ryszard Kaczorowski, Poland's highest-ranking military officers, lawmakers, heads of the Polish National Bank and other central institutions, presidential aides, bishops and priests of various denominations, relatives of those killed in the Katyn massacre, as well as officers of the presidential security detail and crew members.
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List of casualties of the Smolensk air disaster
Not on board
Some early reports were wrong about the number or composition as the official list of victims was corrected in stages; most notably because the flight manifest of passengers only, without names of the crew, lacked the name of the only female member of the nine Biuro Ochrony Rządu (Government Protection Bureau bodyguards), Agnieszka Pogródka-Węcławek. She was listed incorrectly among the stewardesses. Also, a female presidential aide, Zofia Kruszyńska-Gust, was supposed to fly but did not do so due to illness. Additionally, Michael Schudrich, the Chief Rabbi of Poland, was invited but did not board the flight due to its conflict with the Jewish Sabbath, which prohibits flight on Saturday.
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Evergreen, Autauga County, Alabama
Introduction
Evergreen, also known as Huckabee, is an unincorporated community in Autauga County, Alabama.
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Gymnothorax longinquus
Introduction
Gymnothorax longinquus is a moray eel found in coral reefs in the southwest Pacific Ocean. It is commonly known as the yellow-gilled reef-eel, yellow-gilled moray, brown moray-eel, or long moray.
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Mount Graham red squirrel
Introduction
The Mount Graham red squirrel ("Tamiasciurus hudsonicus grahamensis") is an endangered subspecies of the American red squirrel ("Tamiasciurus hudsonicus") native to the Pinaleño Mountains of Arizona. It is smaller than most other subspecies of red squirrel, and also does not have the white-fringed tail that is common to the species. Its diet consists mainly of mixed seeds, conifer cones and air-dried fungi. It exhibits similar behavior to other squirrels in its species.
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Mount Graham red squirrel
Physical
The Mount Graham red squirrel is a generally tiny squirrel weighing on average around and measuring about in length. The subspecies also has a tail. Unlike most other squirrels in its species, the squirrels do not have a white-fringed tail. Both females and males share similar markings and features and are typically grayish brown in color with rusty yellow or orange markings on their backside. During the winter season the squirrels ears are tufted with fur, and during the summer a black lateral line is observed on the squirrel. The skull of the subspecies is rounded and its teeth are low-crowned.
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Mount Graham red squirrel
Behavior
Mount Graham red squirrels behave in a manner similar to most other subspecies of American red squirrel. They are diurnal and do not hibernate during the winter months, but instead carry out activities in the mid-day sun. Mount Graham squirrels usually eat a diet of mixed seeds, conifer cones and air-dried fungi.
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Mount Graham red squirrel
Habitat
Historically, the Mount Graham red squirrel inhabited about of spruce-fir, mixed-conifer and ecotone zone habitats that were generally at higher elevations throughout the Pinaleño Mountains. Recent data shows that it occurs more frequently at the ecotone zone than the other habitats. When choosing a potential nesting site, the squirrels typically pick a cool, moist area with an abundance of food sources. Drought, forest fires, and insect infestation have been responsible for a decrease of the squirrel in the spruce-fir habitat.
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Mount Graham red squirrel
Conservation
The Mount Graham subspecies was believed to be extinct in the 1950s, but was "rediscovered" in the 1970s. After its rediscovery, it was suggested for threatened or endangered species status under the Endangered Species Act in 1982. On May 21, 1986, the subspecies was officially recommended to become an endangered species, and on June 3, 1987, was officially listed as endangered. The Mount Graham International Observatory was controversial when it was built in the squirrel's habitat; the observatory has been required to monitor the community near the observatory to determine if its construction is having any negative effects on the population.
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Mount Graham red squirrel
Conservation
Habitat loss is also occurring at high levels for a variety of natural and anthropogenic reasons. In 1988, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service designated most of this area as a refuge, and access to the area is only granted with a special permit. A lightning strike on June 7, 2017, started a fire that might have led to the extinction of this subspecies. In September 2019, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service agreed to consider if the squirrel needed further protection. They were petitioned under a procedure of the Endangered Species Act by a group that contends it is necessary to remove the observatory and other private structures.
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Geoff Squibb
Introduction
Geoffrey Bruce "Geoff" Squibb (born 27 October 1946) is a former Australian politician. He was an Independent member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 1990 to 2003, representing Mersey. Squibb was born in Devonport, and was its Mayor from 1985–99. In 1990 he was elected to the Tasmanian Legislative Council for Mersey, holding the seat until his defeat by Norma Jamieson, another Independent, in 2003.
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Alpha Gamma
Introduction
Alpha Gamma (ΑΓ) was an American collegiate fraternity. It was founded at Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee in 1867. About 21 chapters developed, with prominent chapters at Washington & Jefferson College, Trinity University, Mercersburg College, Southwestern Presbyterian University, Cumberland University, and the West Virginia University. The fraternity's badge consisted of a golden shield with a globe, six stars, and a pennant with "ΑΓ." The fraternity eventually disbanded. The Trinity and West Virginia University chapters were disbanded because of the anti-fraternity laws. The Washington & Jefferson College and Southwestern Presbyterian University chapters joined Alpha Tau Omega. The remainder disbanded.
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2010 Aberto Santa Catarina De Tenis – Singles
Introduction
Marcelo Demoliner was the defending champion, but he lost against Ricardo Mello in the first round.Marcos Daniel won in the final 7–5, 6–7(5), 6–4 against Bastian Knittel.
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James Clark Brown
Introduction
James Clark Brown (December 1830 – 6 February 1891) was a 19th-century Member of Parliament in Otago, New Zealand. He stood unsuccessfully in the for ; a contemporary report saying that his loss was due to "his own inaction" and also to the small number of miners and settlers on the electoral roll. He was a resident of Lawrence. He represented the Bruce electorate in (from 21 March to 30 December), and then the Tuapeka electorate from 1871 to 1890, when he was defeated. He represented Tuapeka on the Otago Provincial Council from 1865 to 1876. His obituary says that he was born in Macclesfield, Cheshire, England and died in St Clair, Dunedin.
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List of schools in Prince George's County, Maryland
Introduction
Prince George's County Public Schools (PGCPS) is a large school district administered by the government of Prince George's County, Maryland, United States and is overseen by the Maryland State Department of Education. With approximately 127,129 students enrolled for the 2009–10 school year, the Prince George's County Public Schools system is the second largest school district in the state of Maryland; the third largest school district in both the Washington Metropolitan Area and Baltimore-Washington Metropolitan Area; and it's the 18th largest school district in the nation. PGCPS operates a total of 196 schools which includes 127 elementary schools, 36 middle schools, and 24 high schools with 8 special centers, 2 vocational centers, and the Howard B.
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List of schools in Prince George's County, Maryland
Introduction
Owens Science Center, serving students from Pre-Kindergarten through Grade 12 Imagine Leeland at Foundations Public Charter Schools
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List of schools in Prince George's County, Maryland
Magnet schools
Magnet schools provide a wide range of special or unique subjects, activities and/or learning opportunities, as an enhancement to the Prince George's County Public Schools comprehensive programs. Woodstream Christian Academy, Mitchelleville, Maryland
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Tony Fletcher (politician)
Introduction
Anthony William Fletcher (27 October 1934 – 27 August 2020) was an Australian politician. He was an Independent member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 1981 to 2005, representing first Russell and then Murchison. Fletcher, who was born in Hobart, first entered the Council in 1981; although an Independent, he served as Leader of the Liberal Government in the Legislative Council from 1986–89 (during Robin Gray's premiership) and from 1996–98 (Tony Rundle's premiership). In 1999, the seat of Russell was replaced with Murchison, which Fletcher won. He retired from the Legislative Council in 2005.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Introduction
The Ministry of National Food Security & Research or Ministry of Agricultulre (, abbreviated as MoA) is a Cabinet-level ministerial department of Government of Pakistan, responsible for implementing, enforcing, developing, and executing the policy on agriculture, rice, livestock, fishing, and farming. The ministry is governed by the Minister of National Food Security and Research, who must be a member of Parliament of Pakistan.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Agricultural Policy Institute
Agriculture Prices Commission was established in 1981 and re-constituted as Agriculture Policy Institute (API) in 2006 as attached department with ministry.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Federal Seed Certification & Registration Department
Provide seed certification and quality control cover for various crops and field inspection of the crops of registered varieties and released varieties.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Animal Quarantine Department
Regulate the import, export and quarantine of animals and animal products, in order to prevent the introduction or spread of exotic diseases and maintain quarantine services of high standards, to protect the livestock industry of Pakistan and other countries.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
National Veterinary Laboratory
National Veterinary Laboratory is a national institution for service and regulatory support to national livestock wealth. These laboratories are capable of catering needs in advanced applied biotechnology, bacteriology, virology, analytical chemistry, biochemistry, immunology, molecular biology, toxicology, pathology, parasitology and exotic diseases.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Department of Plant Protection
The department Quarantines and routinely locust Survey and control.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Pakistan Agricultural Research Council
Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (PARC) is the apex national organization working in close collaboration with other federal provincial institutions in the country to provide science-based solutions to agriculture of Pakistan. The organization promote and coordinate agricultural research, arrange expeditious utilization of research results and establish research establishments to fill in the gaps in existing agricultural research system.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Pakistan Agriculture Storage and Services Corporation
PASSCO is a public Limited Company, its functions include maintaining strategic reserves of wheat and other specified commodities and procurement of food commodities at Government’s fix price.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Pakistan Oilseed Development Board
Pakistan Oil-seed Development Board (PODB) was established in 1995 to enhance indigenous oil-seed production. PODB serves as an important national institution for the development of oilseed sector in the country, besides providing regulatory and policy framework to this sector.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Livestock and Dairy Development Board
Plan, promote, facilitate and coordinate livestock, poultry and dairy sectors development of Pakistan.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Fisheries Development Board
Fisheries Development Board is set up to provide and maintain a platform for enhancing and promoting fisheries sector in Pakistan. The board Coordinates with national and provincial activities with relation to aquaculture and shrimp farming and development of market infrastructure and improvement of marketing of fisheries products
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Pakistan Dairy Development Company
Pakistan Dairy Development Company (PDDC or Dairy Pakistan) has been established to drive the development of the Pakistan dairy sector. Dairy Pakistan is a Public-Private sector joint initiative to bring about structural long term change in the dairy industry in Pakistan. Dairy Pakistan is chartered to coordinate, manage and facilitate initiatives leading to the development of the dairy sector in the country.
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Ministry of National Food Security & Research
Federal Water Management Cell
Federal Water Management Cell serves as an arm of the Ministry to deal with all the matters related to irrigation water management and agriculture mechanization.
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Amsterdam Gate, Jakarta
Introduction
The Amsterdam Gate () formed the entrance to the Castle Square () south of Batavia Castle. The gate existed from 1744 up to the 1950s in what is now known as Kota, Jakarta, where it would have stood near the intersection of Jalan Nelayan Timur and Jalan Cengkeh.
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Amsterdam Gate, Jakarta
History
Amsterdam Poort was first built in the 17th century. During the rule of governor-general Gustaaf Willen Baron van Imhoff between 1743 and 1750, the castle of Batavia was expanded. Among the involved works was the demolition of the fort's original southeast wall. A new southeast wall was built further south along the Amsterdamse Gracht (current day Nelayan Timur street), thereby including the Castle Square within the castle grounds. The newly build gate was changed to Rococo style. The entrance through the new wall was formed by a gatehouse of two storeys high and topped with a dome and clock. Part of this building was used as a prison, in a similar fashion as the Gevangenpoort in The Hague.
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Amsterdam Gate, Jakarta
History
Owing to its location at the Amsterdamse Gracht, the gate was called the Amsterdamse Poort. Other names include "Pinangpoort" (, after the trade in pinang that took place there) and "Kasteelpoort" (). In 1808, governor-general Daendels commissioned the relocation of the seat of government to Weltevreden. The construction works there were supplied partially by reusing building material from the Castle of Batavia. Most buildings on the castle grounds had been demolished, save for a part of the Amsterdam gate and connected arcades. The arched wing of the gate was connected to the building that formed part of the fort.
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Amsterdam Gate, Jakarta
Architecture
The gate was originally part of a baroque gatehouse, large enough to accommodate a small prison. The gatehouse had two storeys and was covered by a dome with a cupola on top. Semi-circular arcades connected the gatehouse to two flanking military buildings. The remains of the gate after the demolitions of Daendels only counted one storey. The gateway had a rounded arch and was decorated with columns. On top of the gate were eight black urns. The south facade had two niches containing statues of Mars and of Minerva. These statues disappeared during the Japanese occupation in World War II.
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KWCQ
Introduction
KWCQ (106.1 FM, "The Beat") is an American radio station licensed to serve the community of Condon, Oregon, United States. The station is currently owned by Jeffery Huffman, through licensee Jacobs Radio Programming, and features a Hot AC format using programming from Cumulus Media's Today's Best Hits network. Until falling silent in June 2011, the station broadcast an adult contemporary music format and featured programming from Dial Global.
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KWCQ
History
In 2005, NT Radio LLC applied to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for a construction permit for a new broadcast radio station. The FCC granted this permit on June 9, 2005, with a scheduled expiration date of June 9, 2008. The new station was assigned call sign "KHAL" on June 3, 2005. After construction and testing were completed, the station was granted its broadcast license on September 2, 2008. The station changed its call sign to KWCQ on May 18, 2009. The station fell temporarily dark on June 9, 2011. In its filing with the FCC seeking authorization to remain silent for up to six months, the station asserted that it had "been unable to generate sufficient revenue to cover basic operating costs" and that they would attempt to "restructure the operation" and seek "new financing".
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KWCQ
History
On July 13, 2012 KWCQ returned to the air with hot adult contemporary, branded as "103.1 Star FM", the frequency used in the branding is for translator K276EE 103.1 FM The Dalles, Oregon.
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KWCQ
Translators
KWCQ programming is also carried on a broadcast translator station to extend or improve the coverage area of the station on 107.3 FM in Kennewick, Washington. There is a construction permit with the FCC to move the translator frequency to 106.9 MHz.
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Introduction
The 2010–11 season was Manchester City Football Club's 109th season of football, its ninth consecutive season in the Premier League, and its 14th season in the Premier League since it was first created with Manchester City as one of its original 22 founding member clubs. The team finished fifth in the previous season, thereby qualifying for an opportunity to compete in this season's Europa League. The club was managed by Roberto Mancini who had been appointed as manager midway through the previous season.
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Season review
In the summer transfer window, the club, one of the richest in the world since its 2008 takeover by the Abu Dhabi United Group, spent £126 million on players, including Jérôme Boateng from Hamburger SV, Yaya Touré from Barcelona, David Silva from Valencia, Aleksandar Kolarov from Lazio, Mario Balotelli from Inter Milan and James Milner from Aston Villa. Popular City midfielder Stephen Ireland was transferred to Aston Villa as part of a player exchange agreement in the Milner deal. The team began this season's campaign well, collecting four out of a possible six points against "Top 7" opponents Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool, which was three points more than City managed in the comparable fixtures last season.
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Season review
City then stuttered for a couple of games against Sunderland (away) and Blackburn Rovers (at home), bagging only a single home point out of the six despite completely dominating both games, with (according to manager Roberto Mancini) at least 25 missed chances in the Blackburn game alone. City got itself back on a winning track again with a 0–2 away win against Wigan Athletic, which was the first time the team had ever won at the DW Stadium, breaking what some supporters had labelled a jinx for this fixture. After the previous season's run to the semi-final of the League Cup, the team's performance in that competition this season was very disappointing, with the "Blues" falling at the first hurdle, losing 2–1 to West Bromwich Albion in the third round tie played at The Hawthorns.
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Kit
Supplier: Umbro / Sponsor: Etihad Airways
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Kit information
Umbro made a new set of kits for Manchester City whilst they were in their second year of contract with the club. On 2 February 2011, there was a minor "kit "faux pas"" when the Manchester City team wore its regular home team kit for its away fixture against Birmingham City at St Andrew's, a fixture that usually required the visiting Manchester City team to use one of its alternative strips (in this case, its third team kit since the midnight blue away kit also represented a colour clash) as the primary home team colours of both sides combined a blue shirt with white shorts.
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Kit information
No explanation had ever come as to why this mix-up occurred (because as per which kits were to be worn in which fixtures was determined before the season even began), or why the referee, Kevin Friend, allowed two teams so similarly clad onto the pitch rather than insist that one of them first change its kit, although Birmingham's 2010–11 home shirt features large elements of white. Since then, there have been several instances of City wearing sky blue against teams in royal blue.
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Points breakdown
Points at home: 43 Points away from home: 28 Points against 2009/10 Top Four: 9 Points against promoted teams: 18
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Biggest & smallest
Biggest home win: 5–0 vs. Sunderland, 3 April 2011 Biggest home defeat: 0–3 vs. Arsenal, 24 October 2010 Biggest away win: 1–4 vs. Fulham, November 2010 Biggest away defeat: 3–0 vs. Liverpool, 11 April 2011 Biggest home attendance: 47,393 vs. Arsenal, 24 October 2010 Smallest home attendance: 43,077 vs. Fulham, 27 February 2011 Biggest away attendance: 75,322 vs. Manchester United, 12 February 2011 Smallest away attendance: 15,525 vs. Wigan Athletic, 19 September 2010
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
<a href="Premier%20League%20Manager%20of%20the%20Month">Premier League "Manager of the Month"</a> award
"Awarded monthly to the manager that was chosen by a panel assembled by the Premier League's sponsor"
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
<a href="Premier%20League%20Golden%20Boot">Premier League Golden Boot</a> award
"Awarded to the player who scored the most goals in the 2010–11 Premier League season"
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
<a href="Barclays%20Golden%20Glove">Barclays Golden Glove</a> award
"Awarded to the goalkeeper who kept the most clean sheets over the 2010–11 Premier League season"
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
<a href="PFA%20Team%20of%20the%20Year">PFA Team of the Year</a>
"The combined best 11 from all teams in the Premier League chosen by the PFA"
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2010–11 Manchester City F.C. season
Etihad "Player of the Month" awards
"Awarded to the player that receives the most votes in a poll conducted each month on the MCFC OWS"
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