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Showing posts from April, 2012

Henryk Koczewski

Henryk Koczewski (born on July 12, 1918 in Łódź, died on July 29, 1993 there) - Polish footballer, playing as an attacker (left liaison), table tennis player and hockey player, connected for most of his career with ŁKS Lodz. / p> He was a pupil of ŁKS, in which he scored over 60 appearances in the highest league. In the league debut (1934) he scored a goal, which makes him the youngest player in the club's history (he was only 16 years old and 52 days old). After the war, he represented m.in. the colors of the capital city of Polonia. Apart from playing on grassy fields, he also played on the ice sheet, along with other ŁKS players, including with Władysław Król, Antoni Gałecki and Eugeniusz Tadeusiewicz. In addition, he also practiced table tennis. He died in 1993 and was buried in the Doły Cemetery in Łódź. Bibliography wiki

Nibywstawki

Niblets (pseudoparaphyses, pseudoparafizy) - a type of vicious hypha found in pseudotenthus fruiting bodies in some fungi. They grow above the level of the bags, and then between the bags they grow down and grow into the base of the fruiting body. Usually, the niblets are quite broad, sometimes branched, and sometimes have irregularly spaced baffles. Sometimes they form anastomoses between themselves. In addition to the inserts and nibywstawek in the hamatecium, i.e. the collection of fleshy elements of the fruiting body), there may be parafyzoidy, periphysoidy and perifis. The presence of these elements and their morphology are of great importance in the determination of many species of fungi, especially microscopic ones. wiki

Emilian Radomiński

Emilian Radomiński Letter acknowledging the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice award for E.Radomiński Emilian Radomiński (born on January 30, 1850 in Biała Podlaska, died on August 8, 1927 ibid) - Polish independence activist and insurrectionist January. Curriculum vitae Together with his father Jakub Radomiński, he took part in the January Uprising of 1863. For his activity against the tsar and the fight against the introduction of the Orthodox Church - he was persecuted and imprisoned in the Warsaw Citadel. He was deported to Siberia, where he spent six years in prison. During the Russian partition, together with one of the residents of Biała Podlaska, in the Uniate church in Biała Podlaska, under the floor, he hid the coffin with the remains of blessed Josaphat Kuncewicz (he was the patron of January insurgents). These remains were sought after by Russians who refused to allow the canonization of Blessed Josaphat. In 1915, Emilian indicated the place where the coffin was hidden. Finall...

Tomasz Czapla

Tomasz Czapla (born in 1902 in Kuryłówce, died on September 21, 1980) - Polish musician and pedagogue. Curriculum vitae He graduated in 1928 at the Conservatory of the Music Society in Krakow. During the interwar period and during the occupation, he worked as a singing teacher in various schools throughout the country. After the liberation, he settled in Jelenia Góra and there he signed up as an organizer of musical life, and then the director of the Music School in Wrocław. After moving to Rzeszów in 1952, he became the director of the State Music School. As an outstanding artistic movement activist: he led choirs (laureate of the first place at the folklore festival in France), he was the president and inspector of the Musical Society in Rzeszów, he prepared around 180 songs, chants and melodies from Rzeszów for various instrumental and vocal ensembles. For his activity in the field of music dissemination - pedagogical work and social activity - he received a number of high state ...

Agustinus And

Agustinus Agus (born October 22, 1949 in Lintang) - Indonesian Catholic priest, Archbishop of Pontianak since 2014. Curriculum vitae He was ordained a priest on June 6, 1977. Episcopate On October 29, 1999 he was appointed bishop of Sintang by Pope John Paul II. He was granted episcopal ordination on February 6, 2000 by the then Archbishop of Jakarta - Julius Darmaatmadja. On June 3, 2014, he was appointed bishop of Pontianak. The office took over on August 28, 2014. wiki

Thin Sumbwegam

Thin Sumbwegam (born on March 12, 1930 in Myitkyina) - a Burmese athlete, a long-distance runner, a two-time Olympian. At his first Olympic Games in 1964 he took 35th place in the marathon run (2: 30: 35.8), four years later he reached 18th with a time of 2: 32: 22.0. At both games he was the oldest representative of his country. Multiple champion of the Southeast Asian Games (then the Games of the Indochina Peninsula). In the 10,000 m race he won gold in 1965, 1967 and 1969, and in the marathon he won in 1965 and 1969. Life record in the marathon - 2:25:58 (1968). Bibliography wiki

Łukasz Gaweł (culture expert)

Łukasz Gaweł (born November 11, 1970 in Cracow) - Polish cultural expert specializing in research and management of cultural heritage, habilitated doctor of the humanities, in 2012-2016 Director of the Institute of Culture of the Jagiellonian University, since 2016 Deputy Director of the National Museum in Cracow Strategy, Development and Communication. Curriculum vitae In 2001, at the Institute of Polish Studies of the Jagiellonian University, he received his doctorate in humanities based on the dissertation. The artistic activity of the Old Theater in 1954-1963. Birth of legend. He was habilitated in 2012. In the years 2009-2012 he was the deputy director of didactics, and in the years 2012-2016 the director of the Institute of Culture Jagiellonian University. In 2016 he was appointed deputy director of the National Museum in Cracow, Andrzej Betleja for strategy, development and communication. The main area of ​​his interest is "effective management of cultural heritage r...

Feliks Niemirowicz-Szczytt

Feliks (Felicjan) Niemirowicz-Szczytt h. Jastrzębiec (20.XI.1764 Tabołki -1793) - Chamberlain JKM Stanisław Augusta, Marshal Dastinski, Justinian's son and his first wife, a bariaquita of Kazimiera from Łopacińskis. The grandson of Jan Niemirowicz-Szczytt, the inflatable castellan. The nephew of Bishop Jozef Leon Łopaciński and the starost of Jan Macodem Łopaciński of Mscisław Jan The half-brother of Józef Niemirowicz-Szczytt (1777-1848) - also a chamberlain of Stanislas Augustus, who gained dignity during his stay with his father, Justinian, in Warsaw in 1793. Michael's father, a Jesuit died in Rome in the opinion of holiness, John, the exiled priest, and Jozef, the heir of Tablo, married to Marie Rudomin-Dusiatska. The author of a poem dedicated to King Stanislaus August To His Majesty's Grace of Our Lord of Kindness in Learning Exercises for Young People in Public Schools in Old Town of Warsaw Experiencing July 23, 1781 He was buried in the Dominican church in V...

Valery Charazov

Walerij Innokientjewicz Charazov (Russian: Валерий Иннокентьевич Харазов, born 1 November 1918, died 2 August 2013 in Moscow) is a Soviet party activist. Curriculum vitae He worked at the Kazan and Moscow Airports, since 1944 he belonged to the WKP (b). In 1945 he graduated from the Moscow Air Institute. From 1946 he was a komsomolski and party officer, from 1955-1956 he was secretary of the Regional Committee of the KPK in Gurjewo (now Atyrau), and in 1955-1961 in Pavlodar, then in 1961-1967 he worked in the Central Committee of the CPSU. From April 13, 1967 to December 10, 1978, he was the Second Secretary of the Central Committee of the KGB, from April 9, 1971 to February 24, 1976, a member of the Central Committee of the CPSU, and from March 5, 1976 to February 23, 1981, an alternate member of the CPW Central Committee. Member of the Verkhovna Rada of the USSR, VIII and IX. Bibliography wiki

Vladimir Rieszetnikov

Vladimir Ivanovich Rieszetnikov (Russian: Владимир Иванович Решетилов, born March 28, 1937 in Dnepropetrovsk, died July 13, 1992 in Moscow) is a Soviet industrialist and activist of the Ukrainian nationality and party. Curriculum vitae In 1959 he graduated from the Dniepropetrovsk Institute of Engineering and Construction, and worked in the management board of the "Juzalinski" trust in Orsk, and from 1962-1965 he was a teacher and deputy director of the construction technicum at Nowotroicki. From 1963 in the CPSU, 1965-1966 the head of the building board of the trust "Nowotroickmalalturgstroj" in the Orenburg region, 1966-1968 chief engineer and head of the building board "Gorstroj" in Dnepropetrovsk, 1968-1973 deputy manager, chief engineer and administrator of the trust "Dnepropetrovskpromstroj". Then in 1973-1977 I Deputy Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Dnipropetrovsk City Council, 1977-1980 chief engineer and chief of the "D...

Wyżni Chochołowski Potok

Chochołowski Potok - the upper course of the Chochołowskie Potok to the mouth of the Jarusz Potok. It sits slightly below 1500 m with several sources below the threshold of the Dziewrawe glacier in the upper Chochołowska Vistula Valley. These sources have high efficiency. It is also powered by small streams flowing from rocky springs from Rakonia and Long Upwell. The creek bed is crested in the accumulation material and only its final section before the mouth of the Jubilee Stream is in the crystal rock substrate. The width of the trough does not exceed 2 m, the drop is 20%. In many places, the shoreline underlines the turbulent flow of water. The average water flow in the creek is about 150 l / s. The catchment area is 1.40 km. The stream flows in the north-east direction and at an altitude of about 1180 m it joins the Jarząbcza Potok, forming the Chocholow Stream. This is done at a location with coordinates 49 ° 13'34 "N 19 ° 47'05" E / 49.26111 19.784722. A sep...

Marshal (Kochanowski's work)

Marshal - a poetic letter by Jan Kochanowski. The song, written in Polish, was probably written after 1570, perhaps in the years 1572-1574, and was published in 1585/1586. It shows the loosening of Kochanowski's relationship with the royal court, which took place around 1569-1570. The letter is addressed to the court marshal, not mentioned, however, by name (in the 70s of the 16th century they performed in the following order: Stanisław Barzi, Andrzej Opaliński and Andrzej Zborowski). Kochanowski lectures on the cause of his departure from the court. Bibliography wiki

Maria Gattilusio

Maria Gattilusio (15th c.) - wife of Alexander the Great, associate of Trapezuntu. Curriculum vitae She was the daughter of Dorino I Gattilusio, the genus ruler of Lesbos (1428-1455). Her brothers were Dominic Gattilusio, Niccolò Gattilusio and Francis III Gattilusio. Her sister Katarzyna Gattilusio was from 1441 the second wife of the last Emperor of the Byzantine Constantine XI Paleologa. Maria after 1461 after the fall of Trapezuntu joined the sultan's harem. The fate of her husband is not known. It is unclear whether he was executed on November 1, 1463 by the order of Mehmed II along with David II Komnen and his sons in the prison of the Seven Towers in Constantinople. Their son was Alexei. Bibliography wiki

Angel Canew

Angle Minew Canew (Bulgarian Ангел Минев Цанев, born November 1, 1912 in Varna, died April 10, 2003 in Sofia) - Bulgarian Communist politician, Interior Minister of the People's Republic of Bulgaria (1971-1973), General Colonel. Curriculum vitae Graduated from the grammar school in Varna, 1930 appointed to the military service in the Navy of Bulgaria, 1933 joined the BPK. He was arrested for conducting political propaganda and sentenced to 5 years in prison, 1937 released under amnesty, member of the Regional Committee of the BPK in Varna, again arrested in 1937, 1938 released. From 1939 I was Secretary of the Regional Committee of BPK in Varna, 1941 member of the Bulgarian Workers' Party, 1941 again arrested and sentenced to 15 years of imprisonment. He ran and walked to the illegal foot, was an instructor at KC BPK in Widyniu and Ruse, the secretary for organizational matters and the first secretary of the City Committee of the BPK in Sofia. From January 1944 he commanded ...

Pawel Orlov (diplomat)

Dmitrijevich Orlov (Russian: Павел Дмитриевич Орлов, born 1904, died?) - Soviet diplomat. Curriculum vitae Member of the WKP (b), 1939 employee of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of the USSR, 1939-1941 head of the Scandinavian State Department of this station, from 11 April to 22 June 1941 Soviet Ambassador to Finland. From July 1941 to 1943 Head of the Department of the First People's Commissariat of Foreign Affairs of the USSR, 1943-1944 Counselor of the USSR Embassy to the Allied Governments in London, 1944 Head of the Division V of the European People's Commissariat of Foreign Affairs of the USSR, 1944-1945 Political adviser to the President of the Allied Control Commission in Finland. From August 18, 1945 to August 14, 1946, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the USSR in Finland, 1947-1948 Deputy Head of Division III of the European Union Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR, 1948-1952 Head of Division V of the European Foreign Ministry...

Gajchatu

Gajchatu (d. 1295) - the ruler of the Ilkhanid dynasty, ruling in the years 1291-1295. He was Argun's second son. Initially, he was governor of Anatolia. He took the throne while his older brother Mahmud Ghazan was engaged in fighting with Naruzem in the east of the Hulagid state. The foreign policy of this ruler was centered on relations with the Mamluk sultan, who in 1291 acquired Akka, the last enclave of the Crusaders in the Holy Land. The Sultan Al-Ashraf Chalil has occupied several strongholds: Bahana, Marash and Tall Hamdun on the Syrian border. The plans of his further expansion at the expense of the Ilchisha prevented his assassination in December 1293 by the conspiracy of the Mamluk aristocracy. The most important event of the reign of Gajchat was the attempt to introduce paper money, which ended in a complete fiasco. It deteriorated and so bad economic situation in the state. Gajchatu was more interested in domestic politics than Anatolia, where he was previously a l...

Martino Zaccaria

Coat of arms of the Zaccaria family Martino Zaccaria (died January 17, 1345) was the 3rd Genussian ruler of Chios in the years 1314-1329. Curriculum vitae He was the son of the Paleologian of Zaccaria. Zaccaria accepted the title of "king and despot in Asia Minor". When Benedict II Zaccaria, expropriated by his brother, came to Constantinople, Emperor Andronik III used this as a pretext for intervention. In 1329 he incited the Greeks to Chios, organized a maritime expedition, and restored the Byzantine dominion. In the following years Martino spent two barons in the Principality of Achaia. He died during the Battle of Smyrna in 1345. His sons were: Bibliography wiki

Polemoscope

A8 (Latvian) - Latvian main road is 76.10 km. It connects the capital of the country, Riga with the Latvian-Lithuanian border, where it goes to the Lithuanian main road A12 in the direction of Szawle. p> History Hevelius built his instrument in 1637, and his description and technical drawings were published in the book "Selenographia sive lunae descriptio" (published in Gdansk in 1647). In 1668, Jan III Sobieski, who was still a marshal, visited the astronomer's observatory and commissioned a set of observatory instruments, including a fieldwork, a blue and earth globe, a microscope and two telescopes. Hevelius, who practically applied his invention in the field of military technology, personally performed it for the future king of Poland. In the 17th century, the fieldwork was used to observe battlefields from outside obstacles, which made it impossible to detect an observer or his wounded by missiles or shrapnel. The use of a pole-field during wartime, whos...

Torball

Torball is a team sport discipline dedicated mainly to the visually impaired and the blind. It involves winning as many goals as possible by weighing 500 grams of ball when playing the pitch. The team has 6 players (3 players and 3 reserve players). The pitch is 7x16 m. There are European and World Championships in the bag. Currently, torball is grown in about 30 countries around the world. Torball has gained the most popularity in France, Belgium and Italy, where national competitions cover 3 or 4 leagues. The game is also popular in the German-speaking countries, Moldova, Romania, Russia, Hungary and outside Europe, among others. in Argentina, Uruguay, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Papua New Guinea and Uzbekistan. The last World Championships took place in 2007 in Innsbruck. Among the women won the Italy team and among the men Germany. In Poland torball was cultivated until the early 1990's. wiki

Aleksandr Rozanow

Alexander (Abram) Borisowicz Rozanov (Абрам) , head of the NKVD Board of the Kiev Oblast (1934-1935), Odessa (1935-1937) and Voronezh (1937). In the documents he declared Russian nationality, but after his arrest he was found to be a Jew with the real name of Rozenbardt. From November 1916 to October 1917 to February 1918 in the Red Guards, from March to June 1918 in the Supreme Economic Council of the Russian Federation FSRR. From June to December 1918 in the protection of the border check, from January to April 1919 Secretary of the All-Ukrainian Chancellery of the People's Commissar of the People's Republic of Ukraine, from April to August 1919 the Ombudsman's Checks to the People's Commissars of the Ukrainian People's Republic. From September 1919 to March 1920, Cheka's deputy head of the Kazakh government department, from March 1920 to 1921, a member of the Kiev Guberan Confederation, 1921-1922 deputy chairman of the Chełm Guberzian Confederation, 1922-19...

Mogens Glistrup

Mogens Glistrup (born 28 May 1926 in Rønne, died July 1, 2008 in Kongens Lyngby) is a Danish lawyer and politician, Member of the Folketinget, founder and chairman of the Progress Party. Curriculum vitae He graduated from the University of Copenhagen with a degree in law and later educated at UC Berkeley. He practiced law in 1981 as a lawyer. He gained popularity on the television show of January 30, 1971, when he explained how to avoid paying income tax. On August 22, 1972, he set up the Progress Party, advocating extreme liberal slogans, demanding, among other things, radical bureaucracy and the public sector, as well as against taxation. In the 1973 Folketinget elections, progressives unexpectedly won 15.9% of the vote and 28 seats in the parliament. One of the deputies elected to Mogens Glistrup was a politician who maintained him in subsequent elections (1975, 1977, 1979 and 1981). In 1983 he was eventually sentenced to prison for tax evasion, which involved his imprisonment ...

Alexei Griszyn (lieutenant colonel)

Aleksey Nikonowicz Griszyn (Russian: Алексей Никонович Гришин, born 28 March 1918 in the village of Sawkino, in the region of Tachovia in the Tbilisi region, died on August 22, 1974 in Moscow) - Soviet aviator, lieutenant colonel, Hero of the Soviet Union (1945). After his father's death, his family moved to Moscow, where he graduated from a 7-class school and became a mechanic at a railroad training school while studying at the Aeroclub. From January 1939 in the Red Army, 1941 graduated from the military aviation school in Borisoglebsk, and served in the Odessa Military District. A participant in the Great Patriotic War, he shot down two planes in his first fight, but he himself was shot down. After he recovered, he returned to the front, took part in the defense of Moscow, later on the Step Steps and the 1st and 2nd Ukrainian Frons. The war ended in Czechoslovakia as a captain, as commander of the squadron of the 153 Guards Aviation Fighter Regiment, 12 Guards Air Force Fighter...

André Fernand Anguile

The results of the Monte Carlo Rally (66ème Rallye Automobile de Monte-Carlo), the elimination of the World Rally Championship in 1998, took place from January 19 to January 21. It was the first round of the championship that year and the first asphalt, and also the first in the Production World Rally Championship. The base of the rally was Monte Carlo. The winners of the rally were the Spanish crew of Carlos Sainz and Luis Moya at the Toyota Corolla WRC. They overtook Juha Kankkunen and Juha Repo in the Ford Escort WRC and British Colin McRae and Nicky Grista in the Subaru Impreza WRC. Production of the WRC was won by Austrian Manfred Stohl and Peter Müller at Mitsubishi Lancer Evo III. The rally was not completed by one factory crew. Fin Tommi Mäkinen at Mitsubishi Evo IV crashed on the 7th special stage due to a failure. Final classification Winners of special episodes wiki

Nick Montfort

Nick Montfort, American professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, creator, critic and theorist for digital media. His research interests lie at the intersection of computer science and literary practice. He is an author and developer of interactive fiction, poetry and other literary machines, and books: Twisty Little Passages: An Approach to Interactive Fiction (2009), Racing the Beam: The Atari Video Computer System (2005), and New Media Reader ( 2005). Montfort regularly blogs, among other things. on the digital media, writes poems about unusual forms and collaborates with other writers and programmers on a number of joint literary projects. In 2014 the Ha! Art Corporation has issued a World Clock, a book containing 1440 microchips that play around the world in one minute. wiki

Westerplatte run

Westerplatte, starting point of the race Westerplatte run - the oldest running event in Poland, held in Gdansk since 1962 at a distance of 10 km. The International Westerplatte runs on the main city-Westerplatte-Main City route. History Westerplatte is the oldest running event in Poland, launched in 1962 by sports journalist Gdańsk Radio, Jerzy Gebert. It is celebrated annually in September, with the aim of commemorating the events of September 1939. The organizers are from the beginning Radio Gdansk and MOSiR Gdansk. From the beginning, more than 50 runs were held, which until 2007 was named International Road Runner by the Coast Guard '39. It is a mass and popular character, in 2013 more than 3,000 runners took part. characters They competed in: wiki

Tetsu Ikuzawa

Tetsu Ikuzawa (Japanese: 生 沢 徹, Ikuzawa Tetsu, born 21 August 1942 in Tokyo) is a Japanese racing driver. Career Ikuzawa started his career in international car races in 1966 after competing in the British Formula 3 BRSCC Les Leston, where he did not earn points. In the later years, the Japanese also appeared in Formula 3 - Holts Trophy, Formula 3 - E.R. Hall Trophy, Coupe du Salon, Formula 3 Grand Prix, Guards International Trophy, European Formula 3 Trophy, Plessey Trophy, Mantorp Park Formula 2 Trophy, Trophée de France Formule 2, Rouen-les-Essarts Grand Prix, Formula 2 - Rothmans International Trophy, Swedish Gold Cup, Speed ​​International Trophy, Le Mans 24 Hours, Japan Formula 2000 and World Challenge for Endurance Drivers. In the European Formula 2 season, the Japanese started in 1970-1973. In the first season of the race, Hockenheimring was on the second stage of the podium. With a score of nine, he finished eighth overall. In later years he did not score points. Biblio...

Irena Małczuk

Irena Kazimiera Małczuk - activist of the anti-communist partisan, soldier soldier, wife of Józef Małczuk. She was sentenced to 10 years in prison for her activities. In 1955 she was released. honoring By the decision of the President of Poland Lech Kaczyński of November 9, 2007 "for outstanding contributions to the independence of the Republic of Poland" Irena Małczuk was awarded the Commander Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta, and the award was held on November 11 of the same year during the National Independence Day. In 2008 Irena Malczuk was promoted to captain level wiki

Jeorjos Epitidios

Jeorjos Epitidios, gr. Γεώργιος Επιτήδειος (born 2 March 1953 in Athens) - Greek military general, Member of the European Parliament, VIII term. Curriculum vitae Educated in Greek military schools, including the Hellenic military academy, he also studied in the United States. Served in the Greek army, reaching the rank of general. He was an officer in the main defense and also an artillery school commander. He also served as a staff officer at SHAPE headquarters (NATO headquarters for operations) and as a director of one of the departments of the European Union Military Staff. In the 2014 Golden Dawn election, he obtained the mandate of the 8th MEP. wiki

Carl-Heinz Scharpegge

Carl-Heinz Scharpegge (born December 21, 1948) is a senior security service of the GDR Stasi, head of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) representative office in Poland. He studied Polish studies in Łódź (1967-1968) and psychology at the Jagiellonian University in Cracow (1968-1973). He then went to the GDR public security department, occupying a number of functions, including Exhibitions in Katowice (1983-1984), Vice President (1984-1988), and Head of Group (since X 1989). In 1988 he got his degree. wiki

A great love

Heel de wereld - song by Belgian singer Solange Berry written by Michel Eric, Monique Laniece and Raymond Roche and published in 1958. In the same year, the single was represented by Luxembourg during the 3rd Eurovision Song Contest. On March 12, he was presented in the finals of the show as fourth in the rankings and finally scored just one point, finishing second on the penultimate place in the final classification, along with Corry Brokken's proposal to represent Holland with the song "Heel de wereld". The conductor of the orchestra was Dolf van der Linden. wiki

Simon Tirman

Simon Tirman (born 18 April 1996 in Paris) is a French racing driver. Career Tirman started his career in single-seater racing cars at the age of 16 in 2012 in French Formula 4. He also won his first racing career. On the famous circuit in Le Mans he triumphed twice. An achievement of 182 points in the general classification allowed him to win the title of vice-champion. For the 2013 season, Tirman has signed a contract with ARTA Engineering to take part in the European Formula Renault 2.0 and Alpine Formula Renault 2.0. Only in the Alpine edition scored. A total of 20 points earned him twenty positions in the overall classification. statistics Bibliography wiki

Jozef Pietrzykowski (artist)

Segunda División 2013/2014 - The 83rd edition of this tournament in history. 22 teams took part. The first match was played on August 16, 2013, while the last was on June 8, 2014. SD Eibar was the champion, Deportivo La Coruña and Córdoba CF also advanced to the top flight. Segunda División B fell Real Murcia, Real Madrid Castilla, Real Jaén and Hércules CF. The play-off phase ended June 22, 2014. teams ALC FCB COR GIR HERE LUG ME WALL ON ONE PON RMC RHU SAB SPG TIMES DEP ZAR FROM EIB JAE Location of clubs playing in Segunda División 2013/2014 LPA TEN Canary Islands Table Source: LFP - Adelante League (Spanish) Markings: (M) - master title, (A) - promotion, (S) - drop. Rules of ordering: 1. number of points earned in the whole game cycle; 2. number of points scored in direct matches; Difference of goals in direct games; 4. difference of goals in direct games - goals scored twice; 5 goals difference throughout the game; 6. number of goals scored throughout the game; 7th place in t...

Cirrusy

Cirrus, mustache (Latin cirri) - Paraplegia of the multinodes of the pubescent. They are located on the dorsal side of the notopodium, at its base and on the ventral side of the neuropodium, also at its base. Their length is usually less than the parapodium branch on which they are attached, but may also be very large. Cirrus can perform sensory functions, be educated in gills or oars. In addition, dorsal whiskers may be transformed into elytry (scabies), which form in the form of scales and protect the dorsal side of the multifocal body. Cirrus, in contrast to the brides, develop from pranosity. wiki

Jerzy Głogowski (Speedwayer)

Jerzy Głogowski (born April 23, 1959 in Jarosławiec) is a Polish speedway jockey. Sport slag was practiced in 1982-1998 at Motor Lublin clubs (1982-1991, 1993, 1996-1998), KSŻ Krosno (1992, 1994) and Wanda Cracow (1995). Silver medalist of the Polish championship team (1991). Participant of the Individual Championship of Poland (Leszno 1989 - VII place). Participant of the Individual Cup of Poland (Ostrów Wielkopolski 1989 - 16th place). Two-time participant in the finals of the Polish Club Championships (Rzeszów 1990 - 5th place, Gorzów Wielkopolski 1992 - 6th place). Trainer of Lublin Motor in PLŻ2 in the season 2015. Bibliography wiki

Sarah Josepha Hale

Sarah Joseph Hale (born 1788, died 1879) - American poet. Curriculum vitae Sarah Joseph Hale was born Sarah Joseph Buell on October 24, 1788 in Newport, New Hampshire. In 1813 she married lawyer David Hale. In 1823, she published an anonymous volume The Genius of Oblivion and Other Original Poems, and in 1827 she published the novel Northwood: A Tale of New England. She died on April 30, 1879 in Philadelphia. She is known primarily as the author of the extremely popular children's poem Mary's Lamb, widely known as Mary Had a Little Lamb. Mary had a little lamb, little lamb, little lamb, Mary had a little lamb whose fleece was white as snow. And everywhere that Mary went Mary went, Mary went, everywhere that Mary went The lamb was sure to go. wiki

Presidential election in Indonesia in 1999

The presidential election in Indonesia in 1999 took place on October 20. These were the first democratically held elections in the Republic of Indonesia after the overthrow of Gen. Suharto's dictatorship. These were also the last indirect elections in the history of the country for the position of the head of state. The election was won by the representative of the Party of the National Awakening - Abdurrahman Wahid, who won 54.37% of the vote (373 electors). Defeated representative of the Democratic Party of Indonesia - Wlaka - Megawati Soekarnoputri, received 45.63% (313 electoral votes). The turnout was 99.28%. wiki

Halirrotios

Halirrotios (Greek: Ἁλιρρόθιος) - in Greek mythology the son of Poseidon and the nymph Euryte. He died by the god Ares when he tried to rape his daughter Alkippe. Poseidon called the son's killer before the tribunal of the gods. The defending Ares daughter was acquitted and the hill where the court was held was named Areopagus. According to another version of the myth of Halirrotios, angry at Athens, when instead of Poseidon ruled over Attica, he tried to cut down the sacred olive tree goddess. But when he lifted the ax, he slipped out of his hands and cut off his head. wiki

Comment on Cook's trip

The premiere of Kielce in 1956 Cook's Travel Commentary (also: Cook's Cook Reason, Friar Supplément au voyage de Cook) - a comedy in one act by Jean Giraudoux from 1935. Genesis and content The title refers to the work of Denis Diderot entitled Supplément au voyage de Bougainville, which in turn is a dialogue about the book by Louis Antoine de Bougainville - Voyage autour du monde par la frégate de roi La Boudeuse et la flute L'Étoile ( Pol .: Bougainville's journey around the world). For Giraudoux, the confrontation of two cultures - wild and civilized, based on the non-inclusion of natural human instincts in the creation of moral principles, must lead to the disaster of the latter. The author, however, treats these struggles as the basis for the creation of a comedy with strong satirical accents and not devoid of tragic threads. It exposes the paradoxicality of artificially created moral principles. From Diderot, he borrowed the figure of a Tahitian Uturu, and as ...

Fritz Sperling

Fritz Sperling (born August 1, 1945 in Innsbruck) is an Austrian bobsleigher, two-time World Cup medalist. Career His first success came in 1972, when he won the silver medal in four at the European Championship in St. Louis. Moritz. Lake Placid, along with Werner Delle Karth, Walter Delle Karth and Hans Eichinger, won the silver medal in this competition the following year. In addition, the Austrian team in the same team also took third place in the four at the World Championship in St. Petersburg. Moritz in 1974. Sperling also won the gold medal of the European Championship in four in 1978 and bronze in 1973. In 1972 he competed in the Sapporo Olympic Games, taking seventh place in the four and thirteenth in the two. Four years later the Innsbruck was the seventh and fourth respectively. He also participated in the Lake Placid Games in 1980, occupying seventh place in doubles and fourth in four. wiki

Sergei Golubov

Sergei Viktorovich Golubiev (Russian: Сергей Викторович Голубев, born January 28, 1978 in Cherepovets) - Russian bobsleigher, two-time world championship medalist. Career His first career success came in 2003, when he teamed up with Aleksandr Zubkov, Alexei Sielejierstow and Dmitry Stiepuszkin to win the bronze medal at the World Cup in Lake Placid in four. In the same composition, the Russians also won a silver medal at the 2005 World Championships in Calgary. In 2002 he participated in the Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, where he was in the same competition in the eighth. He also participated in the 2006 Turin Games, where he finished fourth in the competition. wiki

Jean-Noel Rey

Jean-Noël Rey (born 23 December 1949, died 16 January 2016) is a Swiss politician, a member of the Swiss National Council, an activist of the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland. Curriculum vitae He came from the Canton of Valais. In 1978 he received a doctorate in social sciences at the University of Geneva. He was the personal assistant of trade unionist Otto Stich. In the years 1990-1998 he held the post of General Manager of Post, Telefon und Telegraph (PTT). In 2003-2007 he was deputy to the lower chamber of the Swiss parliament. Since 2013 he has been chair of the French-Swiss Chamber of Commerce (CCIFS) in Geneva. With the former member of the Swiss canton of the Valais, Georg Lamon, died of terrorist attacks in the Ouagadougou, capital of Burkina Faso on January 16, 2016. wiki

Group of Magura Wilkowicka

The southern part of the Wilkowicka Magura Magurka Wilkowicka Group - western part of the Beskid Mały, located on the western side of the river Sola. It is located in the highest peak of the Beskid Maly - Czupel (930 m). The main ridge of the Magura Wilkowicka group is C-shaped, with its ends reaching to the Sola. In the middle of the ridge, there is a pass called Przegibek, where two streams flow in opposite directions: Ponikiew in the east, west of Straconka. Pass Przegibek and the valleys of the mentioned streams divide the Wilkowicka Magura Group into two smaller groups: The Magurka Wilkowicka Group on the north side is steeply sloping on the Pogórze Slaskie, from the south to the Żywiec Valley, from the west the Biała River Valley and the Wilkowicka Gate separates it from the Silesian Beskids. It is mostly forested, but on the ridges and slopes of the mountains there are also scenic glaciers and windbreaks. It has a dense network of hiking trails and several mountain huts (yea...

Żarnówka Mała (Miedzybrodzie Bialskie)

Żarnówka Mała is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czernichów, within Żywiec County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It is located on the left bank of Lake Międzybrodzkie and the left bank of Lake Czaniecki. Along the small river, along the left bank of these artificial reservoirs, the provincial road no. 948 runs, and through the dam there between them the road to the other side, to the right bank of these water reservoirs. Small winery is located in the Beskid Mały, in the valley of the Żarnówka Mała stream. wiki

Gushing

Gushing - uncontrolled brewing of beer after opening the dish (eg bottles, cans) without prior shaking it. Gushing primary and secondary. Gushing primary is associated with malt. Initially, it was associated with the degree of contamination of barley grains, but nowadays this factor is considered to be insignificant. The second cause may be high concentration in oxalate grains. Secondary Gushing is caused by premature termination of fermentation, excessive use of sugar for referment or contamination of the product. Among the methods to prevent gushing the most effective is the filtering of beer by kaolin, adsorbing on its porous surface impurities, and also by filtration through diatomaceous earth or nylon. wiki

Jan Śliwka (volleyball player)

Jan Śliwka (born May 20, 1933, March 18, 1998) is a Polish volleyball player, Polish representative, Polish championship medalist, female coach and male team of the Wroclaw Guard. Sports career He was a competitor of the Wrocław Guard, with whom he won the Polish Vice-Champion in 1954, 1955 and 1964, the bronze medal of the Polish championships in 1953, 1956 and 1965. Throughout his career he was associated with the Wrocław club, only in the years 1958-1959 he played as a player a coach in the II League of Gorzów Wielkopolski, and in the 1965/1966 season he was injured. After completing his professional career in 1967, he worked as a coach in the Guardian. His team took 4 m in 1968, 5 m in 1969, 7 m in 1970 (falling from league), in 1975 he won promotion to League I, in 1976 - 5 m in the 1st division) Between 1954 and 1965 he made 11 appearances in the 1st Polish national team. There were also his brother Józef Śliwka, sister of Stanisław and brother-in-law Zenon Kurpios. He i...

Zofia Badeńska

Sophie Pauline Henriette Marie Amelie Luise (born 7 August 1834 in Karlsruhe, died April 6, 1904) is a princess of Baden, since the death of her brother-in-law Leopold III on December 8, 1875. Princess Lippe. She was born as a nephew of the Grand Duke of Baden-Leopold. Her parents were the younger brother of the monarch - Prince William and his wife Princess Elisabeth Alexander. On November 9, 1858 Karlsruhe married the future Prince Lippe Waldemar. The couple did not have children. Bibliography wiki

Nikolai Korolov

Nikolai Andrianovich Korolov (Russian: Николай Андрианович Королёв, born 1907 in the village of Podolino in the Novgorod gubernatorial district, died in Moscow in 1986) - Soviet military officer, politician and security officer, deputy minister of state security of the USSR (1950-1951). From 1925 to 1926 he was a secretary of Komsomol's Jacuzzi at the Borowicz factory, from March 1929 in the Red Army, 1931- 1933 instructor of the military school of the Leningrad Military District, from October 1933 to January 1939 studied at the Military Academy of the. Zhukovsky, then worked at the NKVD. From February 4 to December 1, 1939, head of the Special Forces of the NKVD 1 Special Forces Air Forces in the degree of captain of state security, from December 1, 1939 to March 28, 1940 Head of the Special Forces Division of the NKVD 1 Air Force of the Leningrad Military District, from 28 March to 19 September 1940 Head of Division Special NKVD Odessa Military District, from September 1940 to A...

Cicisbeo

Cicisbeo, Carlo Goldoni, 1790 Cicisbeo, also cicisbeo (cicisbeo, cavaliere servente) is a friend of the house who admires the lady of the house, gach, lover. In the 18th century in Italy this was called the companion of a married lady from higher spheres. Cicisbeo, in former Italy, was the trustee of a wealthy married woman, most often paid to meet her intimate needs and accompanied in public. He could have been a married man or a bachelor. Usually he belonged to the aristocracy. An appropriate partner for a lady was chosen by both spouses. In Spain called cortejo or estrecho. Throughout the 18th century the employment of cicisbeo was considered a common custom and social norm which was not linked to the concept of conjugal betrayal. Historically, the Swiss economist Jean de Sismondi devoted much time to cicisbeo, considering that they were one of the main causes of the decline of Italian family traditions. Roberto Bizzocchi, in turn, showed that the stereotypes of masculinity a...

Ivan Chramkov

1973 World Shooting Championship (moving dart and darts) - third world championship in shooting only for moving darts and darts. They were played in Melbourne, Australia. There were eight competitions for men. The competition was dominated by the USSR champions who won all the competition. Medal classification      Gospodarze mistrzostw Results Men Bibliography 1931-1934, the party organizer of the WKP City Committee (b) in Moscow in the mines, 1934-1937 studied at the Communist University of Warsaw. Sverdlovsk, 1937-1939 Second Secretary of the Regional Committee of the WKP (b) of the Autonomous Oblast of Karachiv. From 1939 Secretary of the Ordżonikidze National League (now Stawropolski) Committee of the WKP (b) for propaganda and agitation, later for the food industry, 1942-1943 Commissioner of the Western Partisan Branches in the Ordzhonikidze region. From April 1943 to September 1945 I Secretary of the Municipal Committee of the WKP (b) in Piatigorsk, 1945-1948 studied at the...

Arab sources to the history of Slavs

Arabic sources for the history of the Slavonic - a source series of Arabic texts with a translation into Polish. They relate to the Polish lands during the Middle Ages until the year 1000. Volume 1 contains fragments of the following works: Al-Achtal (640-710), Muhammad ibn Musa al-Chuwarizmi (780-850), Ibn Hurdadbech, Al-Jahiz (775-868), Al Fargani (790-860) ), Ibn Qutajba, Al Baladuri Balāḏurī (900-892), Al-Jaqubi. Volume 2, part. 1: Ibn al Faqih, Ibn as-Sagir, Ibn Wahsiya. Volume 2, part. 2: Ibn Rosteh. Volume 3 contains a description of the journey of Ahmad ibn Fadlan's message from Kitāb or Risāla. Bibliography wiki

Sergey Antonov (politician)

Sergey Fyodorovich Antonov (Russian: Сергей Фёдорович Антонов, born September 25, 1911 in Pokrovskoye near Tiumeni, died December 28, 1987 in Moscow) - Soviet politician, diplomat, minister of meat and dairy industry USSR (1965-1984) . 1932-1937 studied at the Leningrad Institute of Dairy Industry, and from 1939 to 1941 at the Higher School of Party at the KC WKP (b). From 1937 in WKP (b), 1941 course attendant at the Military Academy of the Red Army im. Lenin. From 1937 deputy chief engineer, later head of technical department of the Main Board of Dairy Industry of the USSR's Food Industry Commission. From 1944 to January 1946 Senior Instructor of the Political Department of the South Korean Military District, from January to April 1946 Chief Engineer of the Main People's Commissariat of the Ministry of Industry and Meat and Dairy Industry, USSR, April-September 1946 Secretary of the WKP Committee (b) in that ministry. From September 1946 to March 1953 deputy minister of meat...

Krakauer Zeitung (1939)

Krakauer Zeitung - German newspaper published in the General Government from November 12, 1939 to January 17, 1945. It appeared every day except Mondays and public holidays. The circulation of the daily ranged from 50,000 copies in 1939 to 140,000 in 1942. The distribution was essentially limited to the Kraków district. For the remainder of the GG the mutation "Krakauer Zeitung" under the name "Warschauer Zeitung" was published, and after the aggression on the Soviet Union "Lemberger Zeitung" for the Lviv district. wiki

Dariusz Stefaniuk

Dariusz Paweł Stefaniuk (born May 10, 1981 in Biała Podlaska) - Polish self-government, since 2014 President of Biała Podlaska. Curriculum vitae He completed his political studies at the Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw, and completed postgraduate studies at the Warsaw School of Economics. He joined the Law and Justice, worked as the director of the parliamentary office of Adam Abramowicz. Later he was employed by the Management Association of SKOK, and also became an activist of Grzegorz Bierecki's "I love Podlasie" foundation. In the years 2006-2014 he was a councilor of Biała Podlaska, in the 6th term he was the vice-chairman of the city council. In the election in 2014, PiS candidate applied for the presidency of Biała Podlaska, winning the second round of voting with 58% of votes and defeating the then-governor of Andrzej Czapski. wiki

Leo Zajkow

Nikolayevich Zajoch (Russian: Лев Николаевич Зайков, born March 3, 1923 in Tula, died on 7 January 2002 in Petersburg) - Soviet politician, Central Committee secretary and member of the Politburo of the CPSU (1986-1990), Hero of Socialist Labor 1971). From 1940 a locksmith - a cam specialist at a factory in Leningrad, then a master there, an old master, an assistant manager and a workshop manager and production manager at the factories in Moscow and Leningrad. Since 1961 factory director. 1963 graduated from the Institute of Engineering and Economics in Leningrad, general director of the Production and Technical Union, since 1974 the director general of the Scientific and Production Union "Leninci" in Leningrad. April 26, 1971 honored with the title of Hero of the Socialist Work. 1981-1990 member of the Central Committee of the CPSU. From June 21, 1983 to July 8, 1985 I Secretary of the CPWR Regional Committee in Leningrad. From 1 July 1985 to 13 July 1990 Secretary of the ...

Amadeusz z Clermont

Amadeus de Clermont-Tonnere (born in the second half of the eleventh century at Hauterives Castle - died 1450 in Bonnevaux, 14 January) - Cistercian monk, blessed Catholic Church. He was born in the mighty Clermont-Tonnere family (a prominent figure in Delphine, Mr. Hauterive, son of Sibaud I Clermont, Mr. Hauterive and participant of the First Crusade, and Adelaide d'Albon.) His mother was related to Emperor Konrad III Hohenstauf and In 1119, he decided to start a ascetic life and went to become a monk, accompanied by six vassals and a future saint, and then a small son, Amadeus, at the beginning of his stay in Bonnevaux, but Amadeus was dissatisfied with the level. In 1125 his son was ordained, and Amadeus senior returned to Bonnevaux, where he founded four monasteries: Leoncel, Mazan, Montperoux and Tamis, known from the severity of his life, died on January 14th, probably around 1150, so in time When his son was already a bishop of Lausanne. His liturgical memorial is celeb...

Aleksandr Twieritinow

Aleksandr Aleksandrowicz Twieritinov, Russian Александр Александрович Тверитинов (born July 9, 1897, died 27 May 1942 in the USSR) is an emigre Russian political-trade activist. He studied medicine at the Moscow University, but after the outbreak of World War I he was mobilized to the Russian army. He graduated from the pre-war school in Moscow. Served in the Caucasian Corps on the South-Western Front. In 1919 he joined the Bolshevik army. He fought on the Finnish Front, where he was captured. He was put in a POW camp in Poland. After his release in 1924, he left for France. From 1925 he lived in Paris, where he performed various works. In the years 1929-1937 he worked as a cab driver. At the same time he studied at the School of Social and Political Sciences until 1931. He served in the Republican-Democratic Alliance, as part of the leadership. In 1934 he became a member of the Russian Workers' Union at the French CGT headquarters. He wrote articles for the magazine "Russki...

Amphitheater in Skierniewice

Amphitheater in Skierniewice - amphitheater located in the City Park in Skierniewice was established in the late 1970s. Currently non-existent, liquidated in May 2013. A circular gazebo with a stage for chamber music concerts was created at the Amphitheater. For many years the amphitheater served the inhabitants, where cabarets, concerts of Polish bands were held during the Skierniewic Holidays of Flowers and Vegetables. On the stage of the amphitheater were: Bajm, Budka Suflera, Perfect, Lombard, De Mono, T.Love, Electric Guitars, Formation of Dead Schabuff, Kombi, Ira, Daab, Big Cyc, Blue Café, Maryla Rodowicz with band , A to Z, Children's Band. of the temple in Prussia. The Lutheran Church, which was originally supposed to stand in Czermna, was eventually built on the Mount Park in Kudowa. Under the agreement between the Lutherans and the Reformed Evangelists, the church building served the two denominations. The distance from the Pstrężna, a burdensome for older pe...

Werner Lupberger

Werner Lupberger (born 15 December 1975 in Pretoria) is a South African racing driver. Career Lupberger started his career in motor racing in 1995 after competing in the British Formula 3 but was not classified. In later years, he also appeared in British Formula 2, Formula 3000, Italian Formula 3000, American Le Mans Series, Sports Racing World Cup, Le Mans 24 Hours, European Le Mans Series, FIA Sportscar Championship, 1000 km Le Mans and Le Mans Endurance Series. In the Formula 3000 South Africa he started in 1997-1998 with the British team Edenbridge Racing. In his first season in eight races, he managed to score three points. This made him 18th in the overall classification. A year later his point advantage was one point. He was ranked 23rd in the final drivers classification. Bibliography wiki

Wladyslaw Idzikowski

Władysław Idzikowski (born May 27, 1864 in Kiev, died June 10, 1944 in Warsaw) - son of Leon Idzikowski, bookkeeper and publisher. In 1897, he was succeeded by his father, Leo Idzikowski, and after his death in 1865 by his mother, Hersylia Idzikowska, from the Buharevys (1832-1917) of bookstores and publishing houses in Kiev with branches in many cities of the Russian Empire. He headed it until 1920, then left Kiev and moved to Warsaw, where since 1911 a branch of the company was operating at 119 Marszałkowska Street. The company was privatized in Kiev. Wladyslaw Idzikowski ran a company in Warsaw at Aleje Jerozolimskie 18 during the Second Polish Republic and the Nazi occupation. He died on June 10, 1944, shortly after, the company burned down in Warsaw Uprising. Bibliography wiki

Steel hardenability

Hardenability of steel - the ability to form a martensitic structure during hardening. The main factor affecting the hardenability of steel is its chemical composition, ie the content of carbon and alloy and technological elements. In addition to the chemical composition, grain size and homogeneity of austenite and the presence of other, undissolved particles also have an impact on hardenability. Alloy additives (except cobalt) increase steel hardenability by reducing the critical cooling rate. The critical cooling rate, i.e. the lowest cooling rate allowing to obtain a martensitic structure, is related to the durability of the supercooled austenite until its transformation begins, for carbon steels it can be as much as 400-500 ° C / s. The temperature of the beginning and end of the martensitic transformation depends to a large extent on the carbon content of the austenite (see charts illustrating phase transitions as a function of time and temperature, so-called CTP diagrams). Al...

Selkirka concession

Selkirka Concession - landed about 300,000 square kilometers in today's Canadian province of Manitoba and the US States of Minnesota and North Dakota by the Hudson Bay Company to Lord (count, Earl) Selkirka in 1809. Since the beginning of its administration of the Rupert Land, Kompania has tried to prevent settlement in this area, wishing to maintain a monopoly on trade in skins and other goods. This ban has been repeatedly broken by "wild" settlement, most often of the mestizos. The company tolerated it mainly due to the value of the services provided to it by the mestizos. The Selkirka concession was the first breach in this rule. Douglas, who went down in history as Lord Selkirk, promised the Company to provide 200 employees a year, providing certain sources of food supply and assistance in the settlement of retired Kompania employees. The settlement action, mainly poor Scottish farmers from Selkirk county in Scotland, began in 1811. After a few hard years, mainly ...

Hermann Erich Bauer

Hermann Erich Bauer (born March 26, 1900 in Berlin, died February 4, 1980 ibid) - Nazi criminal, member of the Sobibor death camp and SS-Oberscharführer. Curriculum vitae He was born in Berlin, he was a tram driver by profession. He was a member of the SS and SA and took part in the T4 action. In 1942 he was assigned to Sobibór. In this camp, together with Eric Fuchs, he installed a gassing system using a captured engine, a Soviet tank. Then, Bauer, throughout the period when Sobibór served as a center for the extermination of Jews, dealt with the operation of this installation. He was the direct perpetrator of the deaths of over 200,000 people in the Sobibor gas chambers. After the war, he initially worked as a laborer in the clearing of Berlin. However, he was recognized there by a surviving prisoner from Sobibór and arrested by the German authorities. On May 8, 1950, the court in Berlin sentenced Bauer to death, but after the abolition of the death penalty in West Germany the ...

Nina Wołosowicz

Nina Wołosowicz née Krukowska (born February 28, 1931 in Rybołach) - Polish scientist, biochemist, professor of medical science. Curriculum vitae Daughter of Mikołaj and Ludmila Krukowski. After the war, she passed her high school diploma and in 1956 she graduated from biochemistry at the University of Warsaw. After graduation, she started working at the Medical Academy in Białystok - she was associated with the Department of Medical Biochemistry, Department of Laboratory Clinical Diagnostics and the Department of Hematology Diagnostics. In 1989 she obtained the academic title of professor. Bibliography wiki

Nikolai Ghost

Nikolai Leonidowicz Duchov (Russian: Nikolai Leonidov Dukov, born October 26, 1904 in the village of Wepryk in the Hadziacki region, died on May 1, 1964 in Moscow) - Soviet constructor of atomic weapons and thermonuclear charges, three times Hero of Socialist Work (1945, 1949) and 1954). Curriculum vitae He studied at the classical gymnasium in Hadziacz, from 1920 he worked as the technical secretary of the agricultural department of the local executive committee, then the head of the reading room and the dispatcher in the power plant, later in the sugar factory, 1928 he graduated from the workers' faculty (Rabfak) in Kharkiv. In 1932 he graduated from the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute (specialty: construction and manufacture of tractors and cars) and became an engineer in a defense factory. After the German attack on the USSR, he was evacuated to Chelyabinsk, where he worked in a tractor factory in which he became the main constructor (during the war with Germany the factory s...

Bartuś oak

General view Bartuś Oak - a historic English oak located in the Bory Tucholskie National Park, to the east of the village of Małe Swornegacie, near the lakes Płęsno and Kacze Oko, over the Struga of the Seven Lakes. The oak has a circumference of 670 cm (or 720 cm) and a height of about 25 meters. Its age is estimated at 600 years, but it may be an exaggerated value, because pedunculate oaks of this size usually do not exceed the age of 500 years. The glade under the oak tree is a node of tourist routes. wiki
Yevgeny Nikolaevich Abaheyev (Russian: Евгений Николаевич Абашеев, 1900-1937) - People's Commissar of Internal Affairs of the Buriack-Mongolian ASRR (1926-1928). Curriculum vitae From April 1918 he belonged to RKP (b), in 1918 he became an instructor of the Union of the Siberia Council, then he was a teacher in the village of Tunka. From November 1919 to February 1920 he participated in the communist partisan movement in Siberia, in February 1920 he became the chairman of the Aqmar's revolutionary committee in the Irkutsk Governorate and the war Ajmaku Echirit-Bułagatskiego, 1922 he was the secretary responsible for the Aaric Aymara RKP Committee (b) in the Buryat-Mongol Autonomous Oblast , and from 1923 the chairman of the Executive Committee of the Barguzinska Ajmakova Council and chairman of the Executive Committee of the Tunkinska Rada Aymara in the Buryat-Mongolian ASRR. He was a student of the Marxist-Leninist classes at the Central Committee of the WKP (b), from Febru...
Sergey Alexeyevich Afanasiev (Russian: Сергей Алексеевич Афанасьев, born 1912, died?) - Soviet diplomat. Curriculum vitae He belonged to the WKP (b), 1934 graduated from the Faculty of Engineering and Economics of the University of Leningrad, from 1939 he worked in the People's Commissariat of Foreign Affairs of the USSR, until June 23, 1941 was secretary of USSR Embassy in Slovakia. From 1943 to 1947 he served as an assistant to the People's Commissar / Foreign Minister, then to the Embassy of the USSR in Norway on June 3, 1947, from June 8, 1947 to January 26, 1954 as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the USSR in Norway, then 1954-1955 as Deputy Head of Division III. Of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR. From 1955 to October 1958 he was Deputy Head of the Scandinavian State Department of the USSR, from October 9, 1958 to August 31, 1962 Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the USSR in Belgium, from August 31, 1962 to October 21, 1964 Ambas...

Nikołaj Dmitrijewicz Komarow

Nikolai Dmitriyevich Komarov (Russian: Николай Дмитриевич Комаров, born 1918) is a Soviet state and party activist. In the years 1937-1946 he worked in aviation industry, since 1945 he belonged to WKP (b), 1949 he graduated from the Universiade Trade Union. From 1949 employee of a foreign trade organization, since 1955 employee of the Ministry of Foreign Trade of the USSR, 1965-1980 deputy, and 1980-1987 First Deputy Minister of Foreign Trade of the USSR. From March 3, 1981 to April 25, 1989, deputy member of the Central Committee of the CPSU, since 1987 retired. Member of the 11th Congress of the USSR. Bibliography wiki

Wiktor Turin

Wiktor Aleksandrowicz Turin (Russian: Виктор Александрович Турин, born 1895, died 15 May 1945) - Soviet writer and documentary film director. Curriculum vitae Born in St. Petersburg in 1895, he studied at a theater school. In 1912 he went to relatives in Boston (USA). He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1913-1916). For five years he worked in Hollywood as an actor and a libretto. He made documentaries Turksib (1929), Bakijczycy (1938). In the years 1943-1945 senior consultant "Sojuzintorgkino". He died in 1945. Selected filmography Bibliography wiki

Tommaso Maria Zigliara

Tommaso Maria Zigliara (born October 29, 1833, May 10, 1893) is an Italian Roman Catholic, Dominican, Cardinal. He was ordained priest in 1856. Rector of St. Thomas (1873-1879). Created by the Cardinal in the Consistory in 1879. Prefect of the Congregation for Indulgences and Saints Relic (1886-1887) and Congregation for Studies (1887-1893). Protoodkon of St. Cardinal College (1890-1891). Cardinal Bishop of Frascati since January 6, 1893, died before the episcopal ordination. Author of numerous theological works. Bibliography wiki

Abram Giliński

January 20, 1897 in Dvinsk (Dyneburg) in the Vitebsk Governorate, February 26, 1939) - Soviet politician, folk food industry commissioner of the USSR (1938). Jew, had an undergraduate secondary education, electromonster in St. Petersburg, since 1915 a member of the SDPRR (b). In January 1916 arrested and exiled to the Gubernatorial District of Irkutsk, released from exile after the February Revolution of 1917, agitator of the SDPRR (b) regional council in Petrograd. Active participant in the October Revolution in Petrograd, 1917-1918 chief of staff of the Red Guards in Kremenchug, later in underground activities in the Volyn gubernian district, during the civil war in Russia took part in the establishment of Bolshevik power in Ukraine, 1918-1919 chairman of the Voluntary Government Committee of KP (b) U, 1919-1920 chairman of Kiev gubernian committee KP (b) U. From April to September 1920, secretary of the Ekaterinoslav gubernian committee KP (b) U, 1920 electromagnetist in Kharkiv, ...

Kalistrat Szerozija

1906 in Nakipou village in Georgia, died in Tbilisi in December 1942) - Georgian and Soviet Communist activist, Second Secretary of the Communist Party of Bolsheviks (Georgia) (1938-1942) ). He completed his technical studies at Zugdidi and in 1927 the Tbilisi Pedagogical Institute. From 1928 in the WKP (b), party and state functionary in Gori, later editor of Gori, Zugdidi and Kutaisi newspaper, 1932-1933 head of the party department of the newspaper "Komunisti", then head of the propaganda and propaganda department of the KP (b) Kutaisi and the secretary of the regional committee KP (b) G. From 1937 to August 1938, head of the Department of Education and Science of the Central Committee of the Central Committee of the Central Committee of the Central Committee and second secretary of the CP Central Committee (b) G . Awarded to the Order of Lenin (February 24, 1941) and the Order of the Red Banner (December 13, 1942). Bibliography wiki

500 Motorized Battalion SS Geological Warfare

500 Motorized SS Battalion SS (Wehrgeologen-Bataillon 500) - specialist military unit of the Third Reich Army during the Second World War History The branch was formed at the end of 1942 in Hamburg. He was directly under SS-Führungshauptamt. It was headed by the geologist Dr Rolf Höhne, who received the SS-Obersturmbannführer degree. Subordinates were commanded by officers in the degree of doctor. In the summer of 1943 one company was sent to the Italian province of Reggio Emilia. In Italy about 200 Italians joined the unit. In mid-March 1944, the entire unit (three companies) was transferred to the French Brittany, where it was used for the construction of coastal defense and preparatory work to flood the coastal areas. His tasks included seismic exploration of the explosions caused by V1 missiles. After resting in Holland, Hengelo was transported to mid-September in northern Italy. He was stationed in Trento, preparing defensive positions in mountainous terrain. He also did arch...

Willie Haupt

Willie Haupt (born July 10, 1885 in East Cameron, April 16, 1966, in Elkins Park) is an American racing driver. Career In his career, Haupt was involved in the US Grand Prix, the AAA Championship Car, and the famous Indianapolis 500 race championship. In 1913, Indy 500 was ranked thirteenth. With a score of 35 points was ranked 43rd in the final drivers classification. Two years later the American once stood on the podium. He collected a total of 120 points, which gave him 25th place in the general classification. On the Indianapolis Motor Speedway] reached the finish line as eleventh. Bibliography wiki

Marco Weber

Marco Weber (born 28 September 1982 in Karl-Marx-Stadt) is a German speed skater, bronze medalist of the world championship. Career Marco Weber's biggest success came in 2008 when he and Stefan Heythausen and Jörg Dallmann won the bronze medal in the team's race at the Nagano World Cup. It was the only medal he won at an international event of that rank. In the same competition, Germany and Weber also finished fourth in the World Cup in Inzell three years later. The best result ever achieved was at the World Championships in Nagano, where he was sixth at a distance of 10,000 m. In 2010 he took part in the Vancouver Olympic Games, where he finished 23rd in the 5000 m race, and twice as long as the tenth. He never finished on the podium of individual World Cup competitions, but he made it four times. The best result was achieved in the season 2011/2012, when he was sixth in the final classification of the mass start. Bibliography wiki

Pascal Gibon

Pascal Gibon (born 9 June 1961 in Paris) is a French racing driver. Career Gibon started his international racing career in 2009 from the GT V de V Challenge Endurance Moderne, where he once stood on the podium. With a score of 104, he finished tenth in the drivers' final classification. In later years, the Frenchman also appeared at the FIA ​​GT2 European Cup, 24H Series, Intercontinental Le Mans Cup, Le Mans 24 Hours, the FIA ​​World Endurance Championship, the V-Endurance GT Tourisme, the European Le Mans Series and the Blancpain Endurance Series. Bibliography wiki

Suzanne Wurtz

Suzanne Wurtz, prima voto Bert, second voto Voyez, tetrio voto Léone (born December 26, 1900 in Paris, July 27, 1982 in Aix-en-Provence) - French swimmer from the first half of the twentieth century , participant in the Olympic Games. During the VII Summer Olympics in Antwerp in 1920, nineteen-year-old Wurtz competed in two swimming competitions. In a 100m freestyle race with an unknown time, she took fifth place in the second qualifying race, which did not allow the French to qualify for the finals. In the 300m freestyle race with a time of 5: 33.0, she finished fourth in the third qualifying race and dropped out of competition. Wurtz represented USFSA. Bibliography wiki

Pierre Dieudonné

Pierre Dieudonné (born 24 March 1947 in Brussels) is a Belgian racing driver and sports journalist. Career Dieudonné started his international racing career in 1973 after competing in the European Super Vee Formula. With the achievement of four points he placed there in 21 positions in the general classification. In subsequent years, he also appeared in the Formula 3, British Formula 3, British Formula 3 BARC BP Super Visco, European Touring Car Championship (1976 champion), British Formula 3 BRDC ShellSport, German Racing Championship, German Formula 3, European Formula World Formula One World Championship, Formula One World Championship, Formula One World Championship, Formula One World Championship, Formula One World Championship, Formula One World Championship The Overheys 1000, the Asia-Pacific Touring Car Championship, the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the British Touring Car Championship, the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, the Australian Endurance Championship and the Sportscar World...

Paul Warwick

Paul Warwick (born 29 January 1969 in New Alresford, died July 21, 1991 in Cheshire) is a British racing driver. Career Warwick started his racing career in 1986 with the Dunlop Autosport Star of Tomorrow, the Ford 1600, and the 1600 Ford Junior Townsend Thoresen Championship. In both series he won the championship titles. In later years, he also appeared in the Dutch Formula Ford 2000, British Formula Ford 2000, European Formula Ford 2000, Formula 3 Monaco Formula 3, Formula 3 Supercross, Formula 3000 and British Formula 3000. In the Formula 3000 British, he competed in three races of the 1990 season with the British team Leyton House Racing. But he did not score. He was ranked 29th in the final drivers' classification. In 1991, during the fifth race of the British Formula 3000 race, Oulton Park hit the barrier at 230 km / h. He died due to injuries. Bibliography wiki

Timothy of Gaza

Coats and emblems of dependent territories - official, arranged in alphabetical order: Main article: Dependent Territory. Separate articles: State coat and State emblem. Also see the category: Emblems and Emblems of Historical States. The coat of arms and the emblem of the dependent territories the usurper of pagan Alexandrian circles, including, for example, the closure of the Horapollon school. Timothy had to be his disciple before the end of the 80s. During the reign of Emperor Anastasius I (491-518) he wrote an epic didactic work on the quadrupeds in India, Arabia, Egypt and Libya, peculiar birds and snakes. The words of Suidas show that in addition to prose Timothy wrote also hexameter. Only excerpts from the book of animals in Konstanty Porphyrogenet and in the extracts issued by Matthaei and Haupt have survived from his work. Contrary to the title, they also contain remarks on European animals, even domestic ones, though they mainly focus on the animal worlds taken from Op...

Franciszek Bronowski

Franciszek Bronowski (born September 27, 1928 in Vilnius, died November 18, 1992 in Lodz) is a Polish historian, historian and historiographer. Curriculum vitae He completed his studies in history and sociology at UŁ. Doctorate in 1961 on the basis of the work The idea of ​​the municipalities in Polish historiography (genesis and development) (promoter: Marian Henryk Serejski). Between 1953-1992 he was employed at the Faculty of Popular and Ancient History at the Faculty of Ancient and Modern History and the Department of Modern and Modern History. Member of PTH and LN. He dealt with the analysis of the historiographic work of Adam Naruszewicz (unfinished habilitation work), the Polish historiographical thought of the Age of Enlightenment. Author of articles for PSB. Selected publications Bibliography wiki

Friedrich von Wallenrode

Friedrich (Fryderyk) von Wallenrode (born July 15, 1410 in Grunwald) is a great marshal of the Teutonic Order. He died in the battle of Grunwald. Fryderyk von Wallenrode was the brother of Grand Master Konrad Wallenrode, his relatives were also Johann von Wallenrode, the Archbishop of Riga from 1393 to 1416. Frederick von Wallenrode before 1393 was the mayor of Tczew. At that time Fritz's brother, the great master of the Teutonic Order, Konrad von Wallenrode, also led a vibrant economic and colonial activity in Prussia. On his initiative a new commando was established in Ryn in 1393. Her first supervisor was Friedrich von Wallenrode. Later, after 1396, he was also the commander of Gniew, Brodnica and finally Konigsberg. As a lieutenant of Konigsberg, he served as the great marshal of the Teutonic Order. At the Battle of Grunwald Frederick Wallenrode commanded the left wing of the monastery army. wiki

Ignacy Gryczyński

University of North Texas Ignacy Gryczyński - born Physicist, biologist, professor of cell biology and anatomy, director of the Department of Microscopy at the University of North Texas Department of Cell and Genetic Biology. In 1966 he graduated from Lobia High School and passed his high school diploma. He completed his studies and defended his doctorate in physics from the University of Gdańsk. He twice received the Minister of Science Award in 1975 (with A. Kawski) and 1981. Author of over 400 publications Research interests in fluorescence spectroscopy and its applications in biochemistry and biology. Member of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine and the Gdansk Scientific Society. Bibliography wiki

Shintarō Ishihara

Shintarō Ishihara (Japanese: 石 原 慎 太郎, Ishihara Shintarō, born September 30, 1932 in Kobe) is a Japanese politician and writer. Ishihara was born in Kobe but grew up in Zushi. He studied at Hitotsubashi University in 1952-1956. He received a prestigious prize for them. Akutagawa for the novel Taiyō no kisetsu (The Sun, 1956). This is a story about youth without ideals, lost in the initial period of prosperity. It was filmed by Takumi Furukawa (played by the younger brother of the writer, Yūjirō). He also wrote: Kurutta kajitsu (Crazy Fruit, 1956), Umi no chizu (Map of the Sea, 1958), Kaseki no mori (Fossil Forest, 1970). Noise to Nihon (Japan That Can Say No, 1989). Ishihara used his literary popularity to take up his political career. In 1968, the Liberal Democratic Party was elected to the House of Representatives and then to the House of Representatives four years later. In the years 1999-2012 he was governor of Tokyo. Bibliography wiki

Tor Einar Hielm

Tor Einar Hielm - Norwegian skater. Bronze medalist for the world championships in 1991. Multiple representative of Norway in qualifying individual world championships (eg two-time participant of the Scandinavian finals: 1988 - 13th place and 1991 - 16th place). Winner of the Individual Junior World Championships (Zielona Góra 1987 - 9th place), World Championships (Poznań 1991 - 3rd place) and individual Champion Cup (Krško 1988 - 16th place and Elgane 1991 - VII place). Zloty (1987) and bronze medalist (1994) of the individual championships of Norway. Double gold (1991, 1998), silver (1999) and bronze medalist (2001) of the Norwegian team championship. He started in the Norwegian and Swedish leagues (in the colors of Tuna Rebels Eskilstuna and Norbaggarna). Bibliography wiki

Jiří Damborský

Jiří Damborský (born 1927, d. 2013) - Czech linguist, Slavic, polonist and bohemist, long-time scholar of the University of Ostrava, 1989-1999 prof. dr hab. Chair of Slavic Studies at the University of Opole, author of several textbooks for learning the Czech language. Curriculum vitae He studied Slavic studies at Charles University in Prague and then at the Jagiellonian University in Cracow and the Palacky University in Olomouc, where he received his doctorate in philosophy in 1952. A long-time professor of Czech in Polish universities, including 1950-1952 at the University them. Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, and in 1960-1966 at the University of Warsaw. In 1965, he obtained his habilitation at the University of Warsaw. He is a professor of Polish studies and Slavic studies at the University of Olomouc, and since 1989, professor at the Higher School of Pedagogy in Opole (now Opole University). In 1990, he was allowed to return to the University of Olomouc, and in 1991 he was appointe...

Klementyna Mien

Klementyna Julia Mien (born October 6, 1870 in Cracow, died February 20, 1954 in Montereau) is a painter, photographer. Daughter of Polish Petronelle and French photographer and writer Juliusz Miena, painter's sister Juliusz. She was educated at the Industrial School in Cracow, at the Higher Course for Women. A. Baraniecki and privately at Joseph Mehoffer. In the years 1900-1903 she continued her studies in Paris at the Académie des Beaux-Arts and in private schools. After returning to Cracow she was involved in painting and photography, leading her father (1906-1919) to death. Approx. In 1910 it opened under its name the Department of Artistic Photography at ul. Kolejowa 11 (later Potocki 11, now Westerplatte). In 1934 she visited Bochnia, where she soon moved and at ul. Kazimierz Wielki 10 opened the Department of Art Photography and Magazines "ARS", which she led along with her student, Janina Podgajna. In 1950 she left for France, passing her atelier to her frien...

Rinaldo Orsini

Rinaldo Orsini (born in Rome, died June 6, 1374 in Avignon) is an Italian cardinal. Curriculum vitae He came from the famous Orsini family. In his youth he was an archdiocese in Liège and Perugia, as well as an apostolic proton. On December 17, 1350, he was created a cardinal and received the diacon of S. Adriano. In 1366 he became archbishop of the Vatican Basilica. A year later he was accused of accepting the faith of the Byzantine emperor Jan Paleolog. From 1370 to the death of the protodist. Attended the conclave of 1352 1362, 1370. Bibliography wiki

Hanna Iłowiecka-Przeciszewska

Hanna Iłowiecka-Przeciszewska (born 1 October 1923, 6 June 2013) is a Catholic and social activist. Curriculum vitae She was the daughter of industrialist Kazimierz Iłowiecki and Wanda Piszczatowska. Her father during the German occupation was deputy of the Delegate of the Civil Government of the Republic of Poland. to the Warsaw voivodship. During the war, she was educated on secret sets, first obtaining her high school diploma in 1941, at the Warsaw High School. Cecilia Plater-Zyberkny. Then she studied pedagogy in the underground University of Western Lands in Warsaw. During the war, she was active in the Marian Sodality, and immediately after the end of the war she was the co-organizer of the Marian Sodality in Poland. In the years 1946-1947 she held the post of president of the female academic of the Marian Sodality in Warsaw. Then, in 1948-1952, she was imprisoned in the cellars of the Ministry of Public Security and then imprisoned at ul. Rakowieckie in Warsaw. Since 1956, ...