text
stringlengths 1
2.56k
|
---|
Ramesh Choudhary
|
,Ek gav 10vi Napas, Hasa pn Daat ghada.
|
Ramesh Choudhary was born in Chinchwad, Pune and now lives in Mumbai.
|
His father worked as an employee for Government of Maharashtra.
|
He completed his schooling from Vikas vidya mandir, chinchwad and did his graduation in Arts from Pune University.
|
He is married to Komal Choudhary and they have two children, Shree, Vedant.
|
He started his career with the Marathi play 'Makdach Lagn' in famous Bal Gandharva Ranga Mandir.
|
Ramesh started his career in movies by acting in a film Satya directed by Pushkar Jog where he played a role of Dum n duff.
|
Since then he has acted in many films and television serials.
|
He has acted in many Marathi TV serials, movies and theatre.
|
He has also directed some of popular marathi movies.
|
In 2019 he made his directorial debut with film Babo in 2019 which was a commercial success.
|
He also acted in it.
|
The film Babo 2019 was released on 31 May 2019 He has been applauded by many noted professionals.
|
His noted roles include the role of Pintya in the movie Babo, which was a commecial hit Many songs of this movie become viral ans appreciated by audience.
|
.
|
His role of Gotya was also appreciated in the film "Hasa pn dat Ghasa", which was comedy movie.
|
He also worked as Assistant Director in many marathi films.
|
The films in which he worked as Assistant Director include Mission Possible which was directed by Pushkar Jog, KuruKshetra directed by Milind Lele, Mala ek chance hava directed by Bal Mohite among others.
|
Ramesh has also acted in various plays by different theatre groups.
|
His major plays include Makdach Lagn by theatre group Bal Gandharva Ranga Mandir,Abanchi sabha by theatre group of Ramkrushn More and Wari Via Baari by Bal Gandharva Ranga Mandir.
|
He has also worked in various television serials.
|
His major television serials include Ghar sansar on Sahyadri channel which was aired in year 2008 and
|
Sant Bhagwan Baba on Astha channel which was aired in year 2011.
|
Elizabeth Alsemgeest
|
Elizabeth Alsemgeest (born 9 January 2002) is a New Zealand water polo player.
|
She competed for the New Zealand women's national water polo team in the 2019 World Aquatics Championships.
|
She played for St. Cuthbert's College.
|
Morgan Mcdowall
|
Morgan Mcdowall (born 29 March 2002) is a New Zealand water polo player.
|
She competed for the New Zealand women's national water polo team in the 2019 World Aquatics Championships.
|
Katie McKenty
|
Katie McKenty (born 30 January 1996) is a New Zealand water polo player.
|
She competed for the New Zealand women's national water polo team in the 2019 World Aquatics Championships.
|
She played for Hartwick College.
|
Grace Tobin
|
Grace Tobin (born 9 June 1997 ) is a New Zealand water polo player.
|
She competed for the New Zealand women's national water polo team in the 2019 World Aquatics Championships.
|
Carlino (name)
|
Carlino is an Italian surname from the Milan region.
|
Notable people using this name include the following:
|
IRRI railway station
|
IRRI is a flagstop on the Main Line South of the Philippine National Railways (PNR), located at the front gate of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) opposite to Pili drive, in the city of Los Baños, Laguna.
|
2020 NCAA Division I FCS football season
|
The 2020 NCAA Division I FCS football season, part of college football in the United States, will be organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level.
|
Presbyterian will play the 2020 season as an FCS independent before joining the non-scholarship FCS Pioneer Football League in 2021; it will remain a full but non-football Big South member.
|
This is restricted to coaching changes that took place on or after May 1, 2020.
|
For coaching changes that occurred earlier in 2020, see 2019 NCAA Division I FCS end-of-season coaching changes.
|
Saša Milenić
|
Saša Milenić () is a politician in Serbia.
|
Based in Kragujevac, he was for many years an ally of mayor Veroljub Stevanović and a member of the Together for Šumadija ("Zajedno za Šumadiju") party.
|
He served in the National Assembly of Serbia for most of the period from 2008 to 2014.
|
Milenić is now a member of the Movement of Free Citizens ("Pokret slobodnih građana", PSG) and the leader of the "Šumadijske regije", which holds collective membership in the PSG.
|
Milenić was born in Foča, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
|
He is a graduate of the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy and a teacher at First Kragujevac High School.
|
He has published four books of poetry and essays.
|
Milenić became politically active in 1996 as a member of the "Zajedno" (Together) coalition, a shaky alliance of several political parties opposed to Slobodan Milošević's administration.
|
Although the "Zajendo" name ceased to be used in most municipalities after 1997, it continued to be the name of Stevanović's local political movement for several years thereafter; Milenić was a prominent member of this organization.
|
At the republic level, both Milenić and Stevanović were initially members of the Serbian Renewal Movement ("Srpski pokret obnove", SPO).
|
Milenić appeared on the SPO's electoral list in the 2000 Serbian parliamentary election; the list did not cross the threshold to win representation in the assembly.
|
The SPO formed an alliance with New Serbia ("Nova Srbija", NS) for the 2003 Serbian parliamentary election, and Milenić appeared in the thirty-eighth position on their list, which won twenty-two mandates.
|
From 2000 to 2011, parliamentary mandates in Serbia were awarded at the discretion of the sponsoring parties, and it was common practice for seats to be awarded out of numerical order; the SPO could have selected Milenić for a seat in parliament, but it did not.
|
Following local elections in 2004, he became deputy mayor of Kragujevac, a position he held for the next four years.
|
The SPO subsequently split in 2005, and Milenić joined a breakaway group called the Serbian Democratic Renewal Movement ("Srpski Demokratski Pokret Obnove", SDPO).
|
The party contested the 2007 Serbian parliamentary election on a list led by New Serbia and the Democratic Party of Serbia ("Demokratska stranka Srbije", DSS).
|
Milenić was included on the list, which won forty-seven seats.
|
He was again not selected for a mandate.
|
Stevanović and Milenić affiliated with the G17 Plus alliance after the 2007 election.
|
This alliance participated in the 2008 Serbian parliamentary election as part of the For a European Serbia list led by the Democratic Party ("Demokratska stranka", DS).
|
The list won 102 mandates, and both Stevanović and Milenić were selected as representatives.
|
The DS and its allies formed a coalition government after the election, and Stevanović and Milenić served in the assembly as supporters of the ministry.
|
Both resigned in September 2011, due to a determination that changes in Serbian law had made their executive functions at the municipal level incompatible with serving in the legislature.
|
G17 Plus and Together for Šumadija subsequently joined the United Regions of Serbia ("Ujedinjeni regioni Srbije", URS), an alliance which contested the 2012 Serbian parliamentary election on its own list.
|
After Serbia's 2011 electoral reforms, parliamentary mandates were awarded in numerical order to candidates on successful lists.
|
Milenić received the tenth position on the URS list and was duly re-elected when the party won sixteen mandates.
|
After the election, the URS initially participated in a new coalition government led by the Serbian Progressive Party and the Socialist Party of Serbia; in 2013, however, it moved into opposition.
|
In the same year, the various constituent groups of the URS (including G17 Plus and Together for Šumadija) merged into a single united party.
|
Milenić was a substitute member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) from 21 January 2013 to 22 May 2014.
|
He also served two terms as president (i.e., speaker) of the Kragujevac assembly between 2008 and 2014; his second term in office, lasting from 2012 to 2014, ended when the Serbian Progressive Party and its allies formed a new local administration.
|
Milenić was promoted to the second position on the URS's list in the 2014 Serbian parliamentary election, but the list did not cross the threshold to win representation in the assembly.
|
The URS subsequently dissolved, and Together for Šumadija was re-established at the local level.
|
For the 2016 Serbian parliamentary election, Together for Šumadija joined a coalition led by the DS.
|
Milenić received the twenty-sixth position and was not returned when the list won sixteen seats.
|
Milenić left Together for Šumadija in 2017, saying that it had not existed as a functional political organization for some time.
|
He joined the Movement of Free Citizens on that party's founding in the same year.
|
In August 2019, he argued that the PSG's decision on boycotting the next Serbian parliamentary election should be made openly by the entire party rather than by its leadership alone.
|
Kaitlyn Howarth
|
Kaitlyn Howarth (born 9 January 2002) is a New Zealand water polo player.
|
She competed for the New Zealand women's national water polo team in the 2019 World Aquatics Championships.
|
She played for Rangitoto College.
|
Kamil Chadirji
|
Kamil Chadirji (1897–1968, ), also spelled Kamil al-Chadirji or Kamel al-Chaderji, was an Iraqi politician, photographer, lawyer, activist, and founder of the National Democratic Party in Iraq.
|
He served as a member of the Chamber of Deputies of Iraq in the 1920s and 1950s.
|
He was the father of Rifat Chadirji.
|
Chadirji was born in Baghdad to its mayor.
|
His family was a part of the aristocracy, with roots in Anatolia.
|
Chaderji's father played an important role in democratic reform before British rule.
|
During the First World War, he served in the Ottoman Army.
|
When the British took over Iraq as Mandatory Iraq, Chadirji's family escaped to Istanbul, with Chadirji himself enrolling in the medical school there.
|
He never graduated, and instead returned to Baghdad in 1922, following the establishment of the Kingdom of Iraq.
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.