text
stringlengths 1
2.56k
|
---|
The reported elevation range of "S. ligulatus" is between 100 and 750 m. |
Lactarius alachuanus |
Lactarius alachuanus is a member of the large genus "Lactarius" (order Russulales), known as milk-caps. |
Found in North America, the species was first described in 1938 by American mycologist William Alphonso Murrill. |
It is associated with oaks ("Quercus" spp. |
). |
Featley |
Featley is a surname. |
Notable people with the surname include: |
1950 East German state elections |
State elections were held in East Germany on 15 October 1950. |
They were the last state elections in the country, as the states were dissolved in 1952. |
Voters were presented with a single list from the Socialist Unity Party of Germany-dominated National Front, which they could only approve or reject. |
The seat allocation in each of the state parliaments was agreed in advance between the constituent parties and mass organizations of the Front. |
Voting was not secret, and citizens that voted against the list or abstained were persecuted. |
Genuine or presumed opponents of the SED that participated in other member parties of the National Front were arrested or forced to flee to West Germany. |
Harsent |
Harsent is a surname. |
Notable people with the surname include: |
Midson |
Midson is a surname. |
Notable people with the surname include: |
Sakura Mori |
She was the women's singles winner at the 2017 India Open. |
She also won the women's doubles title at the 2015 Belarus Open with Miyu Maeda. |
Kuebler |
Kuebler is a surname. |
Notable people with the surname include: |
Havel (film) |
Havel is a 2020 Czech historical film based on life of dissident and former Czech president Václav Havel. |
It is directed by Slávek Horák and stars Viktor Dvořák. |
The film focuses on Havel's life from 1968 to 1989 when he was a dissident under Comunist regime and relationship with his wife Olga and friend Pavel Landovský. |
Sandy Ese Idigbe |
Sandy Ese Idigbe (born September 27, 1991) is an international campaigner, activist and media commentator based in London, United Kingdom. |
She has also been cast for an upcoming Netflix Documentary movie. |
She completed her degree in English BA in University College London, to become a broadcast presenter at the London radio station Reprezent alongside a role as a production researcher for Channel 4. |
Sandy setup FouGen! |
A hub, aimed at 18-35-year-olds, originally funded by Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London back at time. |
In December 2019 Idigbe had a meeting with United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson to discuss social issues in Society and Woman in Politics having also a speech at UK House of Lords. |
At the beginning of January 2020, Sandy and other Anti-knife crime campaigners blocked the Westminster Bridge, a demonstration calling for a political action to stop further bloodsheds. |
Later that same month she spoke to London Post on topics such as hunger, overpopulation, and pollution. |
At the end of 2019 a documentary movie based on Idigbe was set in production by New Line Cinema. |
In addition she will star in Netflix feature film. |
Chandler, Ohio |
Chandler is an unincorporated community in Wayne Township, Jefferson County, Ohio, United States. |
It is located south of Bloomingdale at the intersection of Bloomingdale-Smithfield-Chandler Road and County Road 24, at . |
The Chandler Post Office was established on April 16, 1921 and discontinued December 31, 1932. |
Mail service is now handled through the Bloomingdale branch. |
As of 1949, the Pittsburgh and West Virginia Railway was operating a freight terminal here. |
Micheál Aodh Martin |
Micheál Aodh Martin (born 1994) is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Cork Championship club Nemo Rangers and at inter-county level with the Cork senior football team. |
He usually lines out as a goalkeeper. |
Peter Skellerup |
Peter Jensen Reid Skellerup (also Skjellerup, 14 January 1918 – 15 May 2006) was a New Zealand industrialist and philanthropist. |
Skellerup was born in Christchurch in 1918. |
His father was George Skellerup (1881–1955), the founder of rubber manufacturing company Skellerup Industries. |
His mother was Elizabeth, Reid. |
His father was born in Australia but the family stemmed from Denmark, with his father's birth name including a silent "j" that he dropped from the name at some point. |
On their birth certificates, the original spelling Skjellerup was used for all five siblings born between 1907 (his brother Valdemar was the oldest) and 1918 (Peter was the youngest). |
The three middle siblings were girls. |
Frank Skjellerup, an Australian amateur astronomer, was his uncle. |
Peter received his education at Christchurch Boys' High School. |
He saw service in World War II with the 37th Battalion of the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force in the Solomon Islands fighting again Japan. |
Upon leaving school in 1934, he became an office boy in one of his father's companies, the Latex Rubber Company. |
He took over as joint managing director in 1955 upon his father's death alongside his brother Valdemar. |
In 1977, he became deputy chairman of the Skellerup parent company. |
In 1982, he was handed full control by his brother not long before his brother's death. |
Skellerup was first elected to Christchurch City Council in 1958 and served almost continuously until 1980. |
The Labour Party won the 1957 general election and upon the Second Labour Government being formed, several sitting city councillors received high-ranking positions in government and resigned from their local roles. |
This triggered the 1958 Christchurch local by-election, where four city councillor positions were contested by nine candidates. |
Skellerup, standing for the conservative Citizens' ticket, came fourth and was thus elected. |
In the 1959 Christchurch local election, the Citizens' ticket won all 19 city council seats, with Skellerup coming fifth (the mayor, George Manning, was from the Labour Party). |
Skellerup came sixth in 1962. |
In the 1965 local election, Skellerup stood for both the city council and the mayoralty. |
He was decisively defeated by the mayoral incumbent, Manning, but came second in the city council election (once again for 19 positions). |
In 1968, Skellerup stood for council only and came second. |
During this term, Skellerup lost his council seat over a technicality; he had breached the Local Authorities (Members’ Interests) Act 1968. |
In the lead up to the 1971 election, Skellerup was publicly critical of the Citizens' mayor, Ron Guthrey, over his proposal to build a road through North Hagley Park. |
Skellerup had never been fond of Guthrey and as a past chairman of the Parks and Reserves Committee, he was extremely annoyed by Guthrey going behind his back and announcing the road proposal without checking with him first. |
At the election, Guthrey was defeated, Labour gained a majority on the city council, but Skellerup was the highest-polling council candidate by a large margin. |
The 1974 election was a turnaround, with Labour's incumbent Pickering defeated by the Citizens' candidate Hamish Hay. |
According to Hay, Skellerup was not considered as the Citizens' mayoral candidate over the furore that he had caused for Guthrey. |
The Citizens' ticket also gained a majority on the city council and from 1974 to 1980, Skellerup was deputy-mayor to Hay. |
Skellerup was also a member of the Lyttelton Harbour Board for twelve years, for three of those he was the chairman. |
Since 1964, he was Consul of Denmark, first for the South Island and later for all of New Zealand. |
In 1941, he married Rita Margaret Grogan (26 August 1919 – 1985); they were to have one son and three daughters. |
His wife died in 1985. |
His second marriage was to Evelyn Rogers, who died in 1999. |
In 1974, he was awarded Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog by Denmark. |
In the 1979 New Year Honours, Skellerup was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the City of Christchurch. |
Skellerup sponsored the Antarctic wing at Canterbury Museum and to recognise his contribution, Skellerup Glacier in New Zealand's Ross Dependency in Antarctica was named for him. |
Skellerup died in Christchurch on 15 May 2006, and was buried at Ruru Lawn Cemetery. |
He was survived by the four children from his first marriage. |
His Private Life |
His Private Life may refer to: |
Semisi Fonua |
Semisi Fatafehi Fonua (1911 – 5 January 1968) was a Tongan noble and politician. |
He held the titles of Kalaniuvalu and Fotofili, and was a member of the Legislative Assembly between 1936 and his death in 1968, serving as Speaker from 1951 until 1958. |
Born in 1911, Fonua was educated at primary school in Niuafoʻou and Tupou College. |
In June 1932 he married Sisilia Tupou; the couple had three daughers and four sons. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.