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The road was completed in 1951 and, since 1999, the section has been known as the Antonio-Talbot road .
The toponym Lac Talbot was formalized on December 5, 1968 by the Commission de toponymie du Québec.
Alamgir Alam
Alamgir Alam is an Indian politician.
He is a four-term MLA for Pakaur constituency in the Jharkhand Vidhan Sabha as a member of the Indian National Congress.
Alam has been elected to the Jharkhand assembly in the 2000, 2004, 2014 and 2019 elections while he lost in the 2009 elections.
Alam served as the Speaker of the Jharkhand assembly between October 20, 2006 and December 12, 2009.
In the 2019 Jharkhand Legislative Assembly election, Alam retained his seat, defeating Akil Akhtar, who had previously held the seat following the 2009 elections.
Following the elections in which Congress emerged victorious alongside its coalition partners JMM and RJD, Alam was elected the leader of the Congress Legislature Party.
On December 29, 2019, Alam was among the initial four members sworn into the state Cabinet along with Chief Minister Hemant Soren, Rameshwar Oraon and Satyanand Bhokta.
The Novel Magazine
The Novel Magazine was the first British all-fiction pulp magazine.
It ran from 1905 to 1937 when it was absorbed into "The Grand Magazine".
From 1918 to 1922 "The Novel Magazine" was edited by the writer E. C. Vivian.
Contributors of fiction to "The Novel Magazine" included Rafael Sabatini, Agatha Christie, Elinor Glyn, R. Austin Freeman, Edgar Wallace, Sax Rohmer, Baroness Orczy and P. G. Wodehouse.
The Total Money Makeover
The Total Money Makeover: A Proven Plan for Financial Fitness is a best-selling personal finance book written by Dave Ramsey that was first published in 2003.
"The Total Money Makeover" teaches individuals how to get out of debt as well as how to budget.
The book teaches the seven baby steps to follow in order to achieve financial stability, planning ahead for upcoming financial events, like retirement, and shares stories of individuals and couples that have done so successfully.
The seven baby steps are:
As of August 2017, over five million copies have been sold and the book has been on "The Wall Street Journal" bestsellers list for over 500 weeks.
Jamie Johnson's review for Bankrate stated that, "If you've been struggling with debt and need a step-by-step plan for how to pay it off, ""The Total Money Makeover"" gives you precisely that."
Kathleen Elkins and Libby Kane wrote for the Business Insider, "Financial guru Dave Ramsey doesn't shower his readers with quick fixes in ""The Total Money Makeover"."
He provides a bold approach to finance matters and gets to the bottom of money problems: "you".
Ministry of Health and Medical Services
Ministry of Health and Medical Services may refer to:
My Holo Love
My Holo Love () is an upcoming South Korean television series starring Yoon Hyun-min and Ko Sung-hee.
It is set to be released on Netflix on February 7, 2020.
Because of her face blindness disorder, Han So-yeon decided to live a reclusive life.
This changes when she starts using the AI program Holo whose appearance is the same as the developer's assistant, Go Nan-do.
The latter slowly falls in love with So-yeon but his cold personality, which contrasts with Holo's, isn't in his favor.
Ministry of Health and Medical Services (Kiribati)
The Ministry of Health and Medical Services (MHMS) is a governmental ministry of Kiribati.
It is partnered with the World Bank, Unicef, Australian Aid, UNFPA, and New Zealand Foreign Affairs and Trade.
American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education
The American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education (AAHHE) represents professional academics, researchers, educators, and students in the United States of America and focuses on issues affecting Hispanics in higher education.
It functions as a United States nonprofit 501(c)(3) membership society.
AAHHE was originally the Hispanic caucus of the American Association of Higher Education (AAHE) and was formed in 2005 after that organization went defunct, to address the under representation of Hispanics in higher education.
It does so by highlighting scholarship focusing on the social issues of Hispanics, the shaping of educational policies, and the professional development of Hispanic faculty and administrators.
The organization holds an annual meeting and offers a fellowship program for graduate students and junior faculty.
Presidents of the society have included:
Past Tomás Rivera lecturers have included: Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison and U.S. Secretary Henry Cisneros.
The association sponsors several awards including:
Past winners include:
Ministry of Health and Medical Services (Fiji)
Ministry of Health and Medical Services (MOH) is a government ministry of Fiji.
Its head office is in the Dinem House in Toorak, Suva.
The Star of Valencia (French-language film)
The Star of Valencia (French: L'étoile de Valencia) is a 1933 drama film directed by Serge de Poligny and starring Brigitte Helm, Jean Gabin and Simone Simon.
It was the French-language version of the German film "The Star of Valencia".
Such multi-language versions were common in the era before dubbing became widespread.
While made by largely the same crew except the director, it features a completely different cast.
It was produced by UFA at the Babelsberg Studios, and distributed by the company's French subsidiary L'Alliance Cinématographique Européenne.
The film's sets were designed by the art director Otto Hunte.
It incorporated footage shot on location in Mallorca from the German film.
Alnön old church
Alnön old church () is a medieval church on the island of Alnön, Sundsvall Municipality, Sweden.
The oldest part of the church probably originates from the 13th century.
The church is mentioned in 1314 as subordinate to Skön, and Alnön became its own pastorate only in 1892.
It is thought that the sacristy and the cemetery were built in the 15th century.
In 1778, a wooden porch was added.
The windows in the southern and eastern walls were enlarged in the 18th century.
It was built by local inhabitants.
By 1863, the church became too small, and Alnön new church was built nearby.
After that, the old church was disused and only restored in the 1927 under direction of Erik Salvén.
Medieval frescoes from around 1500 have been preserved.
The church used to keep a wooden baptismal font made in the 13th century, however, it has been moved to the new church.
The weathercock on top of the church was voted in 2008 to be the Church Cock of the Year in Sweden.
The building is protected as a cultural heritage monument at the regional level.
Georget Bertoncello
Georget Bertoncello (3 September 1943 – 22 December 2019) was a Belgian footballer who played as a striker.
Parachanna insignis
Parachanna insignis is a species of ray-finned fish from the snakehead family, Channidae from western central Africa.
Stephen Miles
Stephen Miles may refer to:
Legend (Tchaikovsky)
Legend (Russian: Легенда, "Legenda"), Op.
54, No.
5 (also known as The Crown of Roses in some English-language sources) is a composition by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
Originally written in 1883 as a song for solo voice and piano, it was subsequently arranged by Tchaikovsky for solo voice and orchestra (1884), and then for unaccompanied choir (1889).
The words are based on the poem "Roses and Thorns" by American poet Richard Henry Stoddard, originally published in "Graham's Magazine" of May 1856.
Stoddard's poem was translated into Russian by the poet, Aleksey Pleshcheyev and published in the Russian journal "Sem'ia i shkola" ("Family and School") in 1877.
Pleshcheyev described the origin of the poem only as "translated from the English", without crediting Stoddard, the nature of whose contribution was thus lost.
The poem was included in Pleshcheyev's anthology "Snowdrop" (Подснeжник; 1878), where it was found by Tchaikovsky.
When "Legend" is sung by English-speaking choirs, the words used are usually those of Geoffrey Dearmer, who translated Pleschcheyev's Russian text back into English for the "English Carol Book" (1913).
Dearmer himself was only 20 years old when he wrote the words.
While Pleshcheyev's Russian lyrics are a literal translation of Stoddard, and also copy the original rhyming scheme ABCB, Dearmer uses considerable poetic licence and a new rhyming scheme of AABB.
The song is in the key of E minor, but the lack of any accidentals in the melody gives it a modal character.
The original form of the song has a brief piano introduction and coda.
This is retained in the orchestral arrangement.
In the choral arrangement, the introduction is eliminated, and the piano coda is replaced by a choral coda featuring extremely low basses.
The melody of the original version is shown below:
<score vorbis="1">
\new Staff «
\break
\break
\break
\break
\break