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It is mainly for the students coming from the defence background. |
The school was started in 1980 with few students with only primary wing. |
The school got its AWES affiliation in the year of 1994 and in the continuation, 1997 the school was affiliated with Central Board of Secondary Education. |
In 2009 XI classes was also added to the school. |
Finally the time comes in 2010 the school shifted to the new big building with many advanced facilities. |
Karolj |
Karolj is a Hungarian masculine given name. |
Notable people referred to by this name include the following: |
Fahad Badar |
Fahad Abdul Rahman Badar (born 1979) is a Qatari mountaineer known for being the first Arab male to double summit both Mount Everest and Lhotse in a single expedition on 23 May 2019. |
He is one of only two Qataris to successfully climb Mount Everest to date. |
In August 2019 he went on to achieve two further summits, Mont Blanc and the Matterhorn in the Swiss Alps. |
Fahad Badar was born in Qatar, in 1979. |
He graduated with a BA degree in Banking and Finance from Bangor University in North Wales, UK in 2006. |
He completed his MBA from Durham University in the UK in 2007. |
Badar started his career as a clerk at Commercial Bank of Qatar. |
He is currently serving as the director of United Arab Bank. |
He took on physical fitness and mental training long before his expeditions into Mountaineering. |
He is also a Martial Arts aficionado since 1998 and an Aikido practitioner since 2000. |
Badar started taking climbing seriously at the age of 38 with his first summit Mount Kilimanjaro in February 2018, then onto Jebel Shams in November 2018 the eighth tallest peak in the Middle East, Mount Elbrus in August 2018 and an attempt to summit Aconcagua in December 2018. |
He had received ice climbing training in Scotland. |
In 2019, He received an honor from the Qatar Ministry of Culture and Sports, and also from Nepalese Embassy at Doha. |
Tennis at the 1983 Southeast Asian Games |
Tennis at the 1983 Southeast Asian Games was held at Singapore Tennis Center, Singapore City, Singapore. |
Tennis events was held between 29 May to 5 June. |
Ursus Major Mountain |
Ursus Major Mountain is a mountain summit located in Glacier National Park, in the Hermit Range of the Selkirk Mountains in British Columbia, Canada. |
Ursus Major Mountain is situated west of Rogers Pass, northeast of Revelstoke, and west of Golden. |
Its nearest higher peaks are Catamount Peak, to the southwest, and Ursus Minor Mountain, to the northeast. |
The first ascent of the mountain was made August 5, 1902, by a Dominion Topographic Survey party. |
The mountain's name was adopted in 1906, then re-approved September 8, 1932, by the Geographical Names Board of Canada. |
It was so-named by the survey party because of its proximity above Bear Creek (since renamed Connaught Creek), and in keeping with the bear theme of other nearby features such as Ursus Minor Mountain, Grizzly Mountain, Bruins Pass, and Balu Pass. |
The high point on Ursus Major's east ridge is unofficially called "Balu Peak". |
Based on the Köppen climate classification, Ursus Major Mountain is located in a subarctic climate zone with cold, snowy winters, and mild summers. |
Temperatures can drop below −20 °C with wind chill factors below −30 °C. |
Precipitation runoff from the mountain and meltwater from small unnamed glaciers on its slopes drains into tributaries of the Illecillewaet River and Beaver River. |
John Goodrich (Loyalist) |
John Goodrich (1722–1785) was a Virginia-born British planter, merchant shipper, and privateer. |
Uncommitted at the beginning of the American Revolution, he was recruited by Lord Dunmore to become a Loyalist privateer. |
By his own estimation, he destroyed five hundred vessels in the service of the British Crown. |
Goodrich was born in Virginia in 1722, one of several children of John Goodrich (d. 1746). |
Unlike many Loyalists, Goodrich had deep roots in colonial America; his immigrant ancestor, "John Guttreidge", had patented land in Virginia in 1654. |
In 1747 he married the descendant of another prominent local family, Margaret Bridger, a descendant of the 17th-century Virginia political figure General Joseph Bridger. |
They raised a large family, including a number of sons that would follow their father into mercantile pursuits and, later, privateering. |
One of his daughters, Agatha, married Robert Shedden, who would also become a prominent Loyalist as well as Goodrich's business partner. |
Some of his close relatives ended up on the opposite side of the conflict, including two nephews who served as officers on the Patriot side. |
A keen businessman, Goodrich spent his early adult years expanding his landholdings. |
Over the course of several years, he purchased hundreds of acres of land in Nansemond and Isle of Wight counties. |
By 1771 he owned over 2,000 acres of land, some of it described as the best land in the county. |
Starting in the 1760s, he began to turn his interest from farming to shipping. |
He and his sons owned and operated a dozen ships by 1774, and Goodrich also owned his own wharves, dry goods stores, warehouses, and other establishments useful to his shipping business. |
Operating primarily out of Portsmouth, his small fleet shipped agricultural and timber commodities to the West Indies and to other ports in the colonies. |
The Revolutionary War posed a serious threat to merchants like Goodrich, with blockades cutting off imports and exports, and privateers from both sides attacking merchant vessels. |
Goodrich himself does not seem to have been particularly ideological; both sides of the conflict apparently understood he was more motivated by profit than politics. |
Regardless, the Patriot side decided to enlist the aid of the Goodrich family. |
Using one of Goodrich's sons, William, as a go-between, they provided £5,000 for the purchase of powder in the West Indies, with the understanding that John Goodrich, the father, would assist him in successfully bringing the cargo back without attracting notice. |
The family elected to also purchase other cargo on the trip, risking the wrath of both the British and Patriot sides. |
This mission proved to be a debacle for the Goodriches. |
Though the powder did reach its destination, an intercepted letter to John Goodrich from his son-in-law Robert Shedden revealed the conspiracy to Dunmore, who took Shedden and another of Goodrich's sons into custody. |
With John Goodrich, Jr., held as hostage, the elder John Goodrich sought an audience with Dunmore, where he expressed "sincere repentance of what was past and his earnest desire of returning to his duty". |
Though he recognized Goodrich's essentially mercenary character, Dunmore seized the opportunity to augment British forces with a family of experienced, capable, and ambitious ship captains. |
Having been convinced that his family's interests would be better served by the British, Goodrich and his family turned to the Loyalist cause. |
The start of Goodrich's career as a Loyalist was not auspicious. |
He set out to the West Indies to reclaim some of the money that had been left with a merchant there to purchase additional powder, but was quickly captured by British forces unaware of his new loyalties and promptly sent back to Dunmore. |
The Patriots were, likewise, initially confused regarding his loyalties. |
He was actually imprisoned by the Commonwealth of Virginia, which suspected him "of being unfriendly to the Colony", but when witnesses failed to appear he was released on a bond of £1,000 and the condition that he not be of assistance to America's enemies. |
Goodrich and two of his sons were almost immediately charged again, this time with violating the Articles of Association. |
On 9 March 1776, the Virginia Committee of Safety sequestered the lands and property of the Goodrich family, and when one of the Goodrich sons was caught attempting to transport slaves and stock from the sequestered property, the committee had the property confiscated and put up for auction. |
This marked a decisive break with the Patriot side; General Charles Lee ordered Goodrich's house, as well as two of his ships, burned, justifying it on the grounds that Goodrich was one "of the most notorious Traitors", and that it would be a warning to others not to work with Dunmore. |
Under his agreement with Dunmore, Goodrich's ships had been commissioned directly into government service, and he and his sons became some of the most notorious of the Loyalist privateers. |
He was captured in North Carolina on 17 April 1776 while engaged in privateering, and by May was in a Virginia jail. |
Being found guilty of treason, his entire estate was confiscated and he was imprisoned under guard, effectively a prisoner of war. |
His sons vehemently rejected the committee's offer of neutrality and continued in royal service, with one joining Simcoe's Rangers, and John Goodrich himself returned to privateering after escaping prison. |
Later in the war, Goodrich's privateering operation moved to New York, and grew over the course of the war to four fighting vessels; the largest, "The Dunmore", was a sixteen-gun ship. |
After the war, Goodrich and several of his family members left the United States and settled in England. |
He died in November of 1785, aged 63 years, and was interred at Topsham Church in Devon. |
Edmund Randolph, in his "History of Virginia", remarked regarding Goodrich and his sons that "Virginia never repaired the loss which she sustained in these men." |
In England, the descendants of John Goodrich were known as the Goodriches of Energlyn. |
His son John Goodrich, Jr. was High Sheriff of Glamorganshire in 1798, while another descendant, James Pitt Goodrich, was High Sheriff of Denbighshire in 1878. |
His Shedden descendants prospered as well; they lived for several generations at their estate at Spring Hill, East Cowes. |
Vespamantoida |
Vespamantoida is a genus represented by two species of praying mantises in the family Mantoididae. |
The genus was erected in 2019 and the name was derived from the latin word "vespa" which means wasp and "Mmntoida" referring to the mantis. |
These mantis resemble and mimic the behavior of a wasp. |
There are two species of mantises in this genus: |
Negin Zomorodi |
Negin Zomorodi (; also Romanized as "Negin Zomorrodi", ; born 22 April 1973 in Tehran) is an Iranian composer and pianist. |
Negin Zomorodi was born in 1973 in Tehran. |
She began playing the piano at childhood under the instruction of such renowned masters as Voski Ohanessian and Farimah Qavam-Sadri. |
After graduating in textile engineering from Amirkabir University of Technology (AUT) in 1996, motivated by her love for music, she pursued music composition more seriously than before, which ultimately led to her entrance to Tehran University of Art, and she did an MA in music composition in 2009. |
Zomorodi also took specialized courses in music theory and harmony at The Royal Conservatory of Music (RCM) in Toronto, Canada and got up-to-date with these fields. |
Since then her various works have been performed at festivals and concert halls, e.g. |
Roudaki Hall, including the piece "Shadow" for the flute and piano, performed at the Contemporary Composers Festival in Tehran; the string quartet "Suddenly", performed by the Iranian group "Chahargan"; the string quartet "Migration", performed by the group "Respina Quartet"; and the piece "Butterfly’s Dance", performed at the Contemporary Composers’ Piano Night. |
In addition to composition, Zomorodi is skilled at improvisation, and at the Fereshteh Music Nights Festival one night was allotted to her improvisational playing. |
"Specialized Meetings at Gozar Music Academy" were initiated by her in September 2010, aimed at keeping players, composers, masters, and researchers in touch, as well as upgrading the skills of Iranian students of art. |
Zomorodi has been both financially and spiritually the main supporter of these meetings, which are held monthly at Tehran Book Cities and Gozar Music Academy. |
Zomorodi taught music subjects to graduate and postgraduate students at Tehran University of Art and Islamic Azad University for some years. |
When Gozar Music Academy was founded in 2015, she took up its management. |
SS Connecticut (1938) |
SS "Connecticut" was a 8684 ton tanker ship built in 1938 by Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation and used for a World War II. |
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