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In 2013 Adashev started his professional careers in kickboxing and MMA. |
His professional kickboxing record is 16-3-0 while his MMA record is 3-1-0. |
And Belaator MMA record is 3-0. |
Adashev fights for the kickboxing promotion Glory World Series and MMA promotion Bellator MMA. |
Hand to Hand Combat |
Fight Time.ru |
Sherdog.com |
Bellator.com |
Topology.com |
MMBoxing.ru |
Þorlákur |
Þorlákur (Old Norse: Þorlákr) is an Icelandic given name, meaning "game of Thor". |
Notable people with this name include: |
Sherlock Holmes in Russia |
Sherlock Holmes in Russia () is a Russian detective TV series based on Arthur Conan Doyle's stories about the legendary detective Sherlock Holmes. |
This is the third Russian adaptation about the character and the first with original script. |
The first season is scheduled to release in 2020 on Channel One Russia. |
Jack the Ripper leaves behind a trail of victims and escapes from London to Saint-Petersburg. |
Sherlock Holmes leaves Doctor Watson in England and goes after the deadly killer to Saint Petersburg. |
In Russia, he meets Doctor Kartsev, from whom he rents a living room. |
Dr. Kartsev starts helping him solve very strange, confusing, and complicated crimes, and Holmes is once again forced to convince law enforcement authorities of the correctness of his deductive methods of investigation. |
The Filmings began in St. Petersburg in spring 2019. |
The director was Nurbek Egen. |
He has already shot such series and films as “Alibi”, “Secret Sign” and others detective dramas on the Russian television. |
Oleg Malovichenko worked on the script, his previous works were “Ice”, “Method”, “Attraction” and others. |
The series is not a full-fledged adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle's works, and it based on original script. |
According to the producer Aleksander Remizov: “The plot is based on exciting and mysterious crimes that Sherlock would never have encountered in his native England. |
We will show the viewer a story familiar to everyone, but on the other side. |
The unification of cultures through the adaptation of the Englishman in Russia, new crimes and love are the components of the project that create a new story - 'Sherlock in Russia'”. |
Charles Garrett |
Charles Richard Garrett (3 March 1901 – 16 February 1968) was an English first-class cricketer and Royal Navy officer. |
Garrett was born in British India at Puri in March 1901. |
He attended the Britannia Royal Naval College, graduating into the Royal Navy as an acting sub-lieutenant, with confirmation in the rank following in January 1921. |
He was promoted to lieutenant in December 1922. |
Garrett made his debut in first-class cricket for the Royal Navy Cricket Club against the British Army cricket team at Lord's in 1926. |
He made three further first-class appearances for the navy in 1929, playing against the Marylebone Cricket Club, the Army and the Royal Air Force. |
Playing as a bowler, he took a total of 7 wickets in his four matches, with best figures of 3 for 124. |
He was promoted to lieutenant commander in December 1930, before being placed on the retired list at his own request in January 1934. |
He came out of retirement during the Second World War, during which he was promoted to commander in March 1941 and mentioned in dispatches in November 1944. |
He died in Kenya in February 1968. |
Schwarz function |
The Schwarz function, named for Hermann Schwarz, was introduced in a 1974 book by Philip J. Davis. |
Vert Lake (Hébertville) |
The Lac Vert is a freswater body of the watershed of Belle Rivière and Lac Saint-Jean, in the municipality of Hébertville, in the Lac-Saint-Jean-Est Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean, in the province of Quebec, in Canada. |
The area around the lake is served by the route 169 which passes to the west, by the rang Saint-Isidore road (north shore) and by the rang du Lac Vert road (south shore), for the needs of recreational tourism activities, especially vacationing. |
Recreational and tourist activities, especially vacationing, are the main economic activities in this area; agriculture and forestry, second. |
The surface of Lac Vert is usually frozen from the beginning of December to the end of March, however the safe circulation on the ice is generally done from mid-December to mid-March. |
The main watersheds near Lac Vert are: |
Lac Vert has a length of , a width of and an altitude of . |
This lake is mainly fed by riparian streams. |
On the north side, this lake is separated from Kénogamichiche Lake, by a strip of land with a width varying between and , along the entire length of the lake. |
The mouth of this lake is located to the northeast, at: |
From the mouth of Lac Vert, the current crosses Kénogamichiche Lake on to the west, then follows the course of the Rivière des Aulnaies on north-west, the course of La Belle Rivière on north-west (via a bay), then crosses the eastern part of Lac Saint-Jean toward north on , follows the Saguenay river via the Petite Décharge on to Tadoussac where it merges with the Saint Lawrence estuary. |
The toponym "Lac Vert" was formalized on September 23, 1975 by the Commission de toponymie du Québec. |
Philoscia |
Philoscia is a genus of woodlice in the family Philosciidae. |
There are more than 80 described species in "Philoscia". |
These 81 species belong to the genus "Philoscia": |
Heather Anderson (politician) |
Heather Anderson is a Scottish politician, who briefly served as the Member of the European Parliament for the Scotland constituency in late January 2020. |
Anderson was elected as a councillor for the Tweeddale West ward at the 2017 Scottish Borders Council election. |
She was originally placed fifth on the Scottish National Party list for the 2019 European Parliament election, where the party won 3 seats. |
However, following the election of first placed Alyn Smith at the 2019 United Kingdom general election, he ceased to be an MEP, as an individual cannot simultaneously be a member of a member state's legislature and of the European Parliament. |
Fourth placed Margaret Ferrier was also elected at the same election. |
This made Anderson eligible for the newly vacant SNP seat, which she took on 27 January 2020. |
However, she only served as an MEP for four days until 31 January when the Brexit process completed. |
She is an organic farmer who owns her own produce and butcher shop in the Scottish Borders. |
Susan G. Bond |
Susan Bond (born 1942), was a scientific officer and computer programmer for the Mathematics Division of the Royal Radar Establishment (RRE) in the United Kingdom. |
She worked extensively on the ALGOL 68 programming language and the Royal Radar Establishment Automatic Computer (RREAC), an early solid-state, ICL 1907F computer. |
Bond was born in 1942 and grew up in Dagenham, Essex, in the UK. |
Both her parents were teachers, and she was an only child. |
She studied at Bristol University from 1962 to 1965, where she studied mathematics and science and received first-class honours. |
After graduating from Bristol, Bond was interested in working in applied mathematics, although she didn't have computer training before that point. |
She applied to and joined the Mathematics Division of the RRE in 1965; she was hired by British mathematician and engineer Philip Woodward. |
Her work mostly consisted of writing operating systems and compilers, not "numerical" computing. |
At the beginning of her career, Bond was the only female scientific officer with a graduate education at RRE. |
Bond later learned that her supervisor Woodward had been, as historian Janet Abbate describes, "'actively recruiting women' as an affordable source of high-quality researchers". |
One of her first projects was reimplementing Syntax Improving Device (SID), a compiler-compiler tool developed by Michael Foster (another RRE employee) to generate compilers for high-level programming languages. |
Afterwards, she worked with Ian Currie on Coral 64, a high-level language for embedded computers. |
The RRE had originally used ALGOL 60 for the RREAC from its initial development in 1963. |
After the International Federation for Information Processing published the specifications for the more powerful ALGOL 68 in 1968, RRE attempted to adapt it for use on the RREAC. |
Susan Bond worked with John Morison and Ian Currie on ALGOL 68-R, the first compiler implementation of ALGOL 68, and they announced its creation at the 20–24 July 1970 conference "IFIP Working Conference on ALGOL 68 Implementation" in Munich. |
Their ALGOL 68-R was an adaptation of the ALGOL 60 compiler they had built for RREAC. |
The team that worked on ALGOL 68-R intended for the language to become the RRE's primary programming language, which could be used for scientific programming as well as business administration tasks like payroll and taking inventory. |
After the publication of the ALGOL 68-R specifications, Bond published a narrative guide to ALGOL 68, titled "ALGOL 68-R User’s Guide", with Philip Woodward through HM Stationery Office. |
The guide's initial 17,000 copy run sold out. |
Bond effectively provided ongoing support for the compiler; readers would contact her whenever they had trouble implementing it. |
Bond and Woodward continued to update and publish new versions of the their guide for the RRE's later implementations of ALGOL, such as ALGOL 68RS. |
One reviewer, Richard Shreeve, contested that while their 1983 title "Guide to ALGOL 68 for Users of RS Systems" was an "excellent reference text", it gives "insufficient help to the beginner or newcomer to ALGOL 68". |
Bond was promoted to Superintendent of Computing and Software Research of the Royal Signals and Radar Establishment in 1980 (the RRE merged with several other research institutions and was renamed in 1976). |
As part of her role, Bond collaborated with the Open Software Foundation on the Architecture Neutral Distribution Format and on computing policy for the UK Ministry of Defense. |
Bond retired from work in 1993. |
Bond met her husband, Chris Sennett, while working at the RRE. |
Zygaena magiana |
Zygaena magiana is a species of moth in the Zygaenidae family. |
It is found in Central Asia. |
"Z.magiana" (7b) is a pale-coloured, somewhat transparent, Burnet from the mountains near Samarkand, about the habits of which little definite is known. |
— The ab. |
"hissariensis" Gr.-Grsh [ now "Zygaena magiana" ssp. |
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