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The then head/chairperson of the commission Mrs. Betty Mould-Iddrisu helped her acquire her buildings in Tamale which were then being occupied by others.
The buildings were later taken back as the residents of the building also reported the case to the Confiscated Assets Committee.
She had two sons.
Cachoeirão River
The Cachoeirão River is a river of Mato Grosso do Sul state in southwestern Brazil.
It is a tributary of the Aquidauana River.
Galway International Rally
The Galway Rally, Galway International Rally is an annual motorsport tarmac rallying event held in Galway, Ireland.
Promoted and organised by Galway Motor Club, the rally was first ran in 1971.
Galway Rally is the oldest International rally in Ireland.
It had hosted the European Rally Championship stage every year between 1975 and 1982.
Since 1979 Galway Rally hosts the opening stage of the Irish Tarmac Rally Championship.
The rally ran as an International event from its inception in 1971, with only few exceptions.
In 2000 and 2002 it was ran under West International Rally name.
Events did not run in 1983, 1987, 2003 and 2018.
Galway Rally boasts as the first, ever International Rally run in Ireland (1971), the first round of the European Rally Championship run in Ireland (1975), the first computer-generated result system (1975), the first round of the new Irish Tarmac Rally Championship in (1978), the first female Clerk of the Course, Bridget Brophy (1982), the youngest Clerk of the Course of an any International Rally, Mike Smith (1988).
The 2020 Corrib Oil Galway International Rally was confirmed to take place on Sunday 2nd February with a repeat of the racing format which made the previous year's event a success.
The event will be the opening round of the 2020 Irish Tarmac Rally Championship, and will run a week earlier than 2019 in order to avoid a clash with the opening British Rally Championship round, the Cambrian Rally.
The participant entry fee for the event remains same as last year at €875.
With 10 days to go, 65 entries were received.
Originally planned as two day event, it was reduced to one day, 10 stage event after a consultation with participants.
The rally hosted Round 1 of 2019 ITRC and Round 2 of 2019 ITRC Historic championships.
Craig Breen finished first overall, 14.4s ahead of Alastair Fisher.
The event was planned to go ahead in February, however, in November 2017 it was announced that the event is being cancelled due lack of "the necessary financial certainty that is required at this time".
Event organisers Galway Motor Club also quoted logistical issues as a reason for cancellation.
Rising motorsport event insurance costs has also been a contributing factor.
The event planning was counteracted by efforts to stop the rally.
Some of the local residents claimed that application for road closures was not properly dealt with.
There were very strict conditions attached to the road closure license and these mainly relate to insurance issues.
After consultation with local politicians and the Galway County Council it was ruled that the organisers have complied with all of the procedures relating to a temporary road closure, and that the event is cleared to go ahead.
Couple months after the event a High Court case against the rally organizers was brought up.
A 60-year-old retired Garda sergeant claimed that he suffered back pain and depression after an assault by spectators during the Galway Rally in 2009.
The High Court awarded €105,000 damages to the claimant.
Irish motorsport was hit with yet another increase in premiums later that year, which when passed on to competitors were to reach €800 mark per competitor per event.
Top drivers with most wins and most starts.
"(As of 2019)"
Dhakia
Dhakia ("in hindi:ढकिया") is a village in Salarpur block, Budaun district, Uttar Pradesh, India.
Its village code is 128277.
Ghatpuri railway station is 7 KMs away from the village.
As per the report of 2011 Census of India, The total population of the village is 1479, where 802 are males and 677 are females.
The village is administrated by Gram Panchayat.
Muhammad Naqi Butt
Muhammad Naqi Butt (14 February 1919 – 1990) was a Pakistani weightlifter.
He competed in the men's heavyweight event at the 1948 Summer Olympics.
Can Marfà Knitwear Museum
The Can Marfà Knitwear Museum (), located in Mataró (Spain).
Part of the Mataró Museum it is devoted to the knitting and hosiery industry.
It is situated in one of the three-storey warehouses of the former Marfà factory in Mataró, the most important Knitted fabric factory in Spain before 1936.
The facility has 1,800 m distributed over three floors.
The ground floor houses the history of textile industry, technology, design and fashion.
It is the area of temporary exhibitions.
The permanent exhibition presents more than one hundred industrial objects explaining the knitwear manufacturing process in Catalonia from the 18th century to present day: Machinery, tools, clothing, advertising and documents, aiming to highlight one of the most important collections of its kind in Europe.
The exhibition is arranged in seven thematic areas:
The second floor houses documentation, preservation and research areas and displays a selection of clothing items from the 1960s to the 1980s.
2020 Johor Darul Ta'zim F.C.
season
The 2020 season is Johor Darul Ta'zim Football Club's 47th season in club history and 8th season in the Malaysia Super League after rebranding their name from Johor FC.
Johor Darul Ta'zim FC won their 2019 Malaysia Super League to become the first Malaysian club to win the league titles for six consecutive seasons (2014–2019).
JDT returns to win the 2019 Malaysia Cup after defeating Kedah 3-0 at Bukit Jalil National Stadium on 2 November 2019.
JDT failed to qualify for quarter final in Malaysia FA Cup after lost with 0-1 to PKNS at third round on 17 April 2019.
Johor Darul Ta’zim (JDT) FC suffered a shocking 1-0 defeat to PJ City FC in the Malaysia Super League 2019 at the Larkin Stadium on 16 July 2019 ending their hopes of going a fulls season undefeated!
Having won a record sixth Malaysia Super League title couple of weeks back, JDT were just two matches away from repeating their 2016 feat of coasting through a full league season undefeated.
JDT have lost for the first time at the Tan Sri Dato’ Haji Hassan Yunos Stadium in Larkin since April 14, 2012 — a run that lasted for 75 matches (82, if you include their seven wins as Johor FC).
JDT had also won 28 consecutive home league matches before lost to Petaling Jaya City FC.
In Asia, JDT in the first time and to become the first Malaysian club to qualify for AFC Champions League Group Stage.
JDT create the first victory after defeating defending champions Kashima Antlers 1-0 at Tan Sri Dato' Haji Hassan Yunos Stadium on 8 May 2019.
Huang Jiaxiang
Huang Jiaxiang (; born January 1949) is a retired vice admiral (zhongjiang) of the Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN).
He attained the rank of rear admiral (shaojiang) in 2005, and was promoted to the rank of vice admiral (zhongjiang) in 2007.
Huang was born in Nanshi District, Shanghai, China in January 1949.
He was raised in Qidong, Jiangsu.
He enlisted in the People's Liberation Army (PLA) in February 1968, and joined the Communist Party of China in March 1969.
He served in the 38th Group Army for a long time, where he was promoted to become Political Commissar in July 2001.
In 1976, he was appointed political instructor of the Second Company, which was founded by Peng Dehuai in .
He led the army to rescue 16 people in the 1976 Tangshan earthquake.
After the Cultural Revolution, became director of State Physical Culture and Sports Commission, Huang was appointed as secretary of its Political Department.
In December 2005 he was transferred to Guangzhou Military Region and appointed Deputy Political Commissar and Political Commissar of the South Sea Fleet, serving in the post until he retirement in July 2012.
He was a delegate to the 16th National Congress of the Communist Party of China and a delegate to the 11th National People's Congress.
He was a member of the 12th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
Dipika Pandey Singh
Deepika Pandey Singh is an Indian politician from Jharkhand and a member of the Indian National Congress.
She was elected as a member of the Legislative Assembly of Jharkhand from Mahagama
József Gyula Hubertus Szent-Ivány
József Gyula Hubertus Szent-Ivány (3 November 1910 – 8 June 1988) was a Hungarian entomologist who specialized in the Lepidoptera.
He worked as a curator of the Hungarian National Museum from 1936 to 1945 before emigrating to Australia.
He founded the journal "Fragmenta Faunistica Hungarica" which was edited by Soós Árpád until 1948 when it was renamed as "Folia entomologica hungarica".
Szent-Ivány was born in Budapest matriculating in Rimaszombat followed by studies in Vienna, Austria before returning to Budapest.
He obtained a doctorate from the Royal Hungarian University in 1936.
He used the name Gyula Hubertus since his father József Szent-Ivány (1894–1941) came from a noble land-owning class and was a political leader in Czechoslovakia.
He was married to Mária née Lakatos (1919–2012) who also worked in the museum and was an illustrator and specimen preparator.
His father-in-law, Géza Lakatos (1890–1967), was in the Hungarian Army and later became Prime Minister of Hungary.
During the war he transferred the collections at his own expense from Budapest to Tihany.
He moved to western Europe when the Russians invaded Hungary and in the summer of 1950 he decided to emigrate to Australia.
He set up a research station in Konedoba in eastern Papua New Guinea in 1954 and worked on rearing and protection of birdwing butterflies, especially "Ornithoptera meridionalis" which was valuable among collectors.
His wife moved to Australia in 1956 along with a daughter.
Maria took an interest in Australian botany, illustrating a book on "Solanum".
He was involved in the search for the grave of Sámuel Fenichel at Stephansort in the 1970s.
Szent-Ivány published more than 87 papers of which more than half were on butterflies.
He translated "In Quest of Gorillas" (Gregory & Raven, 1937) into Hungarian in 1940.