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โค๏ธ Hall Mark (horse) ๐Ÿ˜‚

"Hall Mark, was a versatile chestnut Thoroughbred stallion, performing in Australia trained by Australian Racing Hall of Fame trainer Jack Holt raced from a two year-old to a five year-old recording 18 wins from 6 furlongs to 2 miles. Ridden mostly by champion jockeys Bill Duncan and Frank Dempsey. Hall Mark was inducted into the Australian Racing Hall of Fame in 2019. Breeding Hall Mark was bred by his owner Charles Kellow at Tarwyn Park stud Rylstone, New South Wales by Heroic (AUS) a leading sire and classic winner of major races in Australia was purchased for 16,000 guineas. Dam Herowinkie (AUS) a failure on the racetrack was purchased for 800 guineas by Charles Kellow. Breeder, Charles Brown Kellow born in Sutton Grange, Victoria in 1871 originally exploited the bicycle boom of the 1890s as a racing cyclist and salesman and in 1910 began importing a range of expensive motor cars under Kellow Motor Co. In his forties then diversified into sheep grazing and horse racing ownership notables being Heroic, Hall Mark and Nuffield 1938 AJC Derby & VRC Derby winner. Racing career Hall Mark raced between 1932 - 1935 over four seasons and best known for winning the 1933 Melbourne Cup a dual classic winner of the 1933 AJC Derby & VRC Derby in the same year with success in signature W.F.A and Handicap races in Sydney and Melbourne, wins in the 1934 VATC Caulfield Stakes defeating Chatham and the 1935 VRC Kings Plate defeating Rogilla confirming his ability in a vintage era. In recognition of past success each year the Hall Mark Stakes is run at Randwick Racecourse. Standing at stud his best horse was Hall Stand 1942 AJC Sires Produce Stakes, 1942 Hobartville Stakes and 1942 Rosehill Guineas. On his owner Kellow's death in 1944, Hall Mark was sold to Burnside Stud in Ingham, Queensland. For the next nine years, he was predominantly used to sire working horses. In this capacity he had an enduring influence as a progenitor of the emerging specialist breed, the Australian Stock Horse. Hall Mark died in 1953 aged 23. Hall Mark's racing colours: Gold, green sleeves and cap. Hall Mark's racing record: 52 starts for 18 wins,16 seconds, 9 thirds and 9 unplaced runs. 1933 racebook File: 1933 VRC Derby Racebook P1.jpg|The cover of the 1933 VRC Derby racebook. File: 1933 VRC Derby Racebook P22.jpg|Starters and jockeys of the 1933 VRC Derby showing the winner, Hall Mark. File: 1933 VRC Derby Racebook P3.jpg|The back cover showing train timetables. References Category:Sport horse sires Category:Australian racehorses Category:1930 racehorse births Category:Racehorses bred in Australia Category:Racehorses trained in Australia Category:Thoroughbred family 2-e Category:Melbourne Cup winners Category:Victoria Derby winners Category:Australian Racing Hall of Fame horses "

โค๏ธ Robert Grove (MP) ๐Ÿ˜‚

"Robert Grove (c.1511-79/80), of Donhead St. Andrew, Wiltshire, was an English Member of Parliament and a gentleman or yeoman. He married Joan Combe of Cann, Dorset, and they had one daughter and three sons including the MP, William Grove. He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Shaftesbury in 1545 and 1572.https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/grove- robert-1511-7980 References Category:1511 births Category:1580 deaths Category:English MPs 1545โ€“1547 Category:People from Wiltshire Category:English MPs 1572โ€“1583 "

โค๏ธ Big Book (award) ๐Ÿ˜‚

"Big Book () is a Russian literary award for best prose in Russian. The award is financed by the founders of the Center for the Support of Domestic Literature, Russian major businessmen and business structures. Acceptable candidates for the award are works of all prose genres, including memoirs, biographies and other documentary prose, written in or translated to Russian. The cash reward is as follows: * First place โ€” 3 million rubles. * Second place โ€” 1.5 million rubles. * Third place โ€” 1 million rubles. Founders The founder of the Big Book National Literary Award is the Center for the Support of Domestic Literature, founded by: * Alfa-Bank JSC * Renova Group * Roman Abramovich, Russian-Israeli businessman, investor and politician * Alexander Mamut, Russian lawyer, banker and investor * LitRes e-book and audiobook service * Chitai-Gorod bookstore chain * GUM department store * Medved magazine * Video International The chairman of the board of the center is Vladimir Grigorev, and the general director of the award and director of the center is Georgy Urushadze. The co-founders of the award are: * Ministry of Culture of Russia * Federal Agency on Press and Mass Communications of the Russian Federation (FAPMC) * Federal Agency on Culture and Cinematography * Institute of Russian Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences * Russian Book Union * Russian Library Association * All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company (VGTRK) * Russian News Agency TASS * Gazprom-Media holding * Komsomolskaya Pravda Publishing House JSC Board of trustees The board of trustees is the highest organ of the award. It approves and amends the regulations of the award, among other tasks. The board of trustees is composed by: * Oleg Sysuyev (chairman of the board) โ€“ first deputy chairman of the board of directors of Alfa-Bank and vice-president of the All-Russian Congress of Municipal Formations * Aleksandr Avdeyev โ€“ Ambassador of Russia to the Holy See and representative of the Russian Federation to the Sovereign Order of Malta * Vsevolod Bagno โ€“ professor of the Faculty of Philology of Saint Petersburg State University and corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS) * Oleg Dobrodeyev โ€“ general director of the VGTRK * Mikhail Seslavinsky โ€“ head of the FAPMC * Sergei Stepashin โ€“ president of the Russian Book Union * Viktor Fedorov โ€“ president of the Russian State Library * Sergey Filatov โ€“ president of the Foundation for Socio-Economic and Intellectual Programs * Mikhail Shvydkoy โ€“ special representative of the President of Russia for International Cultural Cooperation Award procedure Formation of the list of nominees ("long list") In the competition for the award, both published works and manuscripts can participate. Publishers, members of the Literary Academy (the jury of the award), the media, creative unions, as well as state authorities (from federal and regional level) can nominate a work or manuscript for the competition. The published work can also be put forward by the author. The work must be published (signed in print) either in the previous year or before February 28 of the current year, when acceptance of works for the award ends. The Council of Experts selects nominees from the received applications for the "long list" (no restrictions on the number of works). Each submitted work is evaluated by at least two experts and is then recommended or rejected. The general list is finally compiled before April 30 and announced by the chairman of the Council of Experts and published on the Award's website. Formation of the list of finalists ("short list") The list of finalists includes from 8 to 15 works of the "long list". A collective decision is made on each work, and the majority of the experts of the board should speak for inclusion. By May 31, the list must be announced by the chairman of the Council of Experts and published on the Award's website. The work of the Literary Academy (the jury) The Literary Academy (award jury) consists of more than 100 people โ€” professional writers and publishers, cultural and art workers, academics, public and state leaders, journalists and entrepreneurs. Members of the Literary Academy get acquainted with the works from the "list of finalists" and vote on them. According to the number of points awarded, the laureates of the first, second and third awards are determined. Members of the jury may convene an in-person meeting of the Literary Academy, if it is necessary to decide on whether or not to award one or several prizes (including additional ones). Selection of the Readers' Sympathy Prize After the announcement of the "list of finalists", a readers' vote is opened. The first three works that receive the most points from readers are awarded with commemorative statuettes. Since 2008, it is possible to read the applicants' works. Council and jury chairmen Council of Experts Since the creation of the award, the chairman of the Council of Experts has been the First Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Novy Mir, Mikhail Butov. Literary Academy The chairmen (and co-chairmen) of the Literary Academy have been: * 2005โ€”2006 โ€” writers Daniil Granin and Edvard Radzinsky * 2006โ€”2007 โ€” writer Vladimir Makanin * 2007โ€”2008 โ€” writer Andrei Bitov * 2008โ€”2011 โ€” writer, journalist and editor-in-chief of Literaturnaya Gazeta Yury Polyakov and historian, writer and broadcaster Aleksandr Arkhangelsky * 2012โ€”present โ€” literary critic and vice-rector of the RSUH Dmitry Bak. Winners The award was first announced on November 14, 2005. 2005โ€”2006 The "long list" of 71 works was announced on April 26, 2006. The short list ("list of finalists") of 15 works was announced on May 30, 2006, at a special "Literary Dinner" at GUM. * The results of the first season were announced on November 22, 2006: ** First prize โ€” Dmitry Bykov for the biography Boris Pasternak. ** Second prize โ€” Aleksandr Kabakov for the novel Vsyo popravimo. ** Third prize โ€” Mikhail Shishkin for the novel Maidenhair. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Nahum Korzhavin for the memoirs In Temptations of the Bloody Epoch. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize, according to the results of online voting, was received by the finalists of the award: Alexei Ivanov's Zoloto bunta, Dmitry Bykov's Boris Pasternak and Lyudmila Ulitskaya's The People of Our Tsar. 2006โ€”2007 The second season of the award was announced on November 28, 2006. The "long list" contained 45 works, of which 12 became finalists. * The winners of the second season were announced on November 22, 2007, in the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Lyudmila Ulitskaya for the novel Daniel Stein, Interpreter. ** Second prize โ€” Aleksey Varlamov for the biography Aleksey Tolstoy. ** Third prize โ€” Dina Rubina for the novel On the Sunny Side of the Street. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Andrei Bitov and Valentin Rasputin. * The prize For Honor and Dignity was awarded posthumously to the poet and translator Ilya Kormiltsev. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Lyudmila Ulitskaya, (2) Dina Rubina and, (3) Victor Pelevin for the novel Empire V. 2007โ€”2008 The third season of the award was announced on November 27, 2007. The reception of works ended on February 29, 2008. The "long list" contained 45 works, of which 10 became finalists. * The winners of the third season were announced on November 25, 2008, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Vladimir Makanin for the novel Asan. ** Second prize โ€” Lyudmila Saraskina for the biography Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. ** Third prize โ€” Rustam Rakhmatullin for the essay book Two Moscows, or the Metaphysics of Capitals. * The prize For Honor and Dignity was awarded posthumously to Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Rustam Rakhmatullin, (2) Vladimir Kostin for the collection of short stories and tales Godovye koltsa and, (3) Lyudmila Saraskina. 2008โ€”2009 The reception of works ended on February 28, 2009. The "long list" contained 48 works, of which 13 became finalists. * The winners of the fourth season were announced on November 26, 2009, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Leonid Yuzefovich for the novel Cranes and Pygmies. ** Second prize โ€” Aleksandr Terekhov for the novel Stone Bridge. ** Third prize โ€” Leonid Zorin for the collection Skverny globus. * The prize For Honor and Dignity was awarded to Boris Vasilyev. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Andrey Baldin for the essay book Protyazheniye tochki, (2) Leonid Yuzefovich and, (3) Mariam Petrosyan for the novel The House in Which.... 2009โ€”2010 The reception of works ended on February 28, 2010. With 379 works nominated, the "long list", announced on April 15, 2010, contained 37 authors of published works and 12 authors of manuscripts. The list of finalists was announced on May 19, 2010, at the traditional Literary Dinner, and included 14 books and manuscripts. * The winners of the fifth season were announced on November 23, 2010, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Pavel Basinsky for the novel Leo Tolstoy: Escape from Paradise. ** Second prize โ€” Aleksandr Ilichevsky for the novel Pers. ** Third prize โ€” Viktor Pelevin for the novel t. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded posthumously to Anton Chekhov and given to the Chekhov Commission of the Russian Academy of Sciences. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Victor Pelevin, (2) Yevgeny Klyuyev for the novel Andermanir shtuk and, (3) Mikhail Gigolashvili for the novel The Devil's Wheel. 2010โ€”2011 The reception of works ended on February 28, 2011. 375 manuscripts and books from 42 regions of Russia and 14 countries of near and far abroad were nominated for the award, of which 40 works of 39 authors were included in the "long list" presented on April 20, 2011, in Joseph Brodsky's "Pelmeni" building in Moscow's Krasin Street. The list of finalists was announced on May 25, 2011, at the traditional "Literary Dinner" at GUM, and included ten novels. * Winners were announced on November 29, 2011, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Mikhail Shishkin for the novel Pismovnik. ** Second prize โ€” Vladimir Sorokin for the novel Metel. ** Third prize โ€” Dmitry Bykov for the novel Ostromov, or The Magician's Apprentice. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Mikhail Shishkin, (2) Dmitry Bykov and, (3) Yury Buida for the novel Blue Blood. * The prize For Honor and Dignity was awarded to Fazil Iskander. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Peter Mayer. 2011โ€”2012 The reception of works ended on February 29, 2012. 401 works were nominated, 85 of which were manuscripts. The list of finalists was announced on May 30, 2012, and contained 14 works. The readers' vote was held between July and November 2012. * Winners were announced on November 27, 2012, at a ceremony at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Daniil Granin for the novel My Lieutenant. ** Second prize โ€” Aleksandr Kabakov and Yevgeni Popov for the novel Aksyonov. ** Third prize โ€” Marina Stepnova for the novel Women of Lazarus. * The prize For Honor and Dignity was awarded to Daniil Granin. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Antoine Gallimard, head of the French publishing house ร‰ditions Gallimard. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov) for the book Everyday Saints and Other Stories, (2) Maria Galina for the novel Medvedki and, (3) Marina Stepnova. 2012โ€”2013 321 works from writers from Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, the United States, Spain, France, Estonia, Israel, Latvia and Germany were submitted for the award. On April 24, 2013, the "long list" was announced in the memorial museum-apartment of A. Tolstoy, which included 36 works. * Winners were announced on November 26, 2013, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Yevgeny Vodolazkin for the novel Lavr. ** Second prize โ€” Sergey Belyakov for the book Gumilyov syn Gumilyova. ** Third prize โ€” Yury Buida for the novel Vor, shpion i ubiytsa. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Yevgeny Yevtushenko. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Maya Kucherskaya for Aunt Motya, (2) Sergey Belyakov and (3) Yevgeny Vodolazkin. 2013โ€”2014 More than 359 works from Russia and other countries were submitted for the award. The "long list" of applicants included 29 works. * Winners were announced on November 25, 2014, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Zakhar Prilepin for the novel Obitel. ** Second prize โ€” Vladimir Sorokin for the novel Telluriya. ** Third prize โ€” Vladimir Sharov for the novel Return to Egypt. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Leonid Zorin. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Svetlana Alexievich for Vremya sekond khend, (2) Zakhar Prilepin and, (3) Aleksey Makushinsky for Parokhod v Argentinu. 2014โ€”2015 More than 338 works from Russia and other countries were submitted for the award. In the "long list" of the applicants included 30 works. * Winners were announced on December 10, 2015, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Guzel Yakhina for the novel Zuleikha. ** Second prize โ€” Valery Zalotukha for the novel Candle. ** Third prize โ€” Roman Senchin for the novel Zona zatopleniya. * The special prize For a Series of Screen Adaptations of the Classics was awarded to the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Guzel Yakhina, (2) Anna Matveyeva for Nine Nineties and, (3) Valery Zalotukha. 2015โ€”2016 * Winners were announced on December 6, 2016, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Leonid Yuzefovich for the novel Winter Road. ** Second prize โ€” Yevgeny Vodolazkin for the novel The Aviator. ** Third prize โ€” Lyudmila Ulitskaya for the novel Jacob's Ladder. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to the Non/fiction book fair. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Lyudmila Ulitskaya, (2) Maria Galina for the novel Autochthons and, (3) Yevgeny Vodolazkin. 2016โ€”2017 * Winners were announced on December 12, 2017, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Lev Danilkin for the work Lenin. Pantokrator solnechnykh pylinok. ** Second prize โ€” Sergey Shargunov for the work Katayev. Pogonya za vechnoy vesnoy. ** Third prize โ€” Shamil Idiatullin for the novel Gorod Brezhnev. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Viktoriya Tokareva. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Sergey Shargunov, (2) Lev Danilkin and, (3) Shamil Idiatullin. 2017โ€”2018 * Winners were announced on December 5, 2018, at the Pashkov House: ** First prize โ€” Mariya Stepanova for the book Pamyati pamyati. ** Second prize โ€” Aleksandr Arkhangelsky for the novel Byuro proverki. ** Third prize โ€” Dmitry Bykov for the novel June. * The special prize For the Contribution to Literature was awarded to Lyudmila Petrushevskaya. * The Litblog prize was awarded to Yevgeniya Lisitsina for the literary Telegram channel greenlampbooks. * The Readers' Sympathy Prize was awarded to: (1) Dmitry Bykov, (2) Oleg Yermakov for the book Raduga i Veresk and, (3) Andrey Filimonov for Retsepty sotvoreniya mira. References Further reading Grigory Urushadze On the Award External links LiveLib Reader Service Category:Russian literary awards Category:Russian- language literary awards Category:Awards established in 2005 Category:2005 establishments in Russia "

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