angel4hope Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 ohhhh thanx for clearing thigs up anileve. Now that makes more sense. Haha im a dummie... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anileve Posted December 16, 2003 Author Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 I am glad you liked it Dan, it's wonderful! A brilliant woman she was. And about Masquerading as a man for 50 years, remember I have mentioned before that women know men’s psychology like the back of their hand; therefore it is very easy to mislead them. Watch out! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hyebruin Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 ani jan! you're freakin' hillarious!!! loved reading your posts and the crazy responses!! more more more!! ...you and i are on the same wavelength as far as disciplining bad boys!---though i must say YOUR method is more merciful than mine!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 you and i are on the same wavelength as far as disciplining bad boys!---though i must say YOUR method is more merciful than mine!! lol.. disciplining?? And yes, MORE MORE, anileve jan! This thread is great. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 (edited) OK, here's my contribution to the "woman of the day" : Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace December 10, 1815 - November 27, 1852 Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace, was one of the most picturesque characters in computer history. Augusta Ada Byron was born December 10, 1815 the daughter of the illustrious poet, Lord Byron. Five weeks after Ada was born Lady Byron asked for a separation from Lord Byron, and was awarded sole custody of Ada who she brought up to be a mathematician and scientist. Lady Byron was terrified that Ada might end up being a poet like her father. Despite Lady Byron's programming Ada did not sublimate her poetical inclinations. She hoped to be "an analyst and a metaphysician". In her 30's she wrote her mother, if you can't give me poetry, can't you give me "poetical science?" Her understanding of mathematics was laced with imagination, and described in metaphors. At the age of 17 Ada was introduced to Mary Somerville, a remarkable woman who translated LaPlace's works into English, and whose texts were used at Cambridge. Though Mrs. Somerville encouraged Ada in her mathematical studies, she also attempted to put mathematics and technology into an appropriate human context. It was at a dinner party at Mrs. Somerville's that Ada heard in November, 1834, Babbage's ideas for a new calculating engine, the Analytical Engine. He conjectured: what if a calculating engine could not only foresee but could act on that foresight. Ada was touched by the "universality of his ideas". Hardly anyone else was. Babbage worked on plans for this new engine and reported on the developments at a seminar in Turin, Italy in the autumn of 1841. An Italian, Menabrea, wrote a summary of what Babbage described and published an article in French about the development. Ada, in 1843, married to the Earl of Lovelace and the mother of three children under the age of eight, translated Menabrea's article. When she showed Babbage her translation he suggested that she add her own notes, which turned out to be three times the length of the original article. Letters between Babbage and Ada flew back and forth filled with fact and fantasy. In her article, published in 1843, Lady Lovelace's prescient comments included her predictions that such a machine might be used to compose complex music, to produce graphics, and would be used for both practical and scientific use. She was correct. When inspired Ada could be very focused and a mathematical taskmaster. Ada suggested to Babbage writing a plan for how the engine might calculate Bernoulli numbers. This plan, is now regarded as the first "computer program." A software language developed by the U.S. Department of Defense was named "Ada" in her honor in 1979. After she wrote the description of Babbage's Analytical Engine her life was plagued with illnesses, and her social life, in addition to Charles Babbage, included Sir David Brewster (the originator of the kaleidoscope), Charles Wheatstone, Charles Dickens and Michael Faraday. Her interests ranged from music to horses to calculating machines. She has been used as a character in Gibson and Sterling's the Difference Engine, shown writing letters to Babbage in the series " The Machine that Changed the World" and I have gathered her letters and writings in "Ada, The Enchantress of Numbers: A Selection from the Letters of Lord Byron's Daughter and Her Description of the First Computer Though her life was short (like her father, she died at 36), Ada anticipated by more than a century most of what we think is brand-new computing. http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/love.htm Go geeks! Edited December 16, 2003 by Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
THOTH Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 ani jan! you're freakin' hillarious!!! loved reading your posts and the crazy responses!! more more more!! ...you and i are on the same wavelength as far as disciplining bad boys!---though i must say YOUR method is more merciful than mine!! I second all of this of course! heartily! And no - show us no mercy gals! ...I'm more then ready for some strict discipline! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 And no - show us no mercy gals! ...I'm more then ready for some strict discipline! lol THOTH, a masochist, are you? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stormig Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Wow! Thanks, Dan. Didn't know about Ada Byron. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Wow! Thanks, Dan. Didn't know about Ada Byron. Hehe, yes, she's pretty gorgeous, isn't she? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
THOTH Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 lol THOTH, a masochist, are you? No not at all - why would you think such.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Posted December 17, 2003 Report Share Posted December 17, 2003 (edited) Ellen Wilkinson 1891-1947 Ellen Wilkinson, the daughter of a worker in a textile factory, was born in Manchester on 8th October, 1891. Ellen's parents, Richard Wilkinson and Ellen Wood, were both Methodists. After a period out of work, Ellen Wilkinson's father became a an insurance clerk. Ellen was educated at Ardwick School and at the age of eleven won the first of several scholarships. She later recalled that from this date "I paid for my own education by scholarship until I left university." In 1906 Ellen won a teaching bursary that meant she could enter the Manchester Day Training College for half a week and she spent the rest of the week teaching at Oswald Road Elementary School. Although her father was a supporter of the Conservative Party, Ellen developed an interested in socialism after reading Merrie England by Robert Blatchford. At the age of sixteen Ellen Wilkinson joined both the Independent Labour Party after hearing a speech made by Kathleen Glasier. In 1910 Wilkinson became a student at Manchester University where she studied history under Professor George Unwin. Wilkinson was active in the University Socialist Federation where she met Clifford Allen and G.D.H. Cole. Wilkinson became disillusioned with her studies at Manchester and later, when she became involved with the National Council of Labour Colleges, she realised "how little real history" she had been taught at university. In 1912 became a member of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) and the following year was recruited as a district organizer. Wilkinson also ran the local branch of the Fabian Society where she arranged for people such as Charlotte Despard, Katharine Glasier and Beatrice Webb to speak in Manchester. A pacifist, Wilkinson supported the Non-Conscription Fellowship during the First World War. There were very few women trade union officials at this time but in July 1915 she was employed by the National Union of Distributive & Allied Workers (AUCE). Wilkinson, the first woman organizer of the AUCE, was also active in local politics and in 1923 was elected to serve on the Manchester City Council. In the 1924 General Election she was elected to represent Middlesbrough East. In the House of Commons Wilkinson became known as Red Ellen (both for the colour of her hair and her politics). Active in the 1926 General Strike, afterwards she was co-author with Frank Horrabin and Raymond Postgate of The Workers History of the Great Strike (1927). Following the 1929 General Election the Prime Minister, Ramsay MacDonald, appointed Wilkinson as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Health. Wilkinson opposed the National Government formed by MacDonald and as a result lost her seat in the 1931 General Election. While out of the House of Commons Wilkinson wrote two books on politics, Peeps at Politicians (1931) and The Terror in Germany (1933) and a novel, The Division Bell Mystery (1932) and contributed articles to the left-wing feminist journal, Time and Tide. In the 1935 General Election Wilkinson re-entered Parliament as MP for Jarrow. The town had one of the worst unemployment records in Britain. In 1935 nearly 80% of the insured population was out of work. Of the 8,000 skilled manual workers in Jarrow, only 100 were working. In 1936 Wilkinson organised a march of 200 unemployed workers from Jarrow to London where she presented a petition to parliament calling for government action. Wilkinson later wrote an account of the Jarrow Crusade and its outcome called The Town That Was Murdered (1939). In 1936 Wilkinson joined with Stafford Cripps, Victor Gollancz, Aneurin Bevan, and George Strauss to start a left-wing weekly journal called Tribune. Wilkinson became associated with the left-wing group of Labour Party MPs that campaigned for the formation of a Popular Front with other left-wing groups in Europe to prevent the spread of fascism. In the 1936 Labour Party Conference, several party members, including Wilkinson, Stafford Cripps, Aneurin Bevan and Charles Trevelyan, argued that military help should be given to the Spanish Popular Front government, fighting for survival against General Francisco Franco and his right-wing Nationalist Army. Despite a passionate appeal from Senora Isobel de Palencia, the Labour Party supported the Conservative Government's policy of non-intervention. In December 1936, Wilkinson and Clement Attlee travelled to Spain where they documented the German bombing of Valencia and Madrid and gave support to the International Brigades fighting against General Francisco Franco. In May 1937 Wilkinson joined with Charlotte Haldane, Duchess of Atholl, Eleanor Rathbone and J. B. Priestley to establish the Dependents Aid Committee, an organization which raised money for the families of men who were members of the International Brigades. Wilkinson was a strong advocate of Hire Purchase reform. She was concerned about the large number of working-class people who fell into arrears and then lost the goods that they had partly paid for. In 1937 an average of 600 people a day were having high purchase goods seized. These were then sold to the public, providing companies with extra profits. Wilkinson also objected to the high rates of interest being charged on the goods. In 1938 Wilkinson's High Purchase Act became law. The act required traders to display on the goods the actual cash price plus the sum added for interest, and protected hirers who had paid at least one third of the sum contracted. In the coalition government formed by Winston Churchill in 1940, Wilkinson was appointed parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Pensions. Later she joined the team led by Herbert Morrison at the Home Office. Wilkinson was made responsible for air raid shelters and was instrumental in the introduction of the Morrison Shelters in 1941. Following the 1945 General Election, the new Prime Minister, Clement Attlee, appointed Wilkinson as Minister of Education, the first woman in British history to hold the post. Wilkinson's plans to increase the school-leaving age to sixteen had to be abandoned when the government decided that the measure would be too expensive. However, she did managed to persuade Parliament to pass the 1946 School Milk Act that gave free milk to all British schoolchildren. Ellen Wilkinson, depressed by her failure to bring in all the reforms she believed necessary, took an overdose of barbiturates and died on 6th February, 1947. http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/TUwilkinson.htm Edited December 17, 2003 by Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Posted December 20, 2003 Report Share Posted December 20, 2003 Audre Lorde 1934-1992 "Your Silence Will Not Protect You" Audrey Geraldine Lorde was born on February 18, 1934 in New York City. She decided to drop the "y" from the end of her name at a young age, setting a precedent in her life of self determination. She was the daughter of Caribbean immigrants who settled in Harlem. She graduated from Columbia University and Hunter College, where she later held the prestigious post of Thomas Hunter Chair of Literature. She was married for eight years in the 1960's, and had two children -- Elizabeth and Jonathan. Lorde was a self described "Black lesbian, mother, warrior, poet". However, her life was one that could not be summed up in a phrase. Audre Lorde the Poet Lorde collected a host of awards and honors, including the Walt Whitman Citation of Merit, which conferred the mantle of New York State poet for 1991-93. In designating her New York State's Poet Laureate, the Governor, Mario Cuomo, said: "Her imagination is charged by a sharp sense of racial injustice and cruelty, of sexual prejudice . . . She cries out against it as the voice of indignant humanity. Audre Lorde is the voice of the eloquent outsider who speaks in a language that can reach and touch people everywhere." Her first poem was published in Seventeen magazine while she was still in high school. The administration of the high school felt that her work was too romantic for publication in their literary journal. Lorde went on to publish over a dozen books on poetry, and six books of prose. Audre Lorde the Teacher and Activist Lorde worked as a librarian while refining her talents as a writer. In 1968, she accepted a teaching position at Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi where the violence that greeted the civil rights movement was close at hand every night. This period cemented the bond between her artistic talents and her dedication to the struggle against injustice. Lorde went on to provide avenues of expression to future generations of writers by co-founding the Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press. She was at the center of the movement to preserve and celebrate African American culture at a time when the destruction of these institutions was on the rise. Her dedication reached around the world when she formed the Sisterhood in Support of Sisters in South Africa. She was one of the featured speakers at the first national march for gay and lesbian liberation in DC in 1979. In 1989, she helped organize disaster relief efforts for St. Croix in the wake of Hurricane Hugo. Audre Lorde the Warrior Late in life, Audre Lorde was given the African name Gamba Adisa, meaning "Warrior: She Who Makes Her Meaning Clear". It is a name that applies to her whole life. Her struggle against opression on many fronts was expressed with a force and clarity that made her a respected voice for women, African Americans, and the Gay and Lesbian community. Lorde's son Jonathan Rollins recalled the warrior spirit that his mother possesed by stating that not fighting was not an option -- "We could lose. But we couldn't not fight." Audre Lorde the Quotable "The quality of light by which we scrutinize our lives has direct bearing upon the product which we live, and upon the changes which we hope to bring about through those lives." ( Poetry Is Not A Luxury) "When I dare to be powerful - to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid". "I have come to believe over and over again that what is most important to me must be spoken, made verbal and shared, even at the risk of having it bruised or misunderstood." Audre Lorde the Survivor Lorde bravely documented her 14-year battle against the cancer in "The Cancer Journals" and in her book of essays "A Burst of Light". In the latter she wrote: ''The struggle with cancer now informs all my days, but it is only another face of that continuing battle for self-determination and survival that black women fight daily, often in triumph.'' She struggled against disease and a medical establishment that was frequently indifferent to cultural differences and insensitive to women's health issues. She stood in defiance to societal rules that said that she should hide the fact that she had breast cancer. Audre Lorde, died in St Croix, Virgin Islands, on November 17, 1992. Her spirit fights on. http://www.lambda.net/~maximum/lorde.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anileve Posted December 26, 2003 Author Report Share Posted December 26, 2003 Guys I am smiling ear to ear, I am so happy! Thank you for all of your contributions and your support, thank you Dan for being the first guy to post information about those great women. Bruin jan, thank you for your inspiring words. I honestly didn’t think that this thread would ignite any interest, and thought that I would just be the only reader to enjoy the creation. I am happy to say that I was wrong. You guys are great! And David this is not a Beauty contest thread, please refer to the Ms. HyeForum thread regarding your request. By the way thanks for particularly taking an interest in Ms. Malta with her 7 “O” levels over the rest of the information in this thread. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nvard Posted December 26, 2003 Report Share Posted December 26, 2003 GOHAR HARUTYUNYAN Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anoushik Posted November 8, 2004 Report Share Posted November 8, 2004 This woman fascinates me. George Sand (1804-1876) - Pseudonym of Amandine-Aurore-Lucile Dupin French Romantic writer, noted for her numerous love affairs with such prominent figures as Prosper Merimée, Alfred de Musset (1833-34), Frédéric Chopin, (1838-47), Alexandre Manceau (1849-65), and others. The painter Eugène Delacroix (1798-1863) did not take her very seriously, but Alexander Herzen and Francois-Rene de Chateaubriand were inspired of her work. Widespread critical attention accompanied the publication of most of Sand's novels from INDIANA (1832), a story of a naive, love-starved woman abused by her much older husband and deceived by a selfish seducer. Sand's works influenced among others Fedor Dostoevskii, Lev Tolstoi, Gustave Flaubert, and Marcel Proust. In 1842, the English critic George Henry Lewes wrote that Sand was ''the most remarkable writer of the present century.'' "We cannot tear out a single page of our life, but we can throw the whole book in the fire. " (from Mauprat, 1837) George Sand was born in Paris and brought up in the country home of her grandmother. She received education at Nohant, her grandmother's estate, and at Couvent des Anglaises, Paris (1817-20). In 1822 she married the baron Casimir Dudevant, to whom she bore one son and one daughter. She inherited Nohant in 1821, but because of her unhappy marriage, she left her family in 1831 and returned to Paris. In 1831 Sand started to write for Le Figaro. She contributed Revue des Deux Mondes (1832-41) and La République (1848), and was a coeditor of Revue Indépendante (1841). During these years she mad acquaintance with several poets, artists, philosophers, and politicians, and wrote in a few weeks with her lover Jules Sandeau a novel, ROSE ET BLANCHE, under the pseudonym Jules Sand. The second novel Indiana (1832) was written by herself and gained an immediate fame. It was followed by VALENTINE (1832), and LÉLIA (1833). After reading Indiana the poet Alfrted de Musset wrote an admiring letter to Sand which marked the beginning of their passionate affair. At the age of 33 she started an affair with Chopin. The composer, however, did not first consider her attractive. "Something about her repels me," he said to his family. Their relationship ended in 1847 when Sand started to suspect that the composer had fallen in love with her daughter, Solange. It is also possible, that behind the breakup was Sand's treatment of Solange. In her early works Sand's writings show the influence of the writers with whom she was associated. In the 1830s several artists responded to the call of the Comte de Saint-Simon of cure the evils of the new industrial society, among the Franz Listz and Sand who became friends, not lovers. On a personal level, Michel de Bourges, who preached revolution, was more important. After de Bourges came Pierre Leroux, who was against property and supported the equality of women, and wanted to rehabilitate Satan. From the 1840s Sand found her own voice in novels, which had roots in her childhood's peasant milieu. For the rest of her life, Sand was committed to ideal of Socialism, which his friend Flaubert rejected in their dispute. After the 1848 revolution in France failed, Sand settled disappointed at Nohant. From 1864 to 1867 she lived in Palaiseau, near Versailles. Sand spend the rest of her life writing and travelling. "Work is not man's punishment. It is his reward and his strength, his glory and his pleasure." During her career she played an important, if long underestimated, role in the evolution of the novel. Her books, although popular, awoke also controversy: the French Senate recognized its opposition to the presence of Sand's works in public libraries. In her novels Sand questioned the sexual identity and gender destinies in fiction. Sand herself was accused of lesbianism and nymphomania, partly because of affairs with well-known celebrities. In CONSUELO (1843) the musically gifted heroine defies the tragic destiny depicted in Madame de Staël's Corinne (1807). In her mid-life autobiography, HISTOIRE DE MA VIE (1854-55, Story of My Life), Sand displaces conventional distinctions separating male from female, fact from fiction, and public from private life. "Life in common among people who love each other is the ideal of happiness." Among Sand's best works are her countryside novels LA MARE AU DIABLE (1846), in which Germain, a young widower, must choose between a rich woman and a poor girl, FRANÇOIS LE CHAMPI (1847-48), LA PETITE FADETTE (1849), and LES MAÎTRES SONNEURS (1853). In LUCREZIA FLORIANI (1846) Sand depicted her relationship with Frédéric Chopin (Prince Karol de Roswald in the book). HORACE (1842) was an examination of the young generation enthused by the ideals of Romanticism. She also wrote memoirs, short stories, essays and fairy tales. Sand died on June 8, 1876. Sand's literary reputation started to decline after her death, and in the beginning of the 20th century, her work did not attract much attention. "The world will know and understand me someday," Sand once wrote to her critics. "But if that day does not arrive, it does not greatly matter. I shall have opened the way for other women." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Siamanto Posted November 8, 2004 Report Share Posted November 8, 2004 http://members.lycos.co.uk/fannyardant/art.3.jpg Fanny Ardant was born on March 22, 1949 in Saumur, Maine-et-Loire, France. The daughter of a cavalry officer in the French army, Fanny later moved to Monaco with her family where she grew up. Her father was a friend of the Royal household who was also a governor at the palace. She often visited the palace and made acquaintance with Princess Grace. At the age of 17, Fanny moved to Aix-en-Provence where she attended university majoring in political science. She later studied drama and made her stage début in Corneille's Polyeucte in 1974. Her first big break came in 1979 when she landed a role on the TV drama Les Dames de la côte (The Ladies of the Coast). Her appearance on the series caught the attention of the celebrated director François Truffaut, who offered her a role in his next film La Femme d'à côté (The Woman Next Door) in 1981, starring opposite Gérard Depardieu. It was a role that changed her life both professionally and personally. Her performance in the film brought her international recognition and her first César nomination for best actress in 1982. On the personal front, she became Truffaut's companion and remained with him until his death in 1984. They had a daughter, Joséphine, who was born the previous year. Fanny starred in Truffaut's last film Vivement dimanche! (Confidentially Yours), and received her second César nomination for best actress. Throughout the 80's and 90's, Fanny continued to give strong performances, cementing her reputation with serious and dramatic roles. In 1994, she teamed up once again with Gérard Depardieu in Le Colonel Chabert, playing the role of a complex widow. But some of her most memorable performances showcased her comedic talent, such as Pédale douce in 1996, which won her that year's César Award for Best Actress. In that same year, Fanny also appeared in the highly acclaimed costume drama Ridicule (Oscar-nominated Best Foreign Film), as the delightfully acidic Madame de Blayac, lending her powerful mix of well-bred beauty and sexy sophistication to the role. Over the years, Fanny has matured into a captivating figure in French cinema. Her sophistication, elegance and acting versatility have made her one of France's most admired and enduring actresses. Her popularity in France even inspired French comedian/singer Vincent Delerm to write a song, Fanny Ardant et moi, dedicated to her. Although most of her work is on film, Fanny has been equally successful on stage. She continues to participate in theatrical productions throughout her career, appearing in Roman Polanski's much praised stage adaptation of Master Class in 1997, portraying opera singer Maria Callas. Fluent in French, English, Italian and Spanish, Fanny occasionally ventured outside of French cinema and worked in such productions as La Famiglia (The Family) and Le Cena for Italian director Ettore Scola, and the Italian version of Chekov's Three Sisters (Paura e amore). She was also seen in a small supporting role in the 1995 Sydney Pollack's film Sabrina. And in 1998, she appeared in the Oscar-nominated drama Elizabeth, in which her presence highlighted the small but important role of the ruthless and deliciously flirtatious Mary of Guise. In 2002, she took on the role of the sexy, mischievous, yet complex sister-in-law of Catherine Deneuve in François Ozon's hit musical comedy/murder mystery, 8 femmes (8 Women), a role which won her a new wave of international fan following. Fanny Ardant lives in Paris, France, and has three daughters, Loumir, Joséphine and Baladine. http://members.lycos.co.uk/fannyardant/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Siamanto Posted November 8, 2004 Report Share Posted November 8, 2004 (edited) Courtesy of MartyRoss! http://membres.lycos.fr/nabel94/hpbimg/ARDANTFANNY10.jpeg http://hyeforum.com/index.php?showtopic=8235&hl= Edited November 8, 2004 by Siamanto Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Armen Posted March 21, 2005 Report Share Posted March 21, 2005 Now, you don't hear this kind of news every day, don't you? --------------------- Veteran of Foreign Intelligence Service Goar Vartanian Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulated Goar Vartanian, a veteran of Foreign Intelligence Service, on International Women's Day in the Moscow Kremlin, Tuesday, March 8, 2005. While some former Soviet republics have dropped International Women's Day as a relic of the Communist era, it is still an official holiday in Russia, where men give flowers and gifts to female relatives, friends and colleagues. AP/ ITAR-TASS/ Presidential Press Service 03/08/2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anileve Posted March 21, 2005 Author Report Share Posted March 21, 2005 Now that's music to my ears. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Takoush Posted October 3, 2005 Report Share Posted October 3, 2005 (edited) A little late to read; but I also like what I hear. Armenia is a progressive country who continues to regard and respect women. That's good news. Edited October 3, 2005 by Anahid Takouhi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted October 6, 2012 Report Share Posted October 6, 2012 Woman Of The Day wow such a nice topic Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted October 15, 2012 Report Share Posted October 15, 2012 Անժելա Գասպարյան՝ սամբոյի աշխարհի չեմպիոն -=- Կիսաեզրափակիչն ավելի ծանր էր, քան եզրափակիչը, ասել է ռուսաստանցի Անժելա Գասպարյանը Բուլղարիայում ավարտված սամբոյի աշխարհի պատանեկան առաջնության ոսկե մեդալը նվաճելուց հետո։ Նա լավագույնն էր 75 կգ քաշային կարգում։ «Կիսաեզրափակիչ գոտեմարտը Գերգա Պոպովայի հետ մարզական տեսանկյունից ավելի ծանր դասավորվեց, քան եզրափակիրը։ Իսկ վճռական գոտեմարտը բարդ էր հոգեբանական տեսանկյանից։ Ճնշում էր պատասխանատվությունն արդյունքի համար»,- Գասպարյանի խոսքը մեջբերում էր championat.com-ը։ Հիշեցնենք, որ Հայաստանի հավաքականը թիմային հաշվարկում գրավեց երրորդ տեղը՝ առաջ թողնելով Ռուսաստանի եւ Վրաստանի ներկայացուցիչներին։ NEWS.am Sport Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted October 24, 2012 Report Share Posted October 24, 2012 Հայ հրուշակագործ Վերա Հովհաննսիյանն առաջին տեղն է զբաղեցրել խոհարարների մրցույթում (ֆոտո) Գերմանական Էրֆրուտ քաղաքում տեղի ունեցած խոհարարական մրցույթում հայ հրուշակագործ Վերա Հովհաննիսյանը «արտ կլաս» անվանակարգում նվաճել է առաջին մրցանակը: Վերան պայքարել է տարբեր երկրներից ժամանած 500 խոհարարների հետ: «Ես 100 միավոր ստացա 100 հնարավորից` «Սառցե շրջան» մուլտֆիլմի սկյուռիկի շաքարե արձանիկի համար»,- NEWS.am STYLE-ին ասաց խոհարարը: Սկյուռիկն իսկապես զարմանահրաշ է. նա կանգնած է երկու թաթի վրա, նկատելի է նրա մորթու յուրաքանաչյուր աղվամազը: Հարկ է նշել նաեւ արձանիկի գեղարվեստական բաղադրիչը. աշխույժ ու զվարճալի սկյուռիկի կերպարը, որը պաշտում է ընկույզ եւ իր շիկակարմիր ընկերուհուն, որին եւս հրուշակագործը կարողացել է մեծ վարպետությամբ պատրաստել: NEWS.am STYLE-ին Վերան ասաց, որ իր սիրելի թեման մուլտֆիլմի հերոսների շաքարե արձանիկներն են: Նա նաեւ խոստովանում է, որ քաղցրակեր է: Ինչ վերաբերում է ավելորդ կալորիաներին, ապա Վերան պատասխանեց. «Ես փաստերին ավելի շատ եմ հավատում, քան տեսությանը: Ես քաղցրավենիք ուտում եմ եւ չեմ գիրանում: Նշանակում է, եթե քաղցրը գիրացնում է, ապա ես բացառություն եմ»: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted October 24, 2012 Report Share Posted October 24, 2012 http://style.news.am/static/content/news/2012/october/24_10/vera_conditer/388606_146871522092974_100003103808782_203362_383829662_n.jpg Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MosJan Posted November 14, 2012 Report Share Posted November 14, 2012 Աշխարհի առաջնություն. Էլինա Դանիելյանը դուրս եկավ երկրորդ շրջան Ռուսաստանի Խանտի Մանսիյսկ քաղաքում ընթացող շախմատի կանանց աշխարհի առաջնության առաջին շրջանում Հայաստանի ներկայացուցիչ Էլինա Դանիելյանը թայ-բրեյքում հաղթեց վրացի Սոպիկո Խուխաշվիլիին: Թայ-բրեյքի մեկնարկային պարտիայում Դանիելյանը սպիտակներով պարտվեց, սակայն հաջորդ երեք պարտիաներում հաղթեց իր մրցակցին: Հիշեցնենք, որ Դանիելյանի եւ Խուխաշվիլիի երկու դասական պարտիաներից հետո հաշիվը հավասար էր՝ 1։1։ Լիլիթ Մկրտչյանը հաղթել էր շոտլանդացի Քեթեւան Արախամիա-Գրանտին՝ դուրս գալով երկրորդ շրջան։ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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