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"Ramtole रामटोल is a small neighborhood located in Birgunj, Nepal which is the main part of Ward no.9 of Birgunj. It is close to Maisthan Temple and is home to people of diverse castes and origin, for example Nepali (Bahun, Newar), Muslim, Madeshi, Marwadi, Dom and Indian origin. Previously, Ramtole was known as kaichiya tole (scissors tole) because most of the people of middle class from Ramtole used to make bidi (cigarettes) by the use of scissors. Scissors were used to cut leaf to make bidi. Sometimes the eastern part of Ramtole was also known as khalka tole (low land). There is the one and only MAA SANTHOSHI TEMPLE in Birgunj or even in Nepal. There are also Hanuman Mandir, Krisha mandir and other small temples at Ramtole. It is a well plotted tole in Old Birgunj. There is one old dharmashala in Ramtole. Ramtole is attached by Railway Road which is east to Ramtole. There is Gahawa, Kumhaltole and road no.3 (Maisthan) respectively to the north, south and west to Ramtole. There are two straight streets in Ramtole which are connected with five sub-streets (galli) with each other. There is Maisthan Vidyapith School, Kanchanjunga School, Merigold School, Gahawa school (Dhobiya School) at Ramtole. ReferencesExternal links * Category:Populated places in Parsa District "
"Composer David Ludwig David Serkin Ludwig (born 1974, Bucks County, Pennsylvania) is an American composer of classical music. His uncle is pianist Peter Serkin, his grandfather was the pianist Rudolf Serkin, and his great- grandfather was the violinist Adolf Busch. Ludwig has written music for many musicians and ensembles, including Jonathan Biss, André Watts, Jaime Laredo, eighth blackbird, Jennifer Koh, Dolce Suono Ensemble, Mimi Stillman, Network for New Music, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Minnesota Orchestra, and the National Symphony Orchestra, and the Pittsburgh Symphony. Ludwig has held residencies with Meet the Composer, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, the MacDowell and Yaddo artist colonies, and the Marlboro Music School. His choral work, The New Colossus, was performed at the 2013 presidential inauguration of Barack Obama. Ludwig joined the composition faculty at the Curtis Institute of Music as of the 2010-2011 academic year, and is the Artistic Director of the Curtis 20/21 Contemporary Music Ensemble and the Dean of Artistic Programs. He has also composed for films such as Cymbeline. Education Ludwig attended Oberlin College for his undergraduate degree, originally intending to take a degree in art history, but eventually taking a music degree. His teachers included Richard Hoffmann. He spent one year studying at the University of Vienna. After that, he received his M.M. from the Manhattan School of Music. He completed additional post-graduate work at the Curtis Institute of Music with Richard Danielpour, Jennifer Higdon, and Ned Rorem, and at the Juilliard School with John Corigliano. He received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania, where he was the George Crumb Fellow, with his "Sonata for Violin and Piano" as his dissertation. Awards In 2016, Ludwig won the A.I. du Pont Award for his "significant contribution to contemporary classical music" and in 2018 received the 2018 Pew Center for Arts & Heritage Fellowship in the Arts. Ludwig was a winner of the First Music Award, a two-time recipient of the Independence Foundation Fellowship, a Theodore Presser Foundation Career Grant, and awards from New Music USA, the American Composers Forum, the American Music Center, Detroit Chamber Winds, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Choral Arts Philadelphia honored Ludwig as a City Cultural Leader in 2009. Personal life Ludwig is married to violinist Bella Hristova. Compositions= Orchestral = * Les Adieux Concerto for Clarinet and Chamber Orchestra (2020) * Bleeding Pines oratorio for chorus and orchestra (2020) * Pangæa (2017) concerto for piano and strings * Concerto for Violin and Orchestra (2015) * Saturn Bells (2014) for solo violin and orchestra * Pictures from the Floating World (2013) for solo bassoon and orchestra * Virtuosity (2013), Five Micro-Concertos for String Orchestra * Seasons Lost (2012) for two solo violins and string orchestra * Fanfare for Sam (2011) * La Follia (2011) for string orchestra * Symphony No. 1 "Book of Hours" (2009) for solo soprano and orchestra * Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra (2008) * Hanukkah Cantata for vocal soloists, SATB chorus, brass, and strings * Concertino for solo violin and orchestra (2005) * Concerto for Cello and Orchestra (2004) * Radiance, serenade for oboe and strings (2003) * NightVision (2001) = Chamber = * Seven Circles (2019) for violin and clarinet * Prima Variations (2019) for guitar and string trio * Nigunim (2019) for flute, violin, and piano * Paganiniana (2018) for solo violin, flute, clarinet, violin, cello, piano, and percussion * Spiral Galaxy (2017) for violin, cello, and piano * Three Pictures from the Floating World (2017) for bassoon, violin, viola, and cello * Titania's Dream (2015) for piano trio * Rule of Three (2015) for two violins and viola * with the lilies and the song and the stars (2014) for Dizi (or alto flute), string quartet, and piano * Pale Blue Dot (2014) for string quartet * Aria Fantasy (2013) for piano quartet * Kantigas (2013) for Arabic violin, guitar, and Arabic percussion * Josquin Microludes (2012) for saxophone quartet * Piccola Musica Notturna (2011) for English horn, harp, string quartet * Three Yiddish Dances (2010) for piano trio * Sonata for Flute and Piano No. 2 "Canzoniere" (2010) for flute and piano * Flowers in the Desert (2009) for clarinet, viola, and piano * From the Rubayaat of Omar Khayyam (2008) for mezzo-soprano and chamber ensemble * Aigaios (2007) for string quartet * A Modern Psalm (2007) for jazz trio: piano, bass, drum set * Lamentations (2006) for clarinet, harp, bass, and percussion * Divertimento (2006) for violin, viola, cello, bass, piano * Haiku Catharsis (2004) for Pierrot ensemble * Four Japanese Folk Songs (2003) for euphonium and string quartet * The Catherine Wheel (2002) for oboe quartet * April Variations (2002) for violin, guitar, and cello * Autumn Variations (2002) for violin, guitar, cello * Dances of Light (2000) for string trio * Poems from Antiquity (1998) for clarinet and string quartet = Vocal = * Songs from the Spirit of Turpentine (2019) for baritone and piano * Songs from the Bleeding Pines (2016) for soprano and piano * O Clavis David (2015) for soprano and SATB choir * Still Life (2013) soprano and piano * Four Ladino Folk Songs (2012) for SATB choir * Our Long War (2011) for soprano, violin, and piano * Ewigkeit (2011) for baritone and chamber ensemble * From the Rubayaat of Omar Khayyam (2008) for mezzo-soprano and chamber ensemble * Hannukah Cantata (2007) for SATB choir + soloists, cornetto, 3 sackbuts, organ, and baroque strings * Four Hanukkah Songs (2007) for SATB choir and piano * Kaddish (2006) * The Choir (2004) for SATB choir * Whitman Songs (2002) for baritone and piano * The New Colussus (2002) for SATB choir * Ave Maria (2000) for SSAA * Things to Do in a Park (2000) for children's choir & string quartet = Solo = * All The Rage (2020) for solo violin * Moto Perpetuo (2016) for solo violin * Swan Song (2013) for violin and piano * Five Ladino Songs (2012) for violin * Lunaire Variations (2012) for piano * Five Bagatelles (2011) for piano * Sonata for Flute and Piano No. 2 "Canzoniere" (2010) * Density 15.1 (2010) for solo tenor saxophone * Scenes from Childhood (2009) for cello and piano * Six Haikus (2008) for horn and piano * Dante Microludes (2008) for cello * Three Chansons (2007) for cello and piano * Pleiades (2005) for oboe and piano * Three Portraits of Isabella (2003) for solo piano * Sonata No. 1 for Flute and Piano (2002) = Large ensemble = * The Anchoress (2018) for soprano, saxophone quartet, Renaissance winds, and percussion * Missa Brevis (2008) for wind ensemble References External links * Official David Ludwig website * Curtis Institute of Music faculty page on David Ludwig * University of Pennsylvania, Department of Music, 'Penn Ph.D.s in Composition' * Instant Encore * Vermont Symphony Orchestra interview with Ludwig * The Bulletin Newspaper * world of music blog, 29 August 2009 Category:American male classical composers Category:American classical composers Category:Oberlin College alumni Category:Manhattan School of Music alumni Category:Curtis Institute of Music alumni Category:University of Pennsylvania alumni Category:20th-century classical composers Category:21st-century classical composers Category:Living people Category:1974 births Category:People from Bucks County, Pennsylvania Category:21st-century American composers Category:20th-century American composers Category:Classical musicians from Pennsylvania Category:20th-century American male musicians Category:21st-century American male musicians Category:Curtis Institute of Music faculty "
"Andrei Ivanovici Kliushnikov, real name Vasilii Surov (commonly known as Nenin or Ninin; 1892-1924), was a Soviet communist who took a very important role in the Tatarbunary Uprising. Born in the village of Kuki (Sapojok raion, Ryazan gubernia, part of Russian Empire), he moved to Petrograd and worked at the Putilov plant. After some time obtain qualification as a military medical assistant. During the First World War he provided medical care on the Romanian Front. After the World War got involved in the Bolshevik movement and on September 15, 1924, he led a military uprising in and around the town of Tatarbunary proclaiming the Moldavian Soviet Republic as part of the Ukraine SSR but eventually died during fighting with the Romanian Army. References Alexandru V. Boldur, Imperialismul sovietic și România, p. 208 Ludmila Rotari, Miscarea Subversiva din Basarabia 1918–1924, editura Enciclopedica, 2004, p. 258 Category:Bolsheviks Category:Comintern people Category:People from Ryazan Category:Russian communists Category:1892 births Category:1924 deaths "