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❤️ Feridun Yazar 🐱

"Feridun Yazar (1944 in Urfa - 12 June 2016) was the president of the political party HEP from 1991–1992. He worked as an attorney but was also involved in politics and was charged with being a member of the Revolutionary Cultural Eastern Hearths (DDKO). He was in prison until 1974 when he was granted an amnesty. He stayed in politics with the CHP. He was mayor of Urfa for the CHP in the years 1977–80. He was dismissed as mayor after the military coup 1980 and arrested for two years. After his release he returned into politics with the SHP. He became provincial chair for Urfa in 1988 but resigned from the party due to the dismissals from fellow Kurdish MPs. He then became the President of the HEP. He later was sent again to prison for propagandizing against the indivisibility of the state in the year 1998. On 1 November 2015 he was again candidate for MP for Urfa the HDP, but he was not elected. He died on 12 June 2016. References Category:1944 births Category:2016 deaths Category:People from Şanlıurfa Category:Turkish Kurdish politicians Category:Prisoners and detainees of Turkey Category:People expelled from public office Category:Mayors of places in Turkey Category:Republican People's Party (Turkey) politicians Category:Politicians arrested in Turkey "

❤️ Joanne Moldenhauer 🐱

"Joanne K. Moldenhauer (née Gatz, March 15, 1928 – February 14, 2016) was an American high school mathematics teacher and two-time winner of the Edyth May Sliffe Award. Education Moldenhauer's father served in the United States Army. She was born in Omaha, Nebraska, and attended Benson High School in Omaha. She graduated in 1949 from the Iowa State College, with a degree in physics, hoping to go on to a research career in physics but blocked from that goal because there were few places for women in physics at the time. Career After graduating from Iowa State, Moldenhauer became a high school mathematics teacher in Omaha, and two years later became a student again at the University of Minnesota. She completed a master's degree in mathematics at Minnesota in 1952, and started work as an electrical engineer at General Electric. Her job there involved the development of fire-control systems for military aircraft. However, bored with her work, she soon returned to high school teaching. In 1955 she became a high school teacher in Schenectady, New York, where she had been working for General Electric, and in 1956 she moved to Davis Senior High School in Davis, California. After 50 years as a teacher in Davis, Moldenhauer retired in 2006. Contributions and recognition Moldenhauer won the Edyth May Sliffe Award for Distinguished High School Mathematics Teaching of the Mathematical Association of America twice, in 1990 and 2001. She was also a winner of Stanford University's Frederick Emmons Terman Engineering Award, given annually by the graduating engineering students at Stanford to a distinguished high school teacher. She was a two- time winner of Harvey Mudd College's Distinguished Teaching Award. Unusually for a high school mathematics teacher, Moldenhauer has an Erdős number of 2, from her collaboration with mathematician Sherman K. Stein and mechanical engineer Anthony S. Wexler on "Trigonometry and a Wood Bowl". References Category:1928 births Category:2016 deaths Category:20th-century American mathematicians Category:American women mathematicians Category:Mathematics educators Category:Schoolteachers from Nebraska Category:Iowa State University alumni Category:University of Minnesota alumni "

❤️ Terrence Clarke 🐱

"Terrence Clarke (born September 6, 2001) is an American college basketball player for the Kentucky Wildcats of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). He was a consensus five-star recruit and one of the best shooting guards in the 2020 class. Clarke finished his high school career at Brewster Academy in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. High school career =Recruiting= On September 14, 2019, Clarke announced his commitment to the University of Kentucky over offers: Boston College, Duke, Memphis, Texas Tech, and UCLA. He also announced that he is reclassifying to the class of 2020. References External links *Kentucky Wildcats bio *USA Basketball bio Category:2001 births Category:Living people Category:American men's basketball players Category:African-American basketball players Category:Basketball players from Massachusetts Category:Sportspeople from Boston Category:Shooting guards Category:McDonald's High School All-Americans "

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