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"A Fleet's Dancer (born February 19, 1995) was a Kentucky bred racehorse that became a competitive runner in Canada. Race career While he was a black- type winner throughout his career, with a win in the Grade III Canadian Derby during his three year old year, his best year was his six-year-old season. He would go on to win the two Grade III races, Dominion Day Handicap and Durham Cup Handicap; while placing in the grade two Saratoga Breeders' Cup Handicap, and Kentucky Cup Classic Handicap. His performances in these races would win him the 2001 Sovereign Award for Champion Older Male Horse. Retired A Fleet's Dancer retired in 2002 to Anson Stud Farm in Caldon East, Ontario, Canada. He sired a few stakes performers, but nothing close to his caliber. He only produced a few crops before he was euthanized in 2007. It's rumored that he had a difficult temperament and injured a farm employee before being put down. References 1995 racehorse births Racehorses bred in Kentucky Racehorses trained in the United States Thoroughbred family 5-g "
"Khursheda Otakhonova (September 2, 1932 – June 23, 2016) was a Tajikistani poet and literary critic. Her poems were published under the mononym Khursheda. Otakhonova was born in Istaravshan (then called Uroteppa), and graduated from Tajikistan State University in 1953, taking her degree in Persian language and literature; she was the first person from Tajikistan to earn a degree in philology. From 1953 until 1972 she worked at the Rudaki Language and Literature Institute; during this time, in 1959, she joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. In 1972 she became the Institute's director. Otakhonova's first articles appeared in the 1950s. Among the writers she researched were Sadriddin Ayni, Abolqasem Lahouti, Mirzo Tursunzoda, and Muhammadjon Rahimi; among her publications were Rahim Jalil va Osori U (Rahim Jalil and His Works, 1962), Padidahoi Navjui (Innovative Phenomena, 1972), Paivandi Hiss va Andisha (The Relation Between Feeling and Thought, 1982), and Tahavvoloti Doston dar Nazmi Mu'osir (The Development of Story in Modern Verse, 1983). From 1983 she was a member of the Union of Writers of Tajikistan. She was awarded numerous medals and other decorations throughout her career, including the Order of the Red Banner of Courage and the Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin", and in 1994 she was named an Honored Worker of Tajikistan. At her death she was interred in the Sari Osiyo cemetery in Dushanbe. References 1932 births 2016 deaths Tajikistani women poets Tajikistani poets Tajikistani literary critics Soviet women poets Women critics 20th-century poets People from Sughd Region 20th-century Tajikistani writers 20th-century Tajikistani women writers 21st-century Tajikistani writers 21st-century Tajikistani women writers Tajik National University alumni "
"La tiang () is an ancient Thai snack. It is most well-known from the Kap He Chom Khrueang Khao Wan poem composed during the reign of King Rama I by the crown prince who later became King Rama II. It comprises shrimp, pork and peanuts minced together and wrapped in a thin mesh-like omelette casing making a square shape. Ingredients La tiang has two parts: a mesh-shaped omelette wrapping and minced filling made from pork, shrimp, roasted peanuts, garlic, and coriander. It is seasoned with pepper, fish sauce, and coconut palm sugar. Preparation To prepare the mincemeat, chop up shallots, coriander root, garlic and pepper. Fry them all together. After that, add the minced pork, chopped shrimp and roasted peanuts. Season with fish sauce and coconut palm sugar. To prepare the egg wrapping, dip your fingers into the egg mixture and flick it on the pan in a lattice form until the egg is cooked. Lastly, place the egg around the minced filling to form a square shape.</re See also * List of Thai dishes References Thai desserts and snacks "