Kusa Jātaka
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Kusa Jātaka
Kusa or KUSA may refer to: * Kusa, Russia, a town in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia * Kusa, Latvia, a village in Madona district, Latvia * Kusa, Oklahoma, United States * Kusa, indigenous name of Beles River (in Gumuz language) * KUSA (TV), a television station (channel 9) licensed to Denver, Colorado, United States * Kennel Union of South Africa * Kusa, an alternative spelling of Kusha (other) * Kusa, a type of squash (fruit) from the Levant region closely related to the zucchini *Kurashiki University of Science and the Arts is a private university in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from ..., a university in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan See also * Kus (other) {{Disambiguation, geo, callsign ...
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Kusa, Russia
Kusa () is a town and the administrative center of Kusinsky District in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, located on the Kusa and Ay Rivers, west of Chelyabinsk, the administrative center of the oblast. Population: History It was founded in 1778. Town status was granted to it on January 8, 1943. Administrative and municipal status Within the framework of administrative divisions, Kusa serves as the administrative center of Kusinsky District.Resolution #161 As an administrative division, it is, together with three rural localities, incorporated within Kusinsky District as the Town A town is a type of a human settlement, generally larger than a village but smaller than a city. The criteria for distinguishing a town vary globally, often depending on factors such as population size, economic character, administrative stat ... of Kusa. As a municipal division, the Town of Kusa is incorporated within Kusinsky Municipal District as Kusinskoye Urban Settlement. Climate R ...
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Kusa, Latvia
Kusa is a village in the Arona Parish of Madona Municipality in the Vidzeme region of Latvia. As of 2008, Kusa had a population of 686. Kusa is situated by the List of National Roads in Latvia, P30 road at the 8th kilometer heading from Madona towards Cēsis. History Kusa mostly developed from a former Manorialism, manor with few houses into a village under Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet rule in the 1970s under the guidance of the PMK-19 Land development, land improvement brigade (Latvian language, Latvian: ''Pārvietojamā mehanizatoru kolonna'', Mobile Mechanization, Mechanizator Column), which was draining marshes and working on other Land reclamation, amelioration tasks for the local Soviet collective farm (kolkhoz). Block houses, District heating, a district heating system and paved roads were built. Kusa has a Latvijas Pasts, postal office (postal code LV-4847), primary school (Kusas pamatskola) with approximately 250 students, small shops, a hotel, saw mill, car ...
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Kusa, Oklahoma
Kusa is a populated place located in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma Okmulgee County is a county in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. As of the 2020 census, the population was 36,706. The county seat is Okmulgee. Located within the Muscogee Nation Reservation, the county was created at statehood in 1907. The name Ok ..., about 4 miles east-northeast of Henryetta. Officially incorporated March 27, 1916, and located in the Henryetta Coal Mining District, Kusa became a coal mining and lead smelting boomtown, complete with movie theaters, hotels, and banks. It even had its own newspaper, The Kusa Industrial, which published between 1914 and 1920. The population grew to a size of about 3,500, making it the largest town in the county at one point. While coal mining was the major draw, the town was the site of a 47-acre horizontal retort smelter which processed zinc ore beginning in 1915, but ending in 1928. Brickmaking grew up in the 1920s spurred by the need to make the construction gr ...
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Beles River
The Beles (''Kusa'' in Gumuz language) is a river of western Ethiopia. The Beles, a tributary of the Abay River (Blue Nile), originates in Dangur woreda and flows southwest to its confluence. Its catchment area amounts to about 14,200 square kilometers. Course The source is located 15 km west of Lake Tana at an elevation of above sea level. The mouth of the river Beles in the Blue Nile is located about 40 km upstream of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance dam that is under construction, and the water of the Beles will be used in the future. Transferred water from Lake Tana Since the Tana Beles hydroelectric power plant has been put into operation in 2010, the Beles has received water from Lake Tana via the Tana-Beles interbasin transfer, which is to be used in a series of irrigation projects below the power plant. For this purpose a series of dams were built. These large water transfers from Lake Tana to Beles River affect the movement of people, the hydrogeomorpholo ...
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Gumuz Language
Gumuz (also spelled Gumaz) is a dialect cluster spoken along the border of Ethiopia and Sudan. It has been tentatively classified within the Nilo-Saharan family. Most Ethiopian speakers live in Kamashi Zone and Metekel Zone of the Benishangul-Gumuz Region, although a group of 1,000 reportedly live outside the town of Welkite (Unseth 1989). The Sudanese speakers live in the area east of Er Roseires, around Famaka and Fazoglo on the Blue Nile, extending north along the border. Dimmendaal et al. (2019) suspect that the poorly attested varieties spoken along the river constitute a distinct language, Kadallu. Gerrit Dimmendaal, Colleen Ahland & Angelika Jakobi (2019) Linguistic features and typologies in languages commonly referred to as 'Nilo-Saharan', ''Cambridge Handbook of African Linguistics'', p. 6–7 An early record of this language is a wordlist from the Mount Guba area compiled in February 1883 by Juan Maria Schuver. Varieties Varieties are not all mutually intelligi ...
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KUSA (TV)
KUSA (channel 9) is a television station in Denver, Colorado, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside MyNetworkTV affiliate KTVD (channel 20). The two stations share studios on East Speer Boulevard in Denver's Speer neighborhood; KUSA's transmitter is located atop Lookout Mountain, near Golden. In addition to its main studios, the station also operates a secondary studio and news bureau on Canyon Avenue in Fort Collins. History Early years to the mid-1990s The station first signed on the air on October 12, 1952, as KBTV; it was the second television station to sign on in the Denver market—after KFEL-TV (channel 2, now KWGN-TV), which signed on just over three months earlier on July 18. Founded by Mullins Broadcasting, the station initially served as a primary affiliate of CBS, but also carried programs from ABC and NBC through secondary affiliations with both networks. It originally operated from studio facilities located in a converte ...
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Kennel Union Of South Africa
The Kennel Union of Southern Africa (formerly the South African Kennel Club and the South African Kennel Union) is the official kennel club of South Africa. The club was founded as the South African Kennel Club in 1891 when the Southern African Kennel Club of Port Elizabeth formed an affiliation with the South African Kennel Club of Cape Town. The first documented dog show in South Africa took place in 1883 at the Albany Agricultural Show; the Port Elizabeth club was founded a week later, and the Cape Town club was founded in 1889. The Transvaal kennel club joined in 1894 and at a meeting in 1895 the kennel clubs of Cradock, East London and Grahamstown joined, Natal joined in 1899 and the Free State in 1905. In 1920 the club reorganised and changed its name to the South African Kennel Union, with the affiliation of the kennel clubs of Rhodesia and South West Africa in 1964 the club adopted its present name, the Kennel Union of Southern Africa. Initially the club maintained ...
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Kusha (other)
Kusha may refer to: * Kusha, One of the lineages of Chandravamsha Kshatriyas * Kusha-shū (Buddhism), one of six schools of Japanese Buddhism in the Nara period * Kusha (Ramayana), in Hindu mythology, one of the twin sons of Lord Rama and Sita * ''Desmostachya bipinnata ''Desmostachya bipinnata'', commonly known as halfa grass, big cordgrass, and salt reed-grass, is an Old World perennial grass, long known and used in human history. The grass is tall, tufted, leafy, perennial grass, branching from the base, erec ...'' (Kusha), a tall tufted perennial grass * Kucha (woreda) in Ethiopia, sometimes transliterated as "Kusha" * Ab Bid-e Kusha, a village in Hormozgan Province, Iran * Chasbaz-e Kusha, a village in Hormozgan Province, Iran * " Kusha Las Payas", a 2003 song performed by the Andalusian-Spanish pop group Las Ketchup * Lava Kusha, 1963 film by C. S. Rao and C. Pullaiah See also * Kusa (other) * Kush (other) * Lava Kusa (other) {{di ...
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Squash (fruit)
is a genus of herbaceous fruits in the gourd family, Cucurbitaceae (also known as ''cucurbits'' or ''cucurbi''), native to the Andes and Mesoamerica. Five edible species are grown and consumed for their flesh and seeds. They are variously known as squash, pumpkin, or gourd, depending on species, variety, and local parlance. Other kinds of gourd, also called bottle-gourds, are native to Africa and belong to the genus '' Lagenaria'', which is in the same family and subfamily as ''Cucurbita'', but in a different tribe; their young fruits are eaten much like those of the ''Cucurbita'' species. Most ''Cucurbita'' species are herbaceous vines that grow several meters in length and have tendrils, but non-vining "bush" cultivars of ''C. pepo'' and ''C. maxima'' have also been developed. The yellow or orange flowers on a ''Cucurbita'' plant are of two types: female and male. The female flowers produce the fruit and the male flowers produce pollen. Many North and Central Ame ...
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Kurashiki University Of Science And The Arts
is a private university in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ..., established in 1995. Currently part of the Kake Gakuen External links * Educational institutions established in 1995 Private universities and colleges in Japan Universities and colleges in Okayama Prefecture 1995 establishments in Japan {{okayama-university-stub ...
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