List of Clubs, Associations and Centres for UNESCO 2160 TOTAL

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

List of Clubs, Associations and Centres for UNESCO 2160 TOTAL As of October 2018 List of Clubs, Associations and Centres for UNESCO 2160 TOTAL CONTENTS ANGOLA – 1 TOTAL ........................................................................................................................................ 4 ARMENIA – 10 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................... 4 AUSTRALIA – 1 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................... 5 AUSTRIA – 2 TOTAL ....................................................................................................................................... 5 BELGIUM (FLANDERS) – 1 TOTAL .................................................................................................................... 5 BELARUS – 59 TOTAL ..................................................................................................................................... 5 BRAZIL – 4 TOTAL ........................................................................................................................................ 10 BULGARIA – 4 TOTAL ................................................................................................................................... 10 CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC – 38 TOTAL ..................................................................................................... 11 CHINA (PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF) – 135 TOTAL ............................................................................................... 14 CONGO (DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE) – 4 TOTAL .................................................................................... 25 COTE D’IVOIRE – 1 TOTAL ............................................................................................................................ 26 CYPRUS – 1 TOTAL ....................................................................................................................................... 26 EGYPT – 14 TOTAL ....................................................................................................................................... 26 ESTONIA – 1 TOTAL ..................................................................................................................................... 27 FRANCE – 25 TOTAL ..................................................................................................................................... 28 GABON – 24 TOTAL ...................................................................................................................................... 30 GAMBIA – 43 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................... 32 GERMANY – 8 TOTAL ................................................................................................................................... 35 GUINEA – 65 TOTAL ..................................................................................................................................... 36 GUINEA‐BISSAU – 21 TOTAL ......................................................................................................................... 42 INDIA – 621 TOTAL ...................................................................................................................................... 44 IRAQ – 1 TOTAL ........................................................................................................................................... 64 ITALY – 147 TOTAL ....................................................................................................................................... 64 JAPAN –283 TOTAL ...................................................................................................................................... 76 KAZAKHSTAN – 55 TOTAL .......................................................................................................................... 100 KENYA – 1 TOTAL ....................................................................................................................................... 103 KOREA (REPUBLIC OF) – 32 TOTAL ............................................................................................................. 104 KUWAIT – 1 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................... 107 LEBANON – 5 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................. 107 MALAYSIA – 1 TOTAL ................................................................................................................................. 108 MAURITIUS – 6 TOTAL ............................................................................................................................... 108 2 MEXICO – 7 TOTAL..................................................................................................................................... 108 MONACO – 1 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................. 109 MONGOLIA – 31 TOTAL ............................................................................................................................. 109 MOROCCO – 1 TOTAL ................................................................................................................................ 112 MOZAMBIQUE – 28 TOTAL ........................................................................................................................ 112 NETHERLANDS – 1 TOTAL .......................................................................................................................... 115 OMAN – 1 TOTAL ....................................................................................................................................... 115 ROMANIA – 27 TOTAL ............................................................................................................................... 115 RUSSIAN FEDERATION – 37 TOTAL ............................................................................................................. 118 RWANDA – 35 TOTAL ................................................................................................................................ 122 SENEGAL – 78 TOTAL ................................................................................................................................. 125 SERBIA – 29 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................... 131 SPAIN – 27 TOTAL ...................................................................................................................................... 134 SWEDEN – 8 TOTAL .................................................................................................................................... 137 THAILAND – 1 TOTAL ................................................................................................................................. 137 THE FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA – 7 TOTAL .................................................................. 137 TOGO – 80 TOTAL ...................................................................................................................................... 138 TUNISIA – 26 TOTAL................................................................................................................................... 144 TURKEY – 3 TOTAL ..................................................................................................................................... 146 TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO – 13 TOTAL .......................................................................................................... 146 VIET NAM – 104 TOTAL .............................................................................................................................. 147 3 Angola – 1 Total Luanda PSCICA – PROMOÇÃO SOCIAL PARA O COMBATE À IMORALIDADE E CRIMINALIDADE EM ANGOLA Address: Kilamba Kiaxi, bairro Golf, Rua 52 casa nº 3 ‐ Luanda Club Contact: + 243 92 33 46 719 Armenia – 10 Total Yerevan ARMENIAN FEDERATION OF UNESCO CLUBS AND ASSOCIATIONS National Address: 20 Sepuhi Str. Yerevan 0028 Federation Contact: [email protected] “PYUNIC” UNION FOR THE DISABLED Address: 116 Miutiunneri Tun, Republic Square 375010 Yerevan,P.O. Box Club 559 Contact: [email protected] SHOGH STUDIO Club Address: Aintap 12 , Yerevan, Armenia Contact: shogh@unesco‐clubs.am MATYAN ORGANIZATION Address: Zavaryan str. 57\19 ap. 83 Yerevan, Armenia Club Contact: [email protected] THE HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL STUDENT CLUB ANAHIT Club Address: 1 Arghutian St., Yerevan, Armenia, 375051 Contact: +37410 25 41 22 BARS MEDIA DOCUMENTARY FILM STUDIO Club Address: 20 Sepuhi Str., Yerevan 0028, Armenia Contact: [email protected] THE ARMENIAN AVIATION CLUB (AAC) Address: Khorenatsy str., #24, Yerevan, Armenia Club Contact: aac@unesco‐clubs.am LAND AND CULTURE ORGANIZATION (LCO) Club Address: Vardanands 5, Yerevan, Armenia Contact: [email protected] Male choir "Narek" Club Address: Koryun 18, Yerevan, Armenia Contact: [email protected] Lori Marz "NARE” ATHLETIC‐ CULTURAL CLUB Club 4 Address: Kurdan vill. Lori marz, Armenia Contact: nare@unesco‐clubs.am Australia – 1 Total UNESCO CLUB‐ADELAIDE Address: 14 Leabrook Drive ROSTREVOR SA 5073, Australia
Recommended publications
  • DISCOVER URAL Ekaterinburg, 22 Vokzalnaya Irbit, 2 Proletarskaya Street Sysert, 51, Bykova St
    Alapayevsk Kamyshlov Sysert Ski resort ‘Gora Belaya’ The history of Kamyshlov is an The only porcelain In winter ‘Gora Belaya’ becomes one of the best skiing Alapayevsk, one of the old town, interesting by works in the Urals, resort holidays in Russia – either in the quality of its ski oldest metallurgical its merchants’ houses, whose exclusive faience runs, the service quality or the variety of facilities on centres of the region, which are preserved until iconostases decorate offer. You can rent cross-country skis, you can skate or dozens of churches around where the most do snowtubing, you can visit a swimming-pool or do rope- honorable industrial nowadays. The main sight the world, is a most valid building of the Middle 26 of Kamyshlov is two-floored 35 reason to visit the town of 44 climbing park. In summer there is a range of active sports Urals stands today, is Pokrovsky cathedral Sysert. You can go to the to do – carting, bicycling and paintball. You can also take inseparably connected (1821), founded in honor works with an excursion and the lifter to the top of Belaya Mountain. with the names of many of victory over Napoleon’s try your hand at painting 180 km from Ekaterinburg, 1Р-352 Highway faience pieces. You can also extend your visit with memorial great people. The elegant Trinity Church was reconstructed army. Every august the jazz festival UralTerraJazz, one of the through the settlement of Uraletz by the direction by the renowned architect M.P. Malakhov, and its burial places of industrial history – the dam and the workshop 53 top-10 most popular open-air fests in Russia, takes place in sign ‘Gora Belaya’ + 7 (3435) 48-56-19, gorabelaya.ru vaults serve as a shelter for the Romanov Princes – the Kamyshlov.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Article (PDF)
    Advances in Economics, Business and Management Research, volume 139 International Conference on Economics, Management and Technologies 2020 (ICEMT 2020) Regional Differences in Income and Involvement in the Use of DFS as Factors of Influence on the Population Financial Literacy Elena Razumovskaya1,2,* Denis Razumovskiy1,2 1Department of Finance, Money Circulation and Credit, Ural Federal University named after B.N. Yeltsin, Yekaterinburg, Russia 2Department of Finance, Money Circulation and Credit, Ural State University of Economics, Yekaterinburg, Russia *Corresponding author. Email: [email protected] ABSTRACT The article attempts to analyze the impact of regional differences in income and activity of using digital financial services (DFS) on the financial literacy of the population. The authors proceeded from the hypothesis that the effect of concentration of financial activity in large federal centers of the Russian Federation on other territories, in particular, the Sverdlovsk region, is approximated. The main research hypothesis is that the regular and active use of digital financial services is more inherent with people living in large settlements and having a relatively higher income; these two factors have a decisive influence on the level of financial literacy. The use of constantly developing digital financial services in everyday life allows people to visualize the dynamics of their financial capabilities, analyze and adjust the structure of financial resources, which increases financial knowledge and strengthens
    [Show full text]
  • Regional Features of the Financial Literacy the Population of the Sverdlovsk Region
    E3S Web of Conferences 295, 01013 (2021) https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202129501013 WFSDI 2021 Regional Features of the Financial Literacy the Population of the Sverdlovsk Region Elena Razumovskaia1,2,*, Denis Razumovskiy1,3, Elena Ovsyannikova1 1Ural State Economics University, 620144 Yekaterinburg, Russia 2Ural Federal University, 620002 Yekaterinburg, Russia 3Russian Academy of National Economy and Public Administration under the President of the Russian Federation (UIU RANEPA), 620144 Yekaterinburg, Russia Abstract. The presented research is devoted to analysis of the principles and optimality criteria for the structure of household financial resources, formed on the basis of surveys of a sample of 5,842 respondents from the Sverdlovsk region based on the author’s methodology for assessing the level of financial literacy and the structure of citizens expenses. The initial hypothesis about the influence of the level of financial literacy of the population on the structure of household spending has been verified. Examples of author questionnaires are presented, developed taking into account the methodological support of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation and the NAFR Analytical Centre. The conclusion is substantiated that more financially literate people are inclined to plan income and expenses and are able to evaluate the structure of their expenses from the position of optimality. The study is supplemented by an analysis of an array of statistical information on indicators of the financial situation of the population of the cities of the Sverdlovsk region. The purpose of the study is to verify the relationship between the level of financial literacy of the population of the Sverdlovsk region and the structure of household spending based on a subjective assessment of optimality by respondents.
    [Show full text]
  • Shanghai, China Overview Introduction
    Shanghai, China Overview Introduction The name Shanghai still conjures images of romance, mystery and adventure, but for decades it was an austere backwater. After the success of Mao Zedong's communist revolution in 1949, the authorities clamped down hard on Shanghai, castigating China's second city for its prewar status as a playground of gangsters and colonial adventurers. And so it was. In its heyday, the 1920s and '30s, cosmopolitan Shanghai was a dynamic melting pot for people, ideas and money from all over the planet. Business boomed, fortunes were made, and everything seemed possible. It was a time of breakneck industrial progress, swaggering confidence and smoky jazz venues. Thanks to economic reforms implemented in the 1980s by Deng Xiaoping, Shanghai's commercial potential has reemerged and is flourishing again. Stand today on the historic Bund and look across the Huangpu River. The soaring 1,614-ft/492-m Shanghai World Financial Center tower looms over the ambitious skyline of the Pudong financial district. Alongside it are other key landmarks: the glittering, 88- story Jinmao Building; the rocket-shaped Oriental Pearl TV Tower; and the Shanghai Stock Exchange. The 128-story Shanghai Tower is the tallest building in China (and, after the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, the second-tallest in the world). Glass-and-steel skyscrapers reach for the clouds, Mercedes sedans cruise the neon-lit streets, luxury- brand boutiques stock all the stylish trappings available in New York, and the restaurant, bar and clubbing scene pulsates with an energy all its own. Perhaps more than any other city in Asia, Shanghai has the confidence and sheer determination to forge a glittering future as one of the world's most important commercial centers.
    [Show full text]
  • EAP Task Force
    EAP Task Force Document 5 Joint Meeting of the EU Water Initiative’s EECCA Working Group and the EAP Task Force Environmental Finance and Water Networks 29 March –1 April 2005, Chisinau, Moldova Overview of Domestic and International Private Companies Operating in the Water Utilities Sector in Russian Federation Participants are invited to take note of the document and to comment on it as appropriate. ACTION REQUIRED: For information, discussion, and endorsement. TABLE OF CONTENT: USED ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS..................................................................3 PREFACE........................................................................................................................4 ANALYTICAL SUMMARY...............................................................................................6 CHAPTER 1. GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE COMPANIES OPERATING IN UTILITIES SECTOR IN RUSSIA..................................19 CHAPTER 2. EXPERIENCE OF DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE COMPANIES IN IMPLEMENTING SPECIFIC PROJECTS......................................................................28 RUSSIAN UTILITY SYSTEMS....................................................................................................................29 ROSVODOKANAL......................................................................................................................................33 NEW URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE OF PRIKAMYE..................................................................................36
    [Show full text]
  • Demographic Transition
    Population and Economics 4(2): 182–198 DOI 10.3897/popecon.4.e54577 RESEARCH ARTICLE Self-isolation at the dacha: Can’t? Can? Have to? Uliana G. Nikolaeva1, Alexander V. Rusanov1 1 Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, 119991, Russia Received 21 May 2020 ♦ Accepted 31 May 2020 ♦ Published 3 July 2020 Citation: Nikolaeva UG, Rusanov AV (2020) Self-isolation at the dacha: Can’t? Can? Have to? Population and Econo mics 4(2): 182-198. https://doi.org/10.3897/popecon.4.e54577 Abstract Measures taken by most countries to limit the coronavirus infection spread include self-isolation. An option of voluntary restriction of personal contacts for citizens is to move to the country (second or third) houses, which have a particular name in Russia – “dacha”. The demand for country estates as places of self-isolation can be assessed as the emergence of a new sanitary-epidemic function in second homes. Institutional management of such movements in connection with the coronavirus pandemic varies by country, ranging from prohibition (Norway) to encouragement (Belarus), and quantitative indicators (mass character or singleness) fluctuate according to lifestyle, national traditions, characteristics of settlement, urban housing policy, public health opportunities and many other factors. For Russians, the migration of residents of megalopolises from the city to country houses was a re- action to the pandemic, a characteristic social-group strategy of health-preserving behaviour. Several million Muscovites, Petersburgers, as well as residents of other megacities of Russia moved outside the cities immediately after the outbreak of the pandemic. “Half-townspeople” – internal migrant workers and “seasonal workers” (workers living in villages or small towns but working in metropolises in watch mode) also moved to rural areas.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Companies
    List of companies Ural pipe plant Production of electric turbines 18, Frontovykh Brigad Str., Ekaterinburg, 620017 Russia Phone: +7 (343) 339-42-11, fax: 334-79-65 Open joint stock company «Uralhydromash» Production of deep-well pumps, hydraulic turbines 2а, Karl Libknekht Str., Sysert, Sverdlovsk region, 624020 Russia Phone: +7 (34374) 2-17-76, fax: 2-17-28 E-mail: [email protected] www.uhm.chat.ru Ural plant of heavy mechanical engineering Production of metallurgical, oil and gas, mining, hoisting and transport equipment, equipment for power industry Square of First pyatiletka, Ekaterinburg, 620012 Russia Phone: +7 (343) 336-60-22, fax: 269-60-40 E-mail: [email protected] www.uralmash.ru Ural diesel engine plant Production of diesel engines 18, Frontovykh Brigad Str., Ekaterinburg, 620017 Russia Phone: +7 (343) 334-42-22 Fax: +7 (343) 334-05-37 Baranchinskiy electromechanical plant 2а, Lenin Str., Baranchinskiy settlement, Kushva, Sverdlovsk region, 624305 Russia Phone: +7 (343) 372-86-91, fax: 370-45-22 Uralelectrotyazhmash 22, Frontovykh Brigad Str., Ekaterinburg, 620017 Russia Phone: +7 (343) 216-75-00, fax: 216-75-24 Ural plant of chemical mechanical engineering Production of chemical equipment 31, per. Khibinogorskiy, Ekaterinburg, 620010 Russia Phone: +7 (343) 221-74-00, fax: 227-50-92 E-mail: [email protected] www.uralhimmash.ru Open joint stock company «Pneumostroymashina» Production of power hydraulics for road-construction and hoisting and transport equipment 1, Sibirskiy tract, Ekaterinburg, 620055 Russia Phone: +7 (343)
    [Show full text]
  • Winter in the Urals 7 Mountain Ski Resort “Stozhok” Mountain Ski Resort “Stozhok” Is a Quiet and Comfortable Place for Winter Holidays
    WinterIN THE URALS The Government of Sverdlovsk Region mountain ski resorts The Ministry of Investment and Development of Sverdlovsk Region ecotourism “Tourism Development Centre of Sverdlovsk Region” 13, 8 Marta Str., entrance 3, 2nd fl oor Ekaterinburg, 620014 active tourism phone +7 (343) 350-05-25 leisure base wellness winter fi shing gotoural.соm ice rinks ski resort FREE TABLE OF CONTENTS MOUNTAIN SKI RESORTS 6-21 GORA BELAYA 6-7 STOZHOK 8 ISET 9 GORA VOLCHIHA 10-11 GORA PYLNAYA 12 GORA TYEPLAYA 13 GORA DOLGAYA 14-15 GORA LISTVENNAYA 16 SPORTCOMPLEX “UKTUS” 17 GORA YEZHOVAYA 18-19 GORA VORONINA 20 FLUS 21 ACTIVE TOURISM 22-23 ECOTOURISM 24-27 ACTIVE LEISURE 28-33 LEISURE BASE 34-35 WELLNESS 36-37 WINTER FISHING 38-39 NEW YEAR’S FESTIVITIES 40-41 ICE RINKS, SKI RESORT 42-43 WINTER EVENT CALENDAR 44-46 LEGEND address chair lift GPS coordinates surface lift website trail for mountain skis phone trail for running skis snowtubing MAP OF TOURIST SITES Losva 1 Severouralsk Khanty-Mansi Sosnovka Autonomous Okrug Krasnoturyinsk Karpinsk 18 Borovoy 31 Serov Kytlym Gari 2 Pavda Sosva Andryushino Tavda Novoselovo Verkhoturye Alexandrovskaya Raskat Kachkanar Tura Iksa 3 Verhnyaya Tura Tabory Perm Region Niznyaya Tura Kumaryinskoe Basyanovskiy Kushva Tagil Niznyaya Salda Turinsk 27 29 Verkhnyaya Salda Nitza 4 Nizhny Tagil 26 1 Niznyaya Sinyachikha Chernoistochinsk Visimo-Utkinsk Alapaevsk 7 Verkhnie Tavolgi Irbit Turinskaya Sloboda Ust-Utka Chusovaya Visim Aramashevo Artemovskiy Verkhniy Tagil Nevyansk Rezh 10 25 Chusovoe 2 Shalya 23 Novouralsk
    [Show full text]
  • Special Sessions
    SPECIAL SESSIONS SpS 1: Contaminated Land in the EU Accession Countries S. :RáNRZLF] ' &KRURPD VNL : :RáNRZLF] 5 Strzelecki Liquidation and recultivation of repositories containing unwanted pesticides in Poland: current status and perspectives for solving the problem SpS 2 : Risk Based Land management (RBLM): Kempen Case T. Edelman Six key factors in solving a serious environmental heavy metal problem in the Netherlands SpS 5: Site Specific Ecological Risk Assessment: Where Are We Now? J. van Wensem Introduction to Special Session 5: Site specific ecological risk assessment; where are we now? J. Jensen Bioavailability J. Faber Higher tier field research in ecological risk assessment: a case study T. Crommentuijn Implementation of SS-ERA as a regulatory tool – What to take into consideration J. Römbke, J. Weeks The feasibility of bioassays in site-specific ecological risk assessment (SS-ERA) SpS 7: Permeable Reactive Barriers or Zones L. Diels, L. Bastiaens, S. O’Hannessin, J.L. Cortina, P.J. Alvarez, M. Ebert, H. Schad Permeable Reactive Barriers: a multidisciplinary approach of a new emerging sustainable groundwater treatment technology SpS 9: The Industrial Waste Landfill at Bonfol (Switzerland) C.G. Arnold, R. Bentz, M. Fischer, R.A. Hürzeler, B. Matter, C.D. Munz The industrial waste landfill at Bonfol (Switzerland) SpS 10: Agriculture as Source of Contamination: Bioremediation and Risk Assessment G.A. Zharikov, I.I. Starovoitov, I.T. Ermakova, T.V. Shushkova Microbiological degradation of products for detoxication of chemical weapons and organophosphoric herbicides G.A. Zharikov, V.V. Kapranov, N.I. Kiseleva, O.A. Krainova, V.P. Dyadishcheva, R.V. Borovick, N.R.
    [Show full text]
  • The Implementation of the Competition Development Standard
    The 12th International Days of Statistics and Economics, Prague, September 6-8, 2018 THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE COMPETITION DEVELOPMENT STANDARD Ekaterina Ogorodnikova – Alexandr Kokovikhin – Andrey Plakhin Abstract The article contains data obtained as a result of research into the implementation methodology of The competition development standard in the subjects of the Russian Federation on the materials of Sverdlovsk region.The methods of introducing the Standard from the position of the general management methodology and from the position of evaluation of business entities are characterized. The basis for the study was the normative documents of state authorities and local self- government of the Sverdlovsk region, which ensure the implementation of the Standard, as well as the results of surveys of business entities. The method of conducting the survey was an online survey conducted on the website of the regional Investments and DevelopmentMinistry. The base of respondents includes more than 2000 subjects of entrepreneurial activity. The authors have revealed the methodological disproportions in the formation of the management tools for the implementation of the Standard, which consist in the prevalence of economic methods for the implementation of the competition development standard in the subjects of the Russian Federation on the territory of the Sverdlovsk Region. The results of the study allow to formulate recommendations on increasing the effectiveness of measures taken by state authorities and local self-government bodies in
    [Show full text]
  • Reflection on the Construction of Center of Teaching and Learning Development in China University
    Creative Education, 2017, 8, 1302-1314 http://www.scirp.org/journal/ce ISSN Online: 2151-4771 ISSN Print: 2151-4755 Reflection on the Construction of Center of Teaching and Learning Development in China University Yong Li1,2 1College of Education, South-Central University for Nationalities, Wuhan, China 2Center for Faculty Development, South-Central University for Nationalities, Wuhan, China How to cite this paper: Li, Y. (2017). Re- Abstract flection on the Construction of Center of Teaching and Learning Development in Chi- Since 2011, China’s universities have established the Center of Teaching and na University. Creative Education, 8, 1302- Learning Development (CTLD), which has become a new measure to drive 1314. the teaching reform in colleges and universities, promoting the development https://doi.org/10.4236/ce.2017.88092 of teachers’ teaching and learning, and improving the quality of personnel Received: June 15, 2017 training. At present, the research on CTLD in universities has become a hot Accepted: July 15, 2017 issue among the researches of higher education in China, but some basic con- Published: July 18, 2017 fused questions on it are still unclear. CTLD is an exotic concept derived from Copyright © 2017 by author and the United States; therefore, in the process of localization or sinicization, we Scientific Research Publishing Inc. need to answer some major questions: What is the center? Why should we This work is licensed under the Creative construct the center? How to construct it? What should be constructed? This Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0). paper maintains that CTLD in Chinese universities and colleges is a poli- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ cy-driven, exogenous center construction mode which is different from the Open Access endogenous center mode of European and American universities.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Physicsbowl Results
    2018 PhysicsBowl Results Dear Physics Teachers, Thank you for having your students participate in this year’s AAPT PHYSICSBOWL contest. This year there were more than 7200 students participating from 320 schools from Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, the Republic of Korea, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States, as well as 318 schools participating from China! With the addition of the large number of Chinese schools, the contest is almost in two parts with Regions 00 – 14 competing for prizes from AAPT while ASDAN China is coordinating the contest in China. As a result, for simplicity of trying to read the long lists, there are three files: the list of winners in Regions 00 – 14, the list of winners in Regions 15 – 19, and a list of the top students/teams from all regions in both divisions! Instructors from regions 00 – 14 can obtain the scores of their students from a link that will be provided to you in an email from the national office. Please realize that we were able to retrieve some scores that were disqualified for improperly recording the required information, but this was done after-the-fact. If the information was not encoded correctly, the student was immediately disqualified from winning prizes even though we may be able to link that student to your code now. Some students provided no codes, the wrong regions, no name, just a last name, etc. There are a lot of records and we cannot go back and fill in missing information.
    [Show full text]