Michael Nepsa (born June 12, 1989 in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania) is a former American professional ice hockey goaltender and goaltending coach. He last played in the East Coast Hockey League (ECHL) with the Toledo Walleye. He has also played for the Wheeling Nailers and Orlando Solar Bears both of the East Coast Hockey League as well. Mike was with all three teams during the 2015-2016 season while he was only with Toledo for the 2014-2015 season and with Wheeling during the 2015 playoffs. He is currently working as a lead goaltending coach with the Shand Clifford Goalie School in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Nepsa played three years of college hockey at Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania. During those three years his team won two regular season championships and one playoff championship. Prior to college he attended Kiski Area High School in Vandegrift, Pennsylvania where he played ice hockey and football.
Nepsa played three years of college hockey at Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania. During those three years his team won two regular season championships and one playoff championship. Prior to college he attended Kiski Area High School in Vandegrift, Pennsylvania where he played ice hockey and football.
Ummah.com, formerly known as the Islamic Gateway, is a website best known for the Ummah Forum, a large English internet forum for Muslims. As of June 2013 the forum has over 70,000 members.
Ummah.com is based in the UK, as are the majority of its voluntary contributors and active forum users. The Ummah forum membership is mainly composed of Muslims of Pakistani and Indian origin residing in the United Kingdom.
History
Islamic Gateway
The Islamic Gateway was founded in 1996 by a high school student with a shared hosting account from the now-defunct UK-based web host Virtual-PC. By posting the FTP username and password for their hosting account on several Muslim mailing lists the Islamic Gateway encouraged users to put their own Islamic content online, effectively providing free web hosting without adverts.
Rebranding as Ummah.com
After obtaining the Ummah.com domain name in late 2001, Waha Media Limited, a not-for-profit company formed by the administrators of the Islamic Gateway, decided to rebrand the site as Ummah.com. A new homepage was designed from scratch, making use of a bespoke content management system programmed using PHP and mySQL.
Ummah Chat
Ummah.com has had a chat room for as long as its Internet forum. After the move to a dedicated server, the chat room ran on the Java application DigiChat. The chat room was closed in late 2005 due to a lack of server resources caused by the popularity of the Ummah Forum.
Use of FreeBSD
Although Ummah.com has been through several changes of webserver hardware, it has, due to the insistence of its system administrator, always used FreeBSD as its operating system. It did, however, operate a second webserver running Red Hat Linux, hosted by the European firm , for a brief period in 2002. The Ummah Forum was moved to the second webserver as Ummah.com's primary webserver at the time was unable to handle its large number of visitors. The second webserver was retired later in the year, when Ummah.com leased a more powerful dedicated server.
Ummah Forum
Soon after the launch of Islamic Gateway, the site's administrators opened a forum based on the then-popular Perl CGI script DCForum. DCForum was replaced with phpBB when the site moved to a dedicated server. As the forum grew, phpBB was replaced with vBulletin when the latter was requested by the forum's voluntary moderators for its ease-of-use and functionality.
Ummah Radio
Ummah Radio, an Internet radio station, was launched in early 2006 by Ummah.com. The majority of the station's presenters are supplied by Ummah.com. Listeners, who contribute via the Ummah Forum, have considerable say in the running of the station. The majority of airtime is taken by Nasheeds, Qur'an audio and talk shows.
Sun Article
In January 2009 the British tabloid The Sun published an article claiming Ummah.com contained a 'hit list' of British Jews. It later emerged that the journalist responsible for the article, Glen Jenvey, had fabricated the claim by posting the 'hit list' to Ummah.com himself. The issue was investigated by the Press Complaints Commission and The Sun newspaper was ordered to publish an apology.
Ummah.com is based in the UK, as are the majority of its voluntary contributors and active forum users. The Ummah forum membership is mainly composed of Muslims of Pakistani and Indian origin residing in the United Kingdom.
History
Islamic Gateway
The Islamic Gateway was founded in 1996 by a high school student with a shared hosting account from the now-defunct UK-based web host Virtual-PC. By posting the FTP username and password for their hosting account on several Muslim mailing lists the Islamic Gateway encouraged users to put their own Islamic content online, effectively providing free web hosting without adverts.
Rebranding as Ummah.com
After obtaining the Ummah.com domain name in late 2001, Waha Media Limited, a not-for-profit company formed by the administrators of the Islamic Gateway, decided to rebrand the site as Ummah.com. A new homepage was designed from scratch, making use of a bespoke content management system programmed using PHP and mySQL.
Ummah Chat
Ummah.com has had a chat room for as long as its Internet forum. After the move to a dedicated server, the chat room ran on the Java application DigiChat. The chat room was closed in late 2005 due to a lack of server resources caused by the popularity of the Ummah Forum.
Use of FreeBSD
Although Ummah.com has been through several changes of webserver hardware, it has, due to the insistence of its system administrator, always used FreeBSD as its operating system. It did, however, operate a second webserver running Red Hat Linux, hosted by the European firm , for a brief period in 2002. The Ummah Forum was moved to the second webserver as Ummah.com's primary webserver at the time was unable to handle its large number of visitors. The second webserver was retired later in the year, when Ummah.com leased a more powerful dedicated server.
Ummah Forum
Soon after the launch of Islamic Gateway, the site's administrators opened a forum based on the then-popular Perl CGI script DCForum. DCForum was replaced with phpBB when the site moved to a dedicated server. As the forum grew, phpBB was replaced with vBulletin when the latter was requested by the forum's voluntary moderators for its ease-of-use and functionality.
Ummah Radio
Ummah Radio, an Internet radio station, was launched in early 2006 by Ummah.com. The majority of the station's presenters are supplied by Ummah.com. Listeners, who contribute via the Ummah Forum, have considerable say in the running of the station. The majority of airtime is taken by Nasheeds, Qur'an audio and talk shows.
Sun Article
In January 2009 the British tabloid The Sun published an article claiming Ummah.com contained a 'hit list' of British Jews. It later emerged that the journalist responsible for the article, Glen Jenvey, had fabricated the claim by posting the 'hit list' to Ummah.com himself. The issue was investigated by the Press Complaints Commission and The Sun newspaper was ordered to publish an apology.
Nilam Parikh was the daughter of Rani, the daughter of Harilal Mohandas Gandhi who is the eldest son of Mahatma Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi.She born in 1933.
Writer of Biography
She wrote the biography of Harilal in the name Gandhiji's Lost Jewel:Harilal Gandhi. The book tells about the troubled relationship between Harilal Gandhi and his father Mahatma Gandhi.
Own Family
Nilam Farikh has one son named Sameer. He is a eye surgeon, runs his own private practice in Navsari, Gujarat. He has three children.
Poured the ashes of Gandhi
On 30 January 2008, Gandhi's 60th death anniversary, his great-grand daughter Nilam Parikh poured the ashes into the Arabian Sea, Mumbai.
Reference
Writer of Biography
She wrote the biography of Harilal in the name Gandhiji's Lost Jewel:Harilal Gandhi. The book tells about the troubled relationship between Harilal Gandhi and his father Mahatma Gandhi.
Own Family
Nilam Farikh has one son named Sameer. He is a eye surgeon, runs his own private practice in Navsari, Gujarat. He has three children.
Poured the ashes of Gandhi
On 30 January 2008, Gandhi's 60th death anniversary, his great-grand daughter Nilam Parikh poured the ashes into the Arabian Sea, Mumbai.
Reference
Sorcha Faal is the byline under which reports of conspiracy theories are published at the website whatdoesitmean.com. It has been described in the United States by The Washington Post as an "ultra-fringe conspiracy theory Web site", and according to FactCheck.org, it is "widely known as a fake news source that focuses on conspiracy theories" and contains a disclaimer that "some events depicted in certain articles on this website are fictitious".
In 2010 the People's Daily in China named a Faal report about a stargate opening in the Gulf of Aden as one of their top-10 rumor/conspiracy stories for the year 2010. In 2015, The Atlantic magazine described whatdoesitmean.com as a "conspiracy website" which had suggested that the Central Intelligence Agency was responsible for the downing of Metrojet Flight 9268. In 2014, the site reported that a nuclear artillery shell had gone missing from a US military base; in fact a pistol had gone missing and the US Army had not had any nuclear artillery shells for 22 years at that time. In 2016, The Huffington Post noted a report alleging that a meteorite was to blame for EgyptAir Flight 804 crashing into the Mediterranean Sea on 19 May 2016 according to "an intriguing Ministry of Defence report circulating the Kremlin." The Huffington Post described the claim as "bizarre" and Whatdoesitmean as a "somewhat dubious source".
Also in 2016, Media Matters for America reported that Fox News Channel television host Sean Hannity cited a report originating from the whatdoesitmean.com website baselessly claiming that 20,000 of Hillary Clinton's emails might be released by the Kremlin.
In 2010 the People's Daily in China named a Faal report about a stargate opening in the Gulf of Aden as one of their top-10 rumor/conspiracy stories for the year 2010. In 2015, The Atlantic magazine described whatdoesitmean.com as a "conspiracy website" which had suggested that the Central Intelligence Agency was responsible for the downing of Metrojet Flight 9268. In 2014, the site reported that a nuclear artillery shell had gone missing from a US military base; in fact a pistol had gone missing and the US Army had not had any nuclear artillery shells for 22 years at that time. In 2016, The Huffington Post noted a report alleging that a meteorite was to blame for EgyptAir Flight 804 crashing into the Mediterranean Sea on 19 May 2016 according to "an intriguing Ministry of Defence report circulating the Kremlin." The Huffington Post described the claim as "bizarre" and Whatdoesitmean as a "somewhat dubious source".
Also in 2016, Media Matters for America reported that Fox News Channel television host Sean Hannity cited a report originating from the whatdoesitmean.com website baselessly claiming that 20,000 of Hillary Clinton's emails might be released by the Kremlin.