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An active member of the Sokol organization, during World War II he was an active member of Sokol resistance group. He died shortly after the end of World War II, after being put on a death march by the Nazi Germans. [3] Grave of Jan Gajdoš at the cemetery in Brno- Židenice. From 15–16 November 2008, an international gymnastics event was ...
Wimbledon. 3R ( 2015) US Open. QF ( 2011) Team competitions. Fed Cup. 6–10. Jarmila Wolfe [1] [2] (née Gajdošová, formerly Groth; born 26 April 1987) is a Slovak-Australian former tennis player. In her career, she won two singles titles and one doubles title on the WTA Tour, as well as 14 singles and ten doubles titles on the ITF Women's ...
1964-present. Spouse. Elżbieta Brożek. Signature. Janusz Gajos ( Polish pronunciation: [ˈjanuʂ ˈɡajɔs]; born 23 September 1939) [1] is a Polish film, television and theatre actor as well as pedagogue and photographer. Professor of Theatre Arts and an Honorary Doctor of the National Film School in Łódź, he is considered one of the ...
Gajdoš (feminine Gajdošová) is a Czech/Slovak surname meaning "piper". It is derived a Hungarian adjective created from a slavic origin bagpipe noun with adjective modifier -os similar to other words such as gitáros, botos, and játékos. Notable people with the surname include: Jan Gajdoš (1903–1945), Czech gymnast
The men's rings event was part of the gymnastics programme at the 1928 Summer Olympics. It was one of seven gymnastics events for men and it was contested for the fourth time after 1896, 1904, and 1924. Scores from the rings event were added to the results from other individual apparatus events to give aggregate scores for the individual and ...
Silver. 37. Bronze. 31. Total. 107. Czechoslovakian men first competed at the 1907 World Championships as Bohemia. [1] [2] They started competing as Czechoslovakia at the 1922 World Championships. Women didn't start competing at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships until 1934, where the Czechoslovakian women's team won gold. [3]
She was joined in this experience by no fewer than 10 other gymnasts from no fewer than 7 different countries, including 3 different Olympic all-around champions and 2 different World All-Around Champions: Dekanova’s fellow Czechoslovakians Jan Gajdoš and Emanuel Löffler, Finland’s Heikki Savolainen, Hungary’s Margit Kalocsai and ...
The reigning (1926) world champion, Jan Karafiat of Czechoslovakia, did not compete, but the second- and third-place finishers at the world championships, Jan Gajdos and Ladislav Vácha (both also of Czechoslovakia), did. The Netherlands made its debut in the men's pommel horse. Hungary competed for the first time since 1896.