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Oleg Leonov | (footballer) Oleg Leonov |
a British geologist. He is Emeritus Professor of Geology at the University of Leicester. Educated at the University of Liverpool and University of Exeter, he began his career with the Geological Survey of Greenland in 1963. Among his awards are the Bigsby Medal (1977) | 1963. Among his awards are the Bigsby Medal (1977) and the Murchison Medal (1985). According to Google Scholar he has a h-index of 104. References Living people 1936 births British geologists Academics of the University of Leicester Alumni of the University of Liverpool |
joined Centralia as charter members in league play. Beginning play on May 10, 1903, the Centralia Midgets placed 2nd in the Southwest Washington League in their first season of play. In the league structure, Southwest Washington League teams played games six times per week, but only the weekend games were counted for the league standings. Centralia ended the season with a record of 7–11, playing under managers Paul Ruff and George Dysart. The Midgets finished 4.0 games behind Aberdeen and Hoquiam who tied for 1st place with 11–7 records, with Aberdeen awarded the championship when Hoquiam refused to participate in a playoff game. Ira Harmon of Centralia led the Southwest Washington League with both a batting average of .341 and 2 home runs. Continuing Southwest Washington League play in 1904, Centralia finished in 3rd place in the four–team league. The league continued the practice of only counting weekend games in the standings, while playing six times per week overall. Ending the season with a record of 6–12, Centralia played under managers Jack Bell and Bill Auerette. The Midgets finished 8.0 games behind the 1st place Hoquiam Perfect Gentlemen (14–4) in the final standings. The Centralia Midgets folded after the 1904 season, replaced by the Montesano Farmers in 1905 league play. In 1911, minor league baseball resumed in Centralia. The Centralia Pets became members of the four–team Class D level Washington State League. The Chehalis Proteges, Raymond Venetians and South Bend River Rats joined Centralia in 1911 league play. The 1911 Centralia Pets won the Washington State League championship. The Pets placed 1st in the final standings with a record of 38–17, playing under managers W.R. Patton and Guy Muck. Centralia | played under managers Jack Bell and Bill Auerette. The Midgets finished 8.0 games behind the 1st place Hoquiam Perfect Gentlemen (14–4) in the final standings. The Centralia Midgets folded after the 1904 season, replaced by the Montesano Farmers in 1905 league play. In 1911, minor league baseball resumed in Centralia. The Centralia Pets became members of the four–team Class D level Washington State League. The Chehalis Proteges, Raymond Venetians and South Bend River Rats joined Centralia in 1911 league play. The 1911 Centralia Pets won the Washington State League championship. The Pets placed 1st in the final standings with a record of 38–17, playing under managers W.R. Patton and Guy Muck. Centralia finished 2.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Chehalis Proteges (36–20) in the final standings, followed by the Raymond Venetians (25–29) and South Bend River Rats (11–44). Pitcher Ray Callahan, who split the season with Centralia and Chehalis led the Washington State League with 13 wins and 131 strikeouts. In 1912, the Centralia "Railroaders" played their final minor league season, as the Washington State League folded during the season. The Aberdeen Black Cats folded from the league on July 10, 1912, causing the entire league to fold |
the existence of FC Sochaux-Montbéliard and the club's 10th consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Sochaux are participating in this season's edition of the Coupe de France. Players | The 2021–22 season is the 94th season in the existence of FC Sochaux-Montbéliard and the club's 10th consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Sochaux |
far north to broadcast live. In total, seventeen cameras were used, including camera drones. Broadcast and content The entire 221-hour long voyage of the MS Spitsbergen around Spitsbergen, Svalbard was broadcast without interruption on NRK2 between 31 January at 18:00 to 9 February at 23:59 (CET), and was also made directly available for streaming on NRK TV. Alternatively, one-hour highlights from each day of the voyage were broadcast on NRK1 between 1–9 February. In the broadcasts, hosts Kari Toft and Helge Lyngmoe observe the ongoings of the ship, and conduct interviews with passengers and crew members. They were assisted by archaeologist and Svalbard historian Per Kyrre Reymert and former Svalbardposten editor Arne O. Holm. Voyage MS Spitsbergen'''s voyage: 1 February, day one: Departure from Longyearbyen to Lloyds Hotel in Möllerfjorden 2 February, day two: Lloyds Hotel to Smeerenburg 3 February, day three: Smeerenburg to Bock Fjord 4 February, day four: Bock | after completing Hurtigruten Minute by Minute, a slow television broadcast which followed the 134-hour long voyage of from Bergen to Kirkenes. The footage for the broadcast was shot by an NRK crew of 25 people earlier in August 2019 in order for better lighting conditions during midnight sun and because the voyage was too far north to broadcast live. In total, seventeen cameras were used, including camera drones. Broadcast and content The entire 221-hour long voyage of the MS Spitsbergen around Spitsbergen, Svalbard was broadcast without interruption on NRK2 between 31 January at 18:00 to 9 February at 23:59 (CET), and was also made directly available for streaming on NRK TV. Alternatively, one-hour |
Hence, ViuTV created King Maker Season 4 as a platform to scout for a brand new girl group in June 2021. On 25 December 2021, ViuTV announced the winner, first runner-up and second runner-up of Season 4, Marife Yau, Garie Shum, and Day Hui, who were secured the spots of upcoming members of the group. On 12 January 2022, 8 contestants from King Maker Season 4 were announced from the Top 20 of the season, formed the group through a press conference named "Hold Your Breath" which held in | Cantopop girl group formed from Hong Kong broadcaster ViuTV's reality talent show in 2021. The group consists of eight members: Sumling Li, Garie Shum, Natalie So, Winka Chan, Ivy So, Day Hui, Marife Yau and Candy Wong. They debuted on 12 January 2022, with the first single "Call My Name!". History 2021-22: Formation In July 2018, ViuTV's reality talent competition started scouting for potential artists, and after three seasons, three boy bands, namely Mirror, and were formed, and some contestants debuted as solo singers. Nonetheless, since the first season of show had started, there was no any girl group which was formed. Hence, ViuTV created King Maker Season 4 as a platform to scout for a brand new girl group in June 2021. On |
Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall Productions to produce 200 episodes of a revival of Let's Make a Deal in Vancouver for syndication to Canadian and U.S. stations. The program was filmed beginning later that year at the large Panorama Studios in West Vancouver. Two other major productions by Catalena at Panorama were also in the offing: Pitfall, a game show with an original format that began taping in October 1980, and a new syndicated variety show, Tom Jones, featuring Welsh singer Tom Jones which got underway in March 1981. Financial problems, however, quickly engulfed Catalena Productions in the late summer of 1981. In early August, EPI Limited, which was distributing the Tom Jones show, sued Catalena after half of the episodes of the program had been completed. It charged Catalena with breach of contract for not paying certain agreed-to production fees and failing to hand over master tapes of the 12 completed shows. Production costs had reached $3.5 million, and EPI had charged Catalena with "financial irresponsibility" that imperiled its ability to continue producing the remainder of the series. Ian MacLennan, the president of Catalena, claimed that the EPI suit represented a "smear campaign" against a "strong and promising company". However, the company production of further shows of Let's Make a Deal had been delayed because there was sufficient inventory to satisfy the stations, and Catalena did not want to produce episodes until they were needed. It turned out that EPI's forecast of financial doom for Catalena was correct. In mid-August, Hatos and Hall petitioned the Supreme Court of British Columbia for the appointment of a receiver to manage Catalena's financial affairs, claiming they were owed $210,000. On August 31, a Supreme Court judge found in | hired 40 to 50 former Catalena employees to tape the 12 remaining programs. Game show contestants, however, were not so lucky. Because most game shows do not award prizes until the episode airs, and prizing is the responsibility of the producers, many contestants had won prizes on Let's Make a Deal and Pitfall that were no longer paid for. In the case of the latter show, which had not yet premiered, production staff—among them host Alex Trebek—were not paid. Television stations that had contracted to carry the show, including Vancouver's CKVU-TV, faced some difficulty acquiring tapes. Contestants on Let's Make a Deal were informed by Los Angeles–based promoter Global Promotions that they would not receive their promised prizes; Catalena owed Global $80,000 to $90,000, out of a total of $3 million in liabilities. Another large creditor was the Canadian government itself, owed $500,000 to $600,000. Because Catalena also owed moving and storage companies, some prizes were stuck in warehouses in Bellingham, Washington, with freight, storage, and customs duties owing. Despite Catalena's bankruptcy, stations such as the Global Television Network in Ontario continued to air Pitfall for years, irking contestants that were depicted winning prizes they never received. Catalena's collapse left one notable Canadian creditor—Trebek—vowing never to do work in Vancouver again, though he relented in March 1982 when two old friends of his asked him to voice commercials for Greater Vancouver's Chrysler dealers. Trebek would note it was the only time he went unpaid as a game show host; he had the bounced check from Catalena for his $49,000 salary framed and hung it up at his home. References 1981 disestablishments in British Columbia 1977 establishments |
many flavors throughout Japan and in at least ten other countries. To boost sales, Calbee regularly introduces new flavors while taking those items with sluggish sales out of production. For example, a "Salt and Sesame Oil" incarnation of this product was launched in 2016. At roughly the same time their "Jurassic Salt" and "Cheese Curry" flavors were discontinued due to tepid sales. Moreover, in 2020 a shorter garlic-flavored version of this product that targets older consumers hit the market. According to a 2018 report, about 14.5% of Calbee's total 2017 Q1 sales were derived from Jagarico products. During the third financial quarter of 2021 Jagarico sales in Japan amounted to about 34.5 billion yen, and overseas sales are an increasingly important revenue source. According to a 2017 survey by Keio Group, Jagarico was ranked as the fourth most popular snack in the Tokyo area. Unfortunately, the sample size for that survey was not specified. Similar products Although the ingredients of Jagarico are similar to many mass-marketed potato chips, their shape resembles a traditional Japanese candied sweet potato snack known as kempi. According to a 1999 US Department of Agriculture report, this product is classified as a fabricated potato | this product is classified as a fabricated potato snack. However, it resembles other shoestring potato snacks such as Koikeya's “Stick Karamucho,” Morinaga's "Potelong," and Seijō Ishii's "Miraku Nori." Jagarico is also related to another Calbee product known as Jagabee. Whereas Jagabee are somewhat thick and made from unhusked whole potatoes, Jagarico are usually thinner and made from skinned potatoes. According to Onishi, Calbee tailors its products to specific audiences and Jagarico was product designed primarily for teenage women, whereas Jagabee targets older consumers. The success of many Jagarico products has spawned a number of derivative snacks. For example, around 1998 Calbee began marketing a sweet potato version of Jagarico known as "Satsumariko." Moreover, a corn version of this product known as "Tomorico" has been sold nationwide since 2018. That same year, a soybean incarnation of Jagarico known as "Edamarico" hit store shelves in Japan. Furthermore, a thicker processed potato product known as "Poteriko" was launched in 2021. References External links Japanese cuisine Japanese snack food Potato dishes Snack foods Brand name potato chips and crisps |
business. In the late 1950s, the company started producing hygienic paper products. In 1958, Nuqul founded Fine, a tissue and paper product manufacturer, and is considered the first Arab to bring such industry into that region. By 2009, the Nuqul Group included 31 companies and over 5,500 employees. The Elia Nuqul Foundation was formed in 2008. The Foundation provides education to people in underprivileged areas. The idea for the Foundation was from Nuqul's time in Ramla when he was unable to complete his education | it would eventually become a family business. In the late 1950s, the company started producing hygienic paper products. In 1958, Nuqul founded Fine, a tissue and paper product manufacturer, and is considered the first Arab to bring such industry into that region. By 2009, the Nuqul Group included 31 companies and over 5,500 employees. The Elia Nuqul Foundation was formed in 2008. The Foundation provides education to people in underprivileged areas. The idea for the Foundation was from Nuqul's time in Ramla when he was unable to complete his education due to financial |
were drawn from the following sources: John Adams ― Massachusetts Historical Society and Harvard University Press Benjamin Franklin ― Yale University Press Alexander Hamilton ― Columbia University Press Thomas Jefferson ― Princeton University Press James Madison and George Washington ― University of Virginia Press Besides the complete works of these individuals, Founders Online includes the selected papers of John Jay, first Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Eventually, the website's collection is expected to exceed 200,000 documents. The website is based at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Funding The website's editorial work is made possible through federal funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional major funding is provided by a wide range of foundations, corporations, and private individuals. Also sponsoring the Founder Online's editorial | friendships and personal lives. The website's collection is the result of a 50-year effort by scholars to locate, transcribe, annotate, and digitize 18th and 19th century documents held by archives throughout the U.S. and world-wide. From these works, hundreds of individual volumes have been published that can also be accessed. The collection also includes the letterpress editions of the Founders' original papers, which were drawn from the following sources: John Adams ― Massachusetts Historical Society and Harvard University Press Benjamin Franklin ― Yale University Press Alexander Hamilton ― Columbia University Press Thomas Jefferson ― Princeton University Press James Madison and George Washington ― University of Virginia Press Besides the complete works of these individuals, Founders Online includes the selected papers of John Jay, first Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Eventually, the website's collection is expected to exceed 200,000 documents. The website is based at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Funding The website's editorial work is made possible through federal funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional major funding is provided by a wide range of foundations, corporations, and private individuals. Also sponsoring the Founder Online's editorial projects are The University of Virginia, Princeton University, Massachusetts Historical Society, Columbia University. Yale |
student at the University of British Columbia. Career Under–21 Thora Rae debuted for the Canada U–21 team in 2019 during a four–nations tournament in Dublin. In 2021, Rae appeared in the team again at the Pan American Junior Championship in Santiago. At the tournament, Rae won a gold medal with the team, scoring once and securing qualification to the FIH Junior World Cup. Senior national team Rae made her senior international debut in 2016, during a test series against New Zealand | 2021, Rae appeared in the team again at the Pan American Junior Championship in Santiago. At the tournament, Rae won a gold medal with the team, scoring once and securing qualification to the FIH Junior World Cup. Senior national team Rae made her senior international |
theft. The judge sentenced Bixler to 29 years in prison, to be served consecutively with his rape sentences for a total of 35 years. In 2005, Bixler pleaded guilty to second degree arson in the non-fatal assault and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. In exchange, charges of attempted murder and rape were dismissed. In 2008, Bixler entered an Alford plea for two counts of murder in the deaths of Cornett and Wright. He received two consecutive 20-year sentences, to be served concurrently with his other sentences. Bixler is serving his sentence at Northpoint Training Center. He will become eligible for parole on January 29, 2024. If Bixler is not granted parole, he will be released from prison on September 21, 2039, provided he maintains good behavior. If not, he will be released from prison on March 3, 2045. See also List of serial killers in the United States References 1968 | of 35 years. In 2005, Bixler pleaded guilty to second degree arson in the non-fatal assault and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. In exchange, charges of attempted murder and rape were dismissed. In 2008, Bixler entered an Alford plea for two counts of murder in the deaths of Cornett and Wright. He received two consecutive 20-year sentences, to be served concurrently with his other sentences. Bixler is serving his sentence at Northpoint Training Center. He will become eligible for parole on January 29, 2024. If Bixler is not granted parole, he will be released from prison on September 21, 2039, provided he maintains good behavior. If not, he will be released from prison on March 3, 2045. See also List of serial killers in the United States References 1968 births Living people 21st-century American criminals American male criminals Male serial killers American serial killers American rapists American people convicted of murder People convicted of murder by Kentucky American people convicted of rape American prisoners and detainees Prisoners and detainees of Kentucky Violence against women in the United States Criminals from Kentucky People from |
was selected by Governor Roy Barnes in April 1999 to serve out the remaining term of Dave Baker, and subsequently won election to a full term in November 2000. He ascended to the role of chairman of the PSC in 2002. The last (and currently most recent, as of 2022) Democratic incumbent on the commission, he was defeated in his bid | to 1999 as the Director of the commission's Telecommunications Unit. He was selected by Governor Roy Barnes in April 1999 to serve out the remaining term of Dave Baker, and subsequently won election to a full term in November 2000. He ascended to the role of chairman of the PSC in 2002. The last (and currently most recent, as of 2022) |
21st-century Italian women politicians Forza Italia (2013) politicians Brothers of Italy politicians Deputies of Legislature XVI | Living people 1956 births 21st-century Italian women politicians Forza Italia (2013) politicians Brothers of Italy politicians Deputies of Legislature XVI of Italy Deputies of |
for Santa Fe deputy Agustín Rossi, of the Front for Victory. Martínez would form a longstanding association with Rossi, serving in his office until Rossi's hiatus from Congress in 2013. From 2015 to 2017, Martínez worked as an aide for Mendoza deputy Guillermo Carmona. He would later return to Rossi's office when the latter was once again elected to the lower house in 2017. Martínez also briefly served as undersecretary of administrative coordination at the Ministry of Defense during Rossi's time as defense minister, in the presidency of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. National Deputy In the 2019 legislative election, Martínez ran for one of Santa Fe's seats in the Chamber of Deputies in his own right, as the fourth candidate in the Frente de Todos list. The Frente de Todos came second in the general election, with 42.26% of the vote, enough for Martínez to make it past the D'Hondt cut and be elected. As a national deputy, Martínez formed part of the parliamentary commissions on Industry, National Defense, Freedom of Expression, Petitions and Powers, Budgets and Finances, Addiction Prevention, Education, and Tax Norm Auditing. He also served as first vice president of the National Defense Commission. He was a supporter of | politician who has been a National Deputy elected for the Frente de Todos in Santa Fe since 2019. A member of the Justicialist Party, Martínez worked as a legislative aide for Agustín Rossi and Guillermo Carmona from 2005 to his own election to the Chamber of Deputies. Since 2022, he has been president of the Frente de Todos parliamentary bloc. Early life Martínez was born on 22 February 1975 in Rosario. He counts with a licenciatura degree on Political Science from the National University of Rosario, which he earned in 1999. Early in his career, from 1994 to 2003, he was an auxiliary teacher at Colegio Salesiano San José, a private Catholic school in Rosario, and later worked as a project manager at the Institución |
He represented Siwan in the Bihar Legislative Assembly thrice in a row winning 2005, 2010, 2015 elections. In 2020 Bihar Legislative Assembly election, he was denied a ticket to contest from Siwan in favour of Om Prakash | Legislative Assembly thrice in a row winning 2005, 2010, 2015 elections. In 2020 Bihar Legislative Assembly election, he was denied a ticket to contest from Siwan in favour of Om Prakash Yadav who lost the election to Awadh |
in the 1940 Class D level Evangeline League when the Houma Buccaneers moved to Natchez on June 27, 1940. The Pilgrims finished in 7th place in both 1940 and 1941. In 1942, Natchez became an affiliate of the New York Giants and became the Natchez Giants. The Evangeline League suspended play on May 30, 1942, season, with the Giants in 1st place with a 29–10 record. The League resumed in 1946, with the Natchez Giants finishing 2nd in 1946 and being eliminated in the playoffs. The Giants finished 6th in 1947. In 1948, Natchez joined the Class C level Cotton States League as the Natchez Indians. The Indians played in the league from 1948 to 1953, capturing the 1949 and 1951 Cotton States League championships and losing in the league finals in 1950 and 1952. Natchez folded after a 50–75, 7th-place finish in the 1953 season. Natchez has | of the New York Giants in 1942. History Minor league baseball began play in Natchez in 1893. The Natchez team played as a member of the Mississippi State League in 1893 and 1894. The Natchez Indians played as members of the Class D level Cotton States League from 1902 to 1905. The Indians were founding members of the Cotton States League in 1902, along with the Baton Rouge Cajuns, Greenville Cotton Pickers and Vicksburg Hill Climbers. The Natchez Indians were Cotton States League Champions in 1902. Natchez finished 3rd in 1903 with a 59–59 record and were 6th in 1904, finishing with a 42–74 record. The Indians were 18–27 on June 26, 1905, when the franchise moved to Mobile, Alabama and became the Mobile Sea Gulls. After a 25–year span between teams, the Natchez Pilgrims began play in the 1940 Class D level Evangeline League when the Houma Buccaneers moved to Natchez on June 27, 1940. The Pilgrims finished in 7th place in both 1940 and 1941. In 1942, Natchez became an affiliate of the New York Giants and became the Natchez Giants. The Evangeline League suspended play on May 30, 1942, season, with the Giants in 1st place with a 29–10 record. The League resumed in 1946, with the |
in Guinea-Bissau 1 February 2022 : A coup d'état to oust Embaló was attempted on 1 February 2022. He said that "many" members of the security forces had | President: Umaro Sissoco Embaló Prime Minister: Nuno Gomes Nabiam Events Ongoing — COVID-19 pandemic in Guinea-Bissau 1 February 2022 : A coup |
been awarded both the Bigsby Medal (1987) and Lyell Medal (2019) of the Geological Society of London. His h-index, per Google Scholar, is 56. | Nicholas John Kusznir is a British geophysicist. He is Emeritus Professor of Geophysics at the University of Liverpool. Kusznir completed his BSc in Physics at Durham University in 1972; |
Moore in 2006, the United States Supreme Court ruled that for a prosecution to be found retaliatory, it must have been brought without probable cause. In the 2018 case of Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, Riviera Beach, Florida argued that the logic of Hartman extended to retaliatory arrest. The Supreme Court issued a narrow ruling that plaintiff Fane Lozman was able to bring the claim despite there having been probable cause for his arrest. A year later, they answered the broader question, holding in Nieves v. Bartlett that | City of Riviera Beach, Riviera Beach, Florida argued that the logic of Hartman extended to retaliatory arrest. The Supreme Court issued a narrow ruling that plaintiff Fane Lozman was able to bring the claim despite there having been probable cause for his arrest. A year later, they answered the broader question, holding in Nieves v. Bartlett that probable cause defeats a claim of retaliatory arrest unless the plaintiff can show that others are typically not been arrested for similar conduct. References |
Middle Texas League played a spit–season schedule, with champions during each half. Brenham placed 3rd overall in the league regular season standings, finishing 5.5 games behind the 1st place Temple Tigers. The final overall standings were led the Temple Tigers (54–27) followed by the Georgetown Collegians (50–30), Brenham Brewers (50–34), Belton Braves (37–47), Lampasas Resorters (35–51) and Bartlett Bearcats (22–59). In 1915, Brenham hosted two Middle Texas League teams. Both teams folded, along with the Middle Texas League before the completion of the 1915 season. On June 7 1915, the Brenham Brewers folded. At the time they folded, the Brewers had a 12–31 record under managers Arthur Wicks and John Tuller. However, Brenham gained another team the next day. On May 1, 1915, the Austin Reps, with a 2–5 record, had moved to become the Taylor Producers due to flooding at the ballpark in Austin. On June 8, 1915, the day after the Brewers folded, team then moved from Taylor (15–23) to Brenham to replace the Brewers. Some references have the first 1915 Brenham team playing under the "Huskies" moniker instead of the "Brewers." Beginning on June 9, 1915, the Brenham Kaisers continued play under managers Jack Snipes and Billy Disch until the Middle Texas League permanently folded on June 19, 1915. The Middle Texas league final standings were led by the Belton Braves (40–19), who finished 8.0 games ahead of | Brenham gained another team the next day. On May 1, 1915, the Austin Reps, with a 2–5 record, had moved to become the Taylor Producers due to flooding at the ballpark in Austin. On June 8, 1915, the day after the Brewers folded, team then moved from Taylor (15–23) to Brenham to replace the Brewers. Some references have the first 1915 Brenham team playing under the "Huskies" moniker instead of the "Brewers." Beginning on June 9, 1915, the Brenham Kaisers continued play under managers Jack Snipes and Billy Disch until the Middle Texas League permanently folded on June 19, 1915. The Middle Texas league final standings were led by the Belton Braves (40–19), who finished 8.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Temple Governors (32–27), followed by the Bartlett Bearcats (29–26) and Austin Representatives/Taylor Producers/Brenham Kaisers (21–36). The Schulenburg Giants were 23–18 and the Brenham Brewers 12–31 when they both folded on June 7, 1915. The Belton Braves won both half–seasons of the league and no playoffs were held as the league folded. Brenham, Texas has not hosted another minor league team. The ballpark A local newspaper in July 1914 referred to the Brenham home ballpark as League Park. Timeline Year–by–year record Notable alumni Billy Disch (1915, MGR) Newt Hunter (1905) |
Llámame may refer to: "Llámame", a song by Víctor | by Víctor Balaguer that was selected to represent Spain in the |
of the times. After arriving in the United States in 1973, she started writing in English as well. She has a website, thulika.net wherein she publishes English translations of Telugu stories. thulika.net, founded in June 2001, features 120 translations and critical/analytical essays by Malathi, a few by other translators. Malathi has published translations of her own stories, My Little Friend and Other Stories in e-book format. Malathi publishes her original stories and articles in Telugu on her blog. ( ) In response to a question why her stories are not appearing in magazines in India, she said it was basically a communication problem. After moving to the U.S., she found herself alienated from the literary circles in India for want of regular communication channels. As a result, we do not find her stories in Indian journals. Nevertheless, she remains active on her Telugu blog, website, and other Internet avenues. Malathi created the site, http://thulika.net in June 2001 with the specific goal of introducing Telugu traditions and culture to non-Telugu readers through eminent Telugu fiction and informative articles. Her passion for disseminating Telugu cultural values and traditions, and commitment to putting into practice what she believes in are noteworthy. She finds it gratifying that university professors and scholars in the U.S., Britain, Canada and France have welcomed these articles. Some of her articles have been reprinted, and some referenced; that gave her additional motivation and impetus to continue her work. Thulika site is dedicated to introducing exclusively Telugu writers and Telugu stories to non-Telugu-speaking audience around the world, and she remains committed to that end. Malathi selects only stories that depict a wide variety of views, perceptions, lifestyles that are peculiar to Telugu people, traditions, and culture. As of January 2022, the site has featured 198 articles. 137 Telugu stories in translation (120 translated by Malathi.). 53 Analytical/informative articles. (48 written by Malathi.).Some of the articles by Malathi such as "What is a Good Story?", "Dynamics of Transcultural Translation", "Native Element in Telugu Stories," and informative articles such as "Atukuri Molla", "Kanuparti Varalakshmamma", "Bhandaru Acchamamba", "Nidudavolu Venkata Rao" have been well-received, and being used as reference sources by research scholars around the world. Thulika.net is a one-person operation; receives no money and offers no remuneration for published articles. Honors and awards 1968 and 1969. Nidadavolu Malathi was honored at Andhra Pradesh Women Writers Conferences organized by Andhra Pradesh Sahitya Akademi. 1970. Her short story, "thrushna", received special prize in Ugadi short story competition conducted by Andhra Jyothi Weekly, and published on 10 April | created the site, http://thulika.net in June 2001 with the specific goal of introducing Telugu traditions and culture to non-Telugu readers through eminent Telugu fiction and informative articles. Her passion for disseminating Telugu cultural values and traditions, and commitment to putting into practice what she believes in are noteworthy. She finds it gratifying that university professors and scholars in the U.S., Britain, Canada and France have welcomed these articles. Some of her articles have been reprinted, and some referenced; that gave her additional motivation and impetus to continue her work. Thulika site is dedicated to introducing exclusively Telugu writers and Telugu stories to non-Telugu-speaking audience around the world, and she remains committed to that end. Malathi selects only stories that depict a wide variety of views, perceptions, lifestyles that are peculiar to Telugu people, traditions, and culture. As of January 2022, the site has featured 198 articles. 137 Telugu stories in translation (120 translated by Malathi.). 53 Analytical/informative articles. (48 written by Malathi.).Some of the articles by Malathi such as "What is a Good Story?", "Dynamics of Transcultural Translation", "Native Element in Telugu Stories," and informative articles such as "Atukuri Molla", "Kanuparti Varalakshmamma", "Bhandaru Acchamamba", "Nidudavolu Venkata Rao" have been well-received, and being used as reference sources by research scholars around the world. Thulika.net is a one-person operation; receives no money and offers no remuneration for published articles. Honors and awards 1968 and 1969. Nidadavolu Malathi was honored at Andhra Pradesh Women Writers Conferences organized by Andhra Pradesh Sahitya Akademi. 1970. Her short story, "thrushna", received special prize in Ugadi short story competition conducted by Andhra Jyothi Weekly, |
Mountain is a mountain summit located in Whatcom County of Washington state. It is situated less than four miles south of the Canada–United States border, on land managed by Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest. The nearest higher neighbor is Church Mountain, to the southwest, and Mount Baker rises to the south. Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains to the Nooksack River via Canyon Creek. Topographic relief is significant as the north aspect rises 3,100 feet (945 m) above Canyon Creek in approximately 1.5 mile. Climate Bearpaw Mountain is located in the marine west coast climate zone of western North America. Most weather fronts originate in the Pacific Ocean, and travel northeast toward the Cascade Mountains. As fronts approach the North Cascades, they are forced upward by the peaks of the Cascade Range, causing them to drop their moisture in the form of rain or snowfall onto the Cascades (Orographic lift). As a result, the west side of the | intensify during summer months, there is often little or no cloud cover during the summer. Geology The North Cascades features some of the most rugged topography in the Cascade Range with craggy peaks, ridges, and deep glacial valleys. Geological events occurring many years ago created the diverse topography and drastic elevation changes over the Cascade Range leading to various climate differences. The history of the formation of the Cascade Mountains dates back millions of years ago to the late Eocene Epoch. With the North American Plate overriding the Pacific Plate, episodes of volcanic igneous activity persisted. In addition, small fragments of the oceanic and continental lithosphere called terranes created the North Cascades about 50 million years ago. During the Pleistocene period dating back over two million years ago, glaciation advancing and retreating repeatedly scoured and shaped the landscape. The U-shaped cross section of the river valleys are a result of recent glaciation. Uplift and faulting in combination with glaciation have been the dominant processes which have created the tall peaks and deep valleys of the North Cascades area. See also Geography of the North Cascades Geology of the Pacific Northwest References External links |
the celebration of the 50th anniversary of University of Rajshahi. The residence of Farouqui was surrounded by employees of the university who protested the appoinment of 88 employees on an ad hoc basis on 3 June 2005. Hen then cancelled their appointments following protests. Farouqui was replaced by Md. Altaf Hossain on 5 June 2005 as Vice Chancellor of the University of Rajshahi. He is the dean of the faculty of Life and Earth Sciences. | served as the vice-chancellor of the University of Rajshahi from 13 November 2001 to 5 June 2005. Farouqui was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the university by Bangladesh Nationalist Party government and replaced M. Sayeedur Rahman Khan, who was elected by the senate panel of the university. Since Farouqui no other Vice-Chancellors of the |
record producer, songwriter and music manager See also Steve Crosbie (born 1993), Irish former rugby union player Stephen | Crosby (music), British record producer, songwriter and music manager See also |
Arthur Sea Hawks and Waco Pirates as fellow league members. The White Caps franchise folded on June 12, 1955, with a record of 28–30. Joining the Big State League, the White Caps finished 73–73 in 1954 and were 28–30 when the franchise folded on June 12, 1955. Galveston, Texas has not hosted another minor league team. Today, the Galveston "White Caps" moniker is used by the athletic teams at Galveston College. The ballparks Early Galveston minor league teams reportedly played minor league games at Beach Park (1888–1915) and Pirate Field / Gulfview Park (1915–1924). Beach Park was located at the corner of Avenue Q and & 23rd Street, Galveston, Texas. The 500 capacity stadium was located across the street from the Beach Hotel. In 1895 the bleachers collapsed during a game. Gulfview Park / Pirate Field was located at 2802 Avenue R, Galveston, Texas. The ballpark had a capacity of 4,000. It had dimensions of 260 RF and was called Pirate Field when hosting the Pirates. The ballpark was damaged by a tropical storm on August 15, 1915, and the park was unusable for the remainder of the 1915 season. Beginning in 1931, Galveston minor league teams were noted to have played home games at Moody Stadium. Moody Stadium was one of the first | Galveston "White Caps" moniker is used by the athletic teams at Galveston College. The ballparks Early Galveston minor league teams reportedly played minor league games at Beach Park (1888–1915) and Pirate Field / Gulfview Park (1915–1924). Beach Park was located at the corner of Avenue Q and & 23rd Street, Galveston, Texas. The 500 capacity stadium was located across the street from the Beach Hotel. In 1895 the bleachers collapsed during a game. Gulfview Park / Pirate Field was located at 2802 Avenue R, Galveston, Texas. The ballpark had a capacity of 4,000. It had dimensions of 260 RF and was called Pirate Field when hosting the Pirates. The ballpark was damaged by a tropical storm on August 15, 1915, and the park was unusable for the remainder of the 1915 season. Beginning in 1931, Galveston minor league teams were noted to have played home games at Moody Stadium. Moody Stadium was one of the first minor league stadiums equipped with lights. Moody Stadium was located ad 5108 Avenue G Galveston, Texas. Moody Stadium had a capacity of 8,000 in 1937 and dimensions of (left, center, right): 338–460–324. Year–by–year records Notable alumni Jodie Beeler (1955, MGR) Beau Bell (1931–1932) MLB All-Star Harry Brecheen (1935–1936) 2x MLB All-Star; St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame Max Butcher (1935) Jiggs Donahue (1911, MGR) Vallie Eaves (1954) Stan Goletz (1952–1953) Julio Gonzalez (1951) Harry Gumbert (1951, MGR) Harvey Hendrick (1922) Ira Hutchinson (1933–1934) Hank Izquierdo (1951–1953) Rene Monteagudo (1951) Wally Moses (1933–1934) 2x MLB All-Star; Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame Del Pratt (1931–1932, MGR) Chase Riddle (1954, MGR) Hank Severeid (1937) Tully Sparks (1897) Harry Steinfeldt (1896) Jake Stenzel (1890) Monty Stratton (1934) MLB All-Star; Movie: The |
19 July 1996) is a Finnish rally driver. He is the son of former World Rally Championship driver Sebastian Lindholm. He is also the reigning champion | He is also the reigning champion of the Finnish Rally Championship. Rally results WRC results * Season still in |
Voy a Conquistar may refer to: "Te Voy a Conquistar", a song by Intocable also included on their 2003 compilation album La Historia "Te Voy a | their 2003 compilation album La Historia "Te Voy a Conquistar", a 2008 song by Los Favoritos from Tu Favorito "Te Voy a Conquistar", a song by Ricky Martin from his |
Association as it would threaten the economy. In November 2017 he was appointed to the Tonga Tradition Committee by Tupou VI. He later released a book in 2017 on his upbringing. In June 2018 he was appointed Governor of Ha’apai. As Governor he was responsible for disaster management for Cyclone Tino. | Tupou VI. He later released a book in 2017 on his upbringing. In June 2018 he was appointed Governor of Ha’apai. As Governor he was responsible for disaster management for Cyclone Tino. He was replaced as Governor by Viliami Hingano in January 2021. References External links Living people Governors of Haʻapai |
player Fábio Lima (footballer, born 1993), Emirati football forward | Brazilian football centre-back Fábio Lima (futsal player) (born 1988), Portuguese |
was also a violinist. He made his debut at the age of seven. He and his sister played violin duets at the Ramanathaswamy Temple, Subramaniya Swamy Temple, Tiruchendur and Kanyakumari Temple. Anantharaman designed his own style with his brother. The brothers were popular in Parur Bani (mix of Hidustani and Carnatic styles). He was a regular participant at concerts in Chennai as part of the Markazi festival. Later, when M. S. Gopalakrishnan performed his own violin concerts, Anantharaman became accustomed to accompanying musicians on the violin. Anantharaman became a violinist along with Carnatic musicians including M. S. Subbulakshmi and Hindustani musicians including Omkarnath Thakur. He has served as a Professor of violin in the Tamil Nadu Government Music College in Chennai from 1962 to 1983. Later, he taught violin in Pittsburgh, United states also. His sons M. S. Sundareswaran and M. A. Krishnaswamy were also Carnatic violinists. His daughter M. A. Bhagirathi is a Carnatic vocalist. He died on | Omkarnath Thakur. He has served as a Professor of violin in the Tamil Nadu Government Music College in Chennai from 1962 to 1983. Later, he taught violin in Pittsburgh, United states also. His sons M. S. Sundareswaran and M. A. Krishnaswamy were also Carnatic violinists. His daughter M. A. Bhagirathi is a Carnatic vocalist. He died on 19 February 2018, at his home at Sri Apparswamy Koil Street, Mylapore, Chennai, Tamil Nadu. Awards and honors Sangeet Natak Akademi Award 1998 Kalaimamani award of the Tamil Nadu Eyal Isai Nataka Manram T.T.K award of the Music Academy 1996 Sangeetha Kala Acharya of the Music Academy He was the Asthana Vidwan (Head Scholar) of the Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham References 1924 births 2018 deaths Carnatic violinists Hindustani violinists Recipients of the Kalaimamani Award Recipients of the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award Musicians from Chennai Indian violinists Carnatic instrumentalists Indian male classical |
played an important role that season, by playing 26 league matches, scoring one goal and providing five assists. His performance over the season drew in interest from several clubs. He left the club after his contract expired ending a nine-year stint with the Sogakope-based team. Inter Allies On 25 January 2018, International Allies announced that they had signed Lamptey as a free agent on three-year contract. On 3 February 2019, Lamptey signed for Lebanese Premier League side Salam Zgharta on a loan deal till the end of the 2018–19 season. He returned to the Inter Allies and was appointed as the club captain for the 2019–20 season. In the 2020–21 season, he played 30 matches, scored 3 goals, provided two assists and won four man of the match awards. He made headlines within the season with his 40-yard thunderbolt strike against Hearts of Oak in November 2020. | once for the Ghana national team. Club career WAFA Lamptey joined West African Football Academy (WAFA) at the age of twelve. He progressed through the age groups playing for the U-13, U-17 till he was promoted to the senior team in 2015. He played three seasons with the senior team in the Ghana Premier League and was part of the squad that placed second in the 2017 season, the club's highest ever position in the history of the league. He played an important role that season, by playing 26 league matches, scoring one goal and providing five assists. His performance over the season drew in interest from several clubs. He left the club after his |
born 1978), Brazilian football striker Gabriel Lima (futsal player) (born | (footballer, born 1978), Brazilian football striker Gabriel Lima |
in Escrava Isaura. Born in Brazil, he died on 1 February 2022, at the age of 90. Select filmography References 1931 births 2022 deaths Brazilian male television actors | names in Brazilian dubbing, having voiced characters such as Wolverine, Freddy Krueger, Tigger, and Skeletor. As an actor, he became known for playing the overseer Francisco in Escrava Isaura. Born in Brazil, he died |
State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) is formed with the following objectives: Acts as a regulator for distribution licensees during the purchase and procurement of electricity by them . Facilitates during transmission of electricity between different states. Facilitates issuing of licences to transmission and distribution licensees applicants and electricity traders within the state. Fix the rates during wholesale, bulk or retail generation of electricity and its supply, transmission and wheeling within the state. Resolve conflicts between the licensees and/or the generating companies. Integrate state grid codes with the grid code designed by Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) . Streamlining electricity tariff. Transparency in designing subsidy related policies. Promoting environmental policity in matters relating to electricity. Any other matters connected or incidental with it. Advisory Role State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) follows below advisory role: Designing schemes promoting electricity industry related investment. Planinng initiatives in Electrical industry which promotes competition and improves efficiency and brings economy in activities. Initiating restructuring and reorganisation in Electricity industry. Guiding state government in any | connected or incidental with it. Advisory Role State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) follows below advisory role: Designing schemes promoting electricity industry related investment. Planinng initiatives in Electrical industry which promotes competition and improves efficiency and brings economy in activities. Initiating restructuring and reorganisation in Electricity industry. Guiding state government in any issues referred to it which are related to generation, transmission, distribution and trading of electricity in the state. Powers The commissions acts as substitutes to civil courts and are vested with legislative and judicial powers to resolve conflicts between licence holders of production and distribution of electricity, or consumers and electricity distribution entities and with authority to draft regulations and sub ordinate regulations. They can also issue orders for the recovery of amounts from power consuming entities which are due to electricity generating companies. Composition The Composition of State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) 1. Chairperson 2. Two members. Chairperson will be appointed by state Government in consultation with the Chief Justice of state High Court. The eligibility for Chairperson is that he should be serving or served as Judge in any High Court and other members should have good ability,integrity and standing.They should also be proficient experience and expertise knowledge in subjects of accountancy,law,commerce,economics,industry,administration and public affairs and problem solving ability in same. The Chairperson and members of State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) are not permitted to hold any other office of profit or any position which |
Candidates Incumbent Mayor Ravinder Bhalla, was the only person who declared his candidacy for the election. Despite this, Councilmembers Ruben Ramos Jr., Tiffanie Fisher, and Michael Russo as well as former | Ravinder Bhalla announced that he would seek reelection for a second term on June 3, 2021. Since there were no opponents, Bhalla ran unopposed for reelection for a second term. Candidates Incumbent Mayor Ravinder Bhalla, was the only person who declared his candidacy for the election. Despite this, Councilmembers Ruben Ramos Jr., Tiffanie |
The franchise moved to Victoria, Texas on June 10, 1961, to complete the season. In 1976, the Rio Grande Valley White Wings played in the Gulf States League and the Harlingen Suns (1977) played in the Lone Star League, both leagues folded after one season. Later Rio Grande Valley White Wings teams played in independent professional leagues through 2015. The ballpark Beginning in 1950, Harlingen minor league teams were noted to have played home games at Harlingen Field. Opening as Lon C. Hill Field, the ballpark was also called Giants Field. Harlingen Field is still in use today and most recently was home to the Independent professional Rio Grande Valley WhiteWings. The ballpark address is North O Street & Fair Park Boulevard, Harlingen, Texas. Year–by–year record Notable alumni Baseball Hall of Fame alumni Gaylord Perry (1960) Inducted, 1991 Notable alumni Jake Atz (1938, MGR) Bobby Bolin (1960) Earl Caldwell (1951-1952) | Harlingen teams were a minor league affiliate of the Detroit Tigers in 1938 and San Francisco Giants in 1960 and 1961. History Minor league baseball began in Harlingen, Texas in 1931. The Harlingen Ladds played briefly as members of the 1931 Rio Grande Valley League and placed 3rd in their first season of play. On July 29, 1931, the Ladds had a record of 43–49, playing under manager Paul Trammel, when the Rio Grande Valley League folded. Harlingen returned to minor league play in 1938, winning a championship. The Harlingen Hubs became members of the 1938 Texas Valley League and were a minor league affiliate of the Detroit Tigers. The Hubbs finished 2nd in the regular season in 1938, but swept through the playoffs undefeated to capture the Texas Valley League Championship, while playing under manager Jake Atz. The league folded after the 1938 season. The Harlingen Capitals were members of the Class D Rio Grande Valley League (1950) and Class B Gulf Coast League (1951–1953). They were founding members of the Gulf Coast League, along with the Brownsville Charros, Corpus Christi Aces, Galveston White Caps, Lake Charles Lakers, Laredo Apaches, Port Arthur Seahawks and Texas City Texans. When the Gulf Coast League folded after the 1953 season Harlingen joined the Big |
a joint supervision of Dilding and parts of Pendam. “Ilakhas” or estates of Sadam, Pachekhani, Dikling and parts of Pendam were put under joint supervision of both the families. Families Families of six traders - Lachhimidas Pradhan, Kancha Chandbir Pradhan, Chandbir Pradhan Maskey of Pakyong, Jitman Singh Pradhan, Prasad Singh Chettri of Tarku Estate and Bharaddoj Gurung of Khani Goan were addressed as “Taksaris” who were given land estates on lease to mint coins. Legacy They are credited with bringing coinage system to Sikkim and contributing to economic and agricultural growth of the Himalayan state. The first cart road connecting Teesta with Gangtok was built by the Taksaris. Bazaars of Rangpo, Singtam, Rhenock and Rongli were established due to the efforts of the Taksaris of Sikkim. In the judicial history of Sikkim, some of the earliest courts established in the former kingdom was the “Adda” courts of the Kazis and Thikadars. A Taksari family's residence is known as a Kothi accompanied with a Kuchcheri(court) which had jurisdiction over their land estate. There are many well preserved Kothis and | Sikkim. In the same year an agreement was reached between the two families where Chandrabir Maskey was given the Pendam, Temi, Regu, Pakyong and Chotta Pathing estates. Lachhimidas Pradhan and his family took control of the estate bordering Majitar to Kaleej khola and Barmick in South Sikkim. His brother Chandrabir Pradhan(Kasaju) Chandrabir (Kasaju} was given Rhenock, Mamring, Pache Khani, and Taja along with a joint supervision of Dilding and parts of Pendam. “Ilakhas” or estates of Sadam, Pachekhani, Dikling and parts of Pendam were put under joint supervision of both the families. Families Families of six traders - Lachhimidas Pradhan, Kancha Chandbir Pradhan, Chandbir Pradhan Maskey of Pakyong, Jitman Singh Pradhan, Prasad Singh Chettri of Tarku Estate and Bharaddoj Gurung of Khani Goan were addressed as “Taksaris” who were given land estates on lease to mint coins. Legacy They are credited with bringing coinage system to Sikkim and contributing |
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Jesse & Joy from Electricidad, 2009 "Una y Otra Vez", the working title for "Una Na" by Lali Espósito, 2017 "Una y Otra Vez", a song by Magento, 2001 "Una y Otra Vez", a song by María León written for the telenovela Guerra de ídolos, 2017 Una y Otra Vez, an album by Ray Reyes, | theme song for ANA. all in, 2021 "Una y Otra Vez", a song by Antonio Orozco, 2005 "Una y Otra Vez", a song by Ednita Nazario from Apasionada, 2005 "Una y Otra Vez", a song by El Tri from Hecho en México, 2005 "Una y Otra Vez", a song by Jesse & Joy from |
legislature in their 2009 Legislative Assembly election, and was the only member of the party represented there. She is the Assistant Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Macau, and currently heads their Center for Communication. She has published on the history of print media in China. She writes several columns in Macau newspapers, and has written and published several volumes of poetry. Her writing has won several awards, in China and Macau. Early life Lam was born on 7 March 1972 in Macau. Her parents had moved from mainland China to Macau and her father worked in construction and food service before they were able to buy farmland in Areia Preta. Lam was one of nine children and was able to attend college on the condition that she help fund her siblings' education afterwards. Career Journalism Lam earned a degree in journalism from the University of Macau in 1991, and worked with Teledifusão de Macau thereafter, becoming a full-time television reporter in 1994. | journalism from the University of Macau in 1991, and worked with Teledifusão de Macau thereafter, becoming a full-time television reporter in 1994. She covered local events, such as the opening of Macau Airport and visits to Macau by foreign leaders. She hosted a weekly television program, "Witnessing the Handover" which ran until 1999. Education Following her work in journalism, Lam completed a master's degree and Ph.D. from University of Beijing, studying the development of Chinese and Portuguese print media in Macau. In 1997, she joined the faculty of the University of Macau's Department of Communication, where she taught journalism. She was appointed the Assistant Dean of the University of Macau's Faculty of Social Sciences. Later, she helped establish the university's Department of Communication, where she teaches, and heads their Center for Communication. Politics Lam joined the Macau Civic Power party, later becoming the president of the party, and campaigned unsuccessfully for a seat in Macau's legislature in 1999 and 2003. She was elected to the legislature on her third campaign in 2017, and remained in office until 2021, when she ran an unsuccessful re-election campaign. Writing Lam has written ten books. Her most notable work, published in 2015, is a history of the Macanese press, titled The Beginning of the Modern Chinese Press History: Macau Press History 1557- 1840. She has also published four volumes of poetry: A Pond in the Sky: Selected and New Poems (Association of Stories in Macao, 2013), Water Wood Pure Splendour (Asia 2000, 2001), Woman to Woman and Other Poems (Asia 2000, 1997), and Poppies by the Motorway (Chinese University Press, 2018). She is the vice president of Macau PEN. Awards and honors 1999 - Champion of Macau Literature Prize (Poetry Session) for “This City I Come From.” |
and the United States to claim compensation from China. The source is the United States and Australia? The first case appeared in September last year? Both the United Kingdom and the United States have a guilty conscience?" The content quoted the new coronavirus study by the University of Cambridge research team pointed to the origin of the virus as the United States or Australia. As of 28 April, the video had more than 380,000 views. An investigation by the Hong Kong news agency, FactWire, found that the video was taken out of context and misinterpreted the research results. Dr. Peter Forster, an expert who led the research team, responded to the FactWire inquiry and stated that the purpose of the research is not to find the source of the virus at all, but to analyze how the virus mutates over time and spreads among humans. He also said that data showed that the patients in the early stage of the virus outbreak were generally from East Asians, which strongly indicated that the virus spread among them in the early stage of the outbreak. Pro-police comments On September 2020, Chan and another pro-establishment figure, Navis Ha, commented on a pregnant woman who was pushed down by the police during a demonstration on the first anniversary of the Prince Edward station attack. She described the pregnant woman as a "criminal woman" and questioned her "after being interviewed by the media." On 29 September, Hong Kong Police commissioner, Chris Tang, took the initiative to mention during the Yau Tsim Mong District Council meeting that on 31 August and 6 September, during the police operations at the Mong Kok demonstration site, a pregnant woman was pushed down on the day. Tang said that the demonstration scene was very chaotic. Some people did shout "pregnant women", but not everyone present could hear it. References External links 1990 births Living people Alumni of the University | Bachelor of Economics and Finance from the HKU and a Bachelor of Laws from the University of London. Later, she joined FTU as a community officer in Sham Shui Po. During the 2015 Hong Kong local elections, Chan represented the Federation of Trade Unions in the Lai Kok constituency seat of Sham Shui Po District Council and competed with Federick Fung, then a member of the Legislative Council of the ADPL. In the end, she won with 2,531 votes, while former ADPL member Wong Chung-kei got 215 votes at the same time. However, on 2019 Hong Kong local elections, she was defeated by Li Kwing of the ADPL, losing her bid for re-election. After losing the district council election, she opened her YouTube channel to comment on current affairs and became an internet celebrity; she also runs a YouTube channel with another unsuccessful district councillor candidate, Navis Ha Wing-ka. In the 2021 Hong Kong legislative election, she represented the Federation of Trade Unions in the newly created New Territories South West constituency. Chan won 62,690 votes and became the youngest member of the 7th Legislative Council of Hong Kong. Controversies Fake news on COVID-19 On April 2020, Chan posted a video on her YouTube channel titled "A new discovery by British and German scientists debunks the conspiracy of the United Kingdom and the United States to claim compensation from China. The source is the United States and Australia? The first case appeared in September last year? Both the United Kingdom and the United States have a guilty conscience?" The content quoted the new coronavirus study by the University of Cambridge research team pointed to the origin of the virus as the United States or Australia. As of 28 April, the video had more than 380,000 views. An investigation by the Hong Kong news agency, FactWire, found that the video was taken out of context and misinterpreted the research results. Dr. Peter Forster, an expert who led the research team, responded to the FactWire inquiry and stated that the purpose of the research is not to find the |
Marcelo Lima may refer to: Marcelo Lopes (footballer, born | 1975), Brazilian football defender Marcelo Lopes (footballer, born 1994), Portuguese football |
15, 1968 – January 18, 2022) was a Puerto Rican percussionist. He played the requinto drum, a key instrument in plena music. He was one of the founders of Viento de | instrument in plena music. He was one of the founders of Viento de Agua. According to the Smithsonian |
different moniker each season. Baseball Hall of Fame member Kid Nichols managed the 1914 Bonham Sliders. History Professional baseball began in Bonham in 1898. The Bonham team played as a member of the Independent level Southwestern League. Bonham finished with a 6–9 record as the league quickly folded in 1898. The Southwestern League played from April 21, 1898, to May 23, 1898. In 1911, Bonham resumed minor league play. The Bonham Boosters became a member of the Class D level Texas-Oklahoma League. Bonham would continue playing as league members from 1911 to 1914 and 1921 to 1922, which covered all six seasons of play for the league. The 1911 Bonham Boosters finished with a record of 54–60, to place 4th in the Texas–Oklahoma League, playing under manager Jimmie Humphries. The Boosters finished with the Altus Chiefs (31–44), Ardmore Blues (49–58), Cleburne Railroaders (61–50), Durant Educators (65–46), Gainesville Blue Ribbons, Lawton Medicine Men (17–31) and Wichita Falls Irish Lads (65–38) in the 1911 league standings. Continuing play, the 1912 Bonham Tigers finished with a record of 53–35, placing 2nd overall in the Texas–Oklahoma League standings. The Tigers played under manager Roy Leslie. The Tigers threw two no–hitters in 1912. On April 30, 1912, Bonham pitcher Wingo Anderson threw a no–hitter in a 9–0 victory over McKinney. Then, on May 25, 1912, Bonham pitcher Reb Russell threw a second Tiger no–hitter, beating Durant 9–1. The 1912 Texas–Oklahoma | photo and a parade to the ballpark. The Bonham Daily Favorite newspaper reported on April 16, 1913, that "Practically every business house in the city closed during the game which began at 3:15 o'clock, and perhaps the largest crowd that ever attended a ball game in Bonham was present. The grandstand and bleachers were full, and the crowd overflowed into right field." Bonham continued play as members of the Texas–Oklahoma League in 1914. On June 22, 1914, Bonham pitcher Fritz Redford threw a no–hitter in a 7–0 Bonham win over the Sherman Lions. Just a little over a week later, on June 30, 1914, the Bonham Sliders had a 47–58 record under managers Senter Reiney and Kid Nichols when the franchise disbanded. Nichols is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Texas–Oklahoma League League folded after the 1914 season. The 1921 Bonham Favorites joined the reformed Texas-Oklahoma League. The Favorites finished with a record of 57–71, playing under Managers G. D. Pittman and Virgil Moss. Bonham finished 3rd in the league, joining the Ardmore Peps (87–40), Cleburne Generals (51–75), Graham Hijackers/Mineral Wells Resorters (49–79), Paris Snappers and Sherman Lions (48–78) in the 1921 league standings. 1922 was the final year for both the Texas–Oklahoma League and the Bonham franchise. The 1922 Bonham Bingers finished with a record of 39–53, placing 7th in the league. The Bingers' manager was Les Tullos. Bonham was dropped |
of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Yapahuwa representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He was elected to parliament from Yapahuwa in the March 1960 general election defeating U. B. Wanninayake. He lost | general election defeating U. B. Wanninayake. He lost is seat a few months later in the July 1960 general election U. B. Wanninayake. References Sri Lankan politicians Members of the 4th |
B. Yalegama of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party when he contested from the Sri Lanka Freedom Socialist Party and was defeated by Yalegama in the 1970 general election, when he contested from the United National Party. References 1926 births Sri Lankan politicians Members of the 4th Parliament of Ceylon Members of the 5th Parliament of Ceylon Sri Lanka Freedom Party politicians United National | election to S. B. Yalegama of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party when he contested from the Sri Lanka Freedom Socialist Party and was defeated by Yalegama in the 1970 general election, when he contested from the United National Party. References 1926 births Sri Lankan politicians Members |
William Blume Levy (born 14 January 2001) is a Danish professional road cyclist, who currently rides for UCI ProTeam . Major results 2018 2nd Overall Tour du Pays de Vaud 1st Young rider classification 1st Stage 2 3rd La Route des Géants | Pays de Vaud 1st Young rider classification 1st Stage 2 3rd La Route des Géants 3rd Johan Museeuw Classic 4th Overall Sint-Martinusprijs Kontich 1st Stage 3a (ITT) 5th Junior Tour of Flanders 2019 1st Junior Tour of Flanders National Junior Road Championships 3rd Road race 3rd Time trial 3rd Overall Tour |
and description The ship is displaced at standard load and at deep load The ships measured long overall with a beam of . They had a draft of . The ships' complement consisted of 85 officers and ratings. The ships had two General Motors 12-278A diesel engines, one shaft. The engines produced a total of and gave a maximum speed of . They carried a maximum of of fuel oil that gave them a range of at . The Abnaki class was armed with a 3"/50 caliber gun anti-aircraft gun, two single-mount Oerlikon 20 mm cannon and two twin-gun mounts for Bofors 40 mm gun. Construction and career The ship was built at the Charleston Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. at Charleston, South Carolina. She was launched on 29 December 1943. The ship was commissioned on 25 April 1944, with Lt. Carroll F. Johnson in command. She was reclassified ATF-102 on 15 May 1944. Service in the United States Navy After shakedown in Chesapeake Bay, Hidatsa departed Norfolk on 3 June 1944 with two floating destroyer workshops in tow and reached Manus Island, Admiralties, via the Panama Canal, Bora bora, and Espiritu Santo on 4 September. On 20 September, Hidatsa towed two pontoon barges to Morotai to be used in docks assembled on that newly taken island. Next, she towed seven more barges to Mios Woendi. Then, as the long Pacific campaign moved steadily northward, the | . They had a draft of . The ships' complement consisted of 85 officers and ratings. The ships had two General Motors 12-278A diesel engines, one shaft. The engines produced a total of and gave a maximum speed of . They carried a maximum of of fuel oil that gave them a range of at . The Abnaki class was armed with a 3"/50 caliber gun anti-aircraft gun, two single-mount Oerlikon 20 mm cannon and two twin-gun mounts for Bofors 40 mm gun. Construction and career The ship was built at the Charleston Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. at Charleston, South Carolina. She was launched on 29 December 1943. The ship was commissioned on 25 April 1944, with Lt. Carroll F. Johnson in command. She was reclassified ATF-102 on 15 May 1944. Service in the United States Navy After shakedown in Chesapeake Bay, Hidatsa departed Norfolk on 3 June 1944 with two floating destroyer workshops in tow and reached Manus Island, Admiralties, via the Panama Canal, Bora bora, and Espiritu Santo on 4 September. On 20 September, Hidatsa towed two pontoon barges to Morotai to be used in docks assembled on that newly taken island. Next, she towed seven more barges to Mios Woendi. Then, as the long Pacific campaign moved steadily northward, the fleet tug departed Mios Woendi on 13 October with a gasoline barge, a crane barge, and a PT drydock in tow, for use in the invasion of the Philippine Islands. As Hidatsa reached Leyte Gulf, scene of the initial landings, on 25 October, she could observe gun flashes from the Battle of Surigao Straits, part of Japan's desperate attempt to deny America the Philippines. But for brief voyages to Manus and Hollandia, Hidatsa |
parliament from Rattota in the 1965 general election defeating Chandrasena Munaweera and retained his seat in the 1970 general election, but lost it in the 1977 general election. References 1925 births | from Rattota representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He was elected to parliament from Rattota in the 1965 general election defeating Chandrasena Munaweera and retained his seat in the 1970 |
a Sri Lankan politician. He was the Minister of Cultural Affairs and member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Rattota representing the United National Party. He was elected to parliament from Rattota in the 1977 general election defeating S. B. Yalegama and retained his seat in the | Punchi Banda Kaviratne (3 February 1936 - 19??) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the Minister of Cultural Affairs and member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Rattota representing the United National Party. He was elected to parliament from Rattota in the 1977 general election defeating S. B. Yalegama |
armen Knaben (Beckenfridli. The story of a poor boy.) Trivia In 1899, Alfred Altherr was the pastor to whom Emilie Kempin-Spyri applied in vain for a job as a maid. She was the first woman lawyer in Switzerland and was interned in the Friedmatt mental asylum in Basel. Honours and Awards Honorary citizen of the city of Basel 1917: Honorary doctorate from the University of Basel Writings (Extract) Antrittspredigt über 2. Mos. 3, 1–6: gehalten am 11. August 1867. Lichtensteig 1867. Die Kirche des neuen Bundes: Predigt den 3. Mai 1874 in der St. Martinskirche zu Basel. Basel 1874. Antrittspredigt gehalten in der St. Leonhardskirche zu Basel den 4. October 1874. Basel 1874. Die Bedeutung der Bibel für das religiöse, sittliche und soziale Leben: Ein Vortrag. Vereinsbuchdruckerei, Basel 1880. Theodor Hoffmann-Merian: ein Lebensbild nach seinen eigenen Aufzeichnungen. Schwabe, Basel 1889. Die Biblische Lehre. J. Frehner, Basel 1890. Theodor Parker in seinem Leben und Wirken dargestellt. St. Gallen 1894. Beckenfriedli. Zürich 1897. Alfred Bitzius, ein Vorbild freier Frömmigkeit: Vortrag. Frehner, Basel 1898. Das fatale Almosen: eine Erzählung. Haller, Bern 1898. Die Lehre vom Sohne Gottes für das Volk dargestellt. Schünemann, Bremen 1904. Friedrich von Schiller in seiner Bedeutung für die Religion. Volksschriftenverlag des Schweizerischen Vereins | Thomas Alva Edison's assistant and with whom he had to do weaving work, was staying in the orphanage. After the orphanage director changed, Alfred Altherr came to the canton school in Trogen in 1857 and took a preliminary course at the Swiss Federal Polytechnic in Zurich in 1862; He then studied theology at the University of Zurich. He was ordained in Herisau in 1867 and was a pastor in Lichtensteig until 1871, then in Rorschach from 1871 to 1874 and in the Leonhardskirche in Basel from 1874 to 1911. In 1878 he founded the Basler Ferienversorgung armer und erholungsbedürftiger Schulkinder (committee for holiday care for poor and needy school children) who were in need of relaxation. In 1917 he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Basel. Alfred Altherr was buried in the Wolfgottesacker Cemetery in Basel. Family Alfred Altherr married Henriette Pfenninger, daughter of Johann Heinrich Pfenninger, pastor in Laufen, in 1868. The names of their sons: Paul Altherr, Alfred Johann Altherr and Heinrich Altherr. Spiritual Engagement Alfred Altherr was Basel's first liberal pastor and he was one of the most important exponents of the church reform movement, which advocated a Christianity free from confession and dogma. Literary Works Alfred Altherr wrote various books and worked as a founder and editor of magazines; from 1870 to 1876 he was the first editor of the Religiösen Volksblatt (Popular Religious Newspaper) and together with Emanuel Linder he founded the Schweizerisches Protestantenblatt (Swiss Protestant Newspaper) in 1878, of which he was editor until his death; from 1906 Hans Baur was co-publisher and editor. In addition to theological works, biographies, travelogues and stories, his memoirs are particularly noteworthy. Their first volume appeared in Zurich in 1897 under the title Beckenfridli. Geschichte eines armen Knaben (Beckenfridli. The story of a poor boy.) Trivia In 1899, Alfred Altherr was the pastor to whom Emilie Kempin-Spyri applied in vain for a job as a maid. She was the first woman lawyer in Switzerland and was interned in the Friedmatt mental asylum in Basel. Honours and Awards Honorary citizen of the city of Basel 1917: Honorary doctorate from the University of Basel Writings (Extract) Antrittspredigt über 2. Mos. 3, 1–6: gehalten am 11. August 1867. Lichtensteig 1867. Die Kirche des neuen Bundes: Predigt den |
was released on 25 February in the Netherlands by Armind as the fourth single from van Buuren's fourth studio album, Mirage. Swedish disc jockey and producer Avicii made a remix of this song which was more popular. Review According to Dylan Smith from webmedia EDM House Network, the Avicii remix of the song "was nothing short of magnificent, with Avicii putting his signature piano progressive house style onto the single and taking it to the next level". Music video A music | single from van Buuren's fourth studio album, Mirage. Swedish disc jockey and producer Avicii made a remix of this song which was more popular. Review According to Dylan Smith from webmedia EDM House Network, the Avicii remix of the song "was nothing short of magnificent, with Avicii putting his signature piano progressive house style onto the single and taking it to the next level". Music video A music video to accompany the track was released to Armada Music's YouTube channel on 30 March 2011. This video was released a second time for the Avicii remix on 8 April 2011. Both |
of its log walls. It was listed on the National Register as part of a study of Tourtellotte and Hummel works. It currently is the home of a nondenominational church, the Pinehurst Community Bible Church. References Baptist churches in Idaho National Register of Historic Places in Shoshone County, Idaho Buildings and structures | walls. It was listed on the National Register as part of a study of Tourtellotte and Hummel works. It currently is the home of a nondenominational church, the Pinehurst Community Bible Church. References Baptist churches in Idaho National |
His doctoral dissertation, "The Tel Dan Inscription: A Reappraisal and a New Interpretation) was subsequently published in the JSOTSupp series (volume 360). He also completed a Bachelor of Divinity at Moore Theological College (2002–2005). Athas | series (volume 360). He also completed a Bachelor of Divinity at Moore Theological College (2002–2005). Athas researches in prophetic, wisdom, and apocalyptic literature. He has written a Hebrew grammar (Elementary Biblical Hebrew), and commentaries on Deuteronomy, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Songs, as well |
pursued advanced study at Johns Hopkins University. In 1959, Callaway was appointed director of research of the Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute in San Francisco and continued in that capacity as professor until 1986, when he moved to San Francisco VA Medical Center and remained there until his retirement in 1994. Among the students he mentored was Monte Buchsbaum, professor at the University of California, San Diego and founder and editor-in-chief of Psychiatry Research. Callaway is known for his contributions to psychophysiology, cognition and | Surgeons in 1947. He completed his residency at Worcester State Hospital in Massachusetts and pursued advanced study at Johns Hopkins University. In 1959, Callaway was appointed director of research of the Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute in San Francisco and continued in that capacity as professor until 1986, when he moved to San Francisco VA Medical Center and remained there until his retirement in 1994. Among the students he mentored was Monte Buchsbaum, professor at the University of California, San Diego and founder and editor-in-chief of Psychiatry Research. Callaway is known for his contributions to psychophysiology, cognition and psychopharmacology. He was made a distinguished life fellow of the American Psychiatric Association in 1982. He also co-founded the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. After leaving UCSF, he co-founded Neurobiological Technologies, a biotech company that sought to develop drugs to treat strokes and brain |
Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY Jane South and Savannah College of Art & Design, Lacoste Campus, France Jane South, 2005, Susanne Vielmetter, LA Projects, CA Jane South, 2004, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY All Nine, 2003, Installation at Nassauischer Kunstverein, Wiesbaden, Germany Working Drawing, 2003, Installation & Animation, MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA Jane South, 2001, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY Jane South, 1999, Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art, Roswell, NM Awards and honors 1998 - Roswell Artist in Residence Program, Roswell, NM 2002 - Arts & Humanities Grant, Williams College Center for Technology 2003 - MacDowell Colony Residency, Peterborough, NH 2004 - Joan Mitchell Foundation Residency, SFAI (Santa Fe Art Institute) 2006 - Fellowship in Sculpture, NYFA (New York Foundation for the Arts) 2007 - The Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center Residency 2008 - Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant 2009 - The Brown Foundation Fellows Program, Dora Maar House 2010 - Camargo Foundation Fellowship, Cassis, France 2015 - RISD Mellon Teaching Fellowship, Brown University 2021 - Guggenheim Fellowship References Year of birth missing | Museum, CT Shifting Structures: Stacks, 2012, Site-specific installation at the New York Public Library, NY Box, 2010, Knoxville Museum of Art, TN Jane South, 2012, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY Deceptive Volume, 2008, Queens Museum, Bulova Center, NY Jane South Infrastructures, 2007, Second Street Gallery, Charlottesville, VA traveled to: Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, NC Jane South, 2006, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY Jane South and Savannah College of Art & Design, Lacoste Campus, France Jane South, 2005, Susanne Vielmetter, LA Projects, CA Jane South, 2004, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY All Nine, 2003, Installation at Nassauischer Kunstverein, Wiesbaden, Germany Working Drawing, 2003, Installation & Animation, MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA Jane South, 2001, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY Jane South, 1999, Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art, Roswell, NM Awards and honors 1998 - Roswell Artist in Residence Program, Roswell, NM 2002 - Arts & Humanities Grant, Williams College Center for Technology 2003 - MacDowell Colony Residency, Peterborough, NH 2004 - Joan Mitchell Foundation Residency, SFAI (Santa Fe Art Institute) 2006 - Fellowship in Sculpture, NYFA (New York Foundation for the Arts) 2007 - The Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center Residency 2008 - Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant 2009 - The Brown Foundation Fellows Program, Dora Maar House 2010 - Camargo Foundation Fellowship, Cassis, France 2015 - RISD Mellon Teaching Fellowship, Brown University 2021 - Guggenheim Fellowship References Year of birth missing (living people) British artists Alumni of the Central School of Art and Design University of North Carolina at Greensboro alumni Pratt Institute faculty British women |
in the English Football League for Wrexham, appearing in their inaugural Football League fixture in 1921 against Hartlepools United. References 1891 | as a half-back. He made appearances in the English Football League for Wrexham, appearing in their inaugural Football League fixture in 1921 against Hartlepools United. References 1891 births Date of |
Hastings was a member of the Nebraska State League from 1910 to 1915 and 1922 to 1923, playing as the Reds, Cubs, Third Citys and Brickmakers. The Hastings Cubs joined the Tri-State League in 1924. Hall of Famer Fred Clarke began his professional career with Hastings in 1892, hitting .302 with 14 stolen bases in 41 games. The Hastings Third Citys won the 1912 Nebraska State League Championship, finishing 1st in the regular season at 67–44. The Kearney Buffaloes playoff win over Hastings was later reversed at the Nebraska State League 1913 spring meeting and Hastings was awarded the championship. Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Dazzy Vance pitched for the Hastings Reds in 1914 with a 17–4 record. The Hastings Giants were an affiliate of the New York Giants/San Francisco Giants, playing from 1956 to 1959. The Giants played their home games at Duncan Field. The Nebraska State League permanently folded following the 1959 season. The 1959 league member Hastings Giants, Holdrege White Sox, Grand Island Athletics, Kearney Yankees, McCook Braves and North Platte Indians all permanently folded as well. The ballpark The Hastings Giants were noted to have played home minor league games at Duncan Field. Constructed in 1940 as a federal W.P.A. Project, the ballpark was considered | in various seasons between 1887 and 1959. The Hastings Giants played in the short-season Class D level Nebraska State League from 1956 to 1959. Earlier Hastings teams had played as members the Nebraska State League in 1892, Western League in 1887, the Nebraska State League from 1910 to 1915 and 1922 to 1923 and the Tri-State League in 1924. Baseball Hall of Fame members Fred Clarke (1892) and Dazzy Vance (1914) played for Hastings teams. The Hastings Giants were a minor league affiliate of the New York Giants from 1956 to 1957 and San Francisco Giants in 1958 and 1959. History Minor league baseball began with the Hastings Hustlers in the 1887 Western League. Hastings was a member of the Nebraska State League from 1910 to 1915 and 1922 to 1923, playing as the Reds, Cubs, Third Citys and Brickmakers. The Hastings Cubs joined the Tri-State League in 1924. Hall of Famer Fred Clarke began his professional career with Hastings in 1892, hitting .302 with 14 stolen bases in 41 games. The Hastings Third Citys won the 1912 Nebraska State League Championship, finishing 1st in the regular season at 67–44. The Kearney Buffaloes playoff win over Hastings was later reversed at the Nebraska State League 1913 spring meeting and |
four years Bachelor of Technology course is made through UGEAC conducted by Bihar Combined Entrance Competitive Examination Board. To apply for UGEAC, appearing in JEE Main of that admission year is required along with other eligibility criteria. Departments The college has three branches in Bachelor of Technology | that admission year is required along with other eligibility criteria. Departments The college has three branches in Bachelor of Technology course with an annual intake of following number of students. References External links BCECE Board website Aryabhatta Knowledge University website DST, Bihar website Engineering colleges in Bihar Colleges affiliated to Aryabhatta Knowledge University 2019 establishments in Bihar |
actor. He is known for his roles in dramas such as Strong Girl Bong-soon (2017), Gangnam Beauty (2018), | Bong-soon (2017), Gangnam Beauty (2018), At a Distance, Spring Is Green (2021), and All of Us Are Dead (2022). Filmography Television series Film Awards |
the municipality was incorporated into the newly established Libavá Military Training Area. The territory of the village was used to accommodate employees, which saved it from complete extinction. Luboměř pod Strážnou became again | into the newly established Libavá Military Training Area. The territory of the village was used to accommodate employees, which saved it from complete extinction. Luboměř pod Strážnou became again a separate municipality on 1 January 2016 by reduction of Libavá Military Training Area. References Villages in Přerov |
Bauchi College of Arts and Science (BACAS), Bauchi. In 1988, Dambam was at University of Maiduguri where he graduated with a major; Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) in 1994. He also received a master's degree in Public Health from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in 2007. In addition, he obtained a Diploma in Medical Sciences each from Royal College of Physicians in the Republic of Ireland, Imperial College, University of London and the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria. Family Dambam was born to a Muslim Karai-Karai family of Malam Muhammad Dambam in Yamai village under Dambam Local Government in Bauchi State. He was married with six children. Career Dambam saterted his career in medical practice and civil service with Houseman ship at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) in Maiduguri, Borno State from May 1994 to May 1995. Then to Medical Officer General Hospital Ogoja (NYSC) from June 1995 to June 1996, Registrar Department of Medicine in the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Maiduguri from January 1997 to May 1997. Registrar Department of Medicine State House Clinic from 1997 to June 1998, Physician to the First Lady Federal Republic of Nigeria from June 1998 to June 1999, Clinical attachment Gastroenterology Unit, Hammersmith Hospital London July 2000 – Oct, 2000 Senior Registrar University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital from January 2001 to May 2003, Senior Registrar State House Clinic from | State from May 1994 to May 1995. Then to Medical Officer General Hospital Ogoja (NYSC) from June 1995 to June 1996, Registrar Department of Medicine in the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Maiduguri from January 1997 to May 1997. Registrar Department of Medicine State House Clinic from 1997 to June 1998, Physician to the First Lady Federal Republic of Nigeria from June 1998 to June 1999, Clinical attachment Gastroenterology Unit, Hammersmith Hospital London July 2000 – Oct, 2000 Senior Registrar University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital from January 2001 to May 2003, Senior Registrar State House Clinic from May, 2003 to November 2003, then Consultant Physician, State House Clinic from December 2003 to 2007 and chairman, Computerization Committee, State House Clinic from August 2004 to December 2005. In addition, he was the Co-coordinator ARV therapy Team, State House Clinic from January 2004 to June 2007. Also, Executive Secretary, HIV Monitoring Committee, State House Clinic from May, 2005 to June 2007, Head of Medicine Department State House Clinic from May 2004 to June 2007, Senior Special Assistant to His Excellency the governor of Bauchi State on Primary Health Care in June 2007, Director- General Bauchi |
members of the Class D level Nebraska State League in 1914 to 1915 and 1922 to 1923, the Tri-State League in 1924, the Nebraska State League from 1928– to 1938 and the Western League from 1939 to 1941. The Norfolk Elks were a St. Louis Cardinals minor league affiliate in 1936. Norfolk played as an affiliate of the New York Yankees from 1937 to 1941 and adopted the Norfolk "Yankees" moniker in 1940. History Nebraska State League / Tri- State League 1914 to 1924 Minor league baseball began in Norfolk, Nebraska in 1914. The Norfolk Drummers became members of the eight–team Class D level Nebraska State League, replacing the Fremont Pathfinders franchise in league play. At the home opener in 1914, it was noted Mayor Carl Verges threw the first pitch and Prof. Doering and the Battle Creek Band played. Before a reported crowd of 2,000, Norfolk lost to the York Prohibitionists by the score 3–1. At the local Y.M.C.A., bulletin boards were placed at the inside lobby and outside the building to report standings and scores. During away games, Norfolk fans would gather at the boards, waiting for the game score to be called in by phone and updated on the bulletin boards. Fans yelling profanity in the presence of ladies at Norfolk home games were reprimanded by the police, who were present at games, including Police chief Jolly. A public apology, arrest or a $7.50 fine were all used to punish fans using profanity. In a 1914 home game against the Beatrice Milkskimmers, it was reported police chief Jolly broke up a fight between Beatrice player Branon and umpire Dixon. According to the Norfolk paper, Branon attacked Dixon, Jolly intervened and arrested Branon. Branon was fined $7.50. In their first season of play, the 1914 Norfolk Drummers placed 6th in the eight–team Nebraska State League final standings. The Drummers ended the season with a record of 52–60, playing under managers Warren Cummings and Babe Towne. With no playoffs held, Norfolk finished 14.0 games behind the Grand Island Islanders in the final standings. Pitcher Verne Hirsch of Norfolk led the Nebraska State League with 244 strikeouts. The Norfolk Drummers continued play in 1914 and folded during the Nebraska State League season. On June 28, 1915, the Drummers folded with a 24–13 record, playing under returning manager Babe Towne. On July 18, 1914, the Nebraska State League folded. After a seven-season hiatus, the 1922 Norfolk Elk Horns won the pennant. The Elk Horns formed as the six–team Class D level Nebraska State League reformed. In June, 1922, it was reported the team bought three new Ford automobiles for travel, saving $1,000 over train travel. Norfolk finished the season in 1st place, with a record of 70–48. The Elk Horns finished a mere 0.5 game ahead of the 2nd place Lincoln Links in the final standings. Ernie Adams and Runt Marr served as managers. Norfolk lost in the league Finals as the Fairbury Jeffersons defeated Norfolk 4 games to 3. Norfolk player Claude Mitchell led the Nebraska State League with 21 home runs and player/manager Runt Marr won the batting title with a .364 average on a league leading 167 hits. It was reported that admission to home playoff games was .55 cents and the team enjoyed large crowds for the games. The losers share for the playoff was estimated to be $24.00 per player. After the season, the town held a special dinner for the team at the Merchants Cafe. After the league ended, many of the players stay and barnstormed in the area. They were noted to have played against the town team in Snyder, Nebraska for $500.00. The Norfolk Elk Horns were the runner–up in the 1923 Nebraska State League. With a final record of 68–66, the team placed 2nd, playing under the direction of manager Ed Reichle. Norfolk finished the season 2.5 games behind the Lincoln Links in the final standings of the six–team league. No playoffs were held. In 1924, Norfolk briefly played as members of the six–team Class D level Tri-State League. On July 17, 1924, the league folded. Norfolk placed 3rd 31–30 3rd, playing under manager Nig Lane when the league disbanded. Norfolk finished 2.0 games behind the Beatrice Blues and Sioux Falls Canaries who were tied for 1st place with 35–30 records in the final standings. Nebraska State League 1928 to 1938 The 1928 Norfolk Elks resumed minor league play as the eight–team class D level Nebraska State League reformed. Norfolk would continue play in the league through the 1938 season, as other league franchises relocated or folded during the period. The 1928 Elks ended the season with a record of 55–66, playing under manager Lefty Wilkus. The team placed 6th and ended the season 16.5 games behind the 1st place McCook Generalsin the final standings as no playoffs were held. The Norfolk Elks placed 7th in the 1929 Nebraska State League. Playing under returning manager Lefty Wilkus, Norfolk ended the season with a record of 43–73, finishing 31.0 games behind the McCook Generals in the Nebraska State League final standings. John Smith of Norfolk hit 15 home runs to lead the league. The Norfolk Elks continued play in the 1930 eight–team Nebraska State, placing 6th. Ending the season with a record of 56–65, playing under manager Hal Brokaw, the Elks finished 30.0 games behind the champion McCook Generals in the final standings. The 1931 Norfolk Elks were managed by Joe McDermott. Norfolk ended the 1931 with a final record of 47–58 to place 5th in the six–team league. Playing under returning manager Joe McDermott, the Elks finished 18.0 games behind the Grand Island Islanders in the final standings of the Nebraska | hits, most in the league. The Norfolk Elks won the 1935 Nebraska State League championship. Norfolk ended the season in 2nd place with a record of 58–49 Managed by Pat Patterson, Norfolk finished 11.5 games behind the 1st place Sioux Falls Canaries in the final standings of the four–team Class D league. In the finals Norfolk defeated Sioux Falls 4 games to 3 to become league champions. Norfolk's John Grilli had 116 RBI to lead the league and teammate Orie Arntzen had 184 strikeouts to led the Nebraska State League. Norfolk Elks continued Nebraska State League play in 1936 and became a minor league affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals. With Joe McDermott returning as manager, the Elks finished with a record of 63–57 to place 3rd in the six–team league. The Elks finished 8.0 games behind the Sioux Falls Canaries in the final standings. Norfolk qualified for the playoffs and lost in the 1st round, as the Mitchell Kernels defeated Norfolk 3 games to 1. Bill A. James led the Nebraska State League with 29 home runs and fellow Norfolk player Dexter Savage paced the league with 128 RBI. The 1937 Norfolk Elks became a New York Yankees minor league affiliate. Norfolk ended the season with a final record of 50–65, placing 4th in the six–team league and finisheing 31.0 games behind the 1st place Sioux Falls Canaries in the Nebraska State League final standings. Manager Doc Bennett began his four-season stint as the Norfolk manager. In Norfolk's final season of Nebraska State League play, the 1938 Norfolk Elks were Nebraska State League champions. Norfolk ended the 1938 with a record of 67–49 to place 2nd, playing under returning manager Doc Bennett. In the regular season standings, Norfolk finished 2.5 games behind the Sioux City Cowboys in the final standings. In the Finals Norfolk defeated Sioux City 4 games to 2 to become league champions. The Nebraska State League folded following the 1938 season. When the league resumed play in 1956, Norfolk did not field a franchise in the league. Western League 1939 to 1941 Continuing as a New York Yankees affiliate, the 1939 Norfolk Elks became members of the six–team Western League and won the league pennant. Playing again under manager Doc Bennett, the Elks ended the season with a record of 75–44 to place 1st in the regular season standings. Norfolk finished 8.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Sioux Falls Canaries. In the playoffs, Norfolk lost 1st round, as the Sioux City Soos defeated Norfolk 3 games to 2. William Morgan of Norfolk led the league with 17 home runs. In 1940, the Western League reduced to four teams. The newly named "Norfolk Yankees" continued as an affiliate of the New York Yankees. The Yankees ended the 1940 in 1s place with a final regular season of 73–39. Norfolk finished 16.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Sioux Falls Canaries, managed again by Doc Bennett. In the Finals, Sioux Falls defeated Norfolk 4 games to 2. In their final minor league season, Norfolk continued Western League play. The Norfolk Yankees' final season of play saw the franchise win their third consecutive pennant. Norfolk ended the 1941 in 1st place with a record of 64–44. The Yankees finished 2.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Cheyenne Indians, playing under manager Ray Powell. Frank Bocek led the league with 92 RBI. In the playoffs, Norfolk beat the Sioux City Cowboys 3 games to 2. The Pueblo Rollers won 3 games to Norfolk's 2 |
RSWS Second season of the T20 tournament will be held in India and UAE on February 5, 2022. In 2020–21 Road Safety World Series winning the tournament team India led by Sachin Tendulkar and this series tournament was hosted in the Wankhede Stadium and DY Patil Stadium in Mumbai where the legend players are featured. Sachin Tendulkar,Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh (India Legends), Brian Lara (West Indies Legends), Tillakaratne Dilshan (Sri Lanka Legends), Brett Lee (Australia Legends), and Jonty Rhodes (South Africa Legends) were captains of their respective teams. In upcoming season of the tournament more than 160 international retired legend champions will participate. Venues RSWS tournaments will be played | South Africa, Australia, and Bangladesh. The series featured Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, as well as Jonty Rhodes, Carl Hooper, Thilakaratne Dilshan, Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh, Bret Lee, and others. Background The Road Safety World Series approved by the BCCI. RSWS Second season of the T20 tournament will be held in India and UAE on February 5, 2022. In 2020–21 Road Safety World Series winning the tournament team India led by Sachin Tendulkar and this series tournament was hosted in the Wankhede Stadium and DY Patil Stadium in Mumbai where the legend players are featured. Sachin Tendulkar,Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh (India Legends), Brian Lara (West Indies Legends), Tillakaratne Dilshan (Sri Lanka Legends), Brett Lee (Australia Legends), and Jonty Rhodes (South Africa Legends) were captains of their respective teams. In upcoming season of the tournament more |
of of fuel oil that gave them a range of at . The Abnaki class was armed with a 3"/50 caliber gun anti-aircraft gun, two single-mount Oerlikon 20 mm cannon and two twin-gun mounts for Bofors 40 mm gun. Construction and career The ship was built at the Charleston Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. at Charleston, South Carolina. She was laid down on 25 August 1943 and launched on 25 February 1944. The ship was commissioned on 26 June 1944, with Lt. Comdr. W. B. Coats in command. She was reclassified ATF-104 on 15 May 1944. Service in the United States Navy Following shakedown in Chesapeake Bay, Jicarilla departed New York towing barges 9 August 1944, bound fox San Francisco via the Panama Canal. She arrived 22 September, but sailed again seven days later towing ARD-21 to Pearl Harbor. The tug remained in Hawaiian waters until November doing salvage and towing work, including the difficult task of pulling SS Antigua off a reef from 14 to 21 October. Departing Pearl Harbor on 7 November, she towed barges of supplies to advance bases at Eniwetok and Ulithi, arriving the latter island on 3 December. With the campaign to recapture the Philippines well underway, Jicarilla sailed on 10 December as part of the refueling group for Task Force 38, the fast carrier group then supporting the Philippines operation. Refueling began early on 17 December but had to be broken off as weather worsened. Anxious to top off his destroyers and support the Mindoro operation. Admiral Halsey continued attempts to refuel until the next morning, when Jicarilla and the rest of the fueling group turned south. The fleet tug rode out the typhoon and returned to Ulithi oni 22 December, but the great storm sank three gallant destroyers, two of them from Jicarilla's group. Undaunted, the fast carrier force resumed its punishing attacks on the Philippines. Jicarilla arrived at Leyte on 7 January to support the next amphibious operation at Lingayen Gulf. She sailed on 9 January with a convoy of LCI's and LST's; despite numerous air attacks by the Japanese, she arrived at Mangarin Bay 2 days later. The tug remained there until 22 January performing salvage and firefighting duties on the many damaged and beached landing craft. She arrived Ulithi on 27 January. After towing voyages between Ulithi and the Marianas, Jicarilla sailed from Ulithi on 9 April pulling a much-needed floating drydock to Okinawa. The veteran tug arrived at Kerama Retto, repair base for the Okinawa operation, 16 April, and remained there to perform salvage work on ships damaged in the desperate kamikaze attacks. | beached landing craft. She arrived Ulithi on 27 January. After towing voyages between Ulithi and the Marianas, Jicarilla sailed from Ulithi on 9 April pulling a much-needed floating drydock to Okinawa. The veteran tug arrived at Kerama Retto, repair base for the Okinawa operation, 16 April, and remained there to perform salvage work on ships damaged in the desperate kamikaze attacks. She sailed on 20 April with Idaho, arrived at Guam on 25 April, and from there returned to Ulithi on 30 April. After towing work at the advance base, she sailed for Leyte on 19 May and arrived Okinawa again on 13 June. As the struggle for the island continued, she worked directly off the Hagushi beaches, towing landing craft and performing salvage work. Thus, she contributed importantly to the eventual victory by helping to keep the massive fleet afloat and operating. Jicarilla remained at Okinawa until departing for Wakayama, Japan, 21 September. Four days later she arrived, and performed towing duties in connection with the occupation operations until returning to Okinawa on 14 October. After a voyage to Guam, the ship steamed to Iwo Jima on 4 December to salvage the ARL-32. In the months that followed, she was engaged in towing and salvage in the Marshalls and Carolines, arriving Pearl Harbor on 24 April 1946. Jicarilla spent the summer of 1946 in the Marshall Islands in support of Operation Crossroads, the history-making atomic test series in the Pacific. Returning to the United States on 14 September, she performed towing duties on the West Coast and at the Canal Zone until 23 January 1947, when she sailed again for the Far East from Bremerton, Washington. The ship operated out of Pearl Harbor until May, sailing on the 14th to Guam. Jicarilla arrived Tsingtao, China, 17 June for towing |
1953 All England Plate and was a regular Lancashire county champion. In 1954 she became engaged to James Hugh Brown, a company director and county tennis player. Competing under her married name, she made the round of 16 at the 1956 Wimbledon Championships, which was her | of Manchester, Harrison was active in the 1950s. Harrison claimed the 1953 All England Plate and was a regular Lancashire county champion. In 1954 she became engaged to James Hugh Brown, a company director and county tennis player. Competing under her married name, she |
Harriss, who died in 1975. She has lived in the Blue Mountains since 1969. In 1978 she was interviewed by Hazel de Berg for the National Library of Australia's oral history collection. Her papers, including letters and original artwork, are held by the State Library of New South Wales. Selected works Author and illustrator Fiction Trilogy: Colour in the creek Nonfiction Illustrator References External links Photograph of Margaret Paice, taken by Hazel de Berg for the National Library of Australia on 1 March 1978 1920 births Possibly living people | poems published in The Central Queensland Herald in 1937. In 1942 she married Hubert Whitfield Paice. He died in 1955 and Paice moved to Sydney, where she studied at the National Art School and the Royal Art Society, gaining employment as a commercial artist. She wrote and illustrated her first book, Mirram, in 1955. It was commended in the picture book category of the 1955 Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year awards. She provided illustrations for her own and other books published by Angus & Robertson, including three books by Ann E. Wells. Colour in the Creek was a ten-episode television series adapted from Paice's novel of the same name and Shadow of Wings. It was shown on TCN 9. In 1960 she married Wilfred Harriss, who |
to be the death toll. A further 63 people were killed in Assiut and other areas from the effects of the storm. More than 200 houses in Dronka were destroyed and 20,000 residents of the village and surrounding area fled to Assiut. One of the tanks remained ablaze into the night as firefighters decided it was best to let it burn out; there were fears it could ignite some of the surviving five oil tanks. The governor of Assiut declared a state of emergency due to the storm and lightning strike. The WMO attributes the death toll of 469 to the lightning strike and notes the disaster is the highest mortality event as a result of a lightning strike on record (dating back to 1873). The highest death toll directly caused by a single lightning strike is 21 people killed while | reserve near Dronka, Asyut Governorate. The flaming oil leaked from the tanks and was carried by floodwater into the village. More than 200 houses were destroyed and 469 people killed. Strike On 2 November 1994, Asyut Governorate and other parts of Egypt were hit by a five-hour thunderstorm. A lightning strike hit a point of elevation at near Dronka, which was near a complex of eight oil tanks maintained by the Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation as a strategic reserve for the Egyptian Army. The tanks were spaced around apart and three of them caught fire. Around of oil leaked from the tanks; there was no bund wall or any secondary confinement in place to contain the oil, which mixed with floodwaters that were being held back by a nearby railway line. The line collapsed, and the water and flaming oil washed into Dronka, a village of 10,000 people. Effects Contemporary news reports suggested death tolls between 200 to over 500, possibly due to distinctions between those killed by flooding and those by fire. An Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population report noted that 469 bodies were recovered from |
1995 he was head writer of the long-running Sunday sport program , which he also hosted for a number of seasons. He named the asteroid 110702 Titostagno. He died on 1 February 2022, at the age of 92. References External links 1930 births 2022 deaths Grand Officers of the Order of Merit of the | reporter in Radiosera. In 1954 he was employed at RAI, making his official debut one year later with the program Viaggio in Sardegna. Starting from 1956 he specialized as a play-by-play commentator, covering sport, political and space events. He is best known in his home country as the commentator of the 1969 moon landing. Stagno was also a television writer of documentaries and sport programs. He was the head of the RAI sport department between 1976 and 1979, and between |
he was also named Special Deputy Police Commissioner of New York City in charge of The Bronx and severed on several commissions in the New York City Police Department. He was also a president of the Murry and Leonle Guggenheim Foundation from 1939 until his death. Personal life Guggenheim died on March 13, 1972, in a Phoenix, Arizona hospital at age 84. Legacy He is the namesake of Guggenheim Camp, a summer camp organized by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ogdensburg, which is held annually on the Lower Saranac Lake property he owned from 1917 until 1963, when he donated it to the diocese. | 1908 and a Ph.B. from Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University in 1911. Guggenheim joined the family business in 1916 and headed its mining explorations and was its vice president in charge of South American operations. In 1961, Guggenheim retired as director of the Kennecott Copper Corporation and the Braden Copper Company. In 1919, he was also named Special Deputy Police Commissioner of New York City in charge of The Bronx and severed on several commissions in the New York City Police Department. He was also a president of the Murry and Leonle Guggenheim Foundation from 1939 until his death. Personal life Guggenheim died on March 13, 1972, in a Phoenix, Arizona hospital at age 84. Legacy He is the namesake of Guggenheim Camp, a summer camp organized by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ogdensburg, which is held annually on the |
of the bride was Alfonso Caruana, who was wanted in Italy for money laundering. Caruana had disappeared and Mora's reference to him was the first indication as to he had gone after fleeing Italy. On 11 September 1996, Mora was shot four times in the head and his corpse was left in the trunk of his Cadillac automobile, on Teston Road in rural Vaughan. Detective Sergeant Ron Sandelli of the Toronto police told the media: "It [Mora's murder] sure wasn't a surprise. He had his hand into so many things". The police established via forensic testing that Mora was murdered on a farm in Vaughan, where he often visited before his body was placed inside of his Cadillac. Mora's corpse was found with his pants and underwear pulled down, an indication that he likely had committed a sexual offense, as within the Mafia subculture removing a murder victim's pants and underwear indicates that the victim had sex with someone whom they were not supposed to. Within the Mafia subculture, for a Mafiosi to have sex with the wife of another Mafiosi is punishable by death. In practice, the enforcement of such rules largely depend upon the seniority of a Mafiosi. Within the Mafia, actions that offended the "honor" of another Mafiosi can be ordered without the approval of a more senior boss. Giacinto Arcuri was arrested and charged with Mora's murder, but was acquitted for lack of evidence. A shirt with Acruri's DNA and Mora's blood had been found near where Mora's body had been discovered. Acruri was unable to explain to the police how his shirt came to be covered with Mora's blood, saying "I have fifty shirts". At his trial in the fall of 2002, Acruri testified he had been an investor in land speculation alongside Mora; the restaurateur Nicola Galifi; and "a Chinese person". Acruri was the last person known to see Mora alive, saying he was going to show Mora a treadmill on the day of the murder. However, the Crown's case was circumstantial and the Crown Attorney, Peter Westgate, was unable to give a motive for the murder. Moreover, Acruri was a frail-looking senior citizen with one eye whom the jury was unable to believe had killed Mora, removed his pants and underwear and then placed his 260-pound corpse into the trunk | of those charged as part of Barillaro's crew Mora was known for his practice of dousing those behind in their debts to Johnny Papalia with gasoline and threatening to burn them alive if they refused to pay up promptly. Together with Barillaro, Mora was one of Papalia's principle lieutenants, in charge of the Papalia family's operations in the Toronto area while Barillaro ran the operations in the Niagara Peninsula. Barillaro was considered as the more important of the two owing to the proximity of the Niagara peninsula to the American border and hence placing him in charge of drug-smuggling. Following Mora's convictions on weapons and drugs charges, the government of Canada attempted to deport him to Italy, but Mora's lawyers successfully argued in court that it would be cruel to separate Mora from his wife and three daughters, leading the judge to rule that Mora be allowed to stay in Canada. In 1995, Mora took out a loan of $7.2 million from Vito Rizzuto, the boss of Montreal's Rizzuto family. In turn, Mora handed over most of the loan to Papalia and Barillaro who used some of it to open nightclubs and restaurants while the rest just vanished. Neither Papalia nor Barillaro were interested in repaying the loan as the police recorded Barillaro saying on his phone "They can't touch us". The Canadian journalists André Cédilot and André Noël wrote that this was a "major mistake" as Rizzuto decided to wipe out the Papalia family's leaders. In 1995, the police tapped Mora's phone, and heard him talk about a wedding reception he was planning to attend at the Sutton Place Hotel in Toronto. He mentioned in one of his calls that the father of the bride was Alfonso Caruana, who was wanted in Italy for money laundering. Caruana had disappeared and Mora's reference to him was the first indication as to he had gone after fleeing Italy. On 11 September 1996, Mora was shot four times in the head and his corpse was left in the trunk of his Cadillac automobile, on Teston Road in rural Vaughan. Detective Sergeant Ron Sandelli of the Toronto police told the media: "It [Mora's murder] sure wasn't a surprise. He had his hand into so many things". The police established via forensic testing that Mora was murdered on a farm in Vaughan, where he often visited before his body was placed inside of his Cadillac. Mora's corpse was found with his pants and underwear pulled down, an indication that he likely had committed a sexual offense, as within the Mafia subculture removing a murder victim's pants and underwear indicates that the victim had sex with someone whom they were not supposed to. Within the Mafia subculture, for a Mafiosi to have sex with the wife of another Mafiosi is punishable by death. In practice, the enforcement of such rules largely depend upon the seniority of a Mafiosi. Within the Mafia, actions that offended the "honor" of another Mafiosi can be ordered without the approval of a more senior boss. Giacinto Arcuri was arrested and charged with Mora's murder, but was acquitted for lack of evidence. A shirt with Acruri's DNA and Mora's blood had been found near where Mora's body had been discovered. Acruri was unable to explain to the police how his shirt came to be covered with Mora's blood, saying "I have fifty shirts". At his trial in the fall of 2002, Acruri testified he had been an investor in land speculation alongside Mora; the restaurateur Nicola Galifi; and "a Chinese person". Acruri was the |
and 4 months, 31 years after Viswanathan Anand became India's first GM. He began playing chess when he was nine years old, which is relatively late compared to most other grandmasters. Career Beginning with an Elo rating of 1,187 in October 2013, Prithu went past 2,500 in less than six years of competition despite playing in a lesser number of tournaments, focusing instead on the top-ranking events, which featured the best players. Prithu achieved his maiden International Master (IM) norm at the Silver Lake Open in Silver Lake, Veliko Gradište, Serbia, in July 2017, and his second IM norm came a month later at the Golden Prague Chess Festival in the Czech Republic, where he won seven out of his nine matches in the round-robin event, finishing top and crossing 2,300 Elo rating points in the process. In January 2018 at the Tradewise Gibraltar Masters, Prithu won the title of International Master and achieved his first Grandmaster (GM) norm. Then, following a tied-4th finish at the 7th Llucmajor Open in Palma | less than six years of competition despite playing in a lesser number of tournaments, focusing instead on the top-ranking events, which featured the best players. Prithu achieved his maiden International Master (IM) norm at the Silver Lake Open in Silver Lake, Veliko Gradište, Serbia, in July 2017, and his second IM norm came a month later at the Golden Prague Chess Festival in the Czech Republic, where he won seven out of his nine matches in the round-robin event, finishing top and crossing 2,300 Elo rating points in the process. In January 2018 at the Tradewise Gibraltar Masters, Prithu won the title of International Master and achieved his first Grandmaster (GM) norm. Then, following a tied-4th finish at the 7th Llucmajor Open in Palma da Mallorca, Prithu obtained his second GM norm at the Biel International Chess Festival in Switzerland, in July 2018. Also in July 2018, Prithu earned top honours in the team event of the Portuguese League in Porto, and in October of the same year, he was judged the second-best youngster in the under-18 category at the Isle of Man Masters in the UK. In July 2019, |
head coach) He further holds several PERBASI Cup titles. Playing career Regional select teams and club career Ahang was selected to join the South Sulawesi team for the 1988 National Championship (Kejurnas) in Semarang where he was top scorer. His performance led to his first professional contract. Ahang also became the mainstay of his regional team towards the 1989 National Sports Week in Jakarta. His talent attracted the Kobatama club from Banjarmasin at that time, Bandar Utama. There, he started in the second team. Unfortunately for Anhang, in 1993, Banjar Utama which was owned by Pak Budi Surya disbanded but Anhang stayed in Banjarmasin. At the 1993 National Sports Week in Jakarta he played for South Kalimantan. His next team was Daya Sakti. Then, Ahang received an offer from the Kobatama club Panasia Indosyntec. In his first year 1996, Panasia finished as runner-up. The following two seasons, they won the title. Ahang was with Panasia until 2003. He then moved to Satria Muda Jakarta where he won the 2004 IBL title. National team In 1997, Ahang was also included in the Indonesian national team squad for the 1997 SEA Games in Jakarta, but failed to get a medal. Two years later, Ahang returned to the national team and won the bronze | in Jakarta he played for South Kalimantan. His next team was Daya Sakti. Then, Ahang received an offer from the Kobatama club Panasia Indosyntec. In his first year 1996, Panasia finished as runner-up. The following two seasons, they won the title. Ahang was with Panasia until 2003. He then moved to Satria Muda Jakarta where he won the 2004 IBL title. National team In 1997, Ahang was also included in the Indonesian national team squad for the 1997 SEA Games in Jakarta, but failed to get a medal. Two years later, Ahang returned to the national team and won the bronze medal at the Brunei 1999 SEA Games. Coaching career In 2006 he returned to Bandung, at that time Panasia had changed its name to Garuda Bandung. There he became assistant coach to Kak Amran. In 2009, Ahang became head coach at Amartha Hangtuah in South Sumatra for the first time, but only for half a season. He later became assistant coach of Stadium Jakarta. In 2010, he was entrusted with controlling Garuda Bandung. Garuda managed to win the DKI Governor's Cup tournament, and finished 4th place in the regular round. In 2013 he moved to Pelita Jaya, became an assistant coach for Nath Canson then accompanied Antonius F. Rinaldo until he was finally appointed as head |
the Lawton Braves from 1954 to 1957. History Lawton first hosted minor league baseball in 1911, when the city briefly hosted a team in the Texas-Oklahoma League. The Lawton Medicine Men had a 17–31 record when the Lawton franchise folded on June 14, 1911. Lawton next played in the Class D level Sooner State League in 1947. Lawton remained in the league from 1947 to 1957. Lawton teams played as affiliates of the Milwaukee Braves (1954–1957), Cincinnati Reds (1952–1953) and New York Giants (1947–1951). Lawton took the moniker of their affiliates in each case. Lawton won Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri League championships in 1949, 1954 and 1955. The 1954 and 1955 Lawton Braves championship teams were managed by Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Travis Jackson.The Sooner State League folded after the 1957 season. In their first season of play, the 1947 Lawton Giants won the league pennant. The Giants ended the regular season with a 98–42 record, finishing 10.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Ada Herefords before losing in the playoffs. In 1949, the Lawton Giants won the Sooner State League championship. Lawton placed 2nd in the regular season standings with a 87–52 record, finishing 0.5 games behind the 1st place Pauls Valley Raiders. In the playoffs, Lawton swept the Chickasha Chiefs in three games to advance. In the Finals, Lawton defeated Pauls Valley 4 games to 1 to claim the championship. Manager Louis | Lawton swept the Chickasha Chiefs in three games to advance. In the Finals, Lawton defeated Pauls Valley 4 games to 1 to claim the championship. Manager Louis Brower led Lawton to the title. In 1954, Baseball Hall of Fame member Travis Jackson, managed the Lawton Braves to their second Sooner State League championship in the eight–team league. Lawton finished the regular season in 2nd place with an 81–58 record, finishing 10.5 games behind the Shawnee Hawks. In the 1st round of the playoffs, Lawton defeated the McAlester Rockets 3 games to 2 to advance. In the Finals, the Braves defeated the Ardmore Cardinals 3 games to 2, winning the championship. The Lawton Braves defended their Sooner State League championship in 1955, winning the league pennant in the process. Managed by the returning Travis Jackson, the Braves ended the regular season with a 95–44 record to win the pennant and finish 17.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Shawnee Hawks in the eight–team league. In the 1st round of the playoffs, Lawton defeated the Paris Orioles 3 games to 1. In the Finals, the Braves defeated the Muskogee Giants 4 games to 2 to win their second consecutive league title. Following the completion of the 1957 season, the Sooner State League permanently folded. Lawton, Oklahoma has not hosted another minor league baseball team. The ballparks In 1911, Lawton played at home games at Koehler Park. Koehler Park was located between S.W. A and C Avenues on the north and south and S.W. 14th and 15th Streets on the east and west in Lawton, Oklahoma. The 1947 to 1957 Lawton teams played home games at Memorial |
Eyekit flows across the Bulunsky district. The banks of the river are uninhabited. Geography The Eyekit is the last major tributary of the Lena before it ends in the Arctic Ocean. It originates in the northeastern limit of the Central Siberian Plateau as the Buor-Eyekit. In its upper course it flows southeast, then it reaches a floodplain with small lakes and swamps and turns northeast. After being joined by the Tas-Eyekit from the left, it | before it ends in the Arctic Ocean. It originates in the northeastern limit of the Central Siberian Plateau as the Buor-Eyekit. In its upper course it flows southeast, then it reaches a floodplain with small lakes and swamps and turns northeast. After being joined by the Tas-Eyekit from the left, it flows roughly eastwards cutting across the southern end of the Chekanovsky Ridge, north of a large bend of the Lena. Finally it meets the left bank of the great |
January 1920 — 13 June 2002) was an Australian first-class cricketer and Royal Australian Air Force officer. Bremner was born in the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn in January 1920. He served in the Australian Army during the Second World War, enlisting as a private in August 1940. He remained as a private in the army until his discharge in August 1941. He re-enlisted as a flight lieutenant in the Royal Australian Air Force in January 1942, serving in the maritime patrol No. 461 | a flight lieutenant in the Royal Australian Air Force in January 1942, serving in the maritime patrol No. 461 Squadron RAAF in Europe. Following the end of the war in Europe, Bremner represented the Dominions cricket team in a first-class cricket match against England at Lord's in August 1945; he notably twice stumped Wally Hammond in the match, but only after he had reached a century in each innings. He returned home to Australia with the Australian Services cricket team following the war, |
roles. The main plot of the story is taken from Kannada language serial Sundari which is being aired on Udaya TV. Cast Triveni Yadav as Sundari, a dark skinned girl who wants to be an IAS | a dark skinned girl who wants to be an IAS Officer, Karthik's first wife Maneesh as Karthik, Sundari and Anu's Husband Priyanka Chowdary as Anu, Karthik's second wife Sapna Deekshith as Rajeswari Devi, Anu's mother Raga Madhuri Rajendra Vijay as Bangarraju Sahasra Priya as Divya Nata |
in Romania and other European countries. After finishing high school in Paris in 1937, she signed up for studies at the Faculty of Arts at the University of Bucharest. In 1943, she got married to Vlad Stolojan Filipescu and they attempted to leave communist Romania in 1949, but they were arrested and sent to prison for the crime of preparation for illegal emigration. In following years, both were convicted of further crimes, eventually losing their home to the authorities. In 1961, Sanda and Vlad Stolojan managed to leave Romania definitively and settled in Paris. She pursued studies at the École des Hautes Études Commerciales and worked as a translator and interpreter of Romanian language for French presidents. She also became active in the circles of Romanian anticommunist dissidents abroad, especially as a collaborator for Radio Free Europe and as President for the Romanian Human Rights League (Ligue pour la défense des droits de l’homme en Roumanie, LDHR). She also developed an intense literary activity as a writer and poet, and | née Henriette Lucia Sanda Zamfirescu (19 February 1919, Bucharest – 2 August 2005, Paris) was a Romanian poet, translator and writer. She was a dissident and prominent figure of the Romanian anticommunist exile. Life Born and raised in a family of intellectuals and diplomats, she received an elite education in Romania and other European countries. After finishing high school in Paris in 1937, she signed up for studies at the Faculty of Arts at the University of Bucharest. In 1943, she got married to Vlad Stolojan Filipescu and they attempted to leave communist Romania in 1949, but they were arrested and sent to prison for the crime of preparation for illegal emigration. In following years, both were convicted of further crimes, eventually losing their home to the authorities. In 1961, Sanda and Vlad Stolojan managed to leave Romania definitively and settled in Paris. She pursued studies at the École des Hautes Études Commerciales and worked as a translator and interpreter of Romanian language for French |
November 2005 to November 2010. He represented Araria in Lok Sabha in 1998 and Raniganj in Bihar Legislative Assembly in 2005. | Bihar MLAs 2005–2010 Bharatiya Janata Party politicians from Bihar 12th Lok Sabha members Lok Sabha members from Bihar People |
and has been an editor in chief at The Pantograph Punch. Her recent book Bloody Women is a series of essays which describes her experiences as a Samoan woman living in New Zealand. Biography Lopesi is Samoan and is based in Auckland, New Zealand. Lopesi has been the editor for Design Assembly, where she wrote a regular column Graphic Matters. Between 2017 and 2019 Lopesi was the Editor-in-Chief of The Pantograph Punch, a New Zealand online magazine. In 2018 Lopesi worked with Sarah Biscarra Dilley (yak tityu tityu yak tiłhini Northern Chumash, Chicana), Freja Carmichael (Quandamooka), Léuli Lunaʻi Eshraghi (Sāmoa) and Tarah Hogue (Métis, Dutch Canadian) to develop The Commute, a series of exhibitions and programs at the Institute of Modern Art in Brisbane, Australia. In 2019 tattooist Julia Mage’au Gray created some 'tatu' on Lopesi live in front of an audience at a gallery in Auckland – there was a DJ (King Kopesi). Lopesi says, "The work of Mage'au Gray is not only about tatu revival, but the body sovereignty that comes with it." Other places Lopesi has | magazine. In 2018 Lopesi worked with Sarah Biscarra Dilley (yak tityu tityu yak tiłhini Northern Chumash, Chicana), Freja Carmichael (Quandamooka), Léuli Lunaʻi Eshraghi (Sāmoa) and Tarah Hogue (Métis, Dutch Canadian) to develop The Commute, a series of exhibitions and programs at the Institute of Modern Art in Brisbane, Australia. In 2019 tattooist Julia Mage’au Gray created some 'tatu' on Lopesi live in front of an audience at a gallery in Auckland – there was a DJ (King Kopesi). Lopesi says, "The work of Mage'au Gray is not only about tatu revival, but the body sovereignty that comes with it." Other places Lopesi has published in New Zealand include: Metro, North and South, Paperboy, Art New Zealand, HOME Magazine, Aotearotica, Bulletin, E-Tangata and The Spinoff. She has also published |
load. Power was provided by three Yarrow boilers feeding two Brown-Curtis steam turbines rated at and driving two shafts. Three funnels were fitted and of oil was carried, giving a design range of at . Armament consisted of three Mk IV QF guns on the ship's centreline, with one on the forecastle, one aft on a raised platform and one between the middle and aft funnels. A single 2-pounder (40 mm) pom-pom anti-aircraft gun was carried, while torpedo armament consisted of two twin mounts for torpedoes. The facility to launch depth charges was later added. Initially, the ship carried no fire-control system, but during 1916 the vessel was equipped with a single Dumaresq analogue computer and a Vickers range clock. The ship had a complement of 76 officers and ratings. Construction and career Mons was laid down by John Brown & Company of Clydebank on 30 September 1914 alongside sister ship with the yard number 433, launched on 1 May the following year and completed on 14 July. The first vessel in the navy to be named after the Battle of Mons, the ship was deployed as part of the Grand Fleet based at Scapa Flow, joining the newly formed Eleventh Destroyer Flotilla. The destroyer took part in a large naval exercise, involving four flotillas of the Grand | destroyer was long overall, with a beam of and a draught of . Displacement was normal and full load. Power was provided by three Yarrow boilers feeding two Brown-Curtis steam turbines rated at and driving two shafts. Three funnels were fitted and of oil was carried, giving a design range of at . Armament consisted of three Mk IV QF guns on the ship's centreline, with one on the forecastle, one aft on a raised platform and one between the middle and aft funnels. A single 2-pounder (40 mm) pom-pom anti-aircraft gun was carried, while torpedo armament consisted of two twin mounts for torpedoes. The facility to launch depth charges was later added. Initially, the ship carried no fire-control system, but during 1916 the vessel was equipped with a single Dumaresq analogue computer and a Vickers range clock. The ship had a complement of 76 officers and ratings. Construction and career Mons was laid down by John Brown & Company of Clydebank on 30 September 1914 alongside sister ship with the yard number 433, launched on 1 May the following year and completed on 14 July. The first vessel in the navy to be named after the Battle of Mons, the ship was deployed as part of the Grand Fleet based at Scapa Flow, joining the newly formed Eleventh Destroyer Flotilla. The destroyer took part in a large naval exercise, involving four flotillas of the Grand Fleet, on 26 and 27 February 1916. The exercise had been originally planned as joint with the Harwich Force but unfavourable weather prevented those destroyers sailing north and so activity instead focused on manoeuvres to coordinate the destroyers with battleships and battlecruisers. The vessel subsequently took part in a number of sorties, looking for the German High Seas Fleet, including a large operation on 21 April which involved battleships from the First, Second and Third Battle Squadrons. None of these led to a confrontation with the German fleet until the Battle of Jutland. On 30 May, the destroyer sailed with the Grand Fleet to participate in the Battle of Jutland, the only major engagement between the Royal Navy and the German High Seas Fleet during the war. Mons served as one of four members of the Eleventh Destroyer Flotilla attached to the First and Fourth Battle Squadrons. As the German fleet approached during the night on 31 May, the destroyers were spotted by the light cruisers of the High Seas Fleet. Mons attacked the |
It collaborates with other international organisations, including the Qatar Red Crescent Society, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and other networks of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies for a speedy humanitarian aid. The affiliated Islamic humanitarian organisations also participate its sessions held annually. However, Turkish Red Crescent has been a board member of ICIC since its formation in 1977. History Affiliated with the Islamic Solidarity Fund and the Islamic Development Bank, ICIC was established in Libya after the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers adopted a resolution No. (11/8-c) on 16 May 1977 in the 8th session held in Tripoli, Libya. Before the resolution 11/8 was adopted, Libya and the OIC General Secretariat hosted several other meetings in collaboration with a group of jurists that framed a agreement draft for the formation of the Islamic Committee of International Crescent. Besides the participation of Libya and OIC, the Council of Foreign Ministers briefly discussed during the matter | collaboration with a group of jurists that framed a agreement draft for the formation of the Islamic Committee of International Crescent. Besides the participation of Libya and OIC, the Council of Foreign Ministers briefly discussed during the matter in five successive sessions. The formal adoption of the ICIC took place in the 12th session held on 6 June (i.e. 29 rajab to 4th shaaban). The final approval for the establishment of the ICIC came into existence by adopting a resolution No. 4/12 which took place in Baghdad, Iraq. Before ICIC came into force on 20 June 2008 in Kampala, the OIC issued a resolution No. 3/13 by the participation of Council of Foreign Ministers, Saudi Arabia, Cameroon, Turkey, Mali, Indonesia, Kuwait, Senegal, Qatar Libya and OIC General Secretariat. Between 25 and 29 April 1993, |
the domestic production of food. He was also a director of the Rio Tinto Company (serving as chairman later in life). During the First World War, that company supplied pyrites to the Allies at discounted prices. Fielding assisted the wartime government as a member of the Board of Trade's non-ferrous metals committee, as a member of the Restriction of Imports Committee, as a member of the council of the Ministry of Reconstruction and, from 1917, as chairman of the Materials and Metals Economy Committee of the Ministry of Munitions. Having also served on the Committee on the Production of Food in 1915, he was appointed Director-General | on the Committee on the Production of Food in 1915, he was appointed Director-General of Food Production at the Ministry of Food in 1918, serving until 1919. For his war services, he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in June 1917. Afterwards, he remained interested in agricultural policy, writing Food (1923), Prosperity for England (1928) and Permanent Prosperity for Britain and Profitable Work for All Unemployed (1934). He died on 9 April 1941 at Ingfield Manor in Billingshurst. References 1863 |
in Reykjavík, Iceland, in 2009 and combine heavy metal music inspired by bands such as early Metallica, Iron Maiden, Anthrax and Slayer with conventions from Icelandic music and poetry traditions. The lyrics are in Icelandic and draw heavily from Norse mythology. Everybody in the band is a member of the neopagan organisation Ásatrúarfélagið. After releasing the studio albums Baldur (2010) and Börn Loka (2012) and receiving attention for their live performances, Skálmöld were offered to collaborate with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra, which for several years had worked with bands and artists of disparate backgrounds. The composer Haraldur V. Sveinbjörnsson created orchestral arrangements of songs from Skálmöld's two albums to be performed by the band and symphony orchestra in Eldborg, the main auditorium of the concert hall Harpa in Reykjavík. The collaboration also involved the (), the school choir of and the choir Hymnodía. Bernharður Wilkinson was conductor. As part of the Iceland Symphony Orchestra's educational work, teenagers from primary schools in the Reykjavík region attended the final rehearsals on the morning of 28 November 2013, before three sold-out concerts were held on 28, 29 and 30 November 2013. The concerts were recorded and filmed so they could be released on CD and DVD as Skálmöld & Sinfóníuhljómsveit Íslands. Release The live video of the song "Hel", which features Edda Tegeder Óskarsdóttir of the band Angist as guest vocalist, was released on YouTube on 6 December 2013. The record label Sena released the CD and DVD of Skálmöld & Sinfóníuhljómsveit Íslands on 18 December 2013, two days after the initially announced date. The album was launched with an event at a record store in the Reykjavík shopping centre Kringlan where Skálmöld's members signed records. Reception Benedikt Bóas of Morgunblaðið praised the album, rating it five out of five, but thought the video was less impressive and rated it three and a half out of five. He had been at the live performances, which | Skálmöld & Sinfóníuhljómsveit Íslands. Release The live video of the song "Hel", which features Edda Tegeder Óskarsdóttir of the band Angist as guest vocalist, was released on YouTube on 6 December 2013. The record label Sena released the CD and DVD of Skálmöld & Sinfóníuhljómsveit Íslands on 18 December 2013, two days after the initially announced date. The album was launched with an event at a record store in the Reykjavík shopping centre Kringlan where Skálmöld's members signed records. Reception Benedikt Bóas of Morgunblaðið praised the album, rating it five out of five, but thought the video was less impressive and rated it three and a half out of five. He had been at the live performances, which he called "some of the best concerts in Icelandic history", and described the album as "great, absolutely magnificent really" and "probably one of the best concert albums in Icelandic history". He wrote that the record company had rushed to get the release out for Christmas, which he thought shows in how the accompanying booklet has little content. He described the video as poorly edited and the camerawork as uninteresting, as it relies only on tripods and handheld cameras, with no crane shots. The concerts in Eldborg received the Icelandic Music Award for Music Event of the Year. Skálmöld and the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra were jointly nominated for Live Performer of the Year, but lost to Skálmöld who were also nominated on their own. Skálmöld & Sinfóníuhljómsveit Íslands was nominated for Album of the Year – Rock, losing to In the Eye of the Storm by Mono Town. Skálmöld & Sinfóníuhljómsveit Íslands was initially released in 4,700 copies which sold out in four days. In January 2016, the album received an Icelandic platinum certificate, which meant it had sold more than 7,000 copies. Skálmöld simultaneously received gold certificates — 3,500 records sold — for the studio albums Baldur and |
Portsmouth won the Piedmont League championship in 1945 and regular season pennants in 1943 and 1950. The ballparks Beginning in 1936, Portsmouth teams played at Lawrence Stadium, originally called Portsmouth Stadium, which was demolished in 1997. The stadium was named for Frank Lawrence, owner of the Portsmouth Cubs and Merrimacs. Previous teams had played exclusively at Sewanee Stadium, which was built in 1921. Piedmont still played a few games each season at Sewanee Stadium after Lawrence Stadium was constructed. Sewanee Stadium was located near the corner of Washington and Lincoln Streets in Portsmouth, Virginia. Initially, teams played at High Street Park. Frank Lawrence often leased Lawrence Stadium to Joe Lewis, a former Negro leagues player. Lewis would organize exhibitions with Negro league teams such the Indianapolis Clowns, Kansas City Monarchs and the Homestead Grays, with Hall of Famer Josh Gibson. Gibson once hit a home run at Lawrence Stadium that was said to have cleared the football press box and landed on Glasgow Street, traveling an estimated 585 feet. Gibson's Grays teammate, Hall of Famer Buck Leonard, later played for Portsmouth. Notable alumni Baseball Hall of Fame alumni Jimmie Foxx (1944, MGR) Inducted, 1951 Tony Lazzeri (1942, MGR) Inducted, 1991 Buck Leonard (1953) Inducted, 1972 Pie Traynor (1920) Inducted, 1948 Hack Wilson (1923) Inducted, 1979 Notable alumni Larry Benton (1921) Harry Brecheen (1937) 2x MLB All-Star; St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame Smoky Burgess (1945) 9x MLB All-Star; Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame Chuck Connors (1942–1946) Actor. Played MLB and NBA Como Cotelle (1940) Moonlight Graham (1901) Field | 1900–1901, 1912–1917 and 1919–1928. The Virginia League folded after the 1928 season. Portsmouth teams were affiliates of the Chicago Cubs from 1936 to 1938, the Philadelphia Phillies from 1939 to 1940 and the Chicago Cubs from 1941 to 1947. Later, Portsmouth was home of the Portsmouth-Norfolk Tides, who played in the Class A level South Atlantic League (1961–1962) and the Class A Carolina League (1963–1968). The franchise played one last season in Portsmouth when the Jacksonville Suns of the Class AAA level International League moved there in 1969. The franchise relocated permanently to neighboring Norfolk, Virginia in 1970 to become the Tidewater Tides of the International League (1969-1992), evolving into today's Class AAA Norfolk Tides. Baseball Hall of Fame members Jimmie Foxx (1944) and Tony Lazzeri (1942) both managed and played briefly for Portsmouth. Hall of Famer and Negro leagues star Buck Leonard, played for Portsmouth in 1953 at age 45 (hitting .333 in 10 games) and Hall of Famers Hack Wilson (1923, hit .388 in 115 games) and Pie Traynor (1920, hit.270 in 110 games) also played for Portsmouth. Actor and 2–sport professional athlete Chuck Connors played for Portsmouth in 1942 and 1946. Portsmouth won the Piedmont League championship in 1945 and regular season pennants in 1943 and 1950. The ballparks Beginning in 1936, Portsmouth teams played at Lawrence Stadium, originally called Portsmouth Stadium, which was demolished in 1997. The stadium was named for Frank Lawrence, owner of the Portsmouth Cubs and Merrimacs. Previous teams had played exclusively at Sewanee Stadium, which was built in 1921. Piedmont still played a few games each season at Sewanee Stadium after Lawrence Stadium was constructed. Sewanee Stadium was located near the corner of Washington and Lincoln Streets in Portsmouth, Virginia. Initially, teams played at High Street Park. Frank |
is planned to be built in Yukigayaōtsuka-chō, Ōta, Tokyo. See also Heya Japan Sumo Association List of active sumo wrestlers List of past sumo wrestlers List of sumo stables List of sumo elders List of ōzeki | access The stable is planned to be built in Yukigayaōtsuka-chō, Ōta, Tokyo. See also Heya Japan Sumo Association List of active sumo wrestlers List of past sumo wrestlers List of sumo stables List of sumo elders List of ōzeki |
in 14 first-class matches in all, Price scored 327 runs at an average of 19.23; he made one half century, a score of 55 against West Zone. With his slow left-arm orthodox bowling, he took 24 wickets at a bowling average of 26.79, with best figures of 4 for 33. He was discharged from the army in March 1946. Upon his return home, Price moved to rural New South Wales where he went into business. Price died at Avalon in February 1997. References External links 1917 births 1997 deaths | 88 with Graham Williams (53) in the Australian Services first innings. In their second innings he was batting alongside Cec Pepper when the winning runs were struck. Price returned home to Australia with the Australian Services team following their matches in England, stopping off in Ceylon and British India on the homeward journey, where he appeared in six first-class matches in British India and one first-class match in Ceylon against the Ceylon cricket team. Arriving in Australia in December 1945, Price represented the Australian Services in four further first-class matches against Western Australia, Victoria, Queensland, and Tasmania. Playing in 14 first-class matches in |
registered in the settlement. Geography Bozhurka village is located in Municipality Targovishte, 25 kilometers Southeast away from Targovishte. The elevation of the village ranges between 500 and 699 meters with an average elevation of 498m above sea level. The village's climate is continental and has a great environment for tobacco production and sheep breeding, animal husbandry in general. Despite that, there | of the village ranges between 500 and 699 meters with an average elevation of 498m above sea level. The village's climate is continental and has a great environment for tobacco production and sheep breeding, animal husbandry in general. Despite that, there are many abandoned agricultural facilities in the village. |
into 12 Dzongs or administrative units, which each contained a fort. Individual Dzongs were headed by a Dzonga drawn from amongst the Lepchas. The Limbu chiefs or the Subbas were also given full autonomy of their districts under the King. By the end of nineteenth century lands of Sikkim were leased as gifts to many Kazis and Thikadars who in turn leased sub-plots to peasants at high rents. Mandals (headmen) and Karbaris (assistants to the mandals) were employed by the Kazis and Thikadars as rent collectors and dispute mediators. Out of Sikkim's 104 revenue estates, 61 were leased to Kazis and thikadars for fixed sums, five were given to monasteries and fifteen retained by the Chogyal for his private use. After British introduced several administrative changes in 1890, land estates was created with 70 Elakhas given to various landlord on lease. 36 estates were divided among different landlords of which 21 were Kazis, 6 Bhutias, 8 Lepchas, 10 Nepalese and 1 plainsman. All Taksaris of Sikkim were made Thikadars. Besides Kazis and Thikadars, Lamas also held land as Lords In 1867, Newar trader Lachhimidas Pradhan was the first Nepalese to be given territories in East and South Sikkim by Khangsa Dewan and Phudong Lama under British influence by issuing a Sanad(ordinance). Lachhimidas and his brother Chandrabir Pradhan divided the areas into number of estates to be distributed within the members of the family. During this period another Newar family led by Chandrabir Maskey settled in Sadam, South Sikkim. In the same year an agreement was reached between the two families where Chandrabir Maskey was given the Pendam, Temi, Regu, Pakyong and Chotta Pathing estates. Lachhimidas Pradhan and his family took control of the estate bordering Majitar to Kaleej Khola and Barmick in South Sikkim. His brother Chandrabir Pradhan(Kasaju) was given Rhenock, Mamring, Pache Khani, and Taja along with a joint supervision of Dilding and parts of Pendam. Ilakhas or | All Taksaris of Sikkim were made Thikadars. Besides Kazis and Thikadars, Lamas also held land as Lords In 1867, Newar trader Lachhimidas Pradhan was the first Nepalese to be given territories in East and South Sikkim by Khangsa Dewan and Phudong Lama under British influence by issuing a Sanad(ordinance). Lachhimidas and his brother Chandrabir Pradhan divided the areas into number of estates to be distributed within the members of the family. During this period another Newar family led by Chandrabir Maskey settled in Sadam, South Sikkim. In the same year an agreement was reached between the two families where Chandrabir Maskey was given the Pendam, Temi, Regu, Pakyong and Chotta Pathing estates. Lachhimidas Pradhan and his family took control of the estate bordering Majitar to Kaleej Khola and Barmick in South Sikkim. His brother Chandrabir Pradhan(Kasaju) was given Rhenock, Mamring, Pache Khani, and Taja along with a joint supervision of Dilding and parts of Pendam. Ilakhas or estates of Sadam, Pachekhani, Dikling and parts of Pendam were put under joint supervision of both the families. Residence Sikkimese feudal landlords resided with their family in a residence known as a Dzong or a Kothi(bungalow), which was accompanied with a Kuchcheri(court) that had jurisdiction over their respective land estate. Functions After British introduced changes in administration of Sikkim in 1890, the role of Kazis and Thikadars largely replaced Dzongpens(District officers) as main agents of the government at regional level. They could collect taxes in the form of food grains or money under three types of tenancy systems - Adiya, Kutiya and Mashikotta. The Sikkimese feudal landlords could also serve as "Forest Officers" to implement laws related to forests and were given a proportion of revenue collected from forest area of his estate. Rank within nobility Kazis mostly from Lepcha and Bhutia |
a South Korean radio and television presenter and singer. Life and career Having been born in Hwanghae Province, and moved south over the border shortly after the outbreak of the Korean War, Cham graduated from the Dong-a University in Busan. After working as a master of ceremonies in the music cafe Chelbourg, he made his national television debut in the TBC show Seven Singers Show (7대 가수쇼), and since then he was active as a presenter of a large number of radio and television programs. He was best known as the presenter of the long running KBS1 show (가족오락관), he hosted for 26 years, from its debut in 1984 until its termination in 2009. During his | Hwanghae Province, and moved south over the border shortly after the outbreak of the Korean War, Cham graduated from the Dong-a University in Busan. After working as a master of ceremonies in the music cafe Chelbourg, he made his national television debut in the TBC show Seven Singers Show (7대 가수쇼), and since then he was active as a presenter of a large number of |
to commemorate the death anniversary to the said heroine, the statue was opened to the public on 20 December 1958 way beside the KGB Building stood. August coup and Muzeon Park relocation On the evening of 22 August 1991, shortly after the failure of the coup attempt undertaken by the State Emergency Committee, thousands of people began to gather around the KGB building on Lubyanka Square to topple the statue dedicated to Dzerzhinsky as brutal to the Soviet past. The people were sprayed with words "executioner", “antichrist”, “Felix is finished” and the symbol bearing the Russian Orthodox Symbol beneath it. Shortly within evening on the same day, the model of the statue torned down by people using ropes and many of them celebrated. The idea to knock down the statue arose spontaneously. People climbed on it, clung to the rope, immediately a truck appeared, to which they had already begun to attach the ends of the rope. If the monument were toppled in this way, then not only the monument itself could be destroyed, but also the structures of the metro station adjacent to the surface. To avoid such destruction, Sergei Stankevich, while the people's deputy of the USSR and at the same time - the deputy and deputy chairman of the Moscow City Council, addressed the audience, and on his initiative the Moscow Council urgently adopted a resolution to remove the monument, after which the sculpture was carefully removed from the pedestal with a construction crane and taken to a wasteland not far from new building of the Tretyakov Gallery. In 1992, the current structure was moved at the Muzeon art gallery along with other soviet monuments stood. Attempts to restore the monument to Lubyanskaya Square In 2002, Mayor of Moscow Yuri Luzhkov proposed to return the monument to Dzerzhinsky on Lubyanskaya Square and took the initiative | monument itself could be destroyed, but also the structures of the metro station adjacent to the surface. To avoid such destruction, Sergei Stankevich, while the people's deputy of the USSR and at the same time - the deputy and deputy chairman of the Moscow City Council, addressed the audience, and on his initiative the Moscow Council urgently adopted a resolution to remove the monument, after which the sculpture was carefully removed from the pedestal with a construction crane and taken to a wasteland not far from new building of the Tretyakov Gallery. In 1992, the current structure was moved at the Muzeon art gallery along with other soviet monuments stood. Attempts to restore the monument to Lubyanskaya Square In 2002, Mayor of Moscow Yuri Luzhkov proposed to return the monument to Dzerzhinsky on Lubyanskaya Square and took the initiative to hold a referendum on this topic. However, he abandoned this idea due to public backlash. In October 2013, the press reported that the Moscow City Duma decided to restore the monument and return it to Lubyanka Square, and that the preliminary restoration of the monument would cost 50 million ruble. Later it was refuted. On June 12, 2015, the Moscow City Electoral Commission allowed the Communist Party of the Russian Federation to hold a referendum in Moscow on the restoration of the monument to Felix Dzerzhinsky on Lubyanka Square. Supporters of Gennady Zyuganov managed to collect 150,000 signatures for holding a referendum. The campaign was carried out under the slogan "Iron Will - Strong Russia", but the very next day, the head of the Moscow City |
of sustainable finance. In 2019, the bank was the overall winner in the "Bilanz Private Banking Rating". Overview Currently, Globalance operates in Switzerland from its headquarter in Zurich. In 2015, the bank expanded into Germany by establishing a subsidiary in Munich, in a cooperation with the German private bank Donner & Reuschel. By end of 2020 the bank managed around CHF 1.5 billion in client assets. The bank operates with twenty staff and outsources operations such as IT and compliance. Globalance World The organisation's CEO describes Globalance World as a “Google Earth for investors”. Besides the financial performance, users can compare the impact of a company or of entire portfolios on the economy, society and the environment. The tool uses raw data from third party data providers such as MSCI, and calculates various proprietary metrics, such as the Globalance Footprint and the megatrend | CHF 1.5 billion in client assets. The bank operates with twenty staff and outsources operations such as IT and compliance. Globalance World The organisation's CEO describes Globalance World as a “Google Earth for investors”. Besides the financial performance, users can compare the impact of a company or of entire portfolios on the economy, society and the environment. The tool uses raw data from third party data providers such as MSCI, and calculates various proprietary metrics, such as the Globalance Footprint and the megatrend exposure. The site aims to help investors obtain the transparency required in order to steer capital towards more environmentally friendly investments. The site provides transparency about the climate path of a given company, bond or portfolio. In comparison to most competitors however, it does not only include scope 1 and 2 emissions, but also scope 3 emissions of a security. It tells investors in a visual way, whether their portfolio aligns with the Paris Agreement’s two-degree Celsius target. Business model Globalance is the only Swiss private bank that exclusively focuses on sustainable investing. It solely offers wealth management services and does not engage in loan, mortgage, or |
playing for the club's B team in the Championnat National 2. On 31 January 2022, Griffiths signed for League One side Doncaster Rovers for an undisclosed fee, in a two-and-a-half year deal. A day later, he made his professional debut as a second-half substitute in a 5–0 loss to Rotherham United. International career In May 2017, Griffiths made his debut for England U17 as a late substitute in a 3–1 win over Norway U17. References External links 2000 | forward for League One side Doncaster Rovers. Club career Griffiths started his career with Tottenham Hotspur, scoring 33 goals for the club's under–18 side in the 2017–18 season. In August 2018, he joined Ligue 1 side Lyon on a four-year deal. He spent three-and-a-half years with Lyon, largely playing for the club's B team in the Championnat National 2. On 31 January 2022, Griffiths signed for League |
the country. Having worked as office manager of CAN in 2013, he worked as the chief operating officer (COO) of CAN since 2015. His passion for cricket and consistency branded him as an ardent lover and promoter of Nepali Cricket. He served as the Team Manager of the Nepal National Cricket Team in 2015 when Nepal played the T-20 World Cup Qualifier in Scotland and Ireland. His international exposure in cricket was the time when he fulfilled the responsibility as liaison officer of Namibia National Cricket team and Kenya National Cricket Team in ICC World Cricket League played at Nepal in 2016 and 2017 for respective teams | committee member of the Cricket Association of Nepal (CAN). He is also the managing director at Queens Management Pvt Ltd, which organizes Pokhara Premier League (PPL) T-20, Women Champions League (WCL) and various others cricket tournaments in the country. Having worked as office manager of CAN in 2013, he worked as the chief operating officer (COO) of CAN since 2015. His passion for cricket and consistency branded him as an ardent lover and promoter of Nepali Cricket. He served as the Team Manager of the Nepal National Cricket Team in 2015 when |
fast as he could towards home plate. Braves third-base coach Jimy Williams waved home Bream after seeing Bonds having to make a difficult throw on a single. Bonds's throw arrived first, but it was slightly offline and bounced on its way towards the first-base line. Cabrera hit a line drive to left field that scored David Justice and a slow footed Sid Bream, who barely beat a left-field throw from Barry Bonds to win the pennant for the Braves. Amazingly, before this pinch hit, Cabrera had batted only ten times during the 1992 season. As soon as catcher Mike LaValliere received the ball, he desperately lunged toward the plate to tag Bream out, but Bream was able to slide just underneath the tag to score the winning run and send the Braves to their second World Series in a row. In the aftermath of the play, the family received a death threat from an angry Pirates fan, and their house in Wexford was toilet-papered. Some fans called the play the "Bream Curse," as the Pirates endured many losing seasons afterwards. Bream, however, believes it was an act of God that led to him beating the throw to the plate. Twenty-one years later, Lee Jenkins of Sports Illustrated called it "the most damaging play in the history of the Pirates." The calls Aftermath The Braves lost the World Series to the Toronto Blue Jays, however. Sid Bream started five of the six games, scoring a run in Game 2 and getting two hits in Game 3. He batted .200 in the series, which Toronto won in six games. "It's something we can tell our grandkids," reported Bream. "We played in two of the greatest World Series of all time. But at the same time, it's hard to tell your grandkids, 'We're the ones who never won.'" Following the loss, Barry Bonds and star teammate Doug Drabek were expected to command salaries too high for Pittsburgh to again sign them. After the 1992 season, the Pittsburgh front office set out to rebuild the team, giving up several high-payroll players in favor of a younger crew. Bonds and Drabek soon left Pittsburgh via free agency, signing with the San Francisco Giants and Houston Astros, respectively T The March 1993 issue of Baseball Digest pronounced it the greatest baseball comeback ever, as did John Smoltz immediately after the game. A 2006 study by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette pronounced Cabrera's game-winning single the eighth-"clutchest" hit in MLB history. ESPN called the Pirates' defeat the eighth most painful in baseball history. Don Ohlmeyer, the former head of NBC Sports and President of NBC West Coast, supposedly called the event "one of the most exciting baseball moments he had ever seen," albeit regretting the time of day it took place. Also in 1993, the Braves signed Cy Young Award winning pitcher Greg Maddux from the Chicago Cubs, leading many baseball insiders to declare the team's pitching staff the best in baseball. The 1993 team posted a franchise-best 104 wins after a dramatic pennant race with the San Francisco Giants, who won 103 games. The Braves needed a stunning 55–19 finish to edge out the Giants, who led the Braves by nine games in the standings as late as August 11. However, the Braves fell in the NLCS to the Philadelphia Phillies in six games. In 1994, in a realignment of the National League's divisions following the 1993 expansion, the Braves moved to the Eastern Division. This realignment was the main cause of the team's heated rivalry with the New York Mets during the mid-to-late 1990s. When the National League realigned into three divisions, the Pirates were originally supposed to stay in the East while the Braves were to be moved to the newly created National League Central. However, the Braves, wanting to form a natural rivalry with the expansion Florida Marlins, elected to be placed in the East. Despite the Marlins offering to go to the Central, the Pirates instead gave up their spot in the East to the Braves. Since then, the Pirates have tried several times unsuccessfully to be placed back in the East. The player's strike cut short the 1994 season, prior to the division championships, with the Braves six games behind the Montreal Expos with 48 games left to play. Following the 1996 season, Jim Leyland decided to quit after 11 seasons spent with the Pirates in order to manage a contender despite a contract that ran to 2000 with a salary of $1 million, stating that it was not a tough decision but a sad one, noting his dissatisfaction with owner Kevin McClatchy on trades and salary cutting. The Braves returned strong the following strike-shortened (144 games instead of the customary 162) year and beat the Cleveland Indians in the 1995 World Series. This squelched claims by many Braves critics that they were the "Buffalo Bills of Baseball" (January 1996 issue of Beckett Baseball Card Monthly). With this World Series victory, the Braves became the first team in Major League Baseball to win world championships in three different cities. With their strong pitching as a constant, the Braves appeared in the and 1999 World Series (losing both to the New York Yankees, managed by Joe Torre, a former Braves manager), and had a streak of division titles from 1991 to 2005 (three in the Western Division and eleven in the Eastern) interrupted only in 1994 when the strike ended the season early. Pitching was not the only constant in the Braves organization —Cox was the Braves' manager, while John Schuerholz remained the team's GM until after the 2007 season, when he was promoted to team president. Terry Pendleton finished his playing career elsewhere but returned to the Braves system as the hitting coach. As previously mentioned, the Pirates were unable to produce a winning season until 2013, accumulating a 20-year losing streak – the longest in any of the four major professional North American sports leagues. The closest the Pirates had come to fielding a winning team during that period was the 1997 team, which finished second in the NL Central despite having a losing record and a payroll of $9 million. The 1997 team was eliminated from playoff contention during the season's final week. In 2012, they finished in 4th place with a 79–83 record and were not eliminated until late September. On September 23, 2013, the Pirates' magic number to secure a playoff spot was 2. The Pirates needed a win that night against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field, plus a loss by the Washington Nationals, in order to clinch a playoff berth. Later that night, a loss by the Nationals ensured the Pirates' first playoff berth since 1992, when they lost the deciding game of the NL Championship Series to the Atlanta Braves on an eerily similar play. See also Pittsburgh sports lore#The Heartbreaker II/The 20-Year Curse References External links Sid Bream Slide - The Augusta Chronicle Sid Bream, for the first time, plans to watch the classic 1992 NLCS game that made him a cult hero in Atlanta Sid Bream's Electric Slide 1992 NLCS Game 7 - ESPN Former Atlanta Brave Sid Bream speaks at Flat Creek Baptist Church The Slide - University of Pittsburgh Press Braves rub in 'The Slide' 29 years after the fact - Audacy 1992 Major League Baseball season Atlanta Braves postseason Pittsburgh Pirates postseason League Championship Series games Historic baseball plays 1992 in Atlanta October 1992 sports events in the United States 1992 | his mastery over the Pittsburgh offense to 22 shutout innings before giving up five runs in the seventh inning of a Braves rout in Game 2. Pittsburgh knuckleballer Tim Wakefield won both of his starts against Braves star Glavine, throwing a complete game five-hitter in Game 3 of the NLCS and another complete game in Game 6 on three days' rest. After lasting only of an inning and giving up four runs in his second start in Game 5, Avery kept the Pirates at bay in the crucial middle innings of Game 7 in relief of Smoltz. Bob Walk meanwhile, tossed a complete game three-hitter in Game 5 to stave off elimination for the Pirates. In fact, the Pirates had come within one out of re-accomplishing the feats of the 1925 and 1979 Pirates in overcoming such a deficit in post-season play (albeit this time in the NLCS rather than the World Series): down 3-games-to-1 and facing elimination going into Game 5. The set up National League Championship Series Game 7 The deciding game of the NLCS featured the third matchup of the series between John Smoltz and Doug Drabek. Smoltz was an MVP candidate for the series, having started and won both of his games. Drabek had struggled in his two starts, failing to make it past the fifth inning in either matchup. However, the Pirates were carrying momentum from their previous two wins, having knocked out Steve Avery in the first inning and Tom Glavine in the second on their way to outscoring the Braves, 20–5, and looked to become the first team to win the NLCS after trailing, 3–1. The game that followed was regarded as one of the greatest ever, as years later MLB Network ranked it the fourth best game of all time. The Pirates scored first as Alex Cole led off with a walk, advanced to third on a double by Andy Van Slyke, and scored on a sacrifice fly by Orlando Merced. The Pirates would add a run in the sixth as Jay Bell scored on a single by Van Slyke, and the lead held up as Drabek pitched his best game of the series in holding the Braves scoreless. The closest the Braves got to breaking through was in the sixth inning, when Drabek allowed three consecutive singles to Mark Lemke, Jeff Treadway, and Otis Nixon to load the bases. Jeff Blauser, however, lined into an unassisted double play and Terry Pendleton lined out to Barry Bonds in left to end the threat. An incident involving the umpires early in the game set a different tone that would come into play later on. In the second inning, home plate umpire John McSherry became ill and complained of nausea and dizziness. After being checked out by the stadium medical staff, McSherry was removed from the game as a precaution and first base umpire Randy Marsh was summoned over from his position to take over behind the plate. The move gave both Smoltz and Drabek a different target to hit for strikes as Marsh had a consistent strike zone that was much tighter than McSherry's. This was also the first public sign of what would later prove to be fatal cardiac issues for the veteran umpire; it was one of five times he would leave games with similar symptoms, and in 1996, on Opening Day in Cincinnati, McSherry went into cardiac arrest and died on the field at Riverfront Stadium while behind the plate. John Smoltz left the seventh game trailing, but ended up with a no-decision as the Braves mounted a dramatic ninth-inning comeback. Smoltz would ultimately record two wins over 3 games started with only 6 earned runs allowed over 20+1⁄3 innings (the most innings of any pitcher in the series), and 19 strikeouts. However, with the Pirates at the time, leading the Braves in Game 7, Tim Wakefield was poised to be named NLCS MVP until the Braves rallied for three runs in the bottom of the ninth off Stan Belinda. Entering the bottom of the ninth, Doug Drabek had only allowed five hits in eight shutout innings and the Pirates were three outs away from advancing to their first World Series since 1979. If the lead held, Braves manager Bobby Cox would have become the first manager in the era of seven-game LCS play to have blown two 3–1 series leads and lost; Cox previously had seen this happen in 1985, when his Toronto Blue Jays lost to the eventual World Series champion Kansas City Royals after being one victory away from going to the World Series. Pirates manager Jim Leyland sent Drabek out for the ninth to complete the shutout, with the middle of the Braves' order due up. The first batter, Terry Pendleton, doubled. David Justice followed by hitting a sharp grounder to José Lind, who was eventually awarded a Gold Glove at second base for the season. Lind, however, misplayed the ball and runners were at the corners with nobody out. Drabek then walked Sid Bream on four pitches, which moved the tying run into scoring position and loaded the bases. The play The Pirates carried a 20 lead into the bottom of the ninth inning under the pitching of their ace, Doug Drabek, needing just three outs to make the World Series. However, Drabek gave up a leadoff double to Terry Pendleton, then allowed another runner, David Justice, on an infield error by second baseman José Lind. After Drabek walked Bream to load the bases, Pirates manager Jim Leyland pulled him out of the game. After reliever Stan Belinda replaced him on the mound, he induced Ron Gant to fly out, scoring one run. Belinda then walked Damon Berryhill and retired Brian Hunter on a popup. Then, Braves third-string catcher Francisco Cabrera belted a single to left field over shortstop Jay Bell on a 2–1 pitch, and Justice scored easily to tie the game. Despite both Bob Walk and Cabrera being right-handers, Leyland opted to keep Belinda (despite having walked Damon Berryhill to load the bases and giving up a deep fly ball to Ron Gant) to pitch to Cabrera. Pirates left fielder and eventual NL Most Valuable Player Barry Bonds fielded the ball as Bream, one of the slowest runners in baseball, went as fast as he could towards home plate. Braves third-base coach Jimy Williams waved home Bream after seeing Bonds having to make a difficult throw on a single. Bonds's throw arrived first, |
1921. HMS Mons (1945) was a laid down in 1945 | Battle of Mons: was an launched in 1915 and sold in |
Chinese Taipei and Thailand withdrew. Group A Indonesia 10 players are scheduled to represent Indonesia in the men's team competition of the 2022 Badminton Asia Team Championships. India 10 players are scheduled to represent India in the men's team competition of the 2022 Badminton Asia Team Championships. South Korea 10 players are scheduled to represent South Korea in the men's team competition of the 2022 Badminton Asia Team Championships. Hong Kong 10 players are scheduled to represent Hong Kong in the men's team competition of the 2022 Badminton Asia Team Championships. Group B Japan 8 players are scheduled to represent | represent Hong Kong in the men's team competition of the 2022 Badminton Asia Team Championships. Group B Japan 8 players are scheduled to represent Japan in the men's team competition of the 2022 Badminton Asia Team Championships. Malaysia 12 players are scheduled to represent Malaysia in the men's team competition of the 2022 Badminton Asia Team Championships. Singapore 10 |
to have played as a striker for Reno. Career Donaldson started his career with Jamaican side Reno, helping them win 3 consecutive top flight titles, their only top flight titles. In 2009, Donaldson's number 7 jersey was | a Jamaican former footballer who was last known to have played as a striker for Reno. Career Donaldson started his |
Academy Gaya, earlier to this Reddy worked as Inspector General East Silchar Assam Rifles, References Living people Year of birth | was commandant of Officers Training Academy Gaya, earlier to this Reddy worked as Inspector General East Silchar Assam Rifles, References |
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