sentence1 stringlengths 1 133k | sentence2 stringlengths 1 131k |
|---|---|
deciding match of the 2022 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship, an inter-county ladies' Gaelic football tournament for the county teams of Ireland. If the game is a draw, it will be replayed on | draw, it will be replayed on 13 or 14 August. Match info See also List of All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship finals References final All-Ireland |
captured, including the archbishop of Pavia himself. Fiamma recounts that after a few days spent in various prisons in the Milanese countryside, the Pavesi were freed and taken to Milan in the town square, located in front of the Broletto Vecchio. Here, as a mockery, a bundle of straw was tied to the back of each of them and set fire to them and in this manner they were driven out of the city. On 18 June 1110 the Milanese defeated the Cremonese in the battle of Bressanoro (Brixianorum), just north of Castelleone. Although not mentioned in the chronicles of Landulf Junior, who was in France at that time, the victory over the Cremonese was most likely followed by a second victory over Pavia. In May 1111 the Milanese, taking advantage of the absence of the Emperor Henry V of Franconia, who was on his way from Verona to Germany after a turbulent coronation in Rome, sent the army against Lodi and, after a siege that lasted less than a month, took the city on 24 May 24, then set it on fire and completely razed it to the ground, sparing only the churches. This thorough destruction took a month to complete. Consequences After its destruction, the Milanese imposed a harsh peace on the people of Lodi, forbidding the reconstruction of Lodi, which never returned to being a city of primary importance. They also forbade holding the market there, selling or buying possessions and obtaining licenses without the authorization of Milanese magistrates. On pain of exile, they prevented anyone from helping them and prescribed the confiscation of assets from those city magistrates who had not enforced these provisions. In June 1112 Giordano da Clivio, the new archbishop of Milan, entered into a peace and a defensive and offensive alliance with Pavia. Cremona managed to take possession of Crema only on 26 August 1116, followed by a peace | the local militia and most of the citizens. According to Leo of Ostia, the two armies met in Campo Ollii, a place not well identified. The most probable hypothesis is that it must be identified with an expanse of fields near the Olona river south of Milan, since Galvano Fiamma wrote that the site of the battle was "versus civitatem Mediolani", and "Olii" appears among the names for the Olona in some documents of that period. For this reason, the possibility that Campo Olii meant fields near the Oglio river, as claimed by Bernardino Corio, appears less likely. In the battle that followed, the Milanese won a decisive victory in which most of the army and enemy citizens were captured, including the archbishop of Pavia himself. Fiamma recounts that after a few days spent in various prisons in the Milanese countryside, the Pavesi were freed and taken to Milan in the town square, located in front of the Broletto Vecchio. Here, as a mockery, a bundle of straw was tied to the back of each of them and set fire to them and in this manner they were driven out of the city. On 18 June 1110 the Milanese defeated the Cremonese in the battle of Bressanoro (Brixianorum), just north of Castelleone. Although not mentioned in the chronicles of Landulf Junior, who was in France at that time, the victory over the Cremonese was most likely followed by a second victory over Pavia. In May 1111 the Milanese, taking advantage of the absence |
to be played by Spain. Points table References Cricket in France 2022 in women's cricket Associate international cricket competitions in | national sides of France, Austria, Jersey and Spain. These will be the first official WT20I matches to be played by Spain. Points table References |
believed to have been formally established in that year. Since then, the ritual was performed every year between the 8th to the 17th days after the New Year at the facilities of the Ministry of the Imperial Household. The necessary equipment was to be procured from Akishino-dera in Yamato Province, which was associated with Jōgyō. Jōgyō's promotion of Daigensuihō put him in direct conflict with Ennin of the Tendai sect who instead lobbied for the implementation of the as the ritual of national defense. The Daigensuihō was originally formulated as a prayer for and the and was therefore performed only in the immediate presence of the Emperor. Vassals (i.e. the court aristocracy) were not allowed to perform it on their own initiative. In the of 995, Interior Minister Fujiwara no Korechika was banished from the capital | the as the ritual of national defense. The Daigensuihō was originally formulated as a prayer for and the and was therefore performed only in the immediate presence of the Emperor. Vassals (i.e. the court aristocracy) were not allowed to perform it on their own initiative. In the of 995, Interior Minister Fujiwara no Korechika was banished from the capital and relegated to a post in the Dazaifu on the pretext that he had conducted the Daigensuihō himself. It is known that Oda Nobunaga, who at the time held the reins of government, cooperated with Emperor Ōgimachi in the restoration of the image of Āṭavaka in 1575. In the Edo period, the Daigensuihō was once again revived at the Imperial palace in Kyoto. It was held there until the Meiji Restoration. Modern military use In 1904, of Yokohama produced a standing image of Āṭavaka which was used in a Daigensuihō performed in prayer for victory in the Russo-Japanese War. Later, during the Pacific War, the Daigensuihō was carried out for the last time in an invocation of a by the Imperial Japanese Army. points out the connection between the title , which was used by the Emperor as the commander-in-chief of the |
script writers, executives, and board of directors. In the case of wrestlers originating from Spanish-speaking countries, who most often have two surnames, the paternal (first) surname is used. Impact Wrestling talent contracts range from developmental contracts to multi-year deals. They primarily appeared on Impact television programming, pay-per-views, monthly specials, and live events, and talent with developmental contracts appeared at Border City Wrestling and Ohio Valley Wrestling. When talent is released of their contract, it could be for a budget cut, the individual asking for | live events, and talent with developmental contracts appeared at Border City Wrestling and Ohio Valley Wrestling. When talent is released of their contract, it could be for a budget cut, the individual asking for their release, for personal reasons, time off from an injury, or retirement. Those who made appearances without a contract |
d'Amour has more orange and vanilla notes than crème de violette, which is usually quite floral. A recipe for the drink appeared in Regan's 2017 book The Joy of Mixology. Preparation Regan's recreation of the original recipe called for gin, maraschino liqueur, Parfait d'Amour liqueur, and lemon juice. It is garnished with a twist of lemon peel on the top. In 2021, Watanabe said that he had changed the cocktail recipe, stating "Because the liqueurs have changed its flavor, I adjusted the recipe." The new recipe for the drink appeared in The Japanese Cocktail : Watanabe Takumi and Kaneko Michito's philosophy. It called for | I’ve ever encountered." In 2017, Regan contacted Takumi to ask about the recipe, and Tagumi said that it substituted the crème de violette usually included in an aviation cocktail with Parfait d'Amour. The Parfait d'Amour has more orange and vanilla notes than crème de violette, which is usually quite floral. A recipe for the drink appeared in Regan's 2017 book The Joy of Mixology. Preparation Regan's recreation of the original recipe called for gin, maraschino liqueur, Parfait d'Amour liqueur, and lemon juice. It is garnished with |
reform schools and improve student performance. The organization was founded in September 2015 by Laurene Powell Jobs and Russlynn Ali. History XQ Institute was founded in September 2015 by Laurene Powell Jobs and Russlynn Ali, former assistant secretary of civil rights at the U.S. Department of Education. The institute was funded by Emerson Collective, an advocacy organization created by Jobs to fund philanthropic projects. XQ Institute was founded with the goal of changing the high school model, seen as being obsolete. The launch coincided with the announcement of a $50 million competition to redesign American public high schools, with funds to be awarded to build five new schools. In May 2016, the program launched a traveling yellow school bus with an interactive display that allowed students to share suggestions for improving high schools. In September, ten schools were selected to receive $10 million each, out of 700 applicants. In October 2019, XQ Institute partnered with New York City charitable organization Robin Hood Foundation to donate $16 million to help open new and restructured public schools in the city. The NY Times reported at the time that XQ: The Super | obsolete. The launch coincided with the announcement of a $50 million competition to redesign American public high schools, with funds to be awarded to build five new schools. In May 2016, the program launched a traveling yellow school bus with an interactive display that allowed students to share suggestions for improving high schools. In September, ten schools were selected to receive $10 million each, out of 700 applicants. In October 2019, XQ Institute partnered with New York City charitable organization Robin Hood Foundation to donate $16 million to help open new and restructured public schools in the city. The NY Times reported at the time that XQ: The Super School Project, XQ had given out more than $100 million in grants to help teams of students and educators implement ideas for new high schools. In March 2020, Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo and state Education Commissioner Angélica Infante-Green announced at the State House that two schools, Trinity Academy for the Performing Arts and Ponaganset High School, were each getting $500,000 grants from XQ to find ways to improve modern high schools. In May, XQ partnered with Los Angeles-based Entertainment Industry Foundation to host "Graduate Together", a virtual graduation for 2020 high school graduates, hosted |
documents. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1993 births Living people Footballers from Qingdao Footballers from Shandong Chinese footballers Association football defenders China League Two players A.S. Roma players AS Trenčín players Liaoning F.C. players FC Torpedo Kutaisi players Chinese expatriate footballers Expatriate footballers in Italy Chinese expatriate sportspeople | Chinese footballer currently playing as a defender for Xiamen Egret Island. Club career In 2011, Jiang (under the name Jiang Dongnan) went on trial with Italian club Roma. It was announced by the club that he would sign a contract in the summer of that year. In 2016, Jiang was suspended for 6 months for fraudulent identity and age documents. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1993 births Living people |
developmental contracts to multi-year deals. They primarily appeared on Impact television programming, pay-per-views, monthly specials, and live events, and talent with developmental contracts appeared at Border City Wrestling and Ohio Valley Wrestling. When talent is released of their contract, it could be for a budget cut, the individual asking for their release, for personal reasons, time off from an injury, or retirement. Those who made appearances without a contract and those | in Nashville, Tennessee. Former employees (family name letters A–C) in Impact Wrestling consist of professional wrestlers, managers, play-by-play and color commentators, announcers, interviewers, referees, trainers, script writers, executives, and board of directors. In the case of wrestlers originating from Spanish-speaking countries, who most often have two surnames, the paternal (first) surname is used. Impact Wrestling talent contracts range from developmental contracts to multi-year deals. They primarily appeared on Impact television programming, pay-per-views, monthly specials, and |
review: "The title track, "Hymn of Heaven," is anthemic, with a big assist from a chorus of backing voices pushing the song ever higher." Composition "Hymn of Heaven" is composed in the key of E with a tempo of 71 beats per minute and a musical time signature of . Commercial performance "Hymn of Heaven" debuted at number 25 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart dated July 10, 2021, concurrently charting at number six on the Christian Digital Song Sales chart. Music videos The official music video as well as the lyric video and audio video of "Hymn of Heaven" were all published on Phil Wickham's YouTube channel on June 25, 2021. On January 17, 2022, Essential Worship released the Song Session video of the song performed by Wickham through YouTube. Charts Release history Accolades Other versions Bethel Music released a duet cover of the song, led by Brian Johnson and Zahriya Zachary, on their | song is all about bringing heaven to this moment, with the way we act, and the way we speak, and the way we live, letting Jesus be the king and his rule, and his way taking over." On February 11, 2021, Wickham also released the radio version of the song. The radio team of Fair Trade Services announced that "Hymn of Heaven" will be serviced to Christian radio in the United States, the official add date for the single slated on March 25, 2022. Critical reception Jonathan Andre, reviewing for 365 Days of Inspiring Media review, saying "Hymn of Heaven" was one of the songs from Hymn of Heaven which "the potential to be powerful songs sung in churches around the world." Kevin Davis of NewReleaseToday also shared a similar sentiment, saying it was one of the songs on the albums that worship leaders would want to add to their set-lists immediately. Timothy Yap of JubileeCast commented on the song in his review: "it has a strong hymnic structure with well-crafted words that speak of the day we will meet Christ face to face." Jesus Freak Hideout's Josh Balogh opined in his review: "The title track, "Hymn of Heaven," is anthemic, with a big assist from a chorus of backing voices pushing the song ever higher." Composition "Hymn of Heaven" is composed in |
was contested by Al Shabab and Al Ain on 28 May 1981. Al Shabab lifted the trophy for the first time with a 3–1 victory over Al Ain. | the 5th final of the UAE President's Cup, the Emirati football cup competition. The match was contested by Al Shabab and Al Ain on 28 May 1981. Al Shabab lifted |
considered to be synonymous with Mycobacterium bovis. Transmission and symptoms M. suricattae is transmitted by respiratory particles, bites and allogrooming. In addition to the lungs, the spleen and liver may be infected, and submandibular lymph node swelling is a characteristic symptom. Lymph nodes | was considered to be synonymous with Mycobacterium bovis. Transmission and symptoms M. suricattae is transmitted by respiratory particles, bites and allogrooming. In addition to the lungs, the spleen and liver may be infected, and submandibular lymph node swelling is a characteristic symptom. Lymph nodes may swell to the |
The 17 teams will play each other in a double round-robin tournament (once at home and once away) for a total of 32 matches, with every team having two bye rounds. The top team at the end of the 34 rounds will be the champion and will be promoted to the Campeonato Nacional for its 2023 season, while the next five teams will play a play-off tournament (Liguilla) in which the league runners-up will receive a bye to the final. The playoffs winning team will be the second and last promoted team to the top flight for the following season. Two teams will be relegated to the Segunda División Profesional at the end of the season: the bottom-placed team in the league standings as well as the bottom-placed team in the relegation table, which will consider the performance of teams in the 2021 and 2022 seasons. Teams Stadia and locations Standings Results Relegation For this season, a relegation table will | of the Primera B de Chile, Chile's second-tier football league. The fixture for the season was announced on 1 February 2022, with the competition starting on 15 February 2022. Format The tournament will be played by 17 teams, 14 returning from the previous season, two relegated from Campeonato Nacional (Deportes Melipilla and Santiago Wanderers), and the Segunda División Profesional champions Deportes Recoleta. The 17 teams will play each other in a double round-robin tournament (once at home and once away) for a total of 32 matches, with every team having two bye rounds. The top team at the end of the 34 rounds will be the champion and will be promoted to the Campeonato Nacional for its 2023 season, while the next five teams will play a play-off tournament (Liguilla) in which the league runners-up will receive a bye |
University of Oxford and University of Birmingham. In 2005, he accepted a faculty position in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Oregon Health & Science University. He has served as chair of the Biomedical Engineering Department since 2019 and orchestrated collaborative partnerships with OHSU's School of Medicine, School of Dentistry, and external institutions. Current work and achievements McCarty investigates fluid mechanics and cellular biology of the vasculature with the goal of translating these insights into molecular-targeted therapies. His research program has helped take two drug candidates to clinical trials and has also provided insight on the anti-cancer effects of aspirin. Honors and awards 2002: Howard & Jacqueline Chertkof Endowed Fellowship, Johns Hopkins University 2003: University Merit Review Award, University of Oxford 2004 British Journal of Haematology Research Trust Award 2004: Paper of the Year in the Platelets Section of the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2004: International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis Young Investigator Award 2005: Gordon Research Conference Speaker Award 2007: Paper of the Year in the Platelets Section of the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2009: American Heart Association Karl Link New Investigator Award in Thrombosis 2010: American Heart Association Kenneth M. Brinkhous Young Investigator in Thrombosis Finalist 2013: American Heart Association | 2009: American Heart Association Karl Link New Investigator Award in Thrombosis 2010: American Heart Association Kenneth M. Brinkhous Young Investigator in Thrombosis Finalist 2013: American Heart Association Established Investigator Award 2014: Fellow of the American Heart Association 2019: Best Basic Science Award at the International Sepsis Forum 2021: Douglas Strain Endowed Professorship, OHSU Department of Biomedical Engineering Notable Publications McCarty, O. J., Mousa, S. A., Bray, P. F., & Konstantopoulos, K. (2000). Immobilized platelets support human colon carcinoma cell tethering, rolling, and firm adhesion under dynamic flow conditions. Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 96(5), 1789-1797. McCarty, O. J., Larson, M. K., Auger, J. M., Kalia, N., Atkinson, B. T., Pearce, A. C., ... & Watson, S. P. (2005). Rac1 is essential for platelet lamellipodia formation and aggregate stability under flow. Journal of biological chemistry, 280(47), 39474-39484. Cheng, Q., Tucker, E. I., Pine, M. S., Sisler, I., Matafonov, A., Sun, M. F., ... McCarty, O. J. T., ... & Gailani, D. (2010). A role for factor XIIa–mediated factor XI activation in thrombus formation in vivo. Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 116(19), 3981-3989. Aslan, J. E., & McCarty, O. J. (2013). Rho GTPases in platelet function. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 11(1), 35-46. Itakura, A., & McCarty, O. J. (2013). Pivotal role for the mTOR pathway in the formation of |
bowsprit, it has a length overall of . Operational history In a 2010 review Steve Henkel wrote, "this is a character boat of a type attractive to people who think that a sailboat hull shaped like a lifeboat is safer than a hull with a normal transom, In reality, it isn't, at least in a vessel this small. Best features: Compared with her comp[etitor]s, the Skipper 20 has a larger cockpit, with a convenient outboard engine in a well under a hatch just ahead of the rudder, and her simulated lapstrake topsides give her a jaunty antique look. Worst features: Perhaps the designer (who is unidentified in the literature we've seen) expected all skippers to spend most of their time under power. That seems a likely possibility considering the boat's pitifully short mast and tiny sails—exacerbated by a main boom which is needlessly high on the mast. Moreover, the stubby keel is too shallow to keep the boat from side-slipping under sail, and for reasons we can't fathom, the | comp[etitor]s, the Skipper 20 has a larger cockpit, with a convenient outboard engine in a well under a hatch just ahead of the rudder, and her simulated lapstrake topsides give her a jaunty antique look. Worst features: Perhaps the designer (who is unidentified in the literature we've seen) expected all skippers to spend most of their time under power. That seems a likely possibility considering the boat's pitifully short mast and tiny sails—exacerbated by a main boom which is needlessly high on the mast. Moreover, the stubby keel is too shallow to keep the boat from side-slipping under sail, and for reasons we can't fathom, the rudder is much too small for effective steering while sailing ..." See also List of sailing boat types References External links Photo of a Skipper |
in June 2021, but communications were not established by Jan 2022. One theory is that helium exposure during the Falcon 9 launch affected MEMS devices in the cubesats. See also Laser communication in space Free-space optical communication References | in June 2021, but communications were not established by Jan 2022. One theory is that helium exposure during the Falcon 9 launch affected MEMS devices in the cubesats. See also Laser communication in space |
their game early in the season under their new leader and began 0–7–1. While some of the struggles were caused by a difficult schedule (6 games came against ranked opponents), Alaska's offense was paltry in those matches. The team averages less than 2 goals per game and were shut out on three occasions. The team improved in November and saw some modest gains in their scoring production. Freshman goalie, Gustavs Dāvis Grigals, also got a turn in net and helped propel Alaska to four wins over a four-week span. While it looked like the team may be rounding a corner, both Grigals and nominal starter Anton Martinsson struggled as the calendar turned to January and the Nanooks ended up with a 5-game losing streak. Martinsson recovered first and helped the team right the ship down the stretch. Alaska showed some grit with wins over Bowling Green and Minnesota State when both were ranked in the top-10. The Nanooks were also able to take three out of four games from Alaska Anchorage to claim their seventh straight Governor's Cup. In the WCHA Tournament, Alaska continued to show improvement when they fought hard | 6th in the WCHA conference. The Nanooks represented the University of Alaska Fairbanks and were coached by Erik Largen, in his 1st season. Season After just one season with Lance West behind the bench, Alaska brought in Erik Largen as the program's 27th head coach. The Nanooks had trouble finding their game early in the season under their new leader and began 0–7–1. While some of the struggles were caused by a difficult schedule (6 games came against ranked opponents), Alaska's offense was paltry in those matches. The team averages less than 2 goals per game and were shut out on three occasions. The team improved in November and saw some modest gains in their scoring production. Freshman goalie, Gustavs Dāvis Grigals, also got a turn in net and helped propel Alaska to four wins over a four-week span. While it looked like the team may be rounding a corner, both Grigals and nominal starter Anton Martinsson struggled as the calendar turned to January and the Nanooks ended up with a 5-game losing streak. Martinsson recovered first and helped the team right the ship down the stretch. Alaska showed some grit with wins over Bowling Green and Minnesota State when both were ranked in the top-10. The Nanooks were |
References Motown compilation albums 1998 compilation albums Record label compilation albums | the 40th anniversary of Motown Records. Track listing Charts References Motown compilation |
Fall/Winter 2022 collection. Early life and education Mosa was born in Lisbon, Portugal in 1986. He trained as a goldsmith from an early age. He received his Bachelor of Design at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy and a MFA at Cranbrook Academy of Art. Work Mosa exhibited jewelry and metal work in 2011 at Gallery Louise Smit in Amsterdam. In 2014, Mosa wrote an essay, titled A Look Into The Work Of Jean Paul Gaultier: Gender Amalgamation And The Musing Of The Maker for the exhibitionThe Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier: From the Sidewalk to the Catwalk at The Brooklyn Museum. Mosa collaborated with Hotel Particulier, a boutique gallery space, in Paris, France. Mosa had a solo exhibition called Indentations at Jewelers’ Werk in 2017. Later that year, Mosa showed at Chamber gallery's group exhibition, Domestic Appeal, curated by Matylda Krzykowski. He exhibited Inverted | Loewe's Fall/Winter 2022 collection. Early life and education Mosa was born in Lisbon, Portugal in 1986. He trained as a goldsmith from an early age. He received his Bachelor of Design at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy and a MFA at Cranbrook Academy of Art. Work Mosa exhibited jewelry and metal work in 2011 at Gallery Louise Smit in Amsterdam. In 2014, Mosa wrote an essay, titled A Look Into The Work Of Jean Paul Gaultier: Gender Amalgamation And The Musing Of The Maker for the exhibitionThe Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier: From the Sidewalk to the Catwalk at The Brooklyn Museum. Mosa collaborated with Hotel Particulier, a boutique gallery space, in Paris, France. Mosa had a solo exhibition called Indentations at Jewelers’ Werk in 2017. Later that year, Mosa showed at Chamber gallery's group exhibition, Domestic Appeal, curated by Matylda Krzykowski. He exhibited Inverted Dart Game, an interactive game where players throw |
to China in 2019 to join Sichuan Jiuniu on loan. He would return to Sichuan Jiuniu on a permanent basis following his release from Vizela, before being loaned again; this time to Yanbian Longding. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1999 births Living people | References 1999 births Living people Footballers from Chongqing Chinese footballers China youth international footballers Association football midfielders Campeonato de Portugal (league) players China League Two players F.C. Vizela players Sichuan Jiuniu F.C. players Chinese expatriate footballers Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Portugal |
competition of German women's volleyball . The organizer is the German Volleyball Association (DVV). The finals have been held in the SAP Arena in Mannheim since 2016. The current title holders in 2021 are the Schweriner SC. Competition history The DVV Cup has been held since 1973. Its East German counterpart was the FDGB Cup under the direction of the German Sports Association Volleyball of the GDR (DSVB), which was held between 1953 and 1991. | since 2016. The current title holders in 2021 are the Schweriner SC. Competition history The DVV Cup has been held since 1973. Its East German counterpart was the FDGB Cup under the direction of the German Sports Association Volleyball of the GDR (DSVB), which was held between 1953 and 1991. From 2006 to 2015 the finals took place in the Gerry |
formally described as a new species in 2019 by Manuela Dal Forno, Laurel Kaminsky, and Robert Lücking. The type specimen was collected in Ocala National Forest (Marion County, Florida), where it was growing as an epiphyte on a trunk of Magnolia. It is only known to occur here and in two other locations in Florida, all in hardwood forests. The lichen has a crustose and filamentous growth form on a white hypothallus, and thallus surface made of | as a new species in 2019 by Manuela Dal Forno, Laurel Kaminsky, and Robert Lücking. The type specimen was collected in Ocala National Forest (Marion County, Florida), where it was growing as an epiphyte on a trunk of Magnolia. It is only known to occur here and in two other locations in Florida, all in hardwood forests. The lichen has a crustose |
determine the national champion of Division III women's collegiate basketball in the United States. Hope defeated Southern Maine in the championship game, 69–56, to claim the Flying Dutchmen's second Division III national title and first since 1990. The championship rounds were hosted by Springfield College | Hope Ashley Marble, Southern Maine Megan Myles, Southern Maine Taryn Mellody, Scranton See also 2006 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament 2006 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament 2006 NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament 2006 NAIA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament 2006 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament References NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament 2006 in sports in Massachusetts |
a railway coach manufacturer, founded in 1852 in Munich, which closed in 1972. It produced railway vehicles, buses, elevators and automatic doors. In 1972 it was taken over | vehicles, buses, elevators and automatic doors. In 1972 it was taken over by Firma F. X. Meiller, who make im früheren Rathgeber-Werk in München-Moosach |
Goito. The Piedmontese advance guard consisted of a company of the newly founded light-infantry Bersaglieri, a small cavalry platoon, a detachment of military engineers, 300 marines of the Royal Sardinian Navy led by Major Alli Maccarani and a detachment of the 6th artillery battery. The Piedmontese were also reinforced by a company of Mantuan volunteers led by Captain Saverio Griffini. A single company of skirmishing Kaiserjäger from the defending Austrian detachment had occupied the town and its outskirts, while five companies of Austrian infantry and 4 artillery pieces held the opposite bank of the river. The objective of the smaller Austrian force was to frustrate the Piedmontese crossing, delaying the enemy advance against Mantua and to destroy the bridge. The Battle Early in the morning (sometime between 8 and 9 am) the advance guard of the 1st Piedmontese Division clashed with Austrian forces outside the town. A company of Bersaglieri and a squadron of cavalry squad then attacked the company of Kaiserjäger holding the entrance to the town and "quickly forced them to disperse". Colonel Alessandro La Marmora then led the Bersaglieri charge into the town, and was seriously injured in the jaw in the course of the engagement. The Austrians, who had earlier placed explosive on the bridge decided to blow it up in order to halt the Italian advance, but were unable to do so as the explosives had been rendered ineffective by rain the previous night. Just | stalled under the accurate fire of the Kaiserjäger protecting the bridge-head in town. Major Alli Maccarani was wounded in the shoulder, and even the officer who replaced him was shot in the right hand and wounded. A Lieutenant from the Royal Sardinian Navy and Lieutenant Demetrio Galli of the Bersaglieri were killed alongside a number of enlisted men. The Piedmontese assault stalled. General d'Arvillars then dispatched a few companies of the 9th infantry Regiment to aid the Bersaglieri and marines in their assault on the bridge. The Austrian engineers had however by then finished placing the explosives, and the Kaiserjäger retreated across the bridge minutes before the Austrian engineers blew up the structure. The Austrian efforts were however unsuccessful in completing destroying the key bridge: the entire floor of the bridge collapsed, but one of its parapets remained standing. The two opposing sides then began exchanging fire across the river. Seeking to end the stalemate and to capture what remained of the crossing, General d'Arvillars ordered some Piedmontese units to march northwards and give the impression that a pontoon may be thrown across the river at another location. As the Austrian defenders prepared to retreat in order to avoid being flanked a small group of Bersaglieri and marines then climbed across the semi-destroyed bridge, prompting a collapse of the Austrian defensive position. As the Austrians fled, the Piedmontese seized a cannon and |
Formula One racing car designed and constructed by the Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team and is expected to compete in the 2022 Formula One World Championship. The car will be driven by Lewis Hamilton and George Russell. The chassis is Mercedes' first car under the | |Name=Mercedes W13 |Debut= |Transmission type= |Differential= |Electric motor=Kinetic and thermal energy recovery systems |Weight= |Fuel=Petronas Primax<ref> The Mercedes W13, officially Mercedes-AMG F1 W13 E Performance, is a Formula One racing car designed |
design ideas. When the Turning Mill / Middle Ridge project began in 1955, there were already 3 communities designed with modernist principles under development in Lexington: Six Moon Hill; developed by The Architects Collaborative (TAC) (1947); Five Fields, also developed by TAC begun in 1951; and Peacock Farm, by Walter Pierce and Danforth Compton (1951). In different ways, each of these teams was looking for ways to take advantage of new, industrial materials and modernist principles, to produce more affordable housing more quickly. The initial developer for the project was Carl Koch, originator of the Techbuilt system of modular housing construction. Koch had already experimented with some of his design ideas at the Concord, Massachusetts community of Conantum. Architecture The Turning Mill neighborhood was envisioned as a development of Techbuilt prefabricated houses, with 35 houses eventually built using this innovative methodology. Over time, other companies became involved in home construction there: specifically, the Architectural Planning Associates of Boston created three housing versions, the raised ranch, the split-level and the chalet; and developer Harmon White licensed the "Peacock Farm House" from Walter Pierce for reuse at Turning Mill. Of the 158 houses in the district, all but 12 reflect mid-century modern design principles. Neighborhood Conservation District As homes in the area aged and market conditions began to favor "tear-downs" over repair, neighbors became concerned about preserving the unique characteristics of their neighborhood. Because the houses were already listed in Lexington's Comprehensive Cultural Resources Survey, there was year-long delay before a listed house could | Lexington's Comprehensive Cultural Resources Survey, there was year-long delay before a listed house could be demolished, and a required public hearing before the Lexington Historic Commission. In one publicized case, the homeowners reconsidered their plan to tear down their 1958 home, surprised by the intensity of local feeling. After much-needed renovations, the house in question still stands, more than 10 years after that hearing. But realization that there was an ongoing threat caused the neighbors to look for new means of preservation. There was an interest in finding a means of protecting architectural resources that was less stringent than the state-governed Local Historic District status. To that end, an article was brought before Lexington's Town Meeting to create a Neighborhood Conservation District (NCD) status which was approved in 2016. Even before the new bylaw was approved, proponents of a Turning Mill NCD began to document the characteristics of the area that would make it worthy of protection. Following completion of the necessary documentation, the request received a positive vote in Lexington's Town Meeting in April 2018. References External links Lexington, Massachusetts Modernist architecture in Massachusetts Buildings and structures in Lexington, Massachusetts |
Huizhanzhongxin station (Tianjin Metro), a station on Line 9 of Tianjin Metro Huizhanzhongxin station (Xi'an Metro), a station on Line | Metro Huizhanzhongxin station (Xi'an Metro), a station on Line 2 of Xi'an Metro See also Convention Center |
Mongolia Caoshangfei, on a permanent basis in 2020. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1993 births Living people People from Zhoukou Footballers from Henan Chinese footballers Association | 2020. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1993 births Living people People from Zhoukou Footballers from Henan Chinese footballers Association football defenders China League Two players Chongqing F.C. players |
annual single-elimination tournament of 64 NCAA Division I Women's college basketball teams that are selected for the field of the 2018 Women's NCAA Tournament. The tournament committee will announce the 64-team field on March 13, following the selection of the NCAA Tournament field. The tournament first round is scheduled to start March 13 and end on April 2 with the championship game televised by CBSSN Participants The 2022 Postseason WNIT field will consist of 32 teams that receive automatic berths - one berth from each conference | 2 with the championship game televised by CBSSN Participants The 2022 Postseason WNIT field will consist of 32 teams that receive automatic berths - one berth from each conference - and 32 at-large teams. All Division I teams will be considered for at-large berths, including those who are independent and/or are in the transition process of reaching full NCAA Division I status. The automatic birth will go to the team that's the highest-finishing team in its conference's regular-season standings, not selected for |
lyricist. Life and career Born in Santiago, Bravo was among the founders of the politically committed theatrical ensemble Teatro Aleph (Aleph Theatre). After the 1973 Chilean coup d'état and the company's forced dissolution, Bravo pursued a career as a television writer, collaborating with educational and children's programs and variety shows, notably Sábados Gigantes. In 1988 Bravo wrote the lyrics of the song "Chile, la alegría ya viene", which was the hymn of the "No" option during the 1988 Chilean national plebiscite. After the end of | notably Sábados Gigantes. In 1988 Bravo wrote the lyrics of the song "Chile, la alegría ya viene", which was the hymn of the "No" option during the 1988 Chilean national plebiscite. After the end of the Pinochet dictatorship, he worked at Televisión Nacional de Chile until 2005, and during this time he created the |
by Canadian MDA Orbital Express — a 2007 U.S. government-sponsored mission to test in-space satellite servicing with two vehicles designed from the start for on-orbit refueling and subsystem replacement. Robotic Refueling Mission, a series of NASA projects, including cryogenics transfer tests at ISS Contracts : Jan 2022: Astroscale contracted to use Orbit-fab in-orbit propellant depots. Standards Rapidly Attachable Fluid | orbit, e.g. in geostationary orbit around Earth. This could be for storable propellants, and later for cryogenic propellants. Examples : Space Infrastructure Servicing by Canadian MDA Orbital Express — a 2007 U.S. government-sponsored mission to test in-space satellite servicing with two vehicles designed from the start for on-orbit |
repainting was carried out in 1955. The church measures 22 meters long by 6–10 meters wide, and is situated on an elevation. It is cross-shaped, with polygonal exterior apses, an octagonal dome above the nave and, above the narthex, a square bell tower. The latter is topped by a cross sitting on a small roof lantern supported by four slender columns. Interior columns were demolished, while the formerly open portico is entirely closed by masonry, ending in a flat facade with two small pylons at the ends. The exterior was frequently modified as well: the string course does not survive, and the sides feature arches in the lower part, medallions in the upper. The entrance is flanked by icons of Saints Peter and Paul. Two rows of seven saints each, with floral decorations, sit above the entrance, as does the patron saint's icon. The church owns a restored Gospel Book and relics | church located at 72 Icoanei Street in Bucharest, Romania. It is dedicated to Saint Nicholas. The church existed by 1773, but lacks a pisanie or other inscriptions attesting its precise origins. Its name comes from two sources: Deoghen, traditionally considered the ktetor, was dichiu or oikonomos of the Metropolis of Ungro-Wallachia; while he was assisted by a certain Tirchilă. For some years, the surrounding area was a village called Tirchilești, incorporated into Bucharest by 1789. Local tradition holds that the church initially served a skete of monks, which ceased to exist when the city extended its boundaries, transforming the building into a parish church. In 1880, it was extended and a wooden dome added. Repairs took place in 1898 |
focused on seabirds and cetaceans. She held various positions at the NOAA, including Chair of the Pacific Seabird Group, Lead of Cetacean Ecology and Chief of Stenella Abundance Research. In 2013, Balance was appointed Chair of the NOAA Fisheries National Seabird Program. The overarching aim of the program was to mitigate bycatch (the unwanted fish caught by commercial fishing nets) and to promote seats as indicates of ecosystem health. She led the Eastern Tropical Pacific Research Program, which was responsible for the “Dolphin Safe” label found on canned tuna. Ballance was made Professor of Fisheries and Wildlife and Director of the Marine Mammal Research Institute at Oregon State University in 2019. She led expeditions to see beaked whales and dolphins. She was awarded a $2 million grant to collect information about the distribution of marine mammals. Selected publications References Year of birth missing (living | the program was to mitigate bycatch (the unwanted fish caught by commercial fishing nets) and to promote seats as indicates of ecosystem health. She led the Eastern Tropical Pacific Research Program, which was responsible for the “Dolphin Safe” label found on canned tuna. Ballance was made Professor of Fisheries and Wildlife and Director of the Marine Mammal Research Institute at Oregon State University in 2019. She led expeditions to see beaked whales and dolphins. She was awarded a $2 million grant to collect information about the distribution |
purchase a former plantation property in Columbia, South Carolina to use for the school campus, which was named in her honor. Benedict died in 1897 and was buried in the Swan Point Cemetery in Providence, Rhode Island. References 1809 births 1897 deaths Philanthropists from Massachusetts Benedict College University and college founders People from Bellingham, Massachusetts People from Pawtucket, Rhode Island American Civil War industrialists 19th-century Baptists Baptists_from_Massachusetts Burials at Swan Point Cemetery 19th-century | was a Baptist philanthropist from Pawtucket, Rhode Island who was a co-founder, benefactor, and namesake of Benedict College, an historically black college, in South Carolina. Bathsheba Adams Barber (Benedict) was born in Bellingham, Massachusetts in 1809. In 1830 she married Stephen Benedict, a banker, mill owner, Baptist church deacon, and early abolitionist from Pawtucket. Her husband died in a fire in 1868. Using proceeds from her husband's insurance policy and estate and with a donation from her |
for her work on environmentalism and women's rights. She has been an appointed member of the Legislative Council of Brunei since 2017. In 2015, she became the first Bruneian recipient of the Queen's Young Leaders Award. Early life and education Ash'ari was born in 1987 in Brunei. She graduated from the Universiti Brunei Darussalam in 2011. She later studied at King's College London through a Chevening Scholarship, graduating with a master's degree in environment, politics, and globalization in 2016. Career Ash'ari first became involved in activism around 2011. In 2012, she co-founded Green Brunei, a youth-centered environmentalist group. She later served as director of another environmental initiative, Green Xchange. Additionally, Ash'ari was a member of the Brunei Youth Council and co-led the ASEAN Young Professionals Volunteer Corps. Ash'ari won the Bruneian sultan's | in Brunei. She graduated from the Universiti Brunei Darussalam in 2011. She later studied at King's College London through a Chevening Scholarship, graduating with a master's degree in environment, politics, and globalization in 2016. Career Ash'ari first became involved in activism around 2011. In 2012, she co-founded Green Brunei, a youth-centered environmentalist group. She later served as director of another environmental initiative, Green Xchange. Additionally, Ash'ari was a member of the Brunei Youth Council and co-led the ASEAN |
designed and constructed by Scuderia Ferrari and is expected to compete in the 2022 Formula One World Championship. The | Scuderia Ferrari and is expected to compete in the 2022 Formula One World Championship. The car will be driven by Charles Leclerc and Carlos |
and Esteban Ocon. The chassis is Alpine's first car under the 2022 technical regulations. References External links Alpine F1 Team official | is expected to compete in the 2022 Formula One World Championship. The car will be driven by Fernando Alonso and Esteban Ocon. |
sexual and suicidal acts. Untitled (White Slaves), also from 2012, staged a reversal of the racial violence of the transatlantic slave trade, picturing naked, white, shackled bodies incarcerated in a metal cage whle Black onlookers assumed "the roles of auctioneer, trader, voyeur, abuser and violater". In 2014 Frimpong was interviewed as part of African Diaspora Artists in the 21st Century, | 1987. Frimpong's 2012 drawing The Accidental Birth of Nicola – I Should Have Been Born a Boy (2012) pictured pink and brown figures caught up in various sexual and suicidal acts. Untitled (White Slaves), also from 2012, staged a reversal of the racial violence of the transatlantic slave trade, picturing naked, white, shackled bodies incarcerated in a metal cage whle Black onlookers assumed "the roles of auctioneer, trader, voyeur, |
RedHawks men's ice hockey program in various categories, including goals, assists, points, and saves. Within those areas, the lists identify single-game, single-season, and career | hockey program in various categories, including goals, assists, points, and saves. Within those areas, the lists identify single-game, single-season, and career leaders. The RedHawks represent Miami University |
porch with a round headed entrance flanked by pairs of colonettes supporting a moulded architrave. The building was fenestrated, on the lower two floors of the outer bays, by square headed bay windows, on the lower two floors of the second and fourth bays, by canted bay windows and, on the second floor, by two-light pedimented sash windows. The bays were all gabled, with the outer bays featuring large gables than the inner bays. The interior decoration included Minton tiles on the walls and fine stained glass windows. The proprietor, a Mrs Spyree, claimed that the building enjoyed "the best situation facing pier and sea." In 1922, St Anne's-on-the-Sea Urban District Council merged with Lytham Urban District Council to form Lytham St Annes Metropolitan Borough. Lytham Urban District Council did not have a permanent headquarters at that time and St Anne's Public Offices were not large enough to accommodate the enlarged authority, so the new civic leaders decided to | been described by the Lytham St Annes Civic Society as "one of the best examples of a Porritt development". It was designed in the Victorian style, built in stone quarried in East Lancashire and was completed in 1898. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with six bays facing onto the South Promenade; the third bay from the left featured a porch with a round headed entrance flanked by pairs of colonettes supporting a moulded architrave. The building was fenestrated, on the lower two floors of the outer bays, by square headed bay windows, on the lower two floors of the second and fourth bays, by canted bay windows and, on the second floor, by two-light pedimented sash windows. The bays were all gabled, with the outer bays featuring large gables than the inner bays. The interior decoration included Minton tiles on the walls and fine stained glass windows. The proprietor, a Mrs Spyree, claimed that the building enjoyed "the best situation facing pier and sea." In 1922, St Anne's-on-the-Sea Urban District Council merged with Lytham Urban District Council to form Lytham St Annes Metropolitan Borough. Lytham Urban District Council did not have a permanent headquarters at that time and St Anne's Public Offices were not large enough to accommodate |
continued actively in lecturing and research including sabbaticals as the Cotswold Visiting Scientist at Iowa State University, at the University of Illinois and elsewhere. Soller is the originator of quantitative trait locus mapping and marker-assisted selection. He began noticing the statistical patterns and composing the mathematical tools that would be required for these techniques in 1974, while studying crop genetics and livestock genetics. He went on to collaborate with his students and peers to create the F2, backcrossing, full sib, half sib, granddaughter, AIL and selective DNA pooling techniques in QTL mapping. Along with other laboratories around the world, his group developed some of the earliest restriction fragment length polymorphism markers for cattle and microsatellite markers for chickens. He has especially become known for using these techniques to analyse trypanotolerance in cattle, especially in the N'Dama breed. Soller has also applied QTL analysis to dairy traits and Marek's disease. His doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers number over 50 . Professional recognition 1996 American Association for the Advancement of Science elected him a Fellow 1999 Awarded the Jay L. Lush Award by the American Dairy Science Association 2000 Chosen to give the A. B. Chapman Lecture of the University of Wisconsin 2000 Honorary doctorate from Iowa State University 2007 Honorary doctorate from the University of Liege, Belgium 2012 Honorary member of the International Society for Animal Genetics 2012 The journal Animal Genetics published a special issue in his honor. Publications Soller had authored and coauthored over 170 peer reviewed publications, and many book chapters and encyclopedia articles. The organisms he has studied include cattle and chickens, but also extend to plants, | at Roosevelt University in the USA. In 1972 he returned to Israel to lecture at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in their Department of Genetics. He would eventually become a full professor and emeritus professor in 2000. He has since continued actively in lecturing and research including sabbaticals as the Cotswold Visiting Scientist at Iowa State University, at the University of Illinois and elsewhere. Soller is the originator of quantitative trait locus mapping and marker-assisted selection. He began noticing the statistical patterns and composing the mathematical tools that would be required for these techniques in 1974, while studying crop genetics and livestock genetics. He went on to collaborate with his students and peers to create the F2, backcrossing, full sib, half sib, granddaughter, AIL and selective DNA pooling techniques in QTL mapping. Along with other laboratories around the world, his group developed some of the earliest restriction fragment length polymorphism markers for cattle and microsatellite markers for chickens. He has especially become known for using these techniques to analyse trypanotolerance in cattle, especially in the N'Dama breed. Soller has also applied QTL analysis to dairy traits and Marek's disease. His doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers number over 50 . Professional recognition 1996 American Association for the Advancement of Science elected him a Fellow 1999 Awarded the |
be in their third and first year with the team respectively. The chassis is Williams' first car under the 2022 technical regulations, and under ownership from team boss, Jost Capito. References Williams Formula One cars 2022 | by Williams and is expected to compete in the 2022 Formula One World Championship. The car will be driven by Nicholas Latifi and Alex Albon, who will be in their third and first year |
and Jacob ran a hardware store in the house called De Keyzershoed (Huis de Keyser) in the[Niezel (a street), where the Imperial Crown later hung. There he ran a cloth trade, and in 1539 he was chief of the Guild of the Amsterdam cloth merchants. Graeff also traded in Antwerp, the former warehouse of English cloth. When he wanted to establish himself as a trader in North Brabant, his sons intervened to return him to Amsterdam soon. In 1542 he became a councilor and in 1543 he was appointed alderman (Schepen) of Amsterdam. Due to its political activities, the De Graeff family is one of the few patrician families to sit in government before and after the Amsterdam Alteratie of 1578. Joost van den Vondel called Graeff in his verse | century. Biography Jan Pietersz Graeff was the son of Pieter Graeff, the first known representative of the Dutch De Graeff family. Pieter was probably a son of Wolfgang von Graben from the Von Graben family. It is uncertain which one was the first Graeff active in Amsterdam [Pieter or Jan]. Jans mother was Griet Pietersdr Berents descendant from Wouter Berensz and his wife Dieuwer Willemsz de Grebber, called Berents, of the De Grebber family, baljuws of the Waterland, and Willem Eggert, stadtholder of Holland. Jan Pietersz Graeff married to Stein Braseman and had five sons who survived their childhood: Pieter Jansz Graeff (died before 1547), married Maria Jacobsdr Dobbens Lenaert Jansz de Graeff (about 1530–35 - before 1578), he may be the same person as Monseigneur de Graeff, from Bruges, a water geus in the Eighty Years' War. In recent historical books, De Graeff is treated as one of the leaders of the Sea beggars. His character was also used in a historical novel about his friend Hendrick van Brederode, De Grote Geus. Dirk |
Bras featured for the semi-professional PDL side SW Florida Adrenaline, scoring four goals in eleven appearances. After graduating, Le Bras moved to Canada, joining PLSQ side Mont-Royal, where he made five appearances in the 2016 season. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links Kévin Le Bras at the Coastal Carolina University 1991 births Living people People from Niort Coastal Carolina University alumni French footballers Association football midfielders Association football forwards Ligue 2 players USL League | States to enrol at the Coastal Carolina University. While there, he featured regularly for the university's soccer team, the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers. While in his second year at university, Le Bras featured for the semi-professional PDL side SW Florida Adrenaline, scoring four goals in eleven appearances. After graduating, Le Bras moved to Canada, joining PLSQ side Mont-Royal, where he made five appearances in the 2016 season. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links Kévin Le Bras at the Coastal Carolina University 1991 |
a coda, Parker disagrees. 'He was not avant-garde; he was a human being who loves life and music,' he states in the liner notes. 'He would not be boxed in by the music world's value system that asks artists to conform to their standards.' By that yardstick, Cecil should be smiling right about now." Glide Magazine's Jim Hynes commented: "Using the principles of space and the notion of 'Sing' - not focusing directly on pitch, dynamics, or rhythm but fusing these dimensions, along with tone, texture, and spirit into an energy flow is the essence of this trio's approach. It's what they learned from Taylor. Within lies some awe-inspiring performances but some beautiful moments too... Some fans of avant-garde or free jazz even find Cecil Taylor's music a bit inaccessible, let alone the mainstream crowd. Don't let that be a deterrent here. Cyrille, Parker, and Rava deliver beautifully executed music that is enthralling throughout." In an article for WBGO Afternoon Jazz, Nate Chinen wrote: "All three improvisers spent important stretches playing with Taylor, though at different times. And their approach with this putative tribute is less about emulation than acknowledgment; they're honoring a common touchstone by being most fully themselves. The album includes some blues and ballads... — and a bristling take on 'Ballerina,' which Rava composed more than 30 years ago. Listen to the way these musicians effervesce through the tune, and the Cecil connection should be clear." A review by Michael Ullman in The Arts Fuse stated: "The trio shares Taylor's love of rational freedom and adventure, but it doesn't try to reproduce the pianist's rip-roaring intensity. 2 Blues for Cecil is a genial set, its silences as intriguing as its flurries of notes. There are a number of lovely improvised melodies — sprightly, clever, and even transparent interactions... the players are independent, out of the box. Yet they also sound beautifully together." Writing for The Big Takeover, Michael Toland remarked: "each player knows that emulating Taylor's style is not the way to pay proper tribute to his spirit. Taylor's art encouraged others to channel their own unfiltered vision, rather than attempt to copy him, and it's a notion embraced by his former bandmates. That's not to say that Cyrille, Parker and Rava don't | artists to conform to their standards.' By that yardstick, Cecil should be smiling right about now." Glide Magazine's Jim Hynes commented: "Using the principles of space and the notion of 'Sing' - not focusing directly on pitch, dynamics, or rhythm but fusing these dimensions, along with tone, texture, and spirit into an energy flow is the essence of this trio's approach. It's what they learned from Taylor. Within lies some awe-inspiring performances but some beautiful moments too... Some fans of avant-garde or free jazz even find Cecil Taylor's music a bit inaccessible, let alone the mainstream crowd. Don't let that be a deterrent here. Cyrille, Parker, and Rava deliver beautifully executed music that is enthralling throughout." In an article for WBGO Afternoon Jazz, Nate Chinen wrote: "All three improvisers spent important stretches playing with Taylor, though at different times. And their approach with this putative tribute is less about emulation than acknowledgment; they're honoring a common touchstone by being most fully themselves. The album includes some blues and ballads... — and a bristling take on 'Ballerina,' which Rava composed more than 30 years ago. Listen to the way these musicians effervesce through the tune, and the Cecil connection should be clear." A review by Michael Ullman in The Arts Fuse stated: "The trio shares Taylor's love of rational freedom and adventure, but it doesn't try to reproduce the pianist's rip-roaring intensity. 2 Blues for Cecil is a genial set, its silences as intriguing as |
games for the Netherlands, both against Italy, and one game for the England under-16s against Turkey. Career statistics Club . Notes References 2003 births Living people English footballers England youth international footballers Dutch footballers Netherlands youth international footballers English people of Nigerian descent Dutch people of Nigerian descent Association | and has represented the Netherlands and England at youth international level. He featured in two under-15 games for the Netherlands, both against Italy, and one game for the England under-16s against Turkey. Career statistics Club . Notes References 2003 births Living people English footballers England youth international footballers |
2022, at a TBD location. Announced bouts Featherweight bout: Dan Ige vs. Movsar Evloev Women's Flyweight bout: Poliana Botelho vs. Karine Silva Flyweight bout: Zhalgas Zhumagulov vs. Jeff Molina Flyweight bout: Zarrukh | on ESPN+ 69) is an upcoming mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship that will take place on June 4, 2022, at a TBD location. Announced bouts Featherweight bout: Dan Ige vs. Movsar Evloev Women's Flyweight bout: Poliana Botelho vs. Karine |
health statistics data, body mass, diabetes, infant mortality, and disability. Formerly the associate director and acting director of the National Center for Health Statistics in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, she is a senior advisor to the Center for Inclusive Policy and vice chair of the Population Reference Bureau. Education and career Madans was an undergraduate at Bard College. She went to the University of Michigan for graduate study in sociology, earning a master's degree and Ph.D. there. She was a postdoctoral researcher in epidemiology at Yale University before joining the National Center for Health Statistics, where she became associate director in 1996. She has also been affiliated with Georgetown University as adjunct faculty in biostatistics and epidemiology and in demography. She | master's degree and Ph.D. there. She was a postdoctoral researcher in epidemiology at Yale University before joining the National Center for Health Statistics, where she became associate director in 1996. She has also been affiliated with Georgetown University as adjunct faculty in biostatistics and epidemiology and in demography. She served as acting director of the National Center for Health Statistics from 2018 to 2020, before retiring in 2021. Recognition Madans was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in |
births 2022 deaths Soviet politicians Russian politicians Communist Party of the Soviet Union members Members of the Federation Council of Russia (1994–1996) Recipients of the Order of Honour (Russia) Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour Recipients of the USSR State Prize People from Tomsk | from 1994 to 1996 and in the Legislative Duma of Tomsk Oblast from 1997 to 2001. He died on 8 February 2022, at the age of 86. References 1935 births 2022 deaths Soviet politicians Russian politicians Communist Party of the Soviet Union members Members of the Federation Council of Russia (1994–1996) |
railway station () is a railway station in the municipality of Wolfurt, in the district of Bregenz, in the Austrian state of Vorarlberg. It | station () is a railway station in the municipality of Wolfurt, in the district of Bregenz, in the Austrian state of Vorarlberg. It is located on the Vorarlberg line of Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB). |
emperor Charles V had ordered the demolition to amplify the fort, leading to new construction here. The church was completed in 1617. In 1925, the church changed hands to belong to the Confraternita della Carità, and was then used as a storage for works from the nearby Galleria Regionale di Palazzo Abatellis. Recently it has been reconsecrated and placed under the care of the Order of Knights of the Temple of Jerusalem (Cavalieri del Tempio di Gerusalemme). The Western facade facing Via Vittorio Emanuele is narrow and minimally conspicuous, as it smooths the acute angle of this end | to new construction here. The church was completed in 1617. In 1925, the church changed hands to belong to the Confraternita della Carità, and was then used as a storage for works from the nearby Galleria Regionale di Palazzo Abatellis. Recently it has been reconsecrated and placed under the care of the Order of Knights of the Temple of Jerusalem (Cavalieri del Tempio di Gerusalemme). The Western facade facing Via Vittorio Emanuele is narrow and minimally conspicuous, as it smooths the acute angle of this end of the church. The Southeastern (right) flank of the church has a secondary facade facing the Giardino Garibaldi of the Piazza Marina. At the apse, is a low octagonal dome with colorful maiolica tiles. The nave is separated from the aisles by slender marble columns. The apse has two chapels, dedicated to the Holy Spirit and the Glory of God the Father. The latter chapel has a Holy Family by an unknown author. The interiors have a restrained stucco decoration, leaning towards neoclassicism, and completed by Procopio Serpotta. He also completed the apse statuary of the |
Basketball Tournament or 2022 Women's National Invitation Tournament. The 2022 field will be announced March 13, the 2022 edition of the tournament will be played on the campus of Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky at the Clive M. Beck Center. This will be the second year in a row the tournament format will be an 8-team field played over four days, with a guarantee of three games. A team does not need to be .500 in | be the second year in a row the tournament format will be an 8-team field played over four days, with a guarantee of three games. A team does not need to be .500 in order to compete in the 2022 WBI. Bracket * – |
was coached by Jim Snyder and played their home games at Grover Center. The Bobcats finished with a record of 8–15 and finished fifth in the MAC regular season | their home games at Grover Center. The Bobcats finished with a record of 8–15 and finished fifth in the MAC regular season with a conference record of 4–8. Schedule |- !colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| regular season |
the 1952 college football season. Led by ninth-year head coach Frank Kimbrough, the Buffaloes compiled an overall record of 3–6 with a mark of 1–4 in conference play, placing seventh the Border | A&M University—as a member of the Border Conference during the 1952 college football season. Led by ninth-year head coach Frank Kimbrough, the Buffaloes compiled an overall record of 3–6 with a mark |
Tristan Versluis and Rebecca Cole) Cruella (2021; co-pending nomination with Nadia Stacey and Julia Vernon) References External links Living people Year of birth missing | filmography 1917 (2019; co-nominated with Tristan Versluis and Rebecca Cole) Cruella (2021; co-pending nomination with Nadia Stacey and Julia Vernon) References External links Living people Year of birth missing (living |
Ramón and Céline, survivors of the Bataclan theatre massacre, the plot goes back and forth between the night of the attack at the Bataclan and the trauma experienced in the year thereafter. Cast Production Based on the book Paz, amor y death metal by Ramón González, the screenplay was penned by Fran Araújo, Isa Campo and Isaki Lacuesta. The score was composed by Refree. The film is a Mr Fields and Friends, Bambú Producciones, La Termita Films and Noodles Production production, with the participation of TVE, Movistar+, TVC, and support from ICAA, and Eurimages. Filming began on 8 February 2021 in Barcelona. Shooting later moved to Paris. Release The film premiered on 14 February 2022, screened | thereafter. Cast Production Based on the book Paz, amor y death metal by Ramón González, the screenplay was penned by Fran Araújo, Isa Campo and Isaki Lacuesta. The score was composed by Refree. The film is a Mr Fields and Friends, Bambú Producciones, La Termita Films and Noodles Production production, with the participation of TVE, Movistar+, TVC, and support from ICAA, and Eurimages. Filming began on 8 February 2021 in Barcelona. Shooting later moved to Paris. Release The film premiered on 14 February 2022, screened at Berlinale Palast as part of the 72nd Berlin International Film Festival's main competition. BTeam Pictures will distribute the film in Spain, where it is expected to be released in the northern hemisphere Fall of 2022. Reception Jonathan Holland |
to SMU. References External links 2001 births Living people American male tennis players Sportspeople from Bradenton, Florida North Carolina Tar Heels men's tennis players SMU Mustangs | after receiving a wildcard into the doubles main draw with Ivan Thamma. Neff played college tennis at North Carolina in his freshman year before transferring to SMU. References External links 2001 births Living people American male |
the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 83rd district. Elected in November 2019, he assumed office on January 7, 2020. Early life and education Calvert was born and raised in Meridian, Mississippi. He earned an associate degree from East Mississippi Community College and a Bachelor of Science degree in applied sciences from the University of Mississippi. | East Mississippi Community College and a Bachelor of Science degree in applied sciences from the University of Mississippi. Career Calvert owns Southern Business Supply, an office supplies store. He was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020. Calvert succeeded |
Ireland (Ministers, Elections and Petitions of Concern) Act 2022|public|2|08-02-2022|maintained=y|archived=n|An Act to make provision about Ministerial appointments, | about Ministerial appointments, extraordinary Assembly elections, the Ministerial Code of Conduct and petitions of concern in Northern Ireland.}} |
killing three of the crewmen. About a month later a second Merkava tank was blown up in similar fashion in the same area, leading to another three Israeli fatalities. The tank commander as well as two other soldiers were killed. In September, 2002 a Merkava II tank was blown up by a mine near the Kissufim crossing leading to the death of one soldier and the wounding of three others. Apparently the tank commander was blown out the turret hatch but landed unharmed. On February 15, 2003, a tank went over another roadside bomb near the settlement of Dugit, killing all its four crewmen. According to Palestinian sources the tank was a Merkava but according to Israeli sources the destroyed tank was a Magach 7, a rebuilt Patton tank. In May 2004, two M113 APC:s were blown up while transporting explosives used for destroying Palestinian tunnels under the Palestinian-Egyptian border fence. On May 11, an APC went over a road-side bomb, killing its entire crew of six soldiers. The next day a second APC exploded after being hit by an RPG grenade. Three soldiers were wounded in the | up in similar fashion in the same area, leading to another three Israeli fatalities. The tank commander as well as two other soldiers were killed. In September, 2002 a Merkava II tank was blown up by a mine near the Kissufim crossing leading to the death of one soldier and the wounding of three others. Apparently the tank commander was blown out the turret hatch but landed unharmed. On February 15, 2003, a tank went over another roadside bomb near the settlement of Dugit, killing all its four crewmen. According to Palestinian sources the tank was a Merkava but according to Israeli sources the destroyed tank was a Magach 7, a rebuilt Patton tank. In May 2004, two M113 APC:s were blown up while transporting explosives used for destroying Palestinian tunnels under the Palestinian-Egyptian border fence. On May 11, an APC went over a road-side bomb, killing its entire crew of six soldiers. The next day a second APC exploded after being hit by an RPG grenade. Three soldiers were wounded in the incident. On June 25, 2006, seven Palestinian fighters belonging to Hamas, Popular Resistance Committees and Army of Islam entered Israeli territory near Rafah through a 400 meter long tunnel dug under the border fence. The Palestinians opened simultaneous |
cousin. In 1980, she received a BS in civil engineering at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and, in 1982, an MS in environmental engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. She received an MPA from Harvard Kennedy School in 1988. Government Service She served in a number of positions in the US government. Under Barack Obama, she served as vice president for administration and finance, and CFO, at the Millennium Challenge Corporation from 2011 to 2014. Previously, she was budget director at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in 2011–12, acting budget director at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and as the chief of staff to the director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Under Bill Clinton, Wong represented the | of the Asian Development Bank. In 1989, Wong co-founded the Conference on Asian Pacific American Leadership. Nomination to the Asian Development Bank On July 2, 2021, Wong was nominated by President Joe Biden to be the next director of the Asian Development Bank. The Senate's Foreign Relations Committee held hearings on her nomination on October 26, 2021. On December 15, 2021, the committee voted to report her nomination favorably to the Senate floor. On February 8, 2022, the entire Senate moved to confirm Wong's nomination in a vote of 66–31. References American people of Chinese descent LGBT people from the United States American women ambassadors Ambassadors of |
Jennifer Castle as Jocasta Wellings Mo Idriss as Ali Hussein Production Mercurio mentored Brierly, who was new to television, and developed the series during a television bursary scheme. The series was filmed in London. On 27 February 2022, itv announced a second series to air in 2023. Episodes Reception Lucy Mangan for The Guardian gave the first episode three out of five stars, remarking, 'It's great fun as long as you set your preposterousness levels to “high”. Go in thinking CSI: Peckham or Line of Bomb Duty or Bomby McBombface, rather than The Wire But With Actual Wires or Breaking Explosively Badly and you'll enjoy yourself a lot more.' Ed Cumming of The Independent also gave it three out five stars, praising the tension but finding the dialogue and storytelling melodramatic. References | was filmed in London. On 27 February 2022, itv announced a second series to air in 2023. Episodes Reception Lucy Mangan for The Guardian gave the first episode three out of five stars, remarking, 'It's great fun as long as you set your preposterousness levels to “high”. Go in thinking CSI: Peckham or Line of Bomb Duty or Bomby McBombface, rather than The Wire But With Actual Wires or Breaking Explosively Badly and you'll enjoy yourself a lot more.' Ed Cumming of The Independent also gave it three out |
played college tennis at UC Davis before grad-transferring to SMU. References External links 1999 births Living people American male tennis players Tennis players | draw with Adam Neff. Thamma played college tennis at UC Davis before grad-transferring to SMU. References External links 1999 births Living people American male tennis players Tennis players from San Diego UC |
between five teams (Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Iran, Lebanon and debutants Palestine). The event was held in Doha, Qatar over two days (8th, 9th October). The winners of the tournament were the United Arab Emirates. Pool stage | held since 2019. And was itself a qualification event for the 2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens. The tournament was played between five teams (Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Iran, Lebanon and debutants Palestine). The event was held in Doha, Qatar over two days (8th, 9th October). The winners of the tournament were the United Arab Emirates. Pool stage All the tournament results were tallied via Asia Rugby: Round-robin Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 |
Elaine Cecconi, the series featured 12 young designers competing in various design challenges to win a professional internship at the hosts' design firm Cecconi Simone. Simone stated that she had often been frustrated by home renovation and design television shows depicting "renovations that are achieved in impossibly short times for impossibly small amounts of money", and said she decided to work on the series because she wanted to show that the job was much more complex and | which aired on HGTV Canada in 2006. Hosted by designers Anna Simone and Elaine Cecconi, the series featured 12 young designers competing in various design challenges to win a professional internship at the hosts' design firm Cecconi Simone. Simone stated that she had often been frustrated by home renovation and design television shows depicting "renovations that are achieved in impossibly short times for impossibly small amounts of money", and said she decided to work on the series |
(SP) players Maringá Futebol Clube players FC Ryukyu players Brazilian expatriate footballers Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Japan Expatriate footballers in Japan | (SP) players Maringá Futebol Clube players FC Ryukyu players Brazilian expatriate footballers Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Japan Expatriate |
she taught at Sacred Heart School in Augusta and later became the mother superior there. She then served as Superior of the Convent of the Immaculate Conception in Atlanta and worked as a nurse at St. Joseph's Infirmary. She was often visited by her second cousin, Maybelle Stephens Mitchell, and her cousin's daughter, Margaret Mitchell. She died at the age of eighty-eight at St. Joseph's Infirmary and is buried in the Sisters of Mercy lot in Westview Cemetery. Holliday was the inspiration behind the character Melanie Hamilton, and possibly Carreen O'Hara, in the novel Gone With the Wind. References 1850 births 1939 deaths American people of Irish descent American Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns American women nurses Catholics from Georgia (U.S. state) People from Jonesboro, Georgia Roman Catholic abbesses Schoolteachers from Georgia (U.S. state) | St. Vincent de Paul in Savannah and at the Convent of the Immaculate Conception in Atlanta. While living in the convent in Savannah, she worked as a schoolteacher in the affiliated academy. When Holliday moved to the convent in Atlanta, she worked as a nurse at St. Joseph's Infirmary. She is believed to be the inspiration behind Melanie Hamilton and Carreen O'Hara in the novel Gone With the Wind, which was written by her second cousin once-removed, Margaret Mitchell. Biography Holliday was born Martha Ann Holliday in Jonesboro, Georgia on December 14, 1850. She was one of eight children of Captain Robert Kennedy Holliday, a Confederate military officer and quartermaster who served in the 7th Georgia Infantry during the American Civil War, and Mary Anne Fitzgerald, whose family owned Rural Home Plantation. She was a |
film companies are after. Cast Mika Boorem as Mika Harms Benjamin Boorem as Ben Harms Devin Ratray as Andy Slimmick Paige Howard as Veronica Lake Brian Krause as The Director Herbert Russell as Josh Lambley Tom Arnold as El Jade Nino De Marco as Mayan Priest Cody Kasch as Marvin Lovejoy Saxon Trainor as James Worley Robert Amico as Joseph Worley Preston Acuff as Hector "The Lawn Protector" Chad Roberts as El Jade's son Brittany Underwood as Jocelyn Reynolds Billy Bob Thornton as himself, with his backing band The Boxmasters Production The film's script loosely based Mika Boorem's experiences in the film industry, as well her father Benjamin's work as a gemologist. In addition, the film Romancing the Stone and its sequel The Jewel | is mistaken for a Mexican cartel member. The trek is also a bonding experience with her father Ben, a gemologist who are searching for a magic jade that the film companies are after. Cast Mika Boorem as Mika Harms Benjamin Boorem as Ben Harms Devin Ratray as Andy Slimmick Paige Howard as Veronica Lake Brian Krause as The Director Herbert Russell as Josh Lambley Tom Arnold as El Jade Nino De Marco as Mayan Priest Cody Kasch as Marvin Lovejoy Saxon Trainor as James Worley Robert Amico as Joseph Worley Preston Acuff as Hector "The Lawn Protector" Chad Roberts as El Jade's son Brittany Underwood as Jocelyn Reynolds Billy Bob Thornton as himself, with his backing band The Boxmasters Production The film's script loosely based Mika Boorem's experiences in the film industry, as well |
4th European Para Karate Championships, and will held in Gaziantep, Turkey from 25 to 29 May 2022. Medalists Men Women Para Karate References External links European Karate Federation | Medalists Men Women Para Karate References External links European Karate Federation European Championships, 2022 2022 in Turkish sport 2022 2021 |
from the Horse Racing Fund to horse racecourse operators; and for connected purposes.}} }} References | (Amendment) Act (Northern Ireland) 2022|ania|2|02-02-2022|maintained=y|archived=n|An Act to amend the Horse Racing (Northern |
practitioner at the SCRMC. Scoggin was elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in November 2016 and assumed office in January 2017. Scoggin is also the vice chair of the House Universities and Colleges Committee. In 2019 and 2020, he was vice chair of the House Technology Committee. References Living people American nurses Male nurses Mississippi Republicans 1962 births People from Ellisville, Mississippi Jones County Junior College alumni University of Southern | January 2017. Early life and education Scoggin was born in Ellisville, Mississippi in 1962. He earned an Associate of Science in Nursing from Jones County Junior College, a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the University of Southern Mississippi, and a Master of Science in Nursing from the Mississippi University for Women. Career Scoggin began his career as an orderly at the South Central Regional Medical Center (SCRMC). He has since |
Rae o Karaka / Karaka Point Te Rae o Karaka / Karaka Point sits between Whatamangō Bay and Waikawa Bay. Karaka is the Te Reo Māori name for the Corynocarpus laevigatus, and a Te Reo Māori word for the colour orange, karaka, is derived from it. The point could be named for its orange hue, or the presence of karaka trees. Te Rae o Karaka translates to "the headland/promontory of karaka" A substantial pā was built along Te Rae o Karaka by early Kāti Māmoe residents, and succeeding iwi took possession peacefully or otherwise. Eventually iwi from Te Ika a Māui began movements and raids on Te Waipounamu. In the summer of 1829–30, Te Ātiawa swept into Tōtaranui / Queen Charlotte Sound, attacking those in East Bay and Endeavour Inlet. Large numbers of Rangitāne and some Ngāti Apa retreated to the Te Rae o Karaka pā, thinking it impregnable due to its shear cliff-face. Tuiti Makitānara described insults being thrown between the attackers and defenders, whilst a group landed and took up offensive positions in the mānuka behind the pā. Once positioned, the rest of the attackers drew in and began picking off defending chiefs and warriors using their muskets. These deaths caused panic amongst the defenders, and a large group attempted to escape the pā through its back gate, but were ambushed | / Karaka Point Te Rae o Karaka / Karaka Point sits between Whatamangō Bay and Waikawa Bay. Karaka is the Te Reo Māori name for the Corynocarpus laevigatus, and a Te Reo Māori word for the colour orange, karaka, is derived from it. The point could be named for its orange hue, or the presence of karaka trees. Te Rae o Karaka translates to "the headland/promontory of karaka" A substantial pā was built along Te Rae o Karaka by early Kāti Māmoe residents, and succeeding iwi took possession peacefully or otherwise. Eventually iwi from Te Ika a Māui began movements and raids on Te Waipounamu. In the summer of 1829–30, Te Ātiawa swept into Tōtaranui / Queen Charlotte Sound, attacking those in East Bay and Endeavour Inlet. Large numbers of Rangitāne and some Ngāti Apa retreated to the Te Rae o Karaka pā, thinking it impregnable due to its shear cliff-face. Tuiti Makitānara described insults being thrown between the attackers and defenders, whilst a group landed and took up offensive positions in the mānuka behind the pā. Once positioned, the rest of the attackers drew in and began picking off defending chiefs and warriors using their muskets. These deaths caused panic amongst the defenders, and a large group attempted to escape the pā through its back gate, but were ambushed and annihilated by the group in the mānuka. For some years after the fact, the deserted headland was cleared and used |
home games at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium in Greenville, North Carolina, and compete as members of the American Athletic Conference. They will be led by head coach Mike Houston, in his fourth season. Schedule The Pirates will host the three of their non-conference opponents, NC State from the ACC, Old Dominion from Conference USA | American Athletic Conference. They will be led by head coach Mike Houston, in his fourth season. Schedule The Pirates will host the three of their non-conference opponents, NC State from the ACC, |
title by defeating Travis Parrott and Rogier Wassen 6–4, 6–3 in the final. Seeds Draw Draw References External links | title by defeating Travis Parrott and Rogier Wassen 6–4, 6–3 in the final. Seeds Draw Draw References |
season in the second division of Belgian football. Players First-team squad (on loan from Brighton) Transfers Im Out Pre-season and friendlies Competitions Overall record | Out Pre-season and friendlies Competitions Overall record Belgian First Division B League table Results summary Results by round Matches Belgian Cup References |
slab of marble, weighing about , from a local stonemason on which to let the hot pralines cool. After making a batch, some customers walked in and could smell the candy being made. In 1991, the Stricklands got divorced and split the company and the family. Pam got the original name and two stores; Stan got two stores (Atlanta and Orlando) and later opened a rival company, Savannah's Candy Kitchen, also on River Street. Their children, Jennifer and Tim, worked exclusively for Pam, and the family did not speak for about twenty years. In 1996, the company expanded and moved part of their production into a factory outside of town to handle its mail orders. It now uses one in Savannah, in a facility. The business expanded outside of Savannah for the first time in 2003, when it opened an outlet in Charleston. Around 2008, Jennifer and Tim broke the silence and began communicating with their father. Seven years later, Savannah's Candy Kitchen and River Sweet Sweets merged brand names. The first franchise location opened at the Tanger Outlet Mall in Pooler, Georgia. As of 2016, sales of the combined entities were $35 million. They make of pralines a day (the most in the United States), and between and of candy per day in total. Some products were not a success, | they made three pieces of candy, put it on wax paper, "and boy, it was good," said Stan. They then found out they could make pralines in the fudge-making machine, despite recommendations from the manufacturer against doing so, warning that it could kill somebody. Stan purchased a slab of marble, weighing about , from a local stonemason on which to let the hot pralines cool. After making a batch, some customers walked in and could smell the candy being made. In 1991, the Stricklands got divorced and split the company and the family. Pam got the original name and two stores; Stan got two stores (Atlanta and Orlando) and later opened a rival company, Savannah's Candy Kitchen, also on River Street. Their children, Jennifer and Tim, worked exclusively for Pam, and the family did not speak for about twenty years. In 1996, the company expanded and moved part of their production into a factory outside of town to handle its mail orders. It now uses one in Savannah, in a facility. The business expanded outside of Savannah for the first time in 2003, when it opened an outlet in Charleston. Around 2008, Jennifer and Tim broke the silence and began communicating with their father. Seven years later, Savannah's Candy Kitchen and River Sweet Sweets merged brand names. The first franchise location opened at the Tanger Outlet Mall in Pooler, Georgia. As of 2016, sales of the combined entities were $35 million. They make of pralines a day (the most in the United States), and between and of candy per day in total. Some products were not a success, including chocolate-covered bananas. As of 2019, the business has been in the Strickland family for three generations, and is now the largest candy store in the South. Above the River Street entrance to the Candy Kitchen hangs a copper kettle. Inside the store there is a salt water taffy machine |
in 1985, but she did not part with aviation. She maintained socially involved in the aviation sector, helped Soviet pilot-athletes master the new Ka-32 helicopter, and worked as a referee at helicopter sports competitions. In 1991, she was awarded the title of judge of the all-Soviet Union category of helicopter sports. In 1992, along with twelve other prominent Soviet aviators, she helped to found the Aviatrix club. From 1992 to 2002 she served as vice president of the club. She died on 3 October 2012 in Moscow and was buried in the Mitinskoe cemetery. She had been awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor and other medals. References Helicopter pilots 1930 births 2012 | a Mi-1 helicopter without oxygen equipment 12 January 1965: altitude record 2 August 1965: range record 23 August 1967: base airspeed record In 1963, she entered the graduate school program of the Moscow Aviation Institute in the Department of Helicopter Design. During that time she worked on her dissertation titled "Vortex theory of the main rotor in steep gliding." Tatyana married Yuri Nikolaevich Gubanov, an associate professor at the Moscow State Technical University in 1972. In 1973, their son Nikolai was born. After retirement Tatyana retired in 1985, but she did not part with aviation. She maintained socially involved in the aviation sector, helped Soviet pilot-athletes master the new Ka-32 helicopter, and worked as a referee at helicopter sports competitions. In 1991, she was awarded the title of judge of the all-Soviet Union category of helicopter sports. In 1992, along with twelve other prominent Soviet aviators, she helped to found the Aviatrix club. From |
a Prix Iris nominee for Best Supporting Actor at the 21st Quebec Cinema Awards in 2019. Nachi began his career as a child actor, appearing in television series such as Sam Chicotte, Ramdam and | as Arturo in Ricardo Trogi's film 1991, for which he was a Prix Iris nominee for Best Supporting Actor at the 21st Quebec Cinema Awards in 2019. Nachi began his career as a child actor, appearing in television series such as Sam Chicotte, Ramdam and Virginie. He has also appeared in films including |
the United Nations Security Council, the Yugoslav government claimed that the victims were all Serbs. The Yugoslav government claimed that three of them had been kidnapped "by the terrorists from the ranks of the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)". A NATO spokesperson initially confirmed that four of the bodies were identified as Serbs, however the statement was later retracted. In a later statement NATO reported that they could not confirm if any of the bodies included Serbs or Albanians. The public affairs office of the American troops in the region issued a statement which designated the victims buried in the site as Serbs who were killed after the war and Albanians who | Serbs, however the statement was later retracted. In a later statement NATO reported that they could not confirm if any of the bodies included Serbs or Albanians. The public affairs office of the American troops in the region issued a statement which designated the victims buried in the site as Serbs who were killed after the war and Albanians who were killed before the war. The spokesman of Hague war crimes tribunal reported that two of the bodies might belong to Kosovo Serbs who were kidnapped after war. An OSCE investigation shortly after the massacre reported that six of the bodies were identified as Serbs, kidnapped from nearby Livoci i Poshtem and Ranilug. Ugljare reportedly housed a KLA detention facility and further investigations by KFOR led to the arrest of a KLA member who denied any involvement in the killings. In August 2018, a UN team scanned the site and nearby fields during a research mission for potential mass grave sites in Kosovo. See also Batajnica |
Dan Kotter is an American paralympic archer. He participated at the 1964 Summer Paralympics. Biography Kotter was the son of Glenn Kotter. He graduated at a high school in 1960, in which Kotter attended at the University of Illinois. He served as a team manager at the Mount Vernon Senior High School. Kotter lived in Mount Vernon, Indiana during the Paralympic Games, being 21 years old. He also contracted polio, when Kotter was at least | Senior High School. Kotter lived in Mount Vernon, Indiana during the Paralympic Games, being 21 years old. He also contracted polio, when Kotter was at least one year old. He participated at the 1964 Summer Paralympics, with participating in the archery competition at the Paralympic Games. Kotter was awarded the gold medal in the Columbia round open event. He scored 586 points. Kotter also participated in the Columbia round team open event alongside with archers, Bob Hawkes and George Pasipanki, being awarded the gold medal. His team scored 1706 points. References External links Possibly living people Place of birth |
of all the Mibrasa charcoal grill used at the restaurant impressed Kotipizza Group CEO Tommi Tervanen. The founders stayed in the chain as minority shareholders and restaurateurs. In autumn 2018 the chain had three restaurants in Helsinki and a fourth restaurant in Kerava. The chain opened a new restaurant in Hamina in April 2019 and another one in Porvoo in May in the same year. The chain opened | 2021 the chain had nine restaurants in Finland. Awards The Social Burgerjoin "Korean Kimchi Burger" won the best hamburger award at the European Street Food contest in September 2018. It reached joint first place along with the Swedish Matsas Mat. The contest was held in Berlin, Germany and had participants from 16 countries. In spring 2019 Social Burgerjoint reached 28th place at the "Big seven travel - world's best burger" |
Living people American male tennis players Sportspeople from Irvine, California SMU Mustangs men's tennis players Illinois Fighting Illini men's tennis players Tennis people from | wildcard. Chakravathi played college tennis at Illinois before transferring to SMU. References External links 1999 births Living people American male tennis players Sportspeople from |
of the board of directors, and in 1903 a member of the board of management. After Commerzbank was founded, Katzenellenbogen was a member of its Board of Managing Directors from 1929 to 1930 and then of its supervisory board until 1937. Nazi persecution When the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, Katzenellenbogen persecuted due to his Jewish heritage.He was obliged to renounce his admission to the bar in October 1935. The property of the Katzenellenbogen family was Aryanized, that is transferred to non-Jews, in 1940. His wife died on April 19 as a result of a stroke. Katzenellenbogen was deported from Frankfurt am Main to the Theresienstadt ghetto on August 18, 1942, and perished in the Maly Trostinez extermination camp on August 25, 1942, on transport "Bc-942. Katzenellenbogen's children were Grete Helene, Marta Sofie (1897-1984) and the art historian Adolf Katzenellenbogen (1901-1964). Their daughter Grete Helene (1893-1944), daughter-in-law of Otto Berndt, | various German cities. As chairman of the board, he guided the fortunes of Mitteldeutsche Creditbank (Commerz- und Privat-Bank in Frankfurt), among others. In 1895 he became the bank's general counsel, in 1897 a member of the board of directors, and in 1903 a member of the board of management. After Commerzbank was founded, Katzenellenbogen was a member of its Board of Managing Directors from 1929 to 1930 and then of its supervisory board until 1937. Nazi persecution When the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, Katzenellenbogen persecuted due to his Jewish heritage.He was obliged to renounce his admission to the bar in October 1935. The property of the Katzenellenbogen family was Aryanized, that is transferred to non-Jews, in 1940. His wife died on April 19 as a result of a stroke. Katzenellenbogen was deported from Frankfurt am Main to the Theresienstadt ghetto on August 18, 1942, and perished in the Maly Trostinez extermination camp on August 25, 1942, on transport "Bc-942. Katzenellenbogen's children were Grete Helene, Marta Sofie |
from the early Eocene (Ypresian) Yuhuangding Formation of Hubei Province, China. The genus contains a single species, Archaeovaranus lii, known from a nearly complete skeleton. The holotype, which includes an intact skull, is associated but disarticulated. Archaeovaranus fills a gap in the varanid fossil record, as it represents a stem-varanid from the early Eocene of East Asia, closely related to Varanus. Discovery and naming The holotype specimen of Archaeovaranus, IVPP V 22770, was discovered at the Dajian locality of the Yuhuangding Formation near Danjiangkou, Hubei Province, China. The generic name, "Archaeovaranus," combines the Greek "archaīos," meaning "ancient," with a reference | Hubei Province, China. The genus contains a single species, Archaeovaranus lii, known from a nearly complete skeleton. The holotype, which includes an intact skull, is associated but disarticulated. Archaeovaranus fills a gap in the varanid fossil record, as it represents a stem-varanid from the early Eocene of East Asia, closely related to Varanus. Discovery and naming The holotype specimen of Archaeovaranus, IVPP V 22770, was discovered at the Dajian locality of the Yuhuangding Formation near Danjiangkou, Hubei Province, China. The generic name, "Archaeovaranus," combines the Greek "archaīos," meaning "ancient," with a reference to the closely related Varanus. "Varanus" is derived from the Arabic "waral," meaning "lizard beast." The specific name, "lii," honors the paleontologist Chuankui Li, whose |
for his supporting role as Marc in the film For Those Who Don't Read Me (À tous ceux qui ne me lisent pas), for which he was a Prix Iris nominee for Best Supporting Actor at the 21st Quebec Cinema Awards in 2019. The son of actors | me lisent pas), for which he was a Prix Iris nominee for Best Supporting Actor at the 21st Quebec Cinema Awards in 2019. The son of actors Luc Picard and Isabel Richer, he has also appeared in the television series Trauma, Jenny, Cerebrum, District 31, Chaos and Toute la vie, and the films Audition (L'Audition), Ésimésac, Cross My Heart (Les Rois mongols), My Boy (Mon Boy), |
that represented Indiana State University as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference during the 1978 NCAA Division | record (2–3 in the MVC). Schedule References Indiana State Indiana State Sycamores football seasons Indiana State Sycamores football |
of 30 competitors in the first qualifying round in the men's moguls event at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He then finished 19th out of 20 competitors in the first final round, eliminating him from medal contention. Personal life Penttala's older brother Jussi is also a freestyle skier and competed at | Junior World Championships in the moguls event. He placed eighth in moguls in the 2021 World Championships. He finished 9th out of 30 competitors in the first qualifying round in the men's moguls event at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He then finished 19th out of 20 competitors in the first final round, eliminating him from medal contention. Personal life Penttala's older brother Jussi is also a freestyle skier and |
Stacey Hobgood-Wilkes (born August 9, 1968) is an American politician serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 108th district. Elected in November 2016, she assumed office in January 2017. Education After graduating from Picayune Memorial High School, Hobgood-Wilkes attended Pearl River Community | Memorial High School, Hobgood-Wilkes attended Pearl River Community College and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in American studies and business administration from the University of Southern Mississippi. Career Prior to entering politics, Hobgood-Wilkes worked as a public relations consultant and insurance agent. She was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2016 and assumed office in January 2017. During the 2019–2020 legislative session, she served as vice |
opened in 1998. Facilities The hotel has 140 guest rooms, and 19 floors. The hotel is operated by Evergreen International Hotels. and offers free wifi, a swimming pool as well as free parking. Restaurants & Bars The Peng's Agora Garden: Chinese restaurant featuring traditional Hunan cuisine, located on the fifth floor. Café Laurel: | cuisine, located on the fifth floor. Café Laurel: Café located on the 18th and 19th floor with views of the Pacific Ocean as well as Port of Keelung. Gourmet Shop: Bakery offering fresh pastries, located on the first floor. References External links Official website 1998 establishments in Taiwan Hotels in Taiwan Hotels |
He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in sports coaching and administration from the University of Southern Mississippi. Career Since 2006, Felsher has worked as a commercial real estate broker with Coldwell Banker. He is also a principal | of Representatives from the 117th district. Elected in November 2019, he assumed office on January 7, 2020. Early life and education Felsher was born in Biloxi, Mississippi in 1975. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in sports coaching |
Catholic church, St Patrick's, was built in the 1820s and 1830s. The local Gaelic games club is Oram Sarsfields. The musician Big Tom McBride was from Oram. References | in County Monaghan, Ireland. The village is on the R182 road, about north-east of Castleblayney. The village population was 186 at the 2016 census. Oram's Catholic church, St Patrick's, was built in |
species of flowering plant in the family Amaranthaceae, native to the region surrounding the Caspian Sea, Central Asia, and Xinjiang and western Gansu provinces of China. A many-branched shrub usually found growing in alluvial fans and dune swales, it is sometimes planted to catch blowing soil and stabilize sand dunes. The alkaloid | to the region surrounding the Caspian Sea, Central Asia, and Xinjiang and western Gansu provinces of China. A many-branched shrub usually found growing in alluvial fans and dune swales, it is sometimes planted to catch blowing soil and stabilize sand dunes. The alkaloid anabasine was named for |
round in the men's moguls event at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He then finished 13th out of 20 competitors in the first final round, eliminating him from medal contention. References 2000 births Living people Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Russian male freestyle skiers Olympic | 2019 Junior World Championships in the moguls event. He placed fourth in moguls in the 2021 World Championships. He finished 13th out of 30 competitors in the first qualifying round in the men's moguls event at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He then finished 13th out of 20 competitors in |
was a member of the 1979 NCAA championship team. A doubles silver medalist at the World University Games, Metz earned All-American honors for the Bruins in 1980. His time at UCLA included a win over future ATP top 10 player Tim Mayotte. In 1982 he featured in the singles main | Tour player Patty Fendick. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people American male tennis players UCLA Bruins men's tennis players Medalists at the 1979 Summer Universiade Universiade silver medalists for the United States Universiade medalists in tennis Tennis people from California |
and Entratter left to be general manager of the Sands Hotel. Stiner and four other Copacabana dancers were let go, and all five decided to follow Entratter to Las Vegas to be showgirls. Entratter billed them as the "CopaGirls", using them for publicity that encouraged other young women to try out for a contest to become a CopaGirl at $150 a week. Columbia contract Stiner was at the Sands for at least three years. According to her later recounting with interviewers, she was performing there when Cinerama filmed the floor show. A talent scout for Columbia Pictures saw the film, noticed her, and signed her to a contract with that studio. However, her first work with Columbia, filming Pal Joey, didn't start until April 1957, while newspaper photos from one year earlier show her doing a modeling assignment in Los Angeles as "Bek Nelson". This is the earliest verifiable use of her stage name. Columnist Lowell E. Redelings said "there's quite a story to how she got that unusual first name" but didn't see fit to share it with his readers. Bek Nelson appeared on camera for an episode of a ZIV produced television program, Science Fiction Theatre, which was first broadcast in August 1956. She had no lines and the two minute part was uncredited, but it clearly establishes her screen debut came prior to her contract with Columbia. She also did TV commercials prior to being signed by Columbia. While filming Pal Joey during April and May 1957, Bek was used for an uncredited bit as a nurse in Operation Mad Ball, which was also in production on the Columbia lot. She then co-starred in a Columbia comedy short Tricky Chicks with Muriel Landers, playing nightclub hostesses suspected of being foreign agents. According to columnist Hedda Hopper, Columbia head Harry Cohn was "giving Bek Nelson a big, big build-up." Cohn had Columbia cast her in four more films made in 1957, to be released in 1958. She had a small uncredited part as a dance hall girl in Cowboy, then a feature role as a stewardess in the disaster film Crash Landing. Bek told the Knoxville Journal that the ocean rescue scene was filmed at the studio lake, with the director requesting "Please don't anyone stand up in the water... we don't want anyone to know our ocean is only three feet deep." Next came another comedy short, with The Three Stooges in Flying Saucer Daffy. Finally, it was back to an uncredited dance hall girl bit in Gunman's Walk Bek's next film for Columbia, Bell, Book and Candle, was made and released in 1958. It was also her last film; Harry Cohn died of a heart attack at the end of February that year. His successors let her contract finish up in 1958 with loaning her out for television shows. Television 1957-1966 When she was not making films, Columbia loaned Bek out to television production companies, including the associated Screen Gems. As 1957 was top-heavy with film work she did only two TV programs that year, but 1958 saw her doing fifteen episodes, a large number for anyone not playing a series regular. Included among these were nine episodes of the ABC series Lawman, where she had a recurring role as a widowed restaurant owner. Columnist Jack Gaver mused "It is difficult to decide which name is odder -- | her contract finish up in 1958 with loaning her out for television shows. Television 1957-1966 When she was not making films, Columbia loaned Bek out to television production companies, including the associated Screen Gems. As 1957 was top-heavy with film work she did only two TV programs that year, but 1958 saw her doing fifteen episodes, a large number for anyone not playing a series regular. Included among these were nine episodes of the ABC series Lawman, where she had a recurring role as a widowed restaurant owner. Columnist Jack Gaver mused "It is difficult to decide which name is odder -- Bek Nelson or Dru Lemp. The former plays the latter ..." An unknown TV Key Mailbag editor found the name confusing. A letter writer asked who played the mean guy, "tall, with strange eyes, and an unusual face" on "The Deputy" episode of Lawman. The editor replied that "the villain on that show was an actor named Bek Nelson". By 1959 Bek Nelson was an independent actress, represented by the Harold L. Gefesky Agency, with whom she remained throughout her show business career. Once again she appeared on fifteen episodes of shows, including another small recurring bit on four episodes of The Third Man. Guest star, feature player, and bit part were all represented in her resume of parts that year, and for years to come. She had no professional vanity about her billing status, but like other television actresses of the time found doing westerns limiting. A girl in a television horse opera can be typed as a dance hall hostess, a rancher's wife, a rancher's daughter, a gambling hall queen, or a gal from the East visiting the rugged West. And the last choice is that of the frontier town's restaurant owner which I currently fill. For 1960 and 1961 the number of television roles she would accept were reduced to half or less of previous years. She was married now, her husband had a successful acting career, and they were hoping to start a family. Subsequent years saw her sometimes do only two shows a year. Her career did pick up some in 1964 and 1965; she had a small part in her husband's award-winning indie film The Lollipop Cover and a brief recurring role on Peyton Place, for most episodes of which she was shown just talking on the phone, without directly interacting with the other actors. Her final acting job was a pro bono bit in 1966 for Insight, a syndicated show usually shown on Sundays. Personal life According to an article in TV Guide, Bek was married shortly after moving to New York in 1945, with the marriage being annulled. Reporting the aftermath of a fire in Laurel Canyon during July 1959, the Los Angeles Times cited a Mrs. Bek Nelson Gordon as saying several houses near hers on Willow Glen Road had been lost. However, actor Don Gordon and Bek Nelson didn't take out a marriage license until much later. They were married under her birthname on December 31, 1959, in Los Angeles. At that period of time, a cohabitating single actress could suffer a serious career setback if the situation became widely known. This was Gordon's third marriage and Bek's second. Gordon told an interviewer in October 1960 that "she doesn't want to be an actress, and I'm glad. I think women should stay home, keep house, and have babies." Bek evidently agreed, for she stopped |
when he engaged in the K-1 World GP 2016 –95 kg Championship Tournament in his hometown of Belgrade, Serbia. He won his quarterfinal by decision against Emmanuel Payet from France before losing by unanimous decision in the semifinals against Fabio Kwasi. On March 24, 2018, Opačić faced Tomáš Hron at the Night of Warriors 2018 event. He was defeated by decision. On February 24, 2019, Opačić took part in an 8-man one night tournament at the Kunlun Fight 80 event. He won his quarter finals against Liu Wei by body shot knockout in the first round before losing by second-round TKO to top ranked heavyweight Roman Kryklia in the semifinals where he was knocked down five times. Opačić was scheduled in a 4-man Heavyweight Tournament at the Enfusion 86 Road to Abu Dhabi event on June 28, 2019. Opačić won both his semi final against Daniel Galabarov and the final against Nidal Bchiri by first-round knockouts. The tournament win qualified him for the year end Enfusion tournament in Abu Dhabi. On December 6, he was outpointed by Slovakia's Martin Pacas in his semifinal bout. ONE Championship Opačić was unable to fight in the first half of 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. During this time it was announced he signed with the ONE Championship organization. On December 4, 2020, he faced veteran Errol Zimmerman for his promotional debut at ONE Championship: Big Bang 2 in Singapore. Opačić won the fight by spinning heel kick knockout in the second round. On January 28, 2022, Opačić faced Francesko Xhaja ONE Championship: Only the Brave. He won by second-round knockout, earning him a performance of the night bonus and tied the record for most knockouts in ONE Super Series. Titles and accomplishments Professional ONE Championship Performance of the Night ( Enfusion 2019 Enfusion 4-man Heavyweight Qualifying Tournament Winner Amateur World Association of Kickboxing Organizations 2015 WAKO European Junior Championships K-1 +91 kg 2015 WAKO World Cup in Hungary K-1 +91 kg Winner K-1 2015 K-1 Open World Amateur Championships in Italy Heavyweight Winner Fight record |- bgcolor="#cfc" | 2022-01-28 || Win || align="left" | Francesko Xhaja || ONE Championship: Only the Brave || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (3 knockdown rule)|| 2|| 2:00 |- bgcolor="#CCFFCC" | 2021-10-15 || Win || align="left" | Patrick Schmid || ONE Championship: First Strike || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (knees) || 2 || 1:19 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 2021-01-22|| Win ||align=left| Bruno Susano || ONE Championship: Unbreakable || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (punches) || 2 || 1:11 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 2020-12-04 || Win ||align=left| Errol Zimmerman || ONE Championship: Big Bang 2 || Kallang, Singapore || KO (spinning heel kick) || 2|| 1:35 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 2019-12-06 || Loss ||align=left| Martin Pacas || Enfusion 92, Heavyweight Tournament, Semifinals || Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates || Decision (unanimous) || 3 || 3:00 |- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;" | 2019-06-28|| Win ||align=left| Nidal Bchiri || Enfusion 86 Road to Abu Dhabi, Final || Belgrade, Serbia || KO (punches) || 1|| | Win || align="left" | Francesko Xhaja || ONE Championship: Only the Brave || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (3 knockdown rule)|| 2|| 2:00 |- bgcolor="#CCFFCC" | 2021-10-15 || Win || align="left" | Patrick Schmid || ONE Championship: First Strike || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (knees) || 2 || 1:19 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 2021-01-22|| Win ||align=left| Bruno Susano || ONE Championship: Unbreakable || Kallang, Singapore || TKO (punches) || 2 || 1:11 |- style="background:#cfc;" | 2020-12-04 || Win ||align=left| Errol Zimmerman || ONE Championship: Big Bang 2 || Kallang, Singapore || KO (spinning heel kick) || 2|| 1:35 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 2019-12-06 || Loss ||align=left| Martin Pacas || Enfusion 92, Heavyweight Tournament, Semifinals || Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates || Decision (unanimous) || 3 || 3:00 |- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;" | 2019-06-28|| Win ||align=left| Nidal Bchiri || Enfusion 86 Road to Abu Dhabi, Final || Belgrade, Serbia || KO (punches) || 1|| 1:38 |- ! style=background:white colspan=9 | |- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;" | 2019-06-28|| Win ||align=left| Daniel Galabarov || Enfusion 86 Road to Abu Dhabi, Semifinals || Belgrade, Serbia || KO (punches) || 1|| |- bgcolor="#fbb" | 2019-04-27 || Loss ||align=left| Martin Pacas || Enfusion 83 || Zilina, Slovakia || Decision (unanimous) || 3 || 3:00 |- style="text-align:center; background:#fbb;" | 2019-02-24||Loss ||align=left| Roman Kryklia || Kunlun Fight 80 - Heavyweight Tournament, Semifinals || Shanghai, China || TKO (referee stoppage/5 knockdowns) || 2 || |- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;" | 2019-02-24|| Win ||align=left| Liu Wei || Kunlun Fight 80 - Heavyweight Tournament, Quarterfinals || Shanghai, China || KO (body punch) ||1 || 0:43 |- bgcolor="#cfc" | 2018-12-01 || Win ||align=left| Mathieu Kongolo || Collision Fighting League 4 || Lazarevac, Serbia || KO (left hook to the body) || 1 || 0:40 |- bgcolor="#cfc" | 2018-04-12 || Win ||align=left| Pascal Touré || Collision Fighting League 2 || Serbia || TKO || 3 || 2:55 |- style="background:#fbb;" | 2018-03-24 || Loss ||align=left| Tomáš Hron || Night of Warriors 2018 || Liberec, Czech Republic || Decision || 3 || 3:00 |- bgcolor="#cfc" | 2017-09-30 || Win ||align=left| Dimitris Vakakis || Collision Fighting League || Serbia || Decision || 3 ||3:00 |- bgcolor="#cfc" | 2017-04-29 || Win ||align=left| Ondřej Hutník || Simply the Best 14 Prague || Prague, Czech Republic || KO (high kick) || 1 || |- bgcolor="#cfc" | 2017-02-26 || Win ||align=left| Martin Sabo || Warrior Destiny || Weiz, Austria || KO || 2 || |- bgcolor="#cfc" | 2017-01-29 || Win ||align=left| Ionuț Iancu || Roat To W5 || Novi Sad, Serbia || TKO (low kick) || 2 || |- bgcolor="#fbb" | 2016-10-27 || Loss ||align=left| Fabio Kwasi || K-1 World GP 2016 -95kg Championship Tournament || Belgrade, Serbia || Decision (unanimous)||3 ||3:00 |- |
channel. , the video has over 40 million views on YouTube. Personnel Credits adapted from Tidal. Mace – producer, composer, drum machine Venerus – composer Blanco – associated performer, author, vocals Salmo – associated performer, author, vocals Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications References 2021 songs 2021 singles Blanco (singer) | FIMI single chart for seven weeks and ranked fifth in the 2021 year-end single chart. "" was certified quintuple platinum in Italy. Music video The music video for "", directed by YouNuts!, was released on 11 January 2022 via Mace's YouTube channel. , the video has over 40 million views on YouTube. Personnel Credits |
is a surname. Notable people with the name include: Eddie Bonine (born 1981), | the name include: Eddie Bonine (born 1981), American baseball player Elias Bonine (1843–1916), American photographer Fred |
in the early 1880s. Mary McCoy was an active clubwoman. She was a member of the Twentieth Century Club of Detroit, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Lydian Association of Detroit, and the Willing Workers. With Lucy Thurman she organized the Michigan State Association of Colored Women (a chapter of the National Association of Colored Women (NACW)). Her philanthropy included participation in the establishment of the Sojourner Truth Memorial Association of Michigan which provided University of Michigan scholarships to children of former slaves. She served as vice president. She also funded the McCoy Home for Colored Children, as well as establishing the Phyllis Wheatley Home for Aged Colored Women in Detroit, serving as president. By the early 1900s McCoy was working for women's suffrage. She was a member of the Independent Women Voters, and advocated for suffrage through her ongoing | Willing Workers. With Lucy Thurman she organized the Michigan State Association of Colored Women (a chapter of the National Association of Colored Women (NACW)). Her philanthropy included participation in the establishment of the Sojourner Truth Memorial Association of Michigan which provided University of Michigan scholarships to children of former slaves. She served as vice president. She also funded the McCoy Home for Colored Children, as well as establishing the Phyllis Wheatley Home for Aged Colored Women in Detroit, serving as president. By the early 1900s McCoy was working for women's suffrage. She was a member of the Independent Women Voters, and advocated for suffrage through her ongoing association with the NACW. She marched in the 1913 Woman Suffrage Parade in Washington D.C. In 1920 she attended the National American Woman Suffrage Association's |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.