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Firanda Djunaidi (born 5 October 2003), simply known as Firanda, is an Indonesian footballer who plays a forward for Asprov Babel and the Indonesia women's national team. Club career Firanda has played for Asprov Babel in Indonesia. International career Firanda represented Indonesia at the 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup qualification. References External links 2003 births Living people Sportspeople from the Bangka Belitung Islands Indonesian women's footballers Women's association football forwards Indonesia women's youth international footballers Indonesia women's international footballers
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A. J. Mills may refer to: A. J. Mills (politician) A. J. Mills (songwriter)
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María Laura Stratta (born 22 February 1976) is an Argentine politician, currently serving as Vice Governor of Entre Ríos Province, deputising for Governor Gustavo Bordet, since 10 December 2019. From 2015 to 2019, Stratta served as Minister of Social Development of her province, having previously served as a member of the provincial Chamber of Deputies. She is a member of the Justicialist Party. Early life and education María Laura Stratta was born on 22 February 1976 in Victoria, Entre Ríos Province. Her mother was a high school teacher, while her father, Juan Carlos Stratta, was active in provincial politics: he was intendente (mayor) of Victoria from 1987 to 1991, and served in both houses of the provincial Legislature. Stratta counts with a degree on communication studies from the National University of Entre Ríos, in Concepción del Uruguay. Political career Stratta's political activism began in the Justicialist Party. She was the provincial representative of the Social Development Ministry's Banco Popular de la Buena Fe programme. In the 2011 provincial elections, she was elected to the Chamber of Deputies of Entre Ríos as part of the Justicialist Party list in Victoria Department. During her four-year term, she presided the parliamentary commission on General Legislation and served as president of the province's Scholarships Institute. She also authroed Law 10.151, which sought to boost the provincial state's welfare investment. Upon the end of her term as legislator, in December 2015, she was appointed by newly elected governor Gustavo Bordet as Minister of Social Development of Entre Ríos. She additionally served as a legislative aide to a number of national congresspeople and in the 2008 Constitutional Convention of Entre Ríos. Vice Governor Ahead of the 2019 general election, Governor Gustavo Bordet announced Stratta would be his running mate in his re-election bid as part of the Frente Justicialista CREER The ticket won with over 57% of the vote, and the two were elected. Stratta is the first female vice governor of Entre Ríos. Personal life Stratta is married and has two children, Juan and Bruno. References External links 1976 births Living people Argentine women in politics People from Entre Ríos Province Vice Governors of Entre Ríos Province Justicialist Party politicians National University of Entre Ríos alumni 21st-century Argentine politicians 21st-century women politicians
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Mark Cronin (born 1998) is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays at club level with Nemo Rangers and at inter-county level with the Cork senior football team. He usually lines out as a forward. Career Cronin first played competitive Gaelic football with the Nemo Rangers club in Cork. After progressing onto the club's senior team in 2018, he has since gone on to win a Munster Club Championship title and two Cork PSFC titles. Cronin first appeared on the inter-county scene as a member of the Cork minor football team in 2017. He progressed onto the under-20 team and was at right corner-forward when Cork beat Dublin in the 2019 All-Ireland under-20 final. Cronin was first selected for the Cork senior football team for the pre-season McGrath Cup competition in 2022. He later earned inclusion on the team's National League panel. Career statistics Club Inter-county Honours Nemo Rangers Munster Senior Club Football Championship: 2019 Cork Premier Senior Football Championship: 2019, 2020 Cork All-Ireland Under-20 Football Championship: 2019 Munster Under-20 Football Championship: 2019 References 2000 births Living people UCC Gaelic footballers Nemo Rangers Gaelic footballers Cork inter-county Gaelic footballers
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On July 19 and 20, 2018, a strong tornado outbreak affected Iowa and nearby areas. This made it the strongest tornado to hit Iowa since June 22, 2015, when another EF3 struck the state. Pella saw 14,000 power outages while Bodurant, which got hit by an EF2, saw 1800. Despite the damage and injuries, though, no one died, which is likely credited to timely warnings once the tornadoes actually did touch down. Of the 37 injuries, 13 occurred in Pella, and 23 in Marshalltown, and one the following day in Indiana. Meteorological history Much of eastern Iowa, where the tornadoes struck, had a 2% chance of tornadoes striking, or even less. However, once the first tornadoes were reported, tornado warnings were issued nonstop. This was due to it not being a closed 500 mb closed low, but rather a closed low at only 700 mb. At 21:00 UTC on July 19 (4pm CDT), a large SRH and low level wind shear was reported. The dewpoints were also in the 70s°F (20s°C), which is moist for this type of event. As the system trekked eastwards into July 20, damaging winds and hail became the main threat, with a 30% chance of strong wind across much of Arkansas, Tennessee and Kentucky, and a 45% chance of damaging hail across central Tennessee and Kentucky. However, a 10% tornado risk was also issued for western Tennessee and eastern Kentucky, with the threat of tornadoes stretching from western Arkansas to southern Michigan. An EF1 tornado in Indiana caused an injury to a camper, who was flipped over. However, that was the only casualty, as no tornadoes that day were stronger then an EF1. Confirmed tornadoes July 19 event July 20 event Non-tornadic effects As part of the storm system as a whole, a duck boat tour sank in Table Rock Lake, Missouri, at approximately 7pm CDT. Of the 31 people on board, 17 of them died and 7 were injured. Nine of them were in a single family. Wind gusts were reportedly in excess of . See also List of North American tornadoes and tornado outbreaks Iowa tornado outbreak of November 2005 – A small but strong tornado outbreak centered in Iowa Tornado outbreak of April 9–11, 2011 – Featured an EF4 tornado in Iowa Notes References Tornadoes in Iowa F3 tornadoes
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Jordan Matthews (born 1984) is an American lawyer known for handling several cases against Wynn Las Vegas and Steve Wynn. Early life and education Matthews was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and attended Community Day School with Bari Weiss. He was discovered by Stella Adler's grandson, Tom Oppenheim. Career In 2018, Matthews filed suit against Wynn Las Vegas and Steve Wynn on behalf of Angelica Limcaco, a former salon manager at Wynn Las Vegas. Limcaco claimed that she was fired, blacklisted and intimidated into silence after she elevated her concerns about sexual assault in 2006 to then-president of Wynn Las Vegas, Andrew Pascal. The federal case followed a report by the Wall Street Journal in January 2018 that uncovered allegations of sexual misconduct against Steve Wynn. The allegations revealed that Steve Wynn entered into a confidential $7.5 million settlement with a manicurist in 2005, who reported that she had been raped and impregnated by Steve Wynn. Limcaco was the salon manager who reported the rape allegation to human resources, but was threatened to remain silent about the incident. Limcaco's case was appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after Judge Miranda Du ruled in favor of Wynn Las Vegas holding that the claim was not made within the statute of limitations. Matthews argued that the time limits should not apply because Limcaco feared for her personal safety. Matthews filed a petition with the Ninth Circuit in March 2020 questioning the Nevada District Court's selection of Elayna Youchah, an attorney for Wynn Resorts, as a magistrate judge. Limcaco filed a civil RICO claim against Steve Wynn, Matthew Maddox, Barbara Buckley and others in California in 2020 related to Wynn's casino licenses with Encore Boston Harbor and a probe by the Massachusetts Gaming Commission. The RICO case made allegations of bribery and alleged incidents tied to the Sicilian Mafia in Boston. The case is currently on appeal with the Ninth Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals. In March 2020, Matthews filed an anti-trust lawsuit against Bell-Carter Foods and DCOOP Group of Spain, the world's largest cooperative of olive growers, related to the Trump administration's trade tariffs against Spanish imports. In April, 2021, Matthews filed suit against Teddy Riley's daughter, Deja Riley, a fitness celebrity. Film Matthews was previously an actor and starred in the movie Fading of the Cries with Brad Dourif and Thomas Ian Nicholas. The movie also starred Mackenzie Rosman from 7th Heaven. The film was released by Lionsgate and was panned by critics. In 2009, The Hollywood Reporter announced that he was set to star opposite Elaine Hendrix in Brian A. Metcalf's movie "Eve". In 2012, Matthews was linked to a film fund backing a mini-series from Walter Isaacson's book "Benjamin Franklin: An American Life." Alec Baldwin was set to star and the series never got made, but was revealed in soap star Katherine Kelly Lang's divorce.. Matthews' companies were linked to film financing deals with several movie studios, including Ryan Kavanaugh's Relativity Media. References 1984 births Living people 20th-century American lawyers 21st-century American lawyers American male film actors Lawyers from Pittsburgh
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The Sao Khua sclerorhynchoid is an unnamed genus and species of sclerorhynchoid from the Early Cretaceous Sao Khua Formation in Thailand. It is known from the tip of a rostral denticle that is deposited in the Sirindhorn Museum as SM 2012-1-021. The denticle has a single barb similar to Onchopristis, Onchosaurus, and Pucapristis, but is distinguished from all other genera by having a row of enameloid "droplets" on each side. It is one of the earliest sclerorhynchoids, along with Celtipristis and Onchopristis which also appeared in the Barremian. References Rajiformes Early Cretaceous fish of Asia Undescribed vertebrate species
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The 2008 Western Illinois Leathernecks football team represented Western Illinois University as a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC) in the 2008 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by tenth-year head coach Don Patterson and acting head coach Mark Hendrickson, who coached the team in its first seven games while Patterson underwent cancer treatment. The team played their home games at Hanson Field in Macomb, Illinois. The Leathernecks finished the season with a 6–5 record overall and a 4–4 record in conference play, tying for fourth place in the MVFC. Schedule References Western Illinois Western Illinois Leathernecks football seasons Western Illinois Leathernecks football
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Sarah C. Eno is an American experimental particle physicist at the University of Maryland, College Park, where she is a professor of physics and UMD Distinguished Scholar–Teacher. She has participated in several large experimental collaborations in high-energy physics, including the AMY experiment at the Japanese TRISTAN particle accelerator, the DØ experiment at Fermilab in the US, the Collider Detector at Fermilab, and the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment at the Large Hadron Collider in France and Switzerland. Education and career Eno is a 1984 graduate of Gettysburg College, where she was salutatorian. She studied physics as a graduate student at the University of Rochester, earning a master's degree there in 1986 and completing her Ph.D. in 1990. After postdoctoral research at the Enrico Fermi Institute of the University of Chicago, she joined the University of Maryland faculty in 1993. She was tenured as an associate professor in 1999, and promoted to full professor in 2005. Recognition In 2009, Eno was elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), after a nomination from the APS Division of Particles and Fields, "for contributions in particle physics involving electroweak parameters, precision electroweak measurements, and physics beyond the Standard Model at the Tevatron". She was named to the 2021 class of Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The University of Maryland named her as a Distinguished Scholar–Teacher in 2014. References External links Home page Year of birth missing (living people) Living people American physicists American women physicists Experimental physicists Particle physicists Gettysburg College alumni University of Rochester alumni University of Maryland, College Park faculty Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Fellows of the American Physical Society
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This is a list of the top-selling singles in New Zealand for 2019 from the Official New Zealand Music Chart's end-of-year chart, compiled by Recorded Music NZ. Recorded Music NZ also published a 2019 list for the top 20 singles released by New Zealand artists. Chart Key – Song of New Zealand origin Top 20 singles of 2019 by New Zealand artists Notes References 2019 in New Zealand music 2019 record charts Singles 2019
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Tarantobelus jeffdanielsi is a species of nematode, and is only one of two species known to infect tarantulas. History T. jeffdanielsi was discovered in 2018 when a wholesale breeder noticed white discharge in the mouths of their tarantulas, and strange behavior prior to death. This discharge were the nematodes in the tarantula's oral cavity. Biology The nematodes infect the oral cavity of a tarantula. The host will begin to lose control of its appendages and fangs, causing starvation and a 'tip toe' like walking behavior. The nematodes only infect the tarantula's mouth, suggesting they may feed on bacteria that lives on tarantulas rather than the actual tarantula. Taxonomy T. jeffdanielsi was named after actor Jeff Daniels for his role in the 1990 movie Arachnophobia References Tylenchida Parasitic nematodes of animals Animals described in 2022
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Au Cap FC is a Seychellois association football club based in Au Cap that currently competes in the Seychelles Division Two. History Au Cap FC was promoted to the Seychelles First Division for the first time for the 2018 season. The club was relegated back to Division Two following the 2019–2020 season. References External links Official Facebook Global Sports Archive profile National Football Teams profile Football clubs in Seychelles
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Joran Wyseure (born 9 January 2001) is a Belgian cyclist, who currently rides for the Tormans Cyclo Cross Team. He won the 2022 UCI Cyclo-cross Under-23 World Championships. Major results 2018–2019 Junior Brico Cross 1st Bredenecross 1st Lokeren 1st Junior Gullegem Junior DVV Trophy 2nd Flandriencross 3rd Koppenbergcross Junior Superprestige 3rd Middelkerke 2019–2020 Under-23 DVV Trophy 3rd Ronse 2021–2022 1st UCI World Under-23 Championships 1st Under-23 Duinencross 2nd Gullegem Stockholm Weekend 2nd Täby Park 2nd Stockholm 3rd Overall Under-23 X²O Badkamers Trophy 1st Flandriencross 2nd Brussels 3rd Urban Cross 3rd National Under-23 Championships References External links Joran Wyseure at Cyclocross 24 2001 births Living people Belgian male cyclists Cyclo-cross cyclists
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The Minister of Home Affairs (or simply, the Home Minister, in Nepali Griha Mantri) is the head of the Ministry of Home Affairs of the Government of Nepal. One of the senior-most officers in the Union Cabinet, the chief responsibility of the Home Minister is the maintenance of Nepal's internal security; the country's large police force comes under its jurisdiction. Occasionally, they are assisted by the Minister of State of Home Affairs and the lower-ranked Deputy Minister of Home Affairs. List of Ministers of Home Affairs This is a list of former Ministers of Home Affairs since Nepal was declared Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal: Reference External links Official Website of Ministry of Home Affairs Ministers of Internal Affairs by country Lists of government ministers of Nepal
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The Nineties: A Book is a 2022 book by Chuck Klosterman. It is an analysis of historical trends and pop culture phenomena in the decade of the 1990s. It was released February 8, 2022, by Penguin Books. References 2022 non-fiction books Popular culture books
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Suleyman Mehrali oglu Gasimov (Azerbaijani: Süleyman Mehrəli oğlu Qasımov; born December 26, 1961 in Bolnisi district) is Vice President for Economic Affairs of the State Oil Company of the Republic of Azerbaijan. Early life Gasimov Suleyman Mehrali oglu was born in 1961 in Fakhrali village of Bolnisi district of the Republic of Georgia.  He graduated from the Azerbaijan Institute of National Economy in 1982, and from the Academy of Public Administration under the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan in 2003. Career From 1982 to 1991 he worked in various positions in the oil and gas industry (accountant, economist, deputy chief accountant, chief accountant).  In 1991-2003, he worked as the chief accountant of "Caspian Oil and Gas" and "Offshore Oil and Gas Production" Production Associations of "Azerineft" Oil and Gas Production Department.  In 2004-2006, he was the head of the department, deputy head of the department, head of the department of Economy and Accounting at the Head Office of the State Oil Company of the Republic of Azerbaijan. Since 2006, he has been the Vice President for Economic Affairs of the State Oil Company of the Republic of Azerbaijan. He was awarded the Progress Medal in 2006 and the Order of Glory in 2011.  He is a doctor of economic sciences, the author of 1 scientific work, more than 15 scientific articles. See also Cabinet of Azerbaijan SOCAR Rovnag Abdullayev Labor Order (Azerbaijan) President of Azerbaijan References External links Süleyman Qasımov: SOCAR daima dövlətin maraqlarını qoruyub “Monteneqroda heç bir aktivimiz yoxdur” - Süleyman Qasımov Süleyman Qasımov: “Uğurlu şəkildə Avro fond yaradıldı” ENERGETİKASənaye və energetika Süleyman Qasımov: “Neftin ucuzlaşmasının SOCAR-a təsiri o qədər də böyük deyil” Süleyman Qasımov: “AzMeCo”nun metanol zavodu SOCAR-ın mülkiyyətinə keçə bilər Süleyman Qasımov: Manatın dollara nisbətən məzənnəsi azalmaqda davam edərsə, SOCAR aidiyyəti qurumlara müraciət edəcək 1961 births Living people SOCAR
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Martin Thalmann (born 5 September 1972) is a Swiss former footballer who played in the 1990s and early 2000s. He played mainly in the position as defender, but also as midfielder. Football career Thalmann came through the youth system of FC Basel and advanced to their U-21 team 1990. He was called up to their first team many times in their 1990–91 season under head coach Ernst August Künnecke. He played his domestic league debut for the club in the home game in the St. Jakob Stadium on 22 December 1990 as Basel won 6–2 against Schaffhausen. In that season he played just two league matches. In the following season he was also called into their first team and had three appearances for them. Thalmann left FCB in the summer of 1992 and moved to FC Riehen. In his two seasons with the club Thalmann played a total of 11 games for Basel's first team without scoring a goal. 5 of these games were in the Nationalliga A and six were friendly games. Thalmann later played for the German teams TSF Ditzingen and SV Waldhof Mannheim before moving to Schaffhausen in 1998, who at that time played in the second tier of Swiss football. In the 2000–01 season Schaffhausen suffered relegation. References Sources Die ersten 125 Jahre. Publisher: Josef Zindel im Friedrich Reinhardt Verlag, Basel. Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv" Homepage 1972 births Living people Swiss footballers FC Basel players TSF Ditzingen players SV Waldhof Mannheim players FC Schaffhausen players Association football defenders Association football midfielders Swiss Super League players Swiss Challenge League players Swiss expatriate footballers Expatriate footballers in Germany Swiss expatriate sportspeople in Germany
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Maniniaro / Angelus Peak is a mountain in Nelson Lakes National Park, near the northwestern extent of New Zealand's main divide. Although it is not the tallest peak in the Angelus Ridge or the wider Travers Range, Maniniaro remains a popular tramping destination and is significant to the Ngāti Apa ki te Rā Tō iwi, who claim mana whenua (regional authority) within the area. According to Ngāti Apa ki te Rā Tō beliefs, the mountain is intrinsically linked with nearby Rotomaninitua / Lake Angelus, with the two both said to represent the footprints of the iwi's ancestors as they embarked on their journey back to Hawaiki. It is also near both major lakes of the national park, being roughly from the southern ends of both Lakes Rotoiti and Rotoroa. Being situated near the intersection of several walking tracks, Maniniaro / Angelus Peak is a popular destination for trampers. The popular Angelus Hut is situated on the shore of nearby Rotomaninitua / Lake Angelus, which provides a launching point for those wishing to climb the summit of Maniniaro as the route from the hut to the summit requires no specialist equipment when there is no snow. Routes to near the summit are among the most important in Nelson Lakes National Park, and are an active part of the park's management plan. The Department of Conservation also noted the potential for ski touring in the alpine areas around the peak, recommending that this be managed through concessions to prevent overcrowding of facilities. Maniniaro / Angelus Peak is one of many places in New Zealand to have a dual place name, consisting of the Māori name and the former European name. The mountain's Māori name highlights the connection which it is to nearby Rotomaninitua in the beliefs of the local Ngāti Apa ki te Rā Tō iwi, who see both as markers and resting places for their ancestors on their return journey to their ancestral homeland of Hawaiki. The mountain was subsequently named as Angelus Peak by the climbers L.J. Dumbleton and D.J. Stanton, who ascended the mountain on an evening during Easter 1947. The latter of these was the official name until 2014, when a Treaty of Waitangi settlement with multiple iwi from the upper South Island included a provision to alter the official name to a dual form. This was done in part to recognise the significance of the peak to local Māori. References Mountains of the Tasman District
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Lukas von Graben zum Stein (until 1500 Lukas von Graben) († 1550 at Stein Castle), lord of Stein, was a Carinthian-Gorizian nobleman and military leader of the Counts of Gorizia and the Habsburgs. He came from the Sommeregger line of Von Graben, whose members held important offices at the time of the last Counts of Gorizia, and through whose work the Renaissance culture also found its way into East Tyrol. Biography Family von Graben Lukas von Graben was born the son of the important nobleman Virgil von Graben of the Von Graben family and Dorothea Arnold, née Herbst von Herbstenburg. However, since this marriage was not legally binding, his children could not accept their father's inheritance. One of his cousins was Ladislaus Prager, Hereditary Marshal of the duchy of Carinthia and Chamberlain of Emperor Frederik III. According to Bucelin, Lukas von Graben was married to a daughter of Georg Hellssen, with whom he had three daughters and two sons, who inherited the Stein fief: Margaretha von Graben zum Stein, married to Leopold Göstels von Mülbach (1542) N of Graben zum Stein, married N of Moors Catharina von Graben zum Stein, married Christoph Mühlsteuers in Flaschberg in 1540 Hans von Graben zum Stein, the older († 1587–91), married to Anna Straufen and remarried in 1576 with Margarita Manndorfferin (von Manndorff), Lord of Stein Georg von Graben zum Stein (mentioned 1570; † 1595), Lord of Stein; married to Kunigunde (née Von Gendorf, widow Von Vasold) no descendants; Lord of Stein Heritage Lukas von Graben was unable to take over his father's inheritance due to his father's illegal marriage. As a result, the von Graben family lost the important fief of Sommeregg. The inheritance passed to Lukas von Graben's cousin Rosina von Graben von Rain and to the barons von Rain zu Sommeregg. Lukas was enfeoffed by the emperor with Heinfels, the manor and castle Schwarzenegk (Schwarzenegg) on ​​the Karst, Črni Vrh (Divača in Slovenia), and the manor and Stein Castle. In 1500 he was given the suffix Zum Stein by the later Emperor Maximilian I. Stein remained in the family until 1664. Career Controversy over the County of Gorizia When the last Count of Gorizia, Leonhard, was about to die at the end of the 15th century, the two neighboring states, the Austrian Habsburg Monarchy and the Republic of Venice, began to fight the inheritance. In 1498 Lukas von Graben was given command of the gorizian Burghut, the defense of the capital and residential city of Gorizia and its surroundings, by his father Virgil von Graben, kaptein (governor) of the County of Gorizia. The Venetians tried to win over Lukas von Graben, but he refused, also because of his father's strict guidelines. The Venice Council of Ten offered to appoint Lukas von Graben as their supreme commander in Friuli. However, since Virgil von Graben ended the contract with Venice about the succession in the County of Gorizia and negotiated with Emperor Maximilian, this appointment was no longer made. Equipped with precise instructions from his father, Lukas von Graben intervened as commander of the Gorizia troops in the war with the Republic of Venice. But since his attempts also failed, Friuli and the city of Gorizia were handed over to the Venetian troops in 1500. A short time later Gorizia was won back by imperial troops for Maximilian of Austria. After the Gorizian inheritance in favor of the Habsburgs, the Venetians saw their failure solely in the actions of Messrs Virgil and Lukas von Graben. Lukas von Graben and his father were modestly rewarded in relation to their immense merits. Imperial service In 1500, Emperor Maximilian gave his "loyal, dear" Lukas von Graben the dominion of Stein as a fief due to his "great services" in winning the County of Gorizia. During the Venetian War of 1508, Von Graben zum Stein belonged to the Lienz War Chamber as Chief Provisioner (a sort of Purser) under the Supreme Commissioner Erich I of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Lukas von Graben zum Stein was in the favor of Emperor Maximilian throughout his life, so he demanded on October 25, 1514, in his instruction to the Krainer councils and the commissaries of the Krain (Carniola) estates that, among other things, "Our faithful dear Lucas von Grabn zum Stain near Traberg servants from our county of Tyrol" to strengthen the defense against the Republic of Venice. Notes External links Hermann Wiesflecker: Die Grafschaft Görz und die Herrschaft Lienz, ihre Entwicklung und ihr Erbfall an Österreich (1500) 1550 deaths People from Spittal an der Drau District Medieval Austrian knights Year of birth unknown 15th-century Austrian people 16th-century Austrian people
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is a potentially hazardous asteroid around 200 meters in diameter that was discovered on 25 January 2022 when it was from Earth. On 29 January 2022 with an observation arc of 22 days it was rated with a Torino scale of 1 for a virtual impactor on 11 July 2061 21:22 UTC. The 2061 virtual impactor was ruled out on 9 February 2022 with a 32.9 day observation arc. Nominal approach is expected to occur 14 June 2061. Closest approach to Earth in 2022 will occur on 13 March 2022 at a distance of about 7.7 million km. It will come to perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) on 25 April 2022. References External links FindOrb 2022 BX1 Minor planet object articles (unnumbered) Discoveries by MLS Potential impact events caused by near-Earth objects 20220125 20220313
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Margaret Elizabeth "Bess" Gardner Hoey (January 21, 1875 – February 13, 1942) was an American civic leader and political hostess who served as the First Lady of North Carolina from 1937 to 1941. She was part of the "Shelby Dynasty" and is the only North Carolinian first lady to be the wife of one governor, Clyde R. Hoey, and the sister of another governor, Oliver Max Gardner. While serving as first lady, Hoey focused on issues related to women's roles and children's welfare, advocated for highway beautification across the state, and established a green house for exotic plants at the state penitentiary. She was known to be an eloquent and passionate orator, giving speeches across the state. Prior to serving as first lady, she acted as a political hostess while her husband served in the North Carolina General Assembly and the U.S. House of Representatives. Hoey was involved in various religious, civic, and lineage organizations including the Daughters of the American Revolution and the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and was a supporter of local amateur dramatic arts. Early life and family Hoey was born Margaret Elizabeth Gardner in Shelby, North Carolina on January 21, 1875, to Oliver Perry Gardner and his second wife, Margaret Young Gardner. Her father was a respected physician, prominent civic leader, and farmer who served in Company I of the 38th North Carolina Regiment of the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. Through her paternal grandmother, Rebecca Beam Gardner, she was a relative of the planter and enslaver Joshua Beam, who built the Joshua Beam House in Shelby. Hoey's great-great grandfather, John Teter Beam (Baum), was a German Lutheran immigrant from Hamburg who served in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. Her maternal great-great grandfather, George Blanton, was the common ancestor of many of the old families in Shelby including the Gardners, Youngs, and Webbs. After her mother's death when she was sixteen years old, Hoey helped her father raise her younger brothers and send them to school. She was the sister of Governor Oliver Max Gardner. Her brother's wife, Fay Webb-Gardner, was their distant cousin through the Blanton line. She was educated at Shelby Female College. Upon finishing her schooling, Hoey worked as a teacher. Marriage and public life She married lawyer, segregationist, and politician Clyde Roark Hoey, who was serving in the North Carolina House of Representatives, on March 22, 1900, and had three children: Clyde R. Hoey Jr., Charles Aycock Hoey, and Isabel Young Hoey. In 1902 her husband was elected to the North Carolina State Senate. In 1919 her husband became a United States Congressman. Hoey and her husband built a Colonial Revival mansion as their primary residence in Shelby in 1920. Her husband was elected as the Governor of North Carolina in 1936, and took office on January 7, 1937. She and her family moved to the North Carolina Executive Mansion in Raleigh. She was an active and political first lady, and had a reputation as a passionate and eloquent orator. She spoke publicly about highway beautification, women's roles in society, and child welfare and volunteered for a variety of civic organizations. In 1937, the Raleigh Times remarked, "North Carolina's new first lady, Mrs. Clyde Roark Hoey, graciously gay, witty and sympathetic, brings with her to the Executive Mansion a multiplicity of interests and experiences. Her popularity in the western part of the state-her home-is due to her exceptional love for people, her hospitality and her outstanding personality." Hoey hosted many teas, receptions, and dinners at the executive mansion while serving as first lady and she often shared her duties with her daughter, Isabel, who lived with them. She was seen as a warm and welcoming hostess, often preparing meals for the guests herself. The Charlotte Observer said in 1942 that Hoey ran "a plain, old-fashioned, homey household in which the humblest were heartily welcomed and quickly came to feel at ease in its congenial and affable fellowships. It was Mrs. Hoey who carried to, and made to preside in the Mansion, the spirit of the common people, the social democracy of the common­ wealth." A talented gardener, she oversaw the executive mansion's grounds and created a greenhouse for exotic flowers at the state penitentiary. In 1940 she and her husband attended a launching ceremony for the USS North Carolina (BB-55) at the New York Navy Yard in Brooklyn where her daughter was serving as the ship's sponsor. Hoey was active in civic, social, artistic, and religious organizations including the Daughters of the American Revolution, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and the Twentieth Century Book Players. She also served as president of the Woman's Club in Shelby. Hoey taught Sunday school classes at her Methodist church, often having more than sixty people in attendance. Death and legacy She died of a heart attack on February 13, 1942, in Shelby and was buried in Sunset Cemetery. Her husband, who outlived her, wore a red rose or carnation in his lapel daily to honor her. Upon his death, the Bess Gardner Hoey Memorial Fund was established as a trust for charitable, educational, and religious purposes. References 1875 births 1942 deaths American people of German descent American political hostesses Daughters of the American Revolution people First Ladies and Gentlemen of North Carolina Margaret Margaret Members of the United Daughters of the Confederacy North Carolina Democrats Old Right (United States) People from Shelby, North Carolina Schoolteachers from North Carolina Southern Methodists Spouses of North Carolina politicians
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Alanna Routledge (born June 25, 1990) is a Canadian curler from Montreal, Quebec. Career Routledge represented Quebec in four Canadian Junior Curling Championships during her junior career in 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2011. Her best finish came at the 2008 Canadian Junior Curling Championships where her team skipped by Kristen Richard finished in seventh with a 7–5 record. As third for the Mike Fournier, Routledge competed in back-to-back Canadian Mixed Curling Championship's in 2013 and 2014. At the 2013 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, the team won the bronze medal after dropping the semifinal to Ontario's Cory Heggestad. Out of juniors, Routledge began competing on the women's tour, skipping her own team. After playing in seven straight Quebec Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Routledge won her first women's provincial title at the 2020 Quebec Scotties Tournament of Hearts as third for Noémie Verreault. The team finished the round robin in second place with a 5–2 record and then won the semifinal and championship final to claim the title. At the 2020 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the team struggled throughout the week and ultimately finished tied for last with a winless 0–7 record. Routledge competed in her second national championship as the alternate for Team Laurie St-Georges in 2022. The team won their opening two matches against Alberta's Laura Walker and the Yukon's Hailey Birnie and their last game against Nova Scotia's Christina Black, ultimately finishing the 2022 Scotties Tournament of Hearts with a 3–5 record. Personal life Routledge is employed as the director of competitions at Curling Québec. She is in a relationship with Dee Rich. Teams References External links 1990 births Canadian women curlers Living people Curlers from Quebec Sportspeople from Montreal
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5 Precentor's Court is an historic building in the English city of York, North Yorkshire. A Grade II* listed structure, standing on Precentor's Court, the building dates to the early 18th century. Architect Henry Cane was living at the property in 1872, while James Boyd, a licensed preacher in the diocese of York, lived there in the early 20th century. See also Grade II* listed buildings in the City of York References Houses in North Yorkshire 18th-century establishments in England Precentor's Court 5 Grade II* listed houses
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Dinero G. Diaz, known professionally as Cuttboy G Dinero or "G Dinero", is an American producer, rapper, actor, and songwriter. He is best known for his single "Dey Put Da Blame On Me" which peaked at #21 on Billboard Hot 100 Compilation Albums Charts in June 2021. He is known for collaborations with former No Limit Records/TRU member Corey C-Murder Miller, Pastor Troy, Boosie Badazz, 2Meka Diaz, and four-time world heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield. Early life Cuttboy G Dinero grew up in the 7th Ward projects of New Orleans. At 4 years old, he taught himself to play a five-piece drum set and learned how to play piano from his father who was also a well-known rhythm and blues singer. Music career After being released from prison, he relocated from New Orleans to Atlanta and signed a record deal with four-time world heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield’s Real Deal Records. He immediately gained recognition on Atlanta top radio stations V103 and Hot 107.9 with records, such as the self-produced track “That’s Gangsta Dogg” featuring Bun B of UGK. He collaborated with director Gabriel Hart to capture story-telling music videos including “Waitin Fa Ma Season” which won “Best Music Video” at the Urban Mediamakers Festival. Two singles by Dinero that created a buzz in the South include “Tilt Ya Hat” f/ Pastor Troy and 2Meka Diaz which aired on BET and “Woedee” f/ 2Meka Diaz and Mike Will Made-It's Ear Drummer Records artist Eearz. After becoming a member of C-Murder's group the "Cuttboyz," Dinero was later appointed President of Miller's TRU Records label in 2021. He also appeared as a guest artist on numerous tracks with Miller, including Calliope Click Volume 1, Screamin' 4 Vengeance, Boosie Badazz and C-Murder's joint album Penitentiary Chances on the track “Remember Me.” Dinero also appeared on C-Murder's Ricochet Mixtape including the tracks “Money On My Mind” and “One False Move Remix” which features Cuttboy G Dinero himself, C-Murder, Akon, B.G., and Young Buck. Dinero also produced C-Murder's Hood Christmas Anthem, “The Black Grinch.” In 2020, he produced 2Meka Diaz's solo single project “B.M.S” (Bang My Sh**) which appeared on BET Jams, MTV, Music Choice Radio/Video stations, and in Billboard 2021 Grammy Prevue Issue. In 2021, Cuttboy G Dinero, C Murder, and 2Meka Diaz released a single collaboration titled “Bitch,” which rips non-stop, twisted, back-to back split verses between the trio. His latest single with C-Murder “Dey Put Da Blame On Me” was featured on Amada Record's 50/50 Compilation album which peaked at #21 on Billboard's Top 100 Compilation Albums Charts of that same year. The 50/50 Compilation album also features notable artist, such as Lauren Hill, Missy Elliott, and Quavo. After C-Murder was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of 16-year-old Steve Thomas, controversy surrounding Miller's trial prompted Cuttboy to submit Corey Miller's case to Investigation Discovery true-crime show Reasonable Doubt. On the show, two witnesses recanted their statements stating they lied when testifying against Miller during his trial. As an entrepreneur, Cuttboy G Dinero secured a VST/AU (virtual studio technology/audio units) plug-in deal with StudioLinked by introducing his downloadable VST plug-in, “King of Diamonds,” to music industry producers worldwide. He is also the founder of Black Tie Millionaires; a fraternal brotherhood of diverse men with millionaire mindsets. Collaboration Singles References African-American songwriters Rappers from Louisiana 21st-century rappers Record producers Living people Southern hip hop musicians African-American actors African-American male actors Gangsta rappers African-American rappers Male actors from New Orleans
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6 and 7 Precentor's Court are an historic pair of buildings in the English city of York, North Yorkshire. Grade II listed structures, standing on Precentor's Court, the buildings date to the mid-19th century, with number 7 having earlier origins. The properties were renovated in the 20th century. Rachael Epworth, a pawnbroker, formerly lived at the property. Henry Hardcastle purchased the property from her. A. Ayer Carr, a new member of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society, was living at number 6 in 1900. References Houses in North Yorkshire 19th-century establishments in England Precentor's Court 6 and 7 Grade II listed houses
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Jared Schmidt (born 18 April 1997) is a Canadian freestyle skier who competes internationally in the ski cross discipline. Career Schmidt has been part of the national team since 2018. Schmidt has won two World Cup medals, both bronzes. The first one came in February 2021, in Bakurani, Georgia, with the second one coming in December 2021. On January 24, 2022, Schmidt was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team along with his sister Hannah Schmidt, who also competed in the women's ski cross event. References External links 1997 births Living people Canadian male freestyle skiers Skiers from Ottawa Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Canada
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Daddy's Girl is a 1996 American direct-to-video slasher film directed by Martin Kitrosser on a screenplay by Steven Pesce, starring William Katt, Michele Greene, Roxana Zal, and Gabrielle Boni. Plot Eleven-year-old girl, Jody, is adopted by a loving couple, Don, and Barbara Mitchell. Jody develops an obsession with her father and paranoia and jealousy about others spending time with him. This leads her to become psychopathic and so envious of his relationships with other people she sets out to remove these people from her father's life. Jody kills her principal, Mrs. Hemp, when the latter suggests that Jody may need to be placed in a state-run boarding school, where she will only see her father on weekends, because of her behavior problems the past school year. Jody goes to the school when only Mrs. Hemp is there and tricks her into standing on a chair to retrieve a book from a high shelf. Jody then pushes the chair out from under her principal, and proceeds to tip the bookcase over onto her prostrate form. Don and Barbara's marriage is becoming strained because of Don's constant spoiling of Jody and the fact that Barbara has to be the breadwinner since Don is working as a toy designer but his projects are not selling. Barbara vents her frustrations to various people, who tell her to divorce Don and take custody of Jody. Jody's maternal grandmother, Jacqueline, is one of the first to do so and, in response to this, Jody pours drain cleaning fluid into Jacqueline's juice one day when Jacqueline is at their house for brunch. She tries to trick Jacqueline into drinking by toasting her father as a great toy designer, but Jacqueline refuses to drink to this. So, later, Jody goes to her house and suggests playing a game of hide-and-seek with her so they can grow closer. Tricking Jacqueline into going upstairs and playing a cassette of her crying for help, Jody shoves her grandmother down the stairs. Jacqueline survives the fall, but goes into a coma. She is later killed in the hospital when Jody sabotages her ventilator after waking up from her coma. Later, Jody kills her mother's friend, Rachel, as Jody had overheard Rachel advising Barbara to consider divorcing Don. During the course of the film, Jody's adoptive cousin, Karen, a college student who has been staying with the family for the summer, becomes suspicious of Jody's behavior. She begins investigating Jody's past, despite Barbara's insistence that she mind her own business, and discovers that as a toddler, Jody witnessed the murder of her biological father by her biological mother, and that she had been removed from her previous foster home when her foster father was convicted of fraud after his wife was killed by being a nag, suspiciously similar to that of Jody's recently deceased adoptive grandmother. This causes Karen to alert social services. At the end of the film, Jody pushes Barbara over the edge of a balcony upon discovering that she is on the verge of finding out about Jody's crimes, but this does not kill her. When the social worker, Mark Springer, arrives at Jody's home, Jody bludgeons him to death with a heavy meat tenderizing mallet, then tries to pin it on Karen. Don, who was at a toy convention, returns home to tell Barbara that she no longer has to be breadwinner as he successfully sold a design for a lot of money, only to find the body of Springer and his wife injured on the ground. Despite Jody desperately trying to not get Don to see that she was responsible for all the crimes she committed, Barbara manages to tell Don everything, while Karen calls 911. Jody begins crying, saying that everyone is against her and begs Don to comfort her and love her, but Don, now knowing what his adopted daughter is capable of, refuses to comfort her, completely disgusted by her actions, and pushes her away, practically disowning Jody as his daughter. Don and Karen then continue to comfort Barbara while ignoring Jody, who still cries over the fact that Don doesn't love her and that everyone is against her, failing to realize the true reasons why. The movie closes with Jody's crying and the sound of police sirens in the background, giving implication to Jody's potential fate of being arrested or institutionalized. Cast William Katt as Don Mitchell Michele Greene as Barbara Mitchell Roxana Zal as Karen Conners Mimi Craven as Rachel Landers Peggy McCay as Grandmother Whip Hubley as Mark Springer Gabrielle Boni as Jody Mitchell Ruth Manning as Mrs. Hemp Lindsay Ridgeway as Claire Landers Madison Mason as William Tucker Freda Foh Shen as Dr. Marsh Christopher Kriesa as Dr. Richardson Sarah Long as Nurse Release The film was released straight-to-VHS on December 23, 1996 by Avid Home Entertainment. The film has not been re-released ever since, and is unavailable on DVD or Blu-ray. The film did eventually get released on DVD in Canada on April 26, 2005 by Seville Pictures, though it has since gone out of print. References External links 1996 films American films American thriller drama films
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Hannah Schmidt (born 4 August 1994) is a Canadian freestyle skier who competes internationally in the ski cross discipline. Career Schmidt has been part of the national team since 2018. In 2021, Schmidt has a breakout season, marked by a top 10 performance at the World Championships. On January 24, 2022, Schmidt was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team along with her brother Jared Schmidt, who will also compete in the women's ski cross event. References External links 1994 births Living people Canadian female freestyle skiers Skiers from Ottawa Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Canada
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10 Precentor's Court is an historic building in the English city of York, North Yorkshire. A Grade II* listed structure, standing on Precentor's Court, the building dates to the early 18th century but incorporates features of a 15th-century house. It stands perpendicular to Fenton House at the western end of the street. The gates and railings in front of the house are Grade II listed. Revd. George William Outram Addleshaw (1906–1982) lived at the property in 1952. See also Grade II* listed buildings in the City of York References Houses in North Yorkshire 18th-century establishments in England Precentor's Court 10 Precentor's Court 10 Grade II* listed houses
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Vancouver, Washington hosted minor league baseball teams in the 1904 and 1918 seasons. Vancouver teams played as members of the Class D level Oregon State League in 1904 and the Class B level Pacific Coast International League in 1918. Baseball Hall of Fame member Joe McGinnity played for the 1918 Vancouver Beavers. History 1904 Oregon State League Minor league baseball began in Vancouver, Washington with the 1904 Vancouver Soldiers. Vancouver began play as charter members of the four–team Class D level Oregon State League, before the franchise was forced to relocate shortly after beginning play in the 1904 season. The Oregon State League began play, with Vancouver joining the teams from Eugene, Oregon (Eugene Blues), Roseburg, Oregon (Roseburg Shamrocks) and Salem, Oregon (Salem Raglans) in the four–team league. Some sources erroneously have the Vancouver Soldiers franchise based in Vancouver, Canada. On May 18, 1904, the Vancouver Soldiers, with a 3–8 record, moved from Vancouver, Washington to Albany, Oregon. The team then continued play as the Albany Rollers. The move was necessary because the Oregon State League was not admitted to the National Association governing body until the league vacated the Vancouver, Washington franchise. The National Association determined that the Vancouver franchise was infringing on another minor league team, as Vancouver was deemed to be in the regional territory of the Portland Browns of the Pacific Coast League. After the Vancouver franchise relocated to Albany, the Oregon State League permanently folded on July 6, 1904. The league folded after both the Eugene and Roseburg franchises folded on July 6. After compiling a 14–16 record while based in Albany, the Vancouver/Albany team finished the season in 3rd place with a 17–24 overall record. Playing under managers Fred Gregory and E.P. Preble, the Vancouver/Albany team finished 9.5 games behind the 1st place Salem Raglans in the final Oregon State League Standings. 1918 Pacific Coast International League Minor league baseball returned to Vancouver, Washington in 1918. The 1918 Vancouver Beavers joined as charter members of the Pacific Coast International League, during the season. The Pacific International League had formed as a six–team Class B level league, evolving from the 1917 Northwestern League. After the season had begun, the Vancouver, British Columbia franchise relocated to Vancouver, Washington. On June 25, 1918, the Vancouver, British Columbia based Vancouver Beavers moved to Vancouver, Washington with a 26–28 record, keeping the team "Beavers" moniker. Previously, the Tacoma Tigers and Spokane Indians franchises had folded on May 26, 1918, leaving the league with four teams. Vancouver, B.C. owner Robert Brown had disagreements over the travel costs of the league and had sought to change the league schedule, offering teams money to play their home games in Vancouver B.C. The Pacific Coast International League stripped the team from Brown and relocated the franchise, despite the team drawing well in Vancouver B.C. Shortly after the Vancouver, Washington franchise began play, the Pacific Coast International League folded. On July 7, 1918, the Vancouver franchise had an 0–11 record after the relocation at the time the league folded. The combined Vancouver teams finished the 1918 season with an overall record of 26–39 to finish in 4th place. Playing under managers Robert Brown and James A. Hamilton in the two locations, the team finished 16.0 games behind the 1st place Seattle Giants in the final standings. The continuation of World War I, the Spanish flu pandemic, as well as local factory work times all contributed to the demise of the 1918 league. The league reformed in 1919 as the Northwest International League with a Vancouver B.C franchise, but without a Vancouver, Washington franchise. Baseball Hall of Fame member Joe McGinnity played for the 1918 Vancouver Beavers, compiling a 2–7 record with a 3.30 ERA at age 47. Vancouver, Washington has not hosted another minor league team. In 2011, talks took place to relocate the Class A level Yakima Bears franchise to Vancouver, Washington. The Yakima Bears franchise eventually relocated to Oregon and became the Hillsboro Hops. The ballpark The name of the home ballpark for Vancouver minor league teams is unknown. Timeline Year-by-year records Notable alumni Baseball Hall of Fame alumni Joe McGinnity (1918) Notable alumni Ray French (1918) Lafayette Henion (1918) Cy Neighbors (1918) Kid Willson (1918) See also Vancouver Beavers players References External links Baseball Reference Bullpen1918 team photo Vancouver, Washington
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Soap Creek is a stream in Monroe, Appanoose, Davis and Wapello counties of Iowa. It is a tributary of the Des Moines River. The stream headwaters arise in Monroe County at adjacent to the west side of Iowa Highway 5 approximately six miles south-southwest of Albia. Th stream flows east and then southeast to pass through the northeast corner of Appanoose County and into Davis County. It flows southeast through a section of the Soap Creek Water Management Area to turn to the east just north of the community of Blackhawk. The stream continues east through northeastern Davis County passing under US Route 63 and north of the community of Floris. It enters the southeast corner of Wapello County and its confluence with the Des Moines River just south of the city of Eldon at . References Rivers of Iowa Rivers of Appanoose County, Iowa Rivers of Davis County, Iowa Rivers of Monroe County, Iowa Rivers of Wapello County, Iowa
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Courtney Hoffos (born 30 August 1997) is a Canadian freestyle skier who competes internationally in the ski cross discipline. Career Hoffos had a fifth-place finish at the 2021 World Championships. Hoffos has won multiple World Cup medals. On January 24, 2022, Hoffos was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. References External links 1997 births Living people Sportspeople from British Columbia Canadian female freestyle skiers Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Canada
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The Tini Tour 2022 (stylized as TINI Tour 2022) is an upcoming concert tour by Argentine singer-songwriter TINI. The tour is set to begin on March 21, 2022, in Buenos Aires at Hipódromo de Palermo. It also included some pre-tour concerts in Argentina, Chile and Bolivia. Background After two years absent due to the COVID-19 pandemic and having left the closing of her previous tour, Quiero Volver Tour, unfinished, Tini resumes live performances. On her interrupted and unfinished tour, she manage to present most of the songs from her third studio album Tini Tini Tini, and she planned to do a brand new tour for the album, unfortunately due to the pandemic she was not able to do it. On November 11, 2021, Tini shared via her social media that she is embarking on her third solo tour, and that the tour starts on March 21, 2022, in her home country Argentina at the Hipodromo de Palermo. The tickets for the show went on sale the same day she confirmed the tour. Tickets sold out in minutes, and then she added four more concerts in a row on 24, 25, 26 and 27 March 2022, at the Hipodromo, that also sold out in minutes. During the months of January and February 2022, a series of concerts were held prior to the official start of the tour. In these, the Argentine singer toured various festivals and gave concerts in Argentina and Chile. Tour dates References 2022 concert tours Martina Stoessel concert tours Concert tours of South America Upcoming concert tours
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Daviesia lancifolia is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a prostrate to erect, spreading shrub with egg-shaped, more or less round or linear phyllodes and yellow to orange and red flowers. Description Daviesia lancifolia is a glabrous, prostrate to erect and spreading shrub that typically grows up to high and wide, its foliage usually covered with silky hairs. Its phyllodes are scattered, egg-shaped, more or less round or linear, mostly long, wide with a pointed tip, sometimes sharply so. The flowers are arranged in one or two clusters of three to five in leaf axils on a peduncle long, the rachis up to long, each flower on a pedicel long. The sepals are long and joined at the base, the upper two joined for most of their length and the lower three triangular and about long. The standard petal is broadly egg-shaped, long and mostly yellow to pale orange, the wings long and yellow to red, and the keel long and yellow to red. Flowering occurs from October to March and the fruit is broadly triangular pod long. Taxonomy and naming Daviesia lancifolia was first formally described in 1853 by Nikolai Turczaninow in the Bulletin de la Société Impériale des Naturalistes de Moscou. The specific epithet (lancifolia) means "lance-leaved". Distribution and habitat This species of Daviesia grows in heath and mallee shrubland between Narrogin, the Stirling Range, Hyden and the Cape Arid National Park in the Avon Wheatbelt, Esperance Plains, Jarrah Forest and Mallee biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia. Conservation status Daviesia lancifolia is listed as "not threatened" by the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions. References lancifolia Eudicots of Western Australia Plants described in 1853 Taxa named by Nikolai Turczaninow
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Rachel Lichtman (born) is an American visual artist, comedy writer and filmmaker known for directing the documentary The Guys Who Wrote 'Em, co-written with Andrew Sandoval, a look into Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart who created the sound of The Monkees. Lichtman did the visual design for The Monkees' final tour in 2011 after contributing to the liner notes for the Head reissue in 2010. Lichtman's work directing music videos is defined by its 70s and 80s styles from the fonts, to the credits, to the colors. She has created music videos for Ted Leo, Juliana Hatfield, and Buffalo Tom some of which appear in her "absurdist New Wave music-and-comedy sketch" web series Network 77. The show, which re-creates the vibe of watching network television in the late 70s, has been described as "funny as classic SCTV and as retro-accurate as Documentary Now!" Lichtman often returns to this time period for her creations, described as having "cool retro vibes" such as her comedic short "The William Joel Show" which posits a Billy Joel who became a news anchor for a Long Island television station. Lichtman has also directed music videos for Aimee Mann and Michael Penn. She was also the co-writer and director of Yesterday, Today and TAMAR a 2021 NYC cabaret show performed by Tammy Faye Starlite. With Sarah Thyre she created the “Something Cool” podcast which covered underappreciated artists and comedians. As an outgrowth of her work on that podcast, she co-produced a tribute concert called Ode to Bobbie Gentry: Celebrating a Living Legend in 2018 with Tara Murtha. Eric Zorn from the Chicago Tribune called her one of the funniest people on Twitter in 2014. References External links Personal website Living people Place of birth missing (living people) The Monkees American directors American music video directors
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Antanas Gaušas (24 December 1901 – 15 March 1964) was a Lithuanian military person, who since 1937 was Colonel of the General Staff. Interwar Lithuanian Army In January 1919, Gaušas enlisted in the Lithuanian Armed Forces as a volunteer. In 1919 he graduated from the War School of Kaunas, in 1922 from the Higher Officers' Courses, in 1926 from the Panevėžys Forest Technical School, in 1933 from the Prague General Staff Academy. Gaušas participated in the Lithuanian Wars of Independence with the Polish Armed Forces in 1920. In 1923 he led the liquidation of Polish partisan gangs operating in the Širvintos District Municipality. In 1923–31 he was company commander. On 17 December 1926, Gaušas took part in the events of the 1926 Lithuanian coup d'état which resulted in removal of President Kazys Grinius from the office and Antanas Smetona was chosen as his replacement by the army. Since 1931 he worked at the Chief of Staff, since August 1934 he was the head of the department. Since November 1936 Gaušas was commander of the 9th Infantry Regiment, since January 1937 he also was commander of the Marijampolė garrison. Occupation and World War II On 15 June 1940, during the Soviet occupation of Lithuania in 1940, the 9th Infantry Regiment commanded by Gaušas withdrew towards the German border with a task to assist the departure of President Antanas Smetona abroad and if necessary confront the occupying Red Army with a gun, however a delegation sent by the Prime Minister Antanas Merkys convinced Gaušas and the regiment was returned to the barracks. On 16 June 1940 Gaušas was dismissed from the position of the regiment's commander and on 19 June 1940 – from the army. Seeking to avoid his arrest, Gaušas went into hiding from 22 June 1940 to 1941. Since March 1942 Gaušas was Commander of the Border Guard of the Interior Management, since January 1943 – Panevėžys County Governor. Emigration In 1944 Gaušas left for Germany, in 1949 he emigrated to the United States. On 15 March 1964 he died in the Billings Hospital in Chicago due to a heart disease. References 1901 births 1964 deaths Lithuanian emigrants to the United States Lithuanian Army officers
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The Hôtel Goblet d'Alviella (, ) is a hôtel particulier designed by Octave van Rysselberghe on Rue Faider/Faiderstraat in Saint-Gilles, Brussels, Belgium. It is the first major realization by Van Rysselberghe, who himself lived here until 1888. After that, the client, Count Eugène Goblet d'Alviella, professor, liberal member of parliament and freemason, moved in. History The building, with a strong Renaissance influence, was built in 1882 and is decorated with sgraffiti. It was the first time these were applied on a large scale in Brussels. They were drawn by sculptor Julien Dillens and executed by architect Jean Baes. The sgrafitti are four. Under the entablature of the two large windows, each has a narrow acanthus motif. Above it, a water-themed frieze depicts Triton and a siren surrounded by dolphins and putti. Between the columns is an allegory of architecture (plumb in hand and foot resting on a piece of Ionic column). The medallion between the windows is by Dillens and represents Minerva. The text τεχνων εραστρια means 'she who loves art'. Under the cornice is a Venetian loggia. Between the columns are six blue tinted stained glass windows with geometric motifs. The building is currently occupied by a private school. Gallery References External links Hôtel Goblet d'Alviella at monument.heritage.brussels Houses in Belgium City of Brussels Octave van Rysselberghe buildings Houses completed in 1882
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Jane Tapsubei Creider (born 1940s) is a Kenyan writer of memoir, fiction, and non-fiction, including articles and books co-authored with her husband Chet. A. Creider on the Nandi language. She is also an artist. Background She had a traditional upbringing as a Nandi and grew up in Kenya near Lake Nyanza (formerly Lake Victoria), then after working in Kisumu and Nairobi she moved to live in Canada. Her work as a writer include articles, short stories, a novel and memoir, her first book being the autobiography Two Lives: My Spirit and I, published in 1986. Two Lives tells of her upbringing as a member of the Nandi tribe, being educated by Christian missionaries, going to live in North America, before eventually marrying a Canadian professor: "The autobiography articulates two main cultural models of identity: the traditional Nandi identity, which is constituted by the spirit world of the ancestors and the extended family, and the autonomous individual, which is a European import into African culture. ... In creating the story of her life, Creider almost inadvertently shows how the contacts between two sometimes incommensurable models of identity have produced out of both modern and traditional materials the nomadic trickster/ethnographer she has become." Creider's writing has been included in collections such as Daughters of Africa (1992), edited by Margaret Busby, and Fiery Spirits (1995), edited by Ayanna Black. Selected writings Two Lives: My Spirit and I – autobiography (London: The Women's Press, 1986) A Grammar of Nandi (with Chet A. Creider; Hamburg, 1989) The Shrunken Dream – novel (Toronto, 1993) A Dictionary of the Nandi Language (2001) References Further reading Ng'eny, Elizabeth C., "The Depiction of Women Characters in Jane Tapsubei Creider's Novel, The Shrunken Dream: Transcending the Conventional Roles of Traditional Society", University of Nairobi, Kenya, 2010. Year of birth missing (living people) 20th-century women writers 21st-century women writers Kenyan women novelists Kenyan writers 20th-century lexicographers 21st-century lexicographers Canadian lexicographers Women lexicographers Canadian ethnographers Canadian women memoirists
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MovieTelevision is a Canadian entertainment news series, which aired on Citytv from 1988 to 2006. The series aired reports on film, including interviews with actors and filmmakers, preview clips of upcoming films and coverage of film-related events such as the Toronto International Film Festival. The series was launched in 1988 as a replacement for the network's longrunning talk show City Lights. It was initially cohosted by Brian Linehan and Jeanne Beker, with its title and format patterned on Citytv's FashionTelevision. However, Linehan was dissatisfied with the format, as it left him with far less time to conduct the in-depth interviews with actors which had been his specialty on City Lights, and he left the show after the first season. Terry David Mulligan joined the show in the second season as a correspondent from Vancouver, but was not officially billed as a full cohost of the show at the time. For a while in the mid-1990s the show was billed as a "hostless" format, with nobody officially serving as the primary host of the program but both Beker and Mulligan continuing to report as correspondents; in later years, however, Beker and Mulligan were again billed as full co-hosts. After joining Citytv as an entertainment reporter, Traci Melchor also sometimes appeared as a correspondent in the mid-1990s. Following the launch of Citytv's entertainment news sister station Star! in 1999, the series was added to that channel's schedule. In addition to new episodes, Star! also reran older episodes under the title Best of MovieTelevision. The series was also syndicated, both to other Canadian television stations and internationally. The series ceased production at the end of the 2005-06 television season, in advance of the network's sale to Rogers Media. References 1988 Canadian television series debuts 2006 Canadian television series endings 1980s Canadian television news shows 1990s Canadian television news shows 2000s Canadian television news shows Entertainment news shows in Canada Citytv original programming Canadian motion picture television series
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The 2022 Hartford Athletic season is the club's fourth season of existence and their fourth in the USL Championship, the second tier of American soccer. Hartford Athletic will also play in the U.S. Open Cup for the second time in club history. Transfers Pre-season In Out Roster Competitions Exhibitions USL Championship Regular season U.S. Open Cup See also Hartford Athletic 2022 in American soccer 2022 USL Championship season References Hartford Athletic Hartford Athletic Hartford Athletic Hartford Athletic
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Mark William Kramer is an American journalist, author, professor, and editor. Career Mark Kramer is the author of four books of narrative journalism, and has written for National Geographic, The New York Times Magazine, and The Atlantic monthly. He is the co-editor of two textbooks in the field of narrative journalism. He was the founding director of the Nieman program on narrative Journalism at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University, and the power of narrative conference (1998–2008). He has been writer in residence at Smith College (1980–1990) and Boston University (1990–2001). Publications Travels With a Hungry Bear: a Journey to the Russian Heartland Houghton Mifflin, 1996 Mother Walter and the Pig Tragedy Knopf, 1972 Three Farms: Making Milk, Meat, and Money from the American Soil Atlantic/Little Brown, 1980; Bantam, 1981; Harvard University Press, 1987 Invasive Procedures: A Year in the World of Two Surgeons. Harper & Row, 1982; Penguin, 1983 Literary Journalism. Ballantine, 1995 Telling True Stories: A Nonfiction Writer's Guide from the Nieman Foundation at Harvard University. Plume/Penguin, 2007 References Year of birth missing (living people) American writers Living people
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Jan-Niclas Gesenhues (born 12 February 1990) is a German politician. Gesenhues became a member of the Bundestag in the 2021 German federal election. He is affiliated with the Alliance 90/The Greens party. References External links Living people 1990 births Politicians from Karlsruhe 21st-century German politicians Members of the Bundestag for Alliance 90/The Greens Members of the Bundestag 2021–2025
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Cyperus alaticaulis is a species of sedge that is native to Queensland in Australia. See also List of Cyperus species References alaticaulis Flora of Queensland Plants described in 2009
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Reece Howden (born 12 July 1998) is a Canadian freestyle skier who competes internationally in the ski cross discipline. Career Junior At the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, Howden won the gold medal in the ski cross event and was Canada's flagbearer during the closing ceremony. Senior Howden won his first World Cup race in 2020, his rookie season. Howden would go on to win the crystal globe, awarded to the overall points leader per discipline for the 2020–21 FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup season. During the season Howden won four races, and had two other podium finishes. Howden had a fifth-place finish at the 2021 World Championships. On January 24, 2022, Howden was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. References External links 1998 births Living people Canadian male freestyle skiers People from Chilliwack Sportspeople from British Columbia Freestyle skiers at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Canada Youth Olympic gold medalists for Canada
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River's End: California's Latest Water War is a 2021 American documentary film written and directed by Jacob Morrison. It follows the competition over California's limited water resources amid worsening droughts, as well as the decline of freshwater ecosystems in the California Delta. The documentary draws parallels to the California water wars featured in the 1974 film Chinatown. The film had its world premiere at the 2021 Wild & Scenic Film Festival on January 14, 2021, where it won the Jury Award and People's Choice Award. It then played at the International Wildlife Film Festival where it won its category. It was released on video on demand by Giant Pictures on November 2, 2021. It received acclaim from critics, with praise for its story, interviews, cinematography, animation, and subject matter. Plot The film explores the struggle over California's limited freshwater resources during recent periods of drought, with particular focus on the expansion of almond groves in the Westlands Water District. The film explores the connection between increased water use for agriculture, and the decline of freshwater ecosystems in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta. The documentary also draws parallels between the construction of the Los Angeles Aqueduct during the historic California water wars, and the now proposed conveyance tunnels in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. Cast Narrated by DeLanna Studi Subjects include (but are not limited to): Peter Gleick Bettina Boxall Richard White (historian) Jared Huffman Tom McClintock George Miller (California politician) Reception The film received positive reviews from critics. Film Threat gave the film a 9/10 rating, writing that River's End "…effectively uses beautiful scenic photography, well-executed interviews, archival footage, and helpful animation." New Scientist also praised the film, stating that "River’s End provides a thorough overview of California’s water issues and the need to achieve a sustainable water supply." Counterpunch wrote, " I urge you to see this timely, very important, indeed, great film: River’s End." National Observer (Canada) gave the film a positive review, writing, "This is a documentary with a bite... anybody who buys produce from California, basically, most of us, should be interested." The film was included in several end-of-year lists as one of the best environmental films of 2021. References 2021 documentary films
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The Josh Allen–Patrick Mahomes rivalry is a series of games played since 2020 between two quarterbacks in the National Football League (NFL): Josh Allen and Patrick Mahomes. The rivalry has drawn comparisons to that of Tom Brady and Peyton Manning. The most famous game in the rivalry so far has been the 2021 AFC Divisional Round Game. Background Allen has played for the Buffalo Bills since 2018, when he was the 7th pick in the first round of the 2018 NFL Draft. Allen has since been the Bills starting quarterback amassing a record of 39–21 in the regular season. He has also led the Bills to three playoff appearances, with a record of 3–3, and broken several Bills franchise passing and rushing records, primarily in his breakout 2020 season where he passed for 37 touchdowns and scored 46 in total. Mahomes was drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs with 10th pick in the 2017 NFL Draft, and he has been with the Chiefs ever since. Mahomes was the backup to then Chiefs quarterback Alex Smith in his first year. He made his first career start against the Denver Broncos in 2017. Smith was traded the next month and Mahomes was the new Kansas City quarterback. In his first full year as a starter, Mahomes threw 50 touchdowns and he won the NFL MVP. He followed that up the next year by winning Super Bowl LIV 31–20. In four seasons as the Chiefs starting quarterback, Mahomes has a record of 50–13 in the regular season and 8–2 in the playoffs. Both quarterbacks are renowned for their arm strength while throwing the football, in addition to their mobile styles of play — though they are both pass-first quarterbacks, Allen and Mahomes have both demonstrated the ability to effectively scramble in the pocket, escape pressure, and even run with the ball when called upon. Rivalry Allen and Mahomes have played each other four times, with Mahomes leading the all-time series 3–1. They have met twice in the playoffs, with Mahomes winning both games. While both were starting quarterbacks since , they did not have their first meeting until the regular season, in which Mahomes' Chiefs defeated Allen's Bills 26–17 in Buffalo. They would later meet in the AFC Championship game, which the Chiefs won 38–24, sending them to their second consecutive Super Bowl. In the 2021 AFC Divisional Round Game, Allen threw for four touchdowns and 329 yards while Mahomes threw for three touchdowns and 378 yards. The final two minutes saw 25 points scored between the teams, including 10 points in the final 13 seconds. The Chiefs won the coin toss and they quickly scored a touchdown to win the game 42–36. The game was an instant classic and it sparked the rivalry between Allen and Mahomes. Results |- | | style="| | Buffalo | | |-style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2020 playoffs | style="| | | | AFC Championship Game. First postseason meeting. Chiefs lose Super Bowl LV. |- | | style="| | Kansas City | | |- style="background:#f2f2f2; font-weight:bold;" | 2021 playoffs | style="| | Kansas City | | AFC Divisional Round. The two teams combined for 25 points in the final two minutes of regulation. Bills score a go-ahead touchdown with 13 seconds remaining to take 36–33 lead, but Mahomes drives Chiefs into field goal range to tie the game, eventually winning in overtime. |- |- | Regular season | | | | |- | Postseason | style="| | | | AFC Divisional playoffs: 2021. AFC Championship Game: 2020. |- | Regular and postseason | style="| | | | |- Notes References 2020 beginnings 2020s in North American sport 2020s in the United States Buffalo Bills Individual rivalries in sports Kansas City Chiefs National Football League rivalries Sports rivalries in the United States
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Kakang Rudianto (born February 2, 2003) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Liga 1 club Persib Bandung. Club career Persib Bandung He was signed for Persib Bandung to played in Liga 1 on 2021 season. Kakang made his first-team debut on 29 January 2022 in a match against Persikabo 1973 at the Ngurah Rai Stadium, Denpasar. He also scored his first goal for the team in 22th minute. Career statistics Club Notes References External links Kakang Rudianto at Soccerway Kakang Rudianto at Liga Indonesia 2003 births Living people Indonesian footballers Persib Bandung players Association football defenders Indonesia youth international footballers
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Cyperus longifolius is a species of sedge that is native to the islands of the east coast of Africa in the western Indian Ocean. See also List of Cyperus species References longifolius Taxa named by Jean Louis Marie Poiret Plants described in 1806 Flora of Madagascar Flora of Mauritius Flora of Réunion
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The 1939 Copa Ibarguren was the 16th. edition of this national cup of Argentina. It was contested by the champions of both competitions, Primera División and Torneo del Litoral crowned during 1939. Independiente (Primera División champion) faced Central Córdoba de Rosario (champion of "Torneo del Litoral") at San Lorenzo de Almagro's venue, Estadio Gasómetro, in the Boedo neighborhood of Buenos Aires, on March 31, 1940, Independiente easily defeted Central Córdoba 5–0 winning their second consecutive Copa Ibarguren trophy. Qualified teams Match details Notes References Club Atlético Independiente matches 1939 in Argentine football 1939 in South American football
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Get to the Heart: My Story is the autobiography of American singer, musician and actress Barbara Mandrell. The book was released in 1990 by Bantam Books. It was written by Mandrell, along with George Vecsey. Background Get to the Heart: My Story chronicles Barbara Mandrell's life and career in the music industry. It details her childhood years and growing up in as a child performer in country music. It also details her rise to adulthood success in the music field and her popular television series in the early 1980s. The book also discusses Mandrell's 1984 car accident which also involved her two children. The book also discusses her life following the accident and the decisions she made following that. The book was co-written with writer George Vecsey, who was previously known for his contributions to Loretta Lynn's 1976 autobiography titled Coal Miner's Daughter. The book totals to 392 pages. Release and reception Get to the Heart: My Story was released in paperback form in 1990. It was published by Bantam Books. The autobiography placed on The New York Times Best Seller list following its release. According to Rick Koster's Texas Music, Mandrell's autobiography remained on the best-sellers list for several months following its release. Following its release, Get to the Heart received mixed reviews. Publishers Weekly commented that "The narrative style complements the Nashville star's image as 'Miss Goody Two Shoes.'" Meanwhile, Louise Titchener of The Washington Post found that Mandrell "gabs non-stop" throughout the book but praised her honesty when discussing experiences such as her 1984 car accident: "Like a steel rod running through whipped cream, the accident and its ramifications give Mandrell's story weight. They also create opportunities for her to make some surprising revelations." References External links Get to the Heart: My Story at Amazon 1990 non-fiction books American autobiographies Books about singers Music autobiographies
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A number of sportspeople eligible for the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing stated that they would not attend because of the COVID-19 pandemic in China. In the case of some sports, media speculated that some absentees were unenthusiastic about competing in any case and used COVID-19 as a convenient excuse. List Qualified but withdrew due to COVID-19 concerns Qualified but withdrew due to testing positive for COVID-19 See also List of athletes not attending the 2020 Summer Olympics due to COVID-19 concerns List of athletes not attending the 2020 Summer Paralympics due to COVID-19 concerns List of athletes not attending the 2016 Summer Olympics due to Zika virus concerns References Lists of competitors at the 2022 Winter Olympics
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Precious Cornerstone University is a Nigerian Private University founded in 2017 and located in Ibadan, Oyo State in Nigeria. The institution is established by the sword of the Spirit Ministries, a popular Pentecostal church in Ibadan, Oyo State, a church presided by Francis Wale Oke who also happens to be the Chancellor of Precious Cornerstone University. Academic Division The institution of higher learning established in 2017 currently houses two faculties. The faculties are: Faculty of Pure and Applied Sciences Faculty of Social And Management Sciences Vice Chancellor The vice-chancellor of Precious Cornerstone University is Professor Julius Kola Oloke, who also doubles as the pioneer vice-chancellor of the higher institution of learning. The vice-chancellor in 2021 inaugurated the pioneer student union leaders for the institution while also enjoining them to be of good conduct within and outside the institution of learning. Achievement Following the establishment of Precious Cornerstone University in 2017, the institution had its pioneer matriculation ceremony in 2019 and the school matriculated 78 pioneer students into the institution on the set date. In the 2020–2021 academic session, the institution also collaborated with some bodies to execute some projects, some of the bodies are the Robotics and Artificial Intelligence in Nigeria, the Oyo state government, the University of Lincoln on Higher Education in Nigeria amongst others. References Universities and colleges in Nigeria Christian universities and colleges in Nigeria Educational institutions established in 2017
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Dmitrii Abramovich Raikov (Russian: , born 11 November 1905 in Odessa; died 1980 in Moscow) was a Russian mathematician who studied functional analysis. Raikov studied in Odessa and Moscow, graduating in 1929. He was secretary of the Komsomol at Moscow State University and was active in the 1929–1930 campaign against the mathematician Dmitri Fyodorovich Egorov. At that time he and his fellow campaigners also rejected non-applied research, but this soon changed. In 1933, he was dismissed from the Communist Party on charges of Trotskyism and exiled to Voronezh, but was rehabilitated two years later and returned to Moscow. From 1938 to 1948, he was at the Mathematical Institute of the Academy of Sciences and in the Second World War in the militia. He was habilitated (Russian doctorate) in 1941 with Aleksandr Yakovlevich Khinchin at the Lomonosov University and in 1950 became professor. He taught at the Pedagogical Institute in Kostroma and from 1952 in Shuysky, before he taught from 1957 at the State Pedagogical University in Moscow. He also supervised students and taught at Lomonosov University. Israel Gelfand and Raikov's 1943 theorem states that a locally compact group is completely determined by its (possibly infinite-dimensional) irreducible unitary representations: for every two elements of there is an irreducible unitary representation with . He also worked on probability theory, for example in 1938 he proved an equivalent of the Cramér's theorem for the Poisson distribution. He edited the Russian editions of Nicolas Bourbaki's "Topology and Integration Theory" and translated numerous other mathematical works from Italian, English and German, for example the lectures on the theory of algebraic numbers by Erich Hecke, the book Moderne Algebra by Bartel Leendert van der Waerden, the Problems and Theorems from Analysis by George Pólya and Gábor Szegő, the introduction to the theory of Fourier integrals by Edward Charles Titchmarsh, the lectures on partial differential equations by Francesco Tricomi, the introduction to differential and integral calculus by Edmund Landau, the monograph on divergent series by Godfrey Harold Hardy and the finite dimensional vector spaces by Paul Halmos. Works with Israel Moiseevich Gelfand, Georgi Evgen'evich Shilov: Kommutative normierte Algebren (Commutative normalized algebras). Berlin, Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften, 1964 (first Russian, 1960). with Gelfand: Commutative normalized rings (Russian). Uspekhi Mat. Nauka, 1946 Vector spaces. Groningen, Netherlands: P. Noordhoff, 1965 (first in Russian, 1962). with Michail Šamšonovič Calenko [Михаил Шамшонович Цаленко], Vladimir Borisovich Gisin [Владимир Борисович Гисин]: Ordered categories with involution. Warsaw, Mathematical Institute of the Academy of Sciences. 1984. One-dimensional mathematical analysis (Russian). Moscow, 1982. with E. Gusatinskaia: Analyse mathématique multidimensionnelle. Moscow: MIR, 1993 (first as Multidimensional Mathematical Analysis (Russian). Moscow, 1989). with Ilya Nikolaevich Bronshtein: Справочник по елементарнои математике, механике и физике (Russian) [Handbook of elementary mathematics, mechanics and physics]. Moscow, 1943. with Boris Nikolayevich Delaunay: Analytical Geometry (Russian). 2 volumes, Moscow, 1948, 1949. References External links mathnet.ru 20th-century Russian mathematicians Moscow State University faculty
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The Sou'wester 51 CC is an American sailboat that was designed by McCurdy & Rhodes as a racer-cruiser and first built in 1986. The Sou'wester 51 CC is a center cockpit development of the Sou'wester 51. Production The design was built by Hinckley Yachts in the United States, starting in 1986, but it is now out of production. Design The Sou'wester 51 CC is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim. It has a masthead sloop rig; a raked stem; a raised counter, angled transom, a rudder controlled by a wheel and a fixed fin keel with a retractable centerboard. A fin keel and a shoal draft Sheel keel were both factory options. The boat displaces and carries of lead ballast. The boat has a draft of with the centerboard extended and with it retracted, allowing operation in shallow water. It is fitted with a inboard engine for docking and maneuvering. The design has sleeping accommodation for eight people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin, an "U"-shaped settee with a drop-down table and a straight settee in the main cabin and two aft cabins with a double berth on the starboard side and a single berth on the port side. The galley is located on the starboard side just aft of the companionway ladder. The galley is equipped with a three-burner stove, an ice box and a double sink. A navigation station is opposite the galley, on the port side. There are two heads, one just aft of the bow cabin on the port side and one on the port side in the aft cabin. Both have showers. The design has a hull speed of . See also List of sailing boat types References Keelboats 1980s sailboat type designs Sailing yachts Sailboat type designs by McCurdy & Rhodes Sailboat types built by Hinckley Yachts
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Thunstrom, Thunström, Thunstrøm, is a Swedish surname. It may also be spelled as Thunstroem, Thunstrœm, Thunstrem, Thunstrohm, Thunstroom, Thunstroum. People with this surname include: Allie Thunstrom (born 1988), U.S. ice hockey player Frida Svedin Thunström (born 1989), Swedish ice hockey player Olle Thunstrom, Swedish saxophonist; member of Beat Funktion See also Thun (disambiguation) Strom (disambiguation)
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The 2000 Tour de Corse (formally the 44th V-Rally Tour de Corse - Rallye de France) was the 11th round of the 2000 World Rally Championship. The race was held over three days between 29 September and 1 October 2000. Peugeot's Gilles Panizzi won the race, his 1st win in the World Rally Championship. Results References External links Results at ewrc-results.com Tour de Corse Tour de Corse
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Muhammad Syafril Lestaluhu (born April 12, 1998) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Liga 1 club Persib Bandung. Club career Persib Bandung He was signed for Persib Bandung to played in Liga 1 on 2021 season. Syafril made his first-team debut on 29 January 2022 in a match against Persikabo 1973 as a substitute for Beckham Putra in the 90+3rd minute at the Ngurah Rai Stadium, Denpasar. Career statistics Club Notes References External links Syafril Lestaluhu at Soccerway Syafril Lestaluhu at Liga Indonesia 1998 births Living people Indonesian footballers Persib Bandung players Association football midfielders
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Sophronia Farrington Cone (1801-1880) was a teacher, artist, and one of the first single female missionaries from America to Africa when she helped found a mission in Liberia in 1834. Farrington was born in Concord, New Hampshire, in 1801 and grew up in Herkimer, New York. She enrolled at the Cazenovia Seminary in 1825 and left in 1828 to attend the female seminary in Utica, New York. Farrington then taught at a school in Onondaga, New York, and the female seminary in Salem, Massachusetts. In 1843 she sailed to Liberia and became the first single female missionary to go to Africa, working with the Young Men's Missionary Society of Boston at the first foreign mission established by the Methodist Episcopal Church. Pastor Melville Cox arrived first and helped to found the College of West Africa, but Cox died shortly after arriving, of the "African fever". Farrington arrived shortly after Cox and taught at the school. Farrington almost died from the fever herself but recovered, and stayed behind in Liberia after the other missionaries left. The local residents were impressed by her artwork and teaching. In 1851 Miss Farrington married Mr. George Cone, of Utica, New York. She died in 1880. References Methodist missionaries in Liberia People from Utica, New York People from Concord, New Hampshire American expatriates in Liberia
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David "Dave" Ziegler (born September 7, 1977) is an American football executive who is general manager of the Las Vegas Raiders of the National Football League (NFL). Ziegler previously served in various roles for the New England Patriots eventually rising to the role of director of player personnel. Ziegler began his NFL career as a player personnel assistant with the Denver Broncos before serving in the scouting department for the Patriots from 2013 to 2021. Early years A native of Tallmadge, Ohio, Ziegler played college football at John Carroll University as a wide receiver, kick returner and punt returner. He was teammates with Houston Texans' general manager Nick Caserio, Las Vegas Raiders' head coach Josh McDaniels and New York Giants quarterbacks coach Jerry Schuplinski. Executive career Denver Broncos In 2010, Ziegler began his career with the Denver Broncos as a player personnel assistant. In 2011, he was promoted to area scout and to pro scout in 2012. New England Patriots In 2013, Ziegler was hired by the New England Patriots as their assistant director of pro scouting, a position he held until 2015. In 2016, he was promoted to director of pro personnel. In 2020, Ziegler was promoted to assistant director of player personnel. In 2021, he was promoted to director of player personnel, replacing Nick Caserio following his departure to become the general manager of the Houston Texans. Las Vegas Raiders On January 30, 2022, Ziegler was named the general manager of the Las Vegas Raiders, replacing Mike Mayock. Personal life Ziegler and his wife, Carissa, have three children. They currently reside in Foxborough, Massachusetts. References External links Las Vegas Raiders profile 1977 births Living people American football wide receivers Denver Broncos scouts John Carroll Blue Streaks football players Las Vegas Raiders executives National Football League general managers New England Patriots executives New England Patriots scouts People from Tallmadge, Ohio
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The Chapter General of the Order of Malta is the legislative body of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. Article 22 of the Constitution describes it as "the supreme assembly of the Order." It meets every five years, mostly recently on 1-2 May 2019. Membership The Chapter General is made up of the following members: the Grand Master who presides (or the Lieutenant ad interim or the Lieutenant of the Grand Master if there is no Grand Master,); the other ten members of the Sovereign Council; the Prelate; the six Priors (or the Procurator, Vicar, or Lieutenant, if the office of Prior is vacant); the Professed Bailiffs; two Professed Knights elected by the Chapter of each Priory (a Knight in Obedience may be substituted for one of the Professed Knights); a Professed Knight and a Knight in Obedience delegated by the Knights in gremio religionis (i.e. those not holding membership in any Priory or Sub-Priory); five Regents of the Sub-Priories, elected from the six Regents; fifteen representatives of the Associations, elected by the Presidents of the Associations; the six members of the Government Council. Meetings The Chapter General normally meets every five years. It can also meet: when the Grand Master, having heard the Sovereign Council, may think fit; when a majority of the Priories, Sub-priories and Associations make an application to the Grand Master. The Chapter General met most recently 1-2 May 2019 with 62 members. Its previous meetings were 30-31 May 2014 with 61 members, 8 June 2009 with sixty members, and 4-6 June 2004. An Extraordinary Chapter General was held 28-30 April 1997 for the revision of the Constitutional Charter and Code. Responsibilities The Chapter General has the following responsibilities: electing the four High Officers (Grand Commander, Grand Chancellor, Grand Hospitaller, Receiver of the Common Treasure) electing the other six members of the Sovereign Council electing the members of the Government Council electing the members of the Board of Auditors making amendments to the Constitution (by a two-thirds vote) making amendments to the Code (amendments to articles 6-93 also require a majority vote by the Knights of Justice who are members of the Chapter General) Structure before 1798 Before the French invasion of Malta in 1798, the Chapter General had a slightly different composition and a somewhat different form of working. The members included: the Grand Master the Bishop of Malta the Prior of the Conventual Church of Saint John the Conventual Bailiffs the Priors the Capitular Bailiffs the Bailiffs ad honores a Procurator for each Langue a Procurator for each Provincial Chapter. Since it was considered that this body was too numerous for creating and establishing laws, the members of the Chapter General divided into the eight Langues. The members in each Langue then elected two of their number to form the Sixteen. The Sixteen were joined at their meetings by the Procurator of the Grand Master, the Vice-Chancellor, and the Secretary of the Treasury. Each meeting of the Chapter General lasted fifteen days; the Sixteen could extend this term for an additional eight days. The Code did not fix a particular frequency for meetings of the Chapter General. Instead, at the end of each meeting, a date was set for the next meeting. The Chapter General of 1631 ordered that the next meeting take place in 1641, but in fact it did not occur until 1776. Notes Sovereign Military Order of Malta
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Intense Tropical Cyclone Batsirai was a deadly tropical cyclone which heavily impacted Madagascar in February 2022, becoming the strongest tropical cyclone to strike Madagascar since Cyclone Enawo in 2017. It made landfall two weeks after Tropical Storm Ana brought deadly floods to the island country in late January. The second tropical disturbance, the first tropical cyclone, and the first intense tropical cyclone of the 2021–22 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Batsirai originated from a tropical disturbance that was first noted on 24 January 2022. It fluctuated in intensity and became a moderate tropical storm on 27 January 2022, after which it unexpectedly rapidly intensified into an intense tropical cyclone. It then weakened and struggled to intensify through the coming days due to present wind shear and dry air, where it weakened after some time. Afterward, it entered much more favorable conditions, rapidly intensified yet again to a high-end Category 4 cyclone on the Saffir–Simpson scale while moving towards Madagascar. The storm underwent an eyewall replacement cycle the next day, and fluctuated in intensity before making landfall in Madagascar as a Category 3 cyclone, later rapidly weakening due to the mountainous terrain on the island. Mauritius and Réunion both experienced damage from the storm, though the effects were relatively minor. 123 deaths—121 in Madagascar and 2 in Mauritius—were reported due to Batsirai, and damage assessments are still continuing. As the storm approached, Madagascar prepared recovery supplies, with worries of significant flooding due to the more barren geography of the country. The United Nations supported preparation and relief efforts for after the storm as well, since millions were expected to be affected by it. Batsirai made landfall in the country early on 5 February, bringing heavy impacts and majorly disrupting power and communication throughout the affected areas. Entire towns were devastated, with thousands of structures being damaged or destroyed. After the storm passed, thousands of people evacuated to temporary shelters. Batsirai has left at least 112,000 displaced, and 124,000 homes affected. Meteorological history The origins of Cyclone Batsirai were from an area of convection which was designated as Invest 96S over the eastern part of the basin on 23 January, located approximately from the Cocos Islands. The disturbance was also located within a marginally favourable environment for further development, with high levels of vertical wind shear, being offset by warm sea surface temperatures of around 29–30 °C (84–86 °F). The Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) gave a low chance for potential cyclogenesis within the next 24 hours. A day later at 00:30 UTC, the agency upgraded the probability to medium after the system gradually improved its convective pattern. Later at 21:30 UTC the same day, the agency issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) for Invest 96S, after noting its obscure low-level circulation center. Meanwhile, at midday of 25 January, the Météo-France La Réunion (MFR) recognized the same low pressure system and later upgraded it to tropical disturbance status at 06:00 UTC the next day. According to them, the system's convection had shown signs of gradual organization since 24 January. The center had become better defined with low-level clouds converging towards it in a defined circular pattern, suggesting that a closed circulation had formed. The MFR further upgraded it to a tropical depression at 12:00 UTC the same day, as it continued to improve its convective structure along its low-level center. After its convective activity was briefly interrupted after 18:00 UTC due to dry air, The JTWC subsequently initiated advisories on the system and classified it as Tropical Cyclone 08S at 03:00 UTC the next day. Three hours later, the MFR reported that the system had become a moderate tropical storm, and the Mauritius Meteorological Services named it Batsirai. Between 06:00 UTC and 12:00 UTC, Batsirai underwent rapid deepening and intensified from a moderate tropical storm to an intense tropical cyclone within a span of three hours. According to the MFR, it was favoured by the very small size of the system and its fast movement. It had also established an inner core in diameter. Two hours later, the JTWC also upgraded it to a Category 2 tropical cyclone on the Saffir–Simpson scale, as it developed a small eye at about in diameter. However, by 18:00 UTC, it started to rapidly decline after its eye quickly collapsed and the cloud tops had warmed. Because of these reasons, the MFR downgraded it to a tropical cyclone. At midnight of 28 January, it was further downgraded to a moderate tropical storm, after further weakening of the convective structure. Three hours later, the JTWC downgraded it back to a tropical storm status. Batsirai resumed its intensification after being upgraded to a severe tropical storm at 06:00 UTC the next day. Nine hours later, the JTWC upgraded it to a Category 1 tropical cyclone. At 03:00 UTC on 30 January, the JTWC further upgraded it to a Category 2 tropical cyclone after noting a well-defined central dense overcast and a microwave eye feature. The MFR further upgraded it to tropical cyclone status at midday. Three hours later, the JTWC upgraded it to a Category 3 tropical cyclone, as its eyewall had expanded and also developed a wide pinhole-eye. However, this was short-lived, and it weakened to Category 1 status by 03:00 UTC on 1 February, as its pinhole-shaped eye collapsed and its eyewall became disorganized, possibly due to the influence of increasing vertical wind shear. At 15:00 UTC the same day, however, it made a comeback to a Category 2 status, as it managed to consolidate and its eye feature re-appeared on satellite imagery. Three hours later, the MFR upgraded it to a intense tropical cyclone. By 03:00 UTC on 2 February, the cyclone underwent another round of rapid intensification, intensifying from a Category 2 to a Category 4 tropical cyclone. Its eyewall rapidly organized and also developed a wide eye. After reaching its peak at 12:00 UTC, satellite imagery depicted the formation of another eyewall and signs of weakening. It weakened to a Category 3 system during this time. After completing the eyewall replacement cycle, the storm again briefly intensified into a Category 4 system, with MFR determining that Batsirai's central barometric pressure had rapidly fallen to 934 hPa (mbar; 27.58 inHg). It weakened again to a Category 3 system, though it still maintained its overall convective structure. Gradually weakening due to land interaction with Madagascar, it made landfall at 17:30 UTC on 5 February close to the city of Nosy Varika. MFR declared that Batsirai had degenerated into an overland depression, with the JTWC downgrading it to a tropical storm. The system entered into the Mozambique Channel, and the MFR re-upgraded the system to a moderate tropical storm. By 7 February, it weakened into a remnant low before transitioning into a post-tropical cyclone. Despite fluctuating convective activity, high wind shear, and low sea surface temperatures, due to baroclinic forces, the MFR upgraded the system to a moderate tropical storm once more. It then underwent subtropical transition according to the JTWC, with the agency ceasing advisories on the system on 15:00 UTC of 8 February. MFR issued their last advisory on the storm on 8 February as it again transitioned into a post-tropical cyclone, with the system being last noted on 11 February. Preparations Mauritius A class IV cyclone warning was issued on 2 February as Batsirai neared the island. Madagascar The landfall area of Batsirai was projected to accumulate up to of rainfall. The country's capital, Antananarivo, was predicted to have of rainfall. Search and Rescue teams were deployed in Brickaville, Manakara, and Morondava. The START Network set aside $567,000 to provide assistance. Emergency stock lists were updated by HCT members and help restock humanitarian items. The country's government's disaster management agency worked with UNOSAT as well, and aerial assistance was also prepared as Batsirai approached. Extensive flooding in the east, southeast, and central highlands and major damage were anticipated. The storm was also expected to cause more damage than usual due to the deforestation the country experienced in the last 20 years. The third largest city in the nation, Antsirabe, was forecasted to receive in excess of of rainfall. Batsirai was expected to worsen food scarcities and emergencies in the country. Schools were closed on 4 February, and residents in low-lying and coastal areas were advised to leave. The storm was also feared to hamper the relief effects of Tropical Storm Ana weeks before. A predicted 4.4 million people were expected to be affected by the storm across 14 districts, with 595,000 directly. More than 150,000 inhabitants were expected be displaced. The IFRC launched a fundraiser to help with potential victims of the storm. Waves of up to 15 m (50 ft) were forecasted as the storm closed in on the coast. The United Nations worked with aid agencies to help with preparedness and the aftermath. Humanitarian items were stockpiled, and rescue aircraft were put on standby. A spokesman for the UN's organization OCHA, stated the impact of Batsirai was expected to be "considerable". Impact Mauritius Along with the airport, all transport services were closed due to the impact. Wind gusts reached , and rain totalled in other areas of the island country. Two deaths were reported. Trees had been uprooted in many areas, and at least 7,500 homes faced power outages. A total of 138 people sought refuge in evacuation centers. The Mahébourg waterfront was damaged by large waves, with several chairs and tables swept into the sea. Réunion At least 36,000 people on the island lost power as Batsirai approached, with 10,000 still out on 7 February. Several people were injured, with the storm causing carbon monoxide poisoning in 10 people. Eleven sailors were stranded in an oil tanker during the storm, and were rescued on 4 February. Agricultural losses were estimated at €47 million ($53.3 million). Madagascar Communication was sparse initially when the storm made landfall. Batsirai's conditions caused power outages and forced many people to move into shelters. Trees fell and power grids were knocked out, as well as homes were destroyed. At least 112,000 people were displaced by the storm, with 91,000 left homeless. Several houses had their roofs completely blown away, and many large coconut palm trees were blown over. Some houses were reduced to just wooden frames, and a survivor said the damage resembled a "fire", and that it was the "strongest cyclone [anyone] had experienced". Mananjary and Manakara were particularly heavy hit, with the former having at least 26,000 displaced alone, and had its hospital and prison damaged as well. A large portion of Madagascar was still waterlogged from Ana weeks earlier, and the arrival of Batsirai worsened the effects. Nosy Varika was strongly damaged. An official described the damage as if they were "bombed", with 95% of buildings being reported as destroyed. Floods cut access to the town. Electric poles fell, and roofs were torn off in the city of Fianarantsoa, which was also heavily flooded. A landslide was caused by the cyclone in the region of Haute Matsiatra. Flooding and debris rendered 17 bridges and 17 roads impassable, as well as at least 69 classrooms completely destroyed, and 439 damaged; this left over 9,000 children unable to attend lessons, with 403 in Mananjary alone. After the storm passed, already flooded canals and rivers continued to rise. In Mananjary and surrounding areas, early reports indicated over 6,000 buildings were flooded, with half of them destroyed. The president of Madagascar, Andry Rajoelina, showed images of a church‘s metal roof twisted off, along other damage online after he visited Mananjary. Fruit trees and rice paddies were ripped and flooded in the town and other areas, hampering the harvest that was only two weeks away. The time it took to travel to the town by car was increased several days due to damage. Main roads linking the capital to smaller areas were cut off, making relief efforts even harder. The UNHAS aerial flight discovered that Fitovinany region mostly suffered flooding damage; with several communities taking heavy hits to their agriculture and infrastructure. In total, over 17,100 homes were damaged, with 7,488 destroyed, 2,714 partially, and 6,978 flooded. 53 health centers were damaged, along with 6 destroyed. In Ikongo alone, 87 people died. Collapsing homes killed people in their sleep. A member of parliament representing the district also said that people also drowned in flooded areas there as well. As of 13 February, 121 deaths have been reported, including 13 children, with 5 being under 12 years of age. Aftermath Mauritius A total of 454 people, in 182 affected families, sought shelter in 45 centers. They were all surveyed in order to give them the necessary help after the storm. The Minister of Social Integration, Social Security, and National Solidarity, Mrs. Fazila, Jeewa-Daureeawoo, made the announcement about the procedure on 7 February. Madagascar The impacts of Tropical Storm Ana were compounded by the damage that Batsirai brought. Schools and churches prepared to shelter those displaced around Mananjary. World Food Programme distributed hot meals to 4,000 evacuated and displaced people in shelters. Drinking water and basic necessities were lacking in impacted areas, and the spreading of several diseases was also a concern. A humanitarian crisis was also feared to rise out of the storms effects. Aerial rescue effort first took place on 6 February via an UNHAS flight. The Malagasy government provided households affected with monetary donations. UNICEF also supported relief efforts by giving out kits to create child-friendly spaces in several regions of the country. Other measures were taken to help decrease incidents inside of shelters as well. A team that initially consisted of five EU Civil Protection officials from France, Finland, and Sweden traveled to affected areas to help victims of the storm. The PRIOI had deployed 87 tons of humanitarian material from its warehouses in the country to use for relief efforts, an effort that cost approximately €667,000. An estimated 75,000 people—including 37,500 children—were in need of relief assistance after Batsirai. WASH partners delivered items to Vatovavy, Fitovinany, and Atsimo Atisinanana regions. International response France and Germany have offered water purification modules via the EU Civil Protection Mechanism. See also Tropical cyclones in 2022 Weather of 2022 List of South-West Indian Ocean intense tropical cyclones Tropical cyclones in the Mascarene Islands Cyclone Honorinina (1986) – cyclone that struck eastern Madagascar in March 1986. Cyclone Geralda (1994) – a powerful tropical cyclone that caused catastrophic damage in Madagascar Cyclone Giovanna (2012) – cyclone that had a similar path and intensity and occurred exactly ten years prior Cyclone Emnati (2022) – Powerful storm which struck the same areas three weeks later Notes References External links MFR Track Data of Intense Tropical Cyclone Batsirai JTWC Best Track Data of Tropical Cyclone 08S (Batsirai) 08S.BATSIRAI from the United States Naval Research Laboratory 2021–22 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season 2022 disasters in Africa 2022 in Madagascar 2022 meteorology 2020s in Mauritius 2020s in Réunion Cyclones in Madagascar Cyclones in Mauritius Cyclones in Réunion February 2022 events in Africa Intense Tropical Cyclones January 2022 events in Africa Tropical cyclones in 2022 Tropical cyclones in the Mascarene Islands
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Laurent Dumais (born 25 March 1996) is a Canadian freestyle skier who competes internationally in the moguls discipline. Career Dumais has been part of the national team since 2014. At the 2021 World Championships in Almaty, Kazakhstan, Dumais finished 6th in the moguls event. In the summer of 2021, Dumais suffered a herniated disc, causing him to miss the start of the 2021–22 season. However, on January 24, 2022, Dumais was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. References External links 1996 births Living people Canadian male freestyle skiers Skiers from Quebec City Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Canada
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Indigofera hilaris, the Red bush indigo or Gay indigofera, is a species of leguminous shrublet in the genus Indigofera (family Fabaceae). Etymology The genus name Indigofera is Neo-Latin for "bearing Indigo" (Indigo is a purple dye originally obtained from some Indigofera species). Hilaris, from the Ancient Greek, means "cheerful, merry", referring to the bright, colourful display of the flowers. Description Indigofera hilaris is a perennial shrublet with erect annual stems up to 60 cm from a thick woody rootstock. Leaves are pinnate of 1–4 pairs of narrowly elliptical, silky, often folded leaflets, basal leaves get reduced, becoming scale-like. Stipules are 2–9 mm long, linear, stiffly erect. Inflorescences are a short-stalked densely-flowered 1.5–5 cm long racemes, scarcely longer than leaves. Flowers are reddish-pink to carmine, 7–8 mm long and about 6 mm in diameter. Pods are 10–30 mm long, cylindrical, straight. Flowers in July — December, especially after fire. Distribution Indigofera hilaris grows in open grasslands through eastern South and tropical Africa in Tanzania, Zambia, Zaire, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Eswatini, Lesotho and South Africa (Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Gauteng, North-West, Free State, KwaZulu-Natal, Eastern Cape). References External links Flora of Zimbabwe: Indigofera hilaris Eckl. & Zeyh. hilaris Flora of South Africa
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The 1983–84 BYU Cougars men's basketball team represented Brigham Young University as a member of the Western Athletic Conference during the 1983–84 basketball season. Led by head coach LaDell Andersen, the Cougars compiled a record of 20–11 (12–4 WAC) to finish second in the WAC regular season standings. The team played their home games at the Marriott Center in Provo, Utah. The Cougars received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 8 seed in the Mideast region. In the opening round, BYU defeated UAB before losing to No. 1 seed Kentucky in the round of 32, 93–68. Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| WAC Tournament |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament Players in the 1993 NBA Draft References BYU Cougars men's basketball seasons Byu Byu
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Dodger Point is a mountain summit located within Olympic National Park in Jefferson County of Washington state. Description Dodger Point is part of the Bailey Range, which is a subrange of the Olympic Mountains, and is set within the Daniel J. Evans Wilderness. In clear weather, the mountain can be seen from the park's visitor center on Hurricane Ridge. The nearest higher neighbor is line parent Ludden Peak, two miles to the southwest, Mount Scott rises to the south-southwest, and Stephen Peak is set four miles to the west. Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains into tributaries of the Elwha River. Topographic relief is significant as the summit rises over 4,300 feet (1,310 m) above the Elwha Valley in approximately 1.5 mile. The Grand Canyon of the Elwha lies near the north base of the mountain. Etymology This landform was named by Forest Service District Ranger Sanford Maurice Floe (1896–1975) to honor fellow ranger, William Bryan "Dodger" Bender (1896–1930). Bender reportedly discovered an illegal Prohibition-era still in the national forest and was stabbed by the moonshiner, then died a few years later due to complications of losing a lung from the knife attack. He was buried at Ocean View Cemetery in Port Angeles, Washington. Dodger Point Fire Lookout The Dodger Point Fire Lookout was built atop the mountain in 1933. Dodger Bender was the first to man the new lookout when it was built. During World War II, the lookout was used as an Aircraft Warning Service station in 1942–43. The Dodger Point and Pyramid Peak Lookouts are the only stations remaining in Olympic National Park of the thirteen that were constructed. Climate Based on the Köppen climate classification, Dodger Point is located in the marine west coast climate zone of western North America. Most weather fronts originate in the Pacific Ocean, and travel east toward the Olympic Mountains. As fronts approach, they are forced upward by the peaks of the Olympic Range, causing them to drop their moisture in the form of rain or snowfall (Orographic lift). As a result, the Olympics experience high precipitation, especially during the winter months. During winter months, weather is usually cloudy, but, due to high pressure systems over the Pacific Ocean that intensify during summer months, there is often little or no cloud cover during the summer. The months July through September offer the most favorable weather for viewing and climbing. Gallery See also Olympic Mountains Geology of the Pacific Northwest References External links Weather forecast: Dodger Point NGS Data Sheet Olympic Mountains Mountains of Washington (state) Landforms of Olympic National Park North American 1000 m summits Mountains of Jefferson County, Washington
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Arthur Hauspurg (August 27, 1925 – Feb. 19, 2003) was an American businessman who was the chairman of Consolidated Edison. Biography Hauspurg was born in Brooklyn and graduated from Brooklyn Technical High School. He received his B.S. from Columbia University School of Engineering in 1943 before serving in the Navy from 1943 to 1946. He returned to Columbia and received a M.S. in electrical engineering in 1947. Hauspurg was a member of the Tau Beta Pi honor society. As chief engineer of the American Electric Power Corporation, he was named to the federal commission investigating the Northeast blackout of 1965. In 1969, he joined ConEdison as vice president for system planning and electrical engineering and he was responsible for research and development. In 1973, he rose to senior vice president and became president and COO of ConEdison in 1975. In 1981, he became CEO and chairman in 1982. He retired from both positions in 1990 and was replaced by Eugene R. McGrath. He was credited for improving the company's transmission system and updating its control center. Hauspurg served on the boards of New York City Partnership and the Central Park Conservancy. He was elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering in 1976, for "[c]ontributions and research in UHV and HVDC transmission and in the field of complex interconnected power systems reliability." In 1979, he received the Thomas Egleston Medal from the Columbia University School of Engineering for distinguished achievement in engineering or applied science. He died on February 19, 2003, at a family reunion in Barbados at 77 years old. References 1925 births 2003 deaths Consolidated Edison Columbia School of Engineering and Applied Science alumni American electricians American chief executives of energy companies
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Cases of COVID-19 at the 2022 Winter Olympics and the 2022 Winter Paralympics in Beijing, China, is a cluster of SARS-CoV-2 infections within the COVID-19 pandemic in mainland China that began in the Beijing 2022 Olympic Village in January 2022, prior to the Opening Ceremony of the games on 4 February 2022. There were 437 total coronavirus cases detected and reported by the Beijing Organizing Committee for the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games since 23 January 2022. All cases at the 2022 Olympics are counted towards China's COVID case count rather than the home country of the person. Background On 31 July 2015, Beijing was selected as the host city of the 2022 Winter Olympics, officially the XXIV Olympic Winter Games, during the 128th IOC Session in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was elected over Almaty. The games were the second Olympic Games to be held in China following Beijing 2008 (Summer). As a result, Beijing will also be the first city to host both the Summer and the Winter Games for the Olympics and Paralympics. On 1 December 2019, the first known case of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a novel virus caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), was identified in Wuhan. The virus has since spread to other parts of the country and around the world, becoming the COVID-19 pandemic, one of the deadliest pandemics in history. During the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics, there were 464 COVID-19 cases linked to the games. Despite the strict COVID-19 containment efforts including bubbles and claims of being the safest sporting event, the Beijing Winter Olympics reported only 27 fewer cases than the similar scale event during the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics, which had less stringent COVID-19 containment measures. Timeline of positive cases The first case related to the 2022 Winter Olympics was reported on Sunday 23 January 2022. Out of the total 437 cases of COVID-19 linked to the 2022 Winter Olympics, 171 cases, including 68 athletes or team officials were among the COVID-19 protective bubble residents. The rest of the 266 cases were detected from airport testing of the games related arrivals. Impact See also List of athletes not attending the 2022 Winter Olympics due to COVID-19 concerns Concerns and controversies at the 2022 Winter Olympics COVID-19 cases at the 2020 Summer Olympics and 2020 Summer Paralympics Notes References 2022 in China 2022 Winter Olympics COVID-19 pandemic in China Olympic Games controversies Paralympic Games controversies
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Arjanit Krasniqi (born 16 October 1999) is an English-born Kosovan footballer who plays as a midfielder for National League club Dover Athletic. Club career Born in England, Krasniqi started his playing career with Waltham Forest during the 2017–18 campaign, before sealing a move to EFL side, Colchester United in January 2018. After just less than 18 months at the Essex-based side, Krasniqi was released at the end of his contract in June 2019. Following his release from Colchester, Krasniqi enjoyed a brief spell at fellow Essex side, Billericay Town before signing a two-year deal with Finnish side, SJK in February 2020. Later that month, he went onto make his debut during a 1–0 defeat against KuPS in a Finnish Cup tie, replacing fellow Kosovan, Anel Rashkaj with ten minutes remaining. On 7 September 2020, Krasniqi's contract was terminated following his desire to return to his native England. Following his return to England, Krasniqi joined up with National League South side, Braintree Town in October 2020 and went onto make his debut during a 4–3 home defeat to Hemel Hempstead Town. He made 35 appearances for the Iron, scoring seven goals. In January 2022, Krasniqi signed for Dover Athletic. International career Krasniqi has represented Kosovo at under-19 and under-21 levels. Career statistics References External links 1999 births Living people Kosovan footballers Kosovo youth international footballers English footballers Association football midfielders Walthamstow F.C. players Colchester United F.C. players Billericay Town F.C. players Seinäjoen Jalkapallokerho players Braintree Town F.C. players Dover Athletic F.C. players English people of Kosovan descent Expatriate footballers in Finland National League (English football) players Ykkönen players
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Liam Moffatt (born 30 March 1997) is a Canadian snowboarder who competes internationally in the snowboard cross discipline. Career At the 2021 World Championships in Sweden, Moffatt finished 7th in the snowboard cross event. As of December 2021, Moffatt was ranked 17th in the world. In January 2022, Moffatt was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team in the snowboard cross event. References External links 1997 births Living people People from Truro, Nova Scotia Canadian male snowboarders Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic snowboarders of Canada
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Vogue Singapore is the Singaporean edition of the fashion and lifestyle magazine Vogue. The magazine is published by Indochine Media. It became the 27th international edition of Vogue. History 1994–1997: Condé Nast publishing In March 1994, it was announced that Condé Nast was planning to launch the first Asian edition of Vogue magazine in Singapore in September. It was said that the magazine has already set up an administrative office in the country and will bring an editorial staff in next year. Until then, the magazine will be edited and designed by Vogue Australia's office in Sydney. Vogue Singapore is expected to have an initial circulation of between 15,000 and 18,000 copies. The magazine will be priced at $3.70. About the launch, Vogue Australia's editor Nancy Pilcher said that is "probably one of the best places in the Asia Pacific to do business in," adding "[that] Besides, Singapore is like a haven of fashion. Every single label in the world is here." The magazine officially launched in August 1994 with the September issue. The theme of the first issue is East meets West with actress Joan Chen gracing its cover. Vogue Singapore will have an initial print run of 35,000 copies for distribution in Singapore, plus 10,000 for Malaysia and 1,000 each for Brunei, Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand. It will sell for about $3.30 a copy. In 1996, The Wall Street Journal reported that Condé Nast Asia-Pacific would be “suspending publication of its Vogue Singapore edition because of the slowing economy in the city-state.” Then-president of Condé Nast Asia-Pacific, Didier Guerin, expressed, “The magazine was no longer economically viable in such a small market unless we compromised the quality of the magazine.” Also reporting that the magazine advertisers were withdrawing and print sales were dropping. The January 1997 was the last issue and went on sale on 30 December 1996. 2020–present: Relaunch In January 2020, Condé Nast announced the launch of Vogue Singapore to launch later this year with an English-language print issue, a website and presences on all relevant social platforms. It will be published under license agreement with Indochine Media Ventures, a Singapore-based media company that publishes regional editions of Robb Report and the Singapore edition of Esquire, among other titles. A print issue of Vogue Singapore will retail for around nine Singaporean Dollars. The web site will not be behind a paywall at launch, but speaking to WWD, Michael von Schlippe, president of Indochine Media, said he couldn't exclude including one down the road. In April, Norman Tan was appointed as Editor-in-chief. He joins Vogue Singapore from Esquire Singapore, where he held the role of Editor-in-Chief for over two years. He successfully launched Buro Singapore in 2015, now bringing with him a wealth of knowledge and experience in both luxury print and digital publishing. Tan graduated from The University of Melbourne with a double degree in commerce and law. The magazine officially launched in September 2020 with three different covers. Singaporean model Diya Prabhakar features on the main cover, while Chnese model Ju Xiaowen and Japanese actress Nana Komatsu round out the triptych. Both print and digital versions of the publication will feature scannable QR codes, as well as AR and VR content. Editors References Vogue (magazine) 1994 establishments in Singapore Magazines established in 1994 Magazines published in Singapore Magazines established in 2020 Magazines disestablished in 1997 Condé Nast magazines
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Armin Grau (born 18 March 1959) is a German politician. Grau became a member of the Bundestag in the 2021 German federal election. He is affiliated with the Alliance 90/The Greens party. References External links Living people 1959 births Politicians from Stuttgart 21st-century German politicians Members of the Bundestag for Alliance 90/The Greens Members of the Bundestag 2021–2025
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Willie Lee Jenkins was lynched by in Eufaula, Barbour County, Alabama. According to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary it was the 3rd of 61 lynchings during 1922 in the United States. Background According to his grand daughter Shirley Johnson, her grandfather had a dispute with his boss' wife which cost him his life. Newspapers of the time reported that he "insulted a white woman." Lynching He tried to escape by train but a mob dragged him off, took him the woods and killed him." His corpse was found in the bottom of a well in Barbour County, from Eufaula on the Batesville road. National memorial The National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018, in a setting of . Featured among other things, is a sculpture by Kwame Akoto-Bamfo of a mother with a chain around her neck and an infant in her arms. On a hill overlooking the sculpture is the Memorial Corridor which displays 805 hanging steel rectangles, each representing the counties in the United States where a documented lynching took place and, for each county, the names of those lynched. Willie Lee Jenkins' name is on the column for Barbour County, Alabama. Bibliography Notes References 1922 riots 1922 in Alabama African-American history of Alabama Lynching deaths in Alabama February 1922 events Protest-related deaths Racially motivated violence against African Americans Riots and civil disorder in Alabama White American riots in the United States
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Marcelo Luis Do Nascimento (born 20 October 1980) is a Brazilian professional boxer. He challenged once for the PABA heavyweight title in 2012, and the PABA interim heavyweight title in 2014. Professional career Nascimento faced undefeated heavyweight Tyson Fury on 19 February 2011 at Wembley Arena in London. Nascimento was knocked down in the first round and lost the fight via knockout in the fifth round. On 26 April 2014, Nascimento was a late replacement for Joseph Parker on the undercard of Wladimir Klitschko's world heavyweight title defence against Australian Alex Leapai. He was stopped after a flurry of blows in the seventh round, although Nascimento protested the decision. Nascimento faced Dillian Whyte on 7 February 2015 at the Camden Centre. Nascimento down knocked down once in the 1st round, and twice in the 2nd, losing the fight via knockout. Nascimento faced Demsey McKean on 16 March 2019 at the Southport Sharks AFL Club in Queensland. The referee stopped the fight in the second round after Nascimento was knocked down three times. Professional boxing record Kickboxing record {{Kickboxing record start|norec=y|title=Kickboxing record|record=0 Wins (0 KO's), 1 Loss, 0 Draw}} |- style="background:#fbb;" | 2008-08-16 || Loss ||align=left| Tsuyoshi Yokoyama || DEEP: Gladiators || Okayama, Japan || Decision (unanimous) || 3 || 3:00 |- | colspan=9 | Legend''': References External links 1980 births Living people Brazilian male boxers Heavyweight boxers
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Storm Malik was an extratropical cyclone that was part of the 2021–22 European windstorm season. It was named by the Danish Meteorological Institute in Denmark on January 28, and lasted until January 30. It caused 2958 severe wind reports and over 800,000 power outages in multiple countries. Seven people died. Meteorological history On 28 January, Storm Malik was named by the Danish Meteorological Institute, after the Greenlandic name that also means "wave". In Finland and Germany, which are not part of the storm naming groups, it was named Valtteri by the Finnish Meteorological Institute, while the Free University of Berlin named the same system as Nadia. The storm lasted until January 30, after which it dissipated. Impacts The impact from the storm ranged from mild to severe throughout most of the continent. Fatalities Two fatalities were reported in the United Kingdom due to Storm Malik: a 60-year old woman in Aberdeen, Scotland and a 9-year old boy in Staffordshire, England. Both were hit by falling trees. In Denmark, a 78-year old woman died from injuries sustained when a door she opened was caught by the wind and she fell. In Germany, a person in Beelitz was killed when hit by a poster that had come loose and in Poland a person was killed when a tree fell on a moving car in Wejherowo County. In the Czech Republic, a worker died after being buried by a wall. Injuries Two teenagers were injured in the southern Swedish region of Scania when their car was hit by a falling tree. A child was injured when a tree crashed through the roof in Charlottenlund, Denmark, while west of Esbjerg, a moving car was hit by a large branch, resulting in 3 injuries. In Poland, a driver was injured when she drove into a downed tree near Kierzkowo, while in Tłuczewo, a person sustained arm injuries. In Germany, a man was injured by a falling tree in a park, in Bremen. Damage More than 680,000 people were left without power in Poland by the storm and in the United Kingdom around 130,000 lost power. In Sweden around 40,000 households lost power, mostly in the south. Sweden In the city of Malmö, many facade panels from the Turning Torso building fell. In the Västra Hamnen (The West Harbour) area a crane from a construction site got overturned and landed close to a bus stop full of people. A second crane got overturned in the city of Malmö and landed on parked cars. Another crane got overturned in the city of Södertälje south of Stockholm and landed on a hospital but only caused slight damage to windows in the ICU section. Many trees fell throughout southern Sweden. Many trees also fell in Norrtälje, a town north of Stockholm which was hit by another similar storm back in January 2019 called Alfrida. Lithuania The storm caused damage to the Lithuanian coast as well, with local authorities calling it the "worst storm since Cyclone Anatol in 1999". The storm reached winds of 93 km/h (58 mph; 50 kn) with gusts of 125 km/h (78 mph; 68 kn). Infrastructure and protective dunes along the Curonian Spit were considerably damaged by the storm. Aftermath The damage in the United Kingdom and Ireland by Malik was worsened by Storm Corrie, which started affecting the two countries on January 29. The following storm resulted in 118,000 power outages in Scotland, and more overall damage. See also Weather of 2022 2021–22 European windstorm season References External links 2022 meteorology January 2022 events in the United Kingdom 2022 disasters in the United Kingdom January 2022 events in Europe European windstorms
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The 1983–84 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball team represented Louisiana Tech University in Ruston, Louisiana for the 1983–84 season. Led by head coach Andy Russo, the Bulldogs played their home games at Thomas Assembly Center in Ruston, Louisiana. After finishing 3rd in the conference regular season standings, Louisiana Tech won the Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament to earn a bid to the NCAA Tournament. After an opening round win over Fresno State, the team was beaten by eventual National runner-up Houston, 77–69. Louisiana Tech finished the season with a 26–7 record (8–4 Southland). Roster Source Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| Southland Conference Tournament |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament References Louisiana Tech Bulldogs basketball seasons Louisiana Tech Louisiana Tech 1983 in sports in Louisiana 1984 in sports in Louisiana
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Milan Ivanović (; born 5 February 1955) is a Kosovo Serb medical doctor, administrator, and politician. He was a leading figure in northern Kosovo's political life in the first decade after the 1998-99 Kosovo War and remains an active figure in the Kosovo Serb community today. Ivanović was for many years the leader of the Serbian National Council of Northern Kosovo and Metohija and has been a vocal opponent of engagement with the post-1999 governing authorities in Priština. He is no relation to the late Oliver Ivanović. Private career Ivanović is a specialist doctor living in Zvečan. He has served on different occasions as the director of North Mitrovica's hospital. In this capacity, he was responsible for coordinating the community's response to the early period of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Politician Ivanović was a member of the Socialist Party of Serbia (Socijalistička partija Srbije, SPS) during the 1990s. He was given the ninth position on the party's electoral list for the Central Serbia division of Leskovac in the December 1992 Yugoslavian parliamentary election and was not elected when the list won seven seats. He appeared in the fifteenth position on the SPS list for Leskovac in the 1993 Serbian parliamentary election; the list won seventeen seats in the division, and he was again not chosen for a mandate. (From 1992 to 2000, Serbia's electoral law stipulated that one-third of parliamentary mandates would be assigned to candidates from successful lists in numerical order, while the remaining two-thirds would be distributed amongst other candidates at the discretion of the sponsoring parties. Ivanović's position on the list did not give him the automatic right to a seat.) He was given the third position on the SPS list for Kosovska Mitrovica in the 1997 Serbian parliamentary election and was again not given a mandate even as the list won five of seven seats. In January 1998, Ivanović spoke a rally in Zvečan to protest the killing of local assembly member Desimir Vasić, apparently by members of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). He was quoted as saying, "May this rally be the beginning of a merciless struggle against terrorism and against the enemies of Serbia." Community leader after the Kosovo War Early years (1999–2003) Kosovska Mitrovica became a divided community after the Kosovo War, with the northern half being predominantly Serb and the southern half predominantly Albanian. Ivanović became an executive member of the municipal Serbian National Council (Srpsko nacionalno Veće, SNV) in the northern half. In November 1999, the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) suspended him for thirty days from his role as deputy director of the community's medical centre after he refused to permit the reintegration of Albanian staff members who had walked off the job a month earlier. UNMIK's decision led to protests; some doctors at a rally in support of Ivanović said they opposed discrimination against ethnic Albanians but that the proposed manner of reintegration threatened the integrity of the Serb community, while the hospital's management stressed that UNMIK should also ensure the safe return of Serbs expelled from other hospitals throughout Kosovo. Ivanović was named to the executive committee of the Serbian National Council of Kosovo and Metohija on its founding in November 1999, with particular responsibility for health. In January of the following year, he articulated the council's policy of non-cooperation with UNMIK chief Bernard Kouchner and its non-participation with UNMIK's interim administrative council. He became known for making inflammatory speeches in this period; at a rally in February 2000, he called for the return to Yugoslavian troops to Kosovo, said that inter-communal violence against Serbs from members of the Albanian community was increasing, and was quoted as saying, "Serbs feel the same as Jews in Auschwitz." On another occasion, he described French, German, and American soldiers in Kosovo as occupiers, saying, "They want to throw Serbs out of Serbian land." In August 2000, he said that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)'s takeover of Trepča Mines (which was then shut down by UNMIK on environmental grounds) was part of a strategy to ethnically cleanse Kosovo of Serbs and establish a Greater Albania. In February 2001, Ivanović spoke against the return of displaced Albanians to northern Mitrovica until displaced Serbs were permitted to return safely to other parts of Kosovo. "We have nothing against Kosovska Mitrovica being a multiethnic city again, but all other parts of Kosovo must be multiethnic, too," he said. In the same period, he called for Mitrovica to be formally divided into two separate municipalities. Some media reports in this period identified him (perhaps erroneously) as a local leader of the Democratic Party of Serbia (Demokratska stranka Srbije, DSS). Ivanović called for the Serb community to boycott the 2001 Kosovan parliamentary election, saying that participation "would legitimize the ethnic cleansing of Serbs from Kosovo. Unlike some other prominent Serb politicians in Kosovo, he considered the Serbian "Return" electoral coalition as an illegitimate project. Notwithstanding his opposition, a large number of northern Kosovo Serbs participated in the vote. Ivanović's stand had political repercussions; in late 2001, the Serbian government (which supported participation) removed him as director of the Kosovska Mitrovica hospital. It was during this time that Ivanović was first identified as leader of the regional Serbian National Council of Northern Kosmet. In April 2002, Ivanović welcomed Serbian deputy prime minister Nebojša Čović's proposal for the creation of entities in the province (similar to those in Bosnia and Herzegovina) as "the essence of what Serbs need in order to survive in this area." The following January, Ivanović oversaw a creation of a group called the Union of Municipalities of Northern Kosovo-Metohija and Serb Municipalities of Kosovo-Metohija, generally considered to have been the first iteration of the Community of Serb Municipalities. 2002 charges An arrest warrant was issued for Ivanović on charges of attempted murder in August 2002. The charges related to events at a demonstration in Kosovska Mitrovica on 8 April 2002 when twenty-two members of a mainly Polish UNMIK contingency were injured after coming under fire from demonstrators armed with rifles and hand grenades. UNMIK officials believed that Ivanović had orchestrated the violence. The initial attempt to arrest him was unsuccessful; he was not home when UNMIK authorities broke into his Zvečan flat to execute the warrant. Several leading SNV members charged that the arrest attempt was politically motivated, a position later echoed by Yugoslavian president Vojislav Koštunica Nebojša Čović said that video footage of the protest would prove Ivanović's innocence. Ivanović, for his part, was quoted as saying at this time, "I never carried weapons and never breached the law. But I have no intention of surrender because I don't trust UNMIK's justice." Notwithstanding this comment, Ivanović somewhat unexpectedly turned himself in to UNMIK authorities in October 2002. After initial questioning, his lawyer Toma Fila said that the charges against him had been reduced to inciting riots, and he was released on bail. He was again released following a series of court hearings. The case against Ivanović was recommenced in April 2003 when an international prosecutor indicted him for "participating as a leader of a group that committed a crime and [for] attacking official persons performing duties of security." He issued a plea of not guilty before a three-member international council in September 2003, reiterating his contention that the charges were politically motivated. The following month, the court issued a guilty verdict and sentenced him to three months in prison. (This decision would presumably have been appealed. Online sources to not clarify if the conviction was upheld or if Ivanović actually served the sentence.) During this period, Ivanović and his leading political ally Marko Jakšić were also placed on an official blacklist by the United States of America. Electoral politics The Serb community generally participated in the 2002 local elections in northern Kosovo, except in Kosovska Mitrovica. The SNV contested these elections as a political party; Ivanović led its electoral list in Zvečan, where it won a narrow plurality victory with six out of seventeen mandates. Dragiša Milović of the second-place DSS was subsequently chosen by the assembly as mayor, with Ivanović in the role of deputy mayor. The SNV did not participate as a party in the 2003 Serbian parliamentary election, and Ivanović clarified that it would not endorse any other party or coalition. Since 2004 Ivanović was again identified as the director of northern Kosovska Mitrovica's hospital in early 2004. He strongly condemned the 2004 unrest in Kosovo, which largely targeted the Serb community. At a rally to protest the murder of seventeen-year-old Dimitrije Popović, Ivanović was quoted as saying, "Kosovo is becoming a concentration camp for Serb children and at the same time the chief prosecutor of the Hague tribunal, Carla Del Ponte, has not indicted a single criminal responsible for the suffering of Serb children, thus opening the door wide for them to act with impunity." He later accused UNMIK of discriminating against the Romani people of Kosovo, on the grounds that "they share Serbs' fate and see Serbia as their homeland." He was a leading proponent of the Serb community's boycott of the 2004 Kosovo assembly election. In February 2005, he was appointed as a member of the Serbian government's newly formed Council for Kosovo-Metohija. The following year, he welcomed the approval of Serbia's new constitution, which recognized Kosovo and Metohija as an integral part of the country with significant autonomy. In the 2007 Serbian parliamentary election, he urged voters to support the "national option" by choosing either the DSS, the SPS, or the Serbian Radical Party (Srpska radikalna stranka, SRS). Like most Kosovo Serb politicians, Ivanović rejected the Ahtisaari Plan, arguing that it would result in an independent Kosovo with Serb community as a threatened minority. He was a leading proponent of a Serb boycott of the 2007 Kosovo assembly election, which he (correctly) said would lead to the election of a parliament that would declare the independence of Kosovo from Serbia. He urged Kosovo Serb voters to support SRS candidate Tomislav Nikolić in the run-off of the 2008 Serbian presidential election. Nikolić was narrowly defeated by incumbent candidate Boris Tadić of the Democratic Party (Demokratska stranka, DS). Tadić signed a Stabilization and Association Agreement with the European Union shortly after the election, a decision which Ivanović described as a "classic betrayal of Kosovo and Metohija." Following Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence in 2008, Ivanović said that members of a European Union delegation assisting in Kosovo's transition should be considered "an occupying mission that should be boycotted, including a refusal to sell them food and coffee in restaurants." The 2008 Serbian parliamentary election did not produce a clear winner; following the vote, Ivanović said that the new government should be formed by the "national forces" of the DSS, SRS, SPS, and New Serbia (Nova Srbija, NS). Discussions for a government composed of these parties were ultimately unsuccessful, and the SPS instead for a coalition with For a European Serbia alliance led by the DS. The SNV fielded candidates in two municipalities (Leposavić and Zvečan) in the Serbian government's concurrent 2008 local elections in Kosovo; the party won four seats in Zvečan, and Ivanović was chosen for another term as the municipality's deputy mayor. He also led the organization of a largely ceremonial assembly of delegates from Kosovo's predominantly Serb municipalities. In June 2009, Kosovo Police initiated charges against Ivanović and Marko Jakšić for allegedly inciting a crowd of protesters to set fire to EULEX administrative crossings between Kosovo and Central Serbia. Ivanović and Jakšić described the accusations as unfounded. EULEX announced a year later that various charges against Ivanović had been rejected, and Ivanović again said that he had been targeted for political reasons. It was reported in July 2009 that the Serbian government led by the DS had removed both Ivanović and Jakšić from management positions at Kosovska Mitrovica's hospital. North Kosovo Crisis, Brussels Agreement, and after In 2011, Kosovo Police crossed into the predominantly Serb municipalities of northern Kosovo, without consulting either Serbia or Kosovo Force (KFOR)/EULEX, in an attempt to assert control over several administrative border crossings with Central Serbia. This action precipitated what became known as the North Kosovo crisis, in which members of northern Kosovo's Serb community restricted highway traffic with blockades and roadblocks. Ivanović became a leader of the protests, saying in October 2011 that Serbs would continue to patrol the roadblocks despite the cold weather to prevent their removal by NATO forces. He later supported the 2012 North Kosovo referendum (which was not recognized by the Serbian government), in which 99.74% of voters rejected participation in the institutions of the Republic of Kosovo. Ivanović was an opponent of the 2013 Brussels Agreement, which normalized aspects of the relationship between Belgrade and Priština without addressing the status of Kosovo; he described the agreement as "unacceptable" and a threat to the vital interests of Serbs. The municipalities of Zubin Potok and Zvečan held local elections in 2012 that were sanctioned neither by Belgrade nor Priština. The SNV participated in the Zvečan vote and won three out of twenty-seven seats. Ivanović later served as a representative from Zvečan in the (again largely ceremonial) Provisional Assembly of the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija, which was established on 4 July 2013 with little notice from the media. Ivanović has continued to oppose engagement with the Priština authorities since the signing of the Brussels Agreement. He called for Serbs to boycott the 2013 Kosovo local elections, notwithstanding the Serbian government's support for participation. He was once again reported as being the manager of North Mitrovica's hospital in 2014. In January 2018, he advised the media that doctors in the hospital had tried to save the life of Oliver Ivanović after the latter was shot by unknown assailants, but without success. Later, speaking at a protest rally, he claimed that no-one from northern Kosovo was responsible for Oliver Ivanović's death. In 2019, he took part in a protest against the proposed annexation of North Mitrovica into a united municipality. He appears to have retired from the his position at the hospital in 2020. Ivanović endorsed the Serbian Progressive Party (Srpska napredna stranka, SNS) in the 2020 Serbian parliamentary election. In January 2022, Ivanović's car was struck with several bullets. No one was injured in the attack. Authorities initially described this as an assassination attempt, although this statement was retracted when it was determined that no-one had been inside the car at the time of the shooting. Criticism Over the course of his career, Ivanović was accused of illegal activities in northern Kosovo. In 2008, Priština's Express newspaper alleged that Ivanović and Marko Jakšić had held absolute power in the north prior to that year's parliamentary elections, supported by paramilitary groups and Serbian state authorities; their hold on power was described as having been weakened when Vojislav Koštunica's second term as Serbian prime minister ended in 2008. Reports circulated in 2009 that the European Union Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo (EULEX) was planning to indict Ivanović for a number of serious crimes, and in 2011 it was alleged that a confidential NATO bulletin described him as "a xenophobic person who controls all fuel routes in northern Kosovo, medicine and construction material smuggling." (EULEX did not issue the indictment, and the existence of the alleged NATO document was questioned.) Ivanović rejected these accusations as politically motivated. He said in a 2011 interview, "They say I am the leader of the mafia in northern Kosovo. They are trying to discredit us." Notes References 1955 births Living people People from Zvečan Kosovo Serbs Socialist Party of Serbia politicians Serbian National Council of Kosovo and Metohija politicians
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Hooman Haji Abdollahi (, born 14 July 1975) is an Iranian actor, television presenter, voice actor . The most famous role in the field of his acting is "Rahmatollah Amini Shalikar hezarjaribi . He has been a member of Glory Entertainment (The Association of Tehran Young Voice Actors) for a short time. He has dubbed many roles, include Monsters vs. Aliens (as Dr. cockroach), Meet the Robinsons (as Grandpa), Barnyard (as Miles) and (Two Pizza Sellers), The Wild (as Zoo Squirrel), Avatar: The Last Airbender, SpongeBob SquarePants (as SpongeBob), Shrek (as Shrek), Happy Feet (as Shahin), Five Children and It, Coconut (as Lengeh). At the 37th Fajr International Theater Festival, he won the Best Actor award for his play in "Reincarnation 3 to 35 Tomans" in the "Iran Two" theater event . Career Television Voice acting Coconut (Home video) (Voice actor of doll) Rainbow (Chapel voice actor) Rainbow (Pengul voice actor) Pengul or Cats City(Pengul voice actor) khandevaneh (farkhondeh voice actor) Pagard Dubbing Ice Age (2002 film) Ice Age 3 SpongeBob SquarePants Barnyard (as Miles / Pizzerias) Happy Feet Meet the Robinsons Avatar: The Last Airbender Monsters vs. Aliens Five Children and It The Wild The Legend of Arash Angry Birds Finding Dory Soul Stand-up comedy Top Laughing Home video External links References 1975 births Living people Iranian male film actors Iranian male voice actors Actors from Tehran
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Zita Holbourne FRSA (born 1960s) is a British community and human rights campaigner and activist, and a multi-disciplinary artist, creating work as a writer, performance poet and visual artist. As a trade unionist, she is National Vice President of the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) in the UK, and chairs its national equality committee and women's committee, and as joint national Chair of Artists Union England she also leads on equality. She sits on the European Public Services Union National and European Administration Committee. She co-founded with Lee Jasper the organisation BARAC (Black Activists Rising Against the Cuts), which campaigns against the impact of austerity on black communities. Background Holbourne studied art and graphic design at the London College of Printing and Watford School of Art. She produces artwork that ranges from oil paintings on canvas to digital works and graphic design. Through activism and art, she campaigns for equality, justice and human rights. In her creative work she also highlights the impact of climate change on the global South. She is the co-founder and National Chair of Black Activists Rising Against Cuts (BARAC) UK, a founding member of Movement Against Xenophobia, BME Lawyers for Grenfell and BAME Lawyers for Justice and has played a prominent role in campaigning against injustices ensuing from the Windrush scandal. In 2012 she won the Role Model award at the National Diversity Awards. In 2018, in recognition of her work in arts and culture and as a campaigner for race equality, she was invited to become part of the UNESCO Coalition of Artists for the General History of Africa. She founded the Roots, Culture and Identity arts collective, which showcases the art of predominantly young black, Asian and migrant artists, and she is the author of the 2017 book Striving for Equality, Freedom and Justice: Embracing Roots, Culture and Identity: A Collection of Poetry, published by Hansib. Holbourne has contributed work to anthologies including New Daughters of Africa (2019), edited by Margaret Busby, and Here We Stand, Women Changing the World. Publications for which she has written include The Guardian, the Morning Star and The Voice. On the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition in August 2020, Holbourne delivered the Dorothy Kuya Memorial Lecture at the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool. In 2021, she wrote a "Manifesto for Cultural Workers" that was launched by Public Services International (PSI), addressing the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, public policy and systemic exploitation on workers in the arts and culture sector. She was curator of the Roots, Culture, Identity'' virtual art exhibition hosted by the TUC Race Relations Committee in 2021. Holbourne has been the organiser of a long-running petition calling on the Home Office to end "mass deportations" to Jamaica. References External links Official website "Two questions about diversity for Zita Holbourne" (interview), European Network of Cultural Centres. "Zita Holbourne presents Equality, Freedom and Justice", Newham Black History, 16 October 2021. 21st-century British women artists 21st-century British women writers Black British artists Black British women writers British women activists Date of birth missing (living people)
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Solomon Hughes is a freelance investigative journalist working in the United Kingdom. Many of his pieces focus on corporate influence on politicians. His work has appeared regularly in Private Eye since around 2000. Hughes has contributed to The Observer, The Independent, Morning Star, Vice, and The Guardian. In 2008, Hughes's book War on Terror, Inc: Corporate Profiteering from the Politics of Fear was published by Verso. A political fiction book Oliver's Army was published in 2014. Hughes was barred from covering the DSEI arms fair in 2019. In January 2022, Hughes alongside fellow Private Eye journalist Richard Brooks and editor Ian Hislop presented evidence on MPs' conduct to the House of Commons' Standards Committee References British investigative journalists Private Eye contributors Living people The Guardian journalists The Times journalists British business writers The Independent people
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Peñas del Chache is the highest altitude of the island of Lanzarote, Canary Islands, Spain, with a height of 672 meters above sea level. It is located in the north of the island, in the municipality of Haría. Toponymy The term Chache is of probably of Guanche origin. As for its possible meaning, the philologist Maximiano Trapero has proposed its translation as 'the height'. Characteristics Peñas del Chache is a rocky mountain located in the Famara massif. The top is occupied by an installation of the Air Surveillance Squadron. Geology Peñas del Chache is a basaltic intrusive formation dating from the Miocene period, and is part of the Famara volcanic edifice, one of the oldest massifs on the island. Vegetation The surroundings of the Peñas del Chache were characterized by thickets of the Canarian thermophilic forest in the past. However, historical human activity has caused its near disappearance, finding itself dominated by substitution thickets such as bitter tabaibal in modern times, dominated by the wild spurge Euphorbia regis-jubae, and the tojio thickets Asteriscus intermedius and Lavandula dentata. Archeological sites Nearby, archaeological remains of the ancient inhabitants of Lanzarote, the majos, have been found. References External links Mountains of the Canary Islands Geography of the Province of Las Palmas Lanzarote
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Christopher Bovett (born 25 December 1945) is a British-American former professional tennis player. Born in Worcestershire, Bovett was educated at Harrow High School. In the mid-1960s, after being unable to secure special coaching from the LTA, he emigrated to Australia to work as a freelance photographer. He secured a scholarship in 1966 to Pan American College (Texas), transferring from there to the University of Houston, where he met his wife Karen. He featured in main draws at the Australian and US national championships while based in both countries. A longtime resident of the Houston area, he was a 2014 inductee into the Texas Tennis Hall of Fame. References External links 1945 births Living people British male tennis players English male tennis players English emigrants to the United States Tennis people from Worcestershire
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Assad Aboudou (born 3 January 2003) is a Seychellois footballer who plays for Seychelles First Division club La Passe FC and the Seychelles national team. He is the twin brother of fellow footballer Affandi Aboudou. Club career In November 2019, while a member of La Passe FC of the Seychelles First Division, Aboudou traveled to Germany for a two-week training stint with VfL Lohbrügge of the Landesliga Hamburg-Hansa. He was joined on the trip by his twin brother, Affandi, and Achille Esther. In September 2021 it was announced that Assad and Affandi had traveled to Portugal for a three-month trial with C.D. Trofense of the Liga Portugal 2. During this time they were evaluated by the club and others from within and outside of the country. He returned to Portugal for a second stint in January 2022. International career In April 2018 Aboudou was part of the Seychelles football team that competed at the Indian Ocean Youth and Sports Commission Games in Djibouti. He made his senior international debut on 1 September 2021 in a friendly against Comoros. He earned his second cap three days later against Burundi. International career statistics References External links Global Sports Archive profile 2003 births Living people Association football midfielders Seychellois footballers Seychelles international footballers La Passe FC players Twin sportspeople Twin people from Seychelles
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Presidential elections are scheduled to hold in South Ossetia on 10 April 2022. References South Ossetia 2022 in South Ossetia Presidential elections in South Ossetia
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Oliver Arthur King (1855, Islington, London - 23 August 1923, Hammersmith, London) was a British composer, pianist, organist and conductor. Oliver King started learning piano at 6-years old, he was noticed by Joseph Barnby for his talent, and made King a choirboy in the St. Andrew's Church which he excelled in the role. He learned the organ and became a deputy organ and assistant to Joseph Barnby until 1874 when he moved to Leipzig University to study. After Leipzig, King moved back to London as a skilled pianist and was appointed the pianist to Princess Louise in 1879. During her trip to Ottawa, King played in several performances, touring across Canada and America as a pianist and composer. After his stay in North America from 1879 to 1883, King moved back to London, with his reputation of being the pianist to Her Royal Highness Princess Louise, he became the organist of the Novello Oratarios and a popular composer of chants and anthems. He wrote a concert-overture "Among the Pines" which won a prize from the Royal Philharmonic Society. His popularity was only in England and he wasn't able to achieve much fame in the rest of Europe. His performance activity died down, although a professor of piano in the Royal Academy of Music, his main musical activities lessened especially after the beginning of the 20th-century, and King died at the age of 68 in Hammersmith. Biography Early life and education Oliver Arthur King was born in 1855 in Islington, he was introduced to the piano at 6-years-old, and was noticed to have an early talent for the instrument, and by the time King was 8, he was noticed and taught by Joseph Barnby who was the choirmaster of St. Andrew's Church by Wells Street in London. In St. Andrew's Church, King was a chorister who had to frequently perform, particularly on Wednesday and Sunday services, King was noted for his talents and was soon co-teaching younger kids in singing as well as learning the organ, which he soon took up a position playing and singing during Wednesday and Sunday services. However, King was also mischievous, and received the name Scaramouch for his actions, and was often beaten with a cane, which proved ineffective, and instead was placed with the younger boys as a form of humiliation, which was effective. By 16, King and Barnby moved to the St. Anne's church in Soho, Westminster, there King was the deputy organist and an assistant to Barnaby. Around this time, King was taught piano by Wiilliam Henry Holmes in the Royal Academy of Music for three years, until 1874 when Henry Littleton (the head and business director of music publisher Novello, Ewer and Co.) took notice of the boy and advised him move to Leipzig, singing and studying choir in the Thomasschule zu Leipzig under Ernst Richter and studying in the Leipzig Conservatory for piano and composition under Carl Reinecke, Salomon Jadassohn and Oscar Paul. King was a dedicated student, having tried to branch out into as many music-related fields as possible, including (unsuccessfully) learning flute during his stay in the Royal Academy and trying to learn violin under and Henry Schradieck, however King would frequently spend ten hours a day on musical studies which only progressed slowly, and he eventually decided to make a career out of composing and playing piano. However, the conservatory choir was in an unfavourable position, Carl Reinecke disapproved the state of which the choir was under Charles John Vincent (father of George Frederick Vincent), and Reinecke and a couple members of the choir supported King as the trainer and teacher for choir, to which he accepted. In 1877, Oliver King wrote a piano concerto (dedicated to his teacher Carl Reinecke) in which King premiered as both a conductor and composer, this was to be his last major moment in Leipzig as he moved back to London that same year. Career Upon Oliver King's return to London in 1877, he faced a question of whether to teach music or compose and become a pianist, his friends were supportive of teaching as it was a more stable job, however King decided to take a career path in composing, being a pianist and even conducting. He joined the London Musical Society as a pianist, and became a frequent conductor of the Isleworth Choral Society and Royal Albert Hall Choral Society. In fact, in 1873, King premiered as a pianist playing a piano concerto composed by Carl von Weber. In 1879, Oliver King was appointed as the pianist to Princess Louise for her trip to Ottawa, Canada, and he travelled to Canada on December 22nd. Travelling in Canada and America King took up a residence in a hotel near Rideau Hall, here King would frequently work on many pieces for the piano and also for orchestra, including his Symphony in F major "Night" which was composed (or at least completed) in 1880. King would practice piano (A Kirkman) which was nearby the room where Princess Louise stayed in, Louise would often compliment and be impressed by King's play, and they would often play together, along with Montreal violinist Russell Stephenson. The trio's performances were a highlight of culture in Ottawa, and particularly of Rideau Street. Besides his work with Princess Louise in Ottawa, King would frequently tour across Quebec and other parts of Ontario, he accompanied Lord Archibald Campbell (1846-1913) during the latter's visit to Quebec in 1880. Also around this time, King saw the premiere of his Night Symphony in Boston, to which he dedicated to Princess Louise. Besides playing with royalty, King frequently performed in Ottawa in public, these concerts were originally mildly successful, however over time King's popularity grew, and so did the success of these concerts. These concerts brought newer styles of music from Europe, particularly from Germany and England. However, in December 1881, Oliver King moved to New York City for composition and performing. These compositions were usually church music, he wrote many anthems such as The star that now is shining, Sing a song of praise. From these compositions, he most likely may have not made a lot of money off these compositions, as they would be sold for ~12 cents each ($3.68 in 2022 USD), however he was popular in America as he toured frequently, and was the organist of the Church of the Holy Innocents in New York. The piano piece Gavotte was a popular hit in America, and 2 pieces which were composed in Ottawa, Curfew and Slumber Song, were still popular in the states. Return to London In 1883, Oliver King moved back to London. In early 1882, he already made his plan to go back to England, he received letters from Joseph Barnby about assistance as an organist in the St. Anne's Church in Soho. However, King went on to become the organist and musical director of the Marylebone Church from 1883 to 1886, he gave numerous concerts at the church and outside the church. For example, he gave performances of Bach and other choral and religious works, but gave a England-premiere performance of his piano concerto on 7 November 1885 under the conductorship of in a newly built concertroom in St James's Hall, this performance was part of an event held by John Brinsmead, a London-based piano maker, and by the end of the event a prize was given by Brinsmead and William George Cusins to King for his piano concerto. Also during this time period, King became the organist of the Novello Oratario Concerts, where he would play many works and compose many works under Novello, Ewer and Co. music publishers. In 1883, the London Philharmonic Society created a composition competition where the winner would receive 10 pounds (~£1,300 in 2022 GBP), here King wrote his most significant piece, an Ouverture titled "Among the Pines", this work was in competition with 46 other ouvertures including those composed by Michael Costa, and Julius Benedict. The ouverture was performed under the baton of William George Cusins, with great success, winning first place. The Musical Times in 1883 commented about the Ouverture, saying the Allegro's "Themes are so good, and their orchestral treatment so attractive, that we can hear them again with pleasure, and still have the zest for their recapitulation in the second part." In 1886, King resigned his position in the Marylebone church, during this time he toured around Britain, Ireland and Holland as pianist, however he also composed heavily, during the time between 1886 and 1893 he wrote 4 significant works: Psalm 137, by the Waters of Babylon (1888) a choral work which premiered in the Chester Music Festival, and received numerous more performances during the 1890s; a violin concerto in G-minor (1887), and another concert-ouverture in the key of D minor (1888), and the 4th significant work is a part-song called Soldier rest, thy warfare o'er (1893), this work was very popular in his day and was based on already existing text. In 1893, Oliver King became a professor of piano in the Royal Academy of Music, and King most likely took on a life with less public performances, he still continued composing, writing three cantatas from 1893 to 1897, the first called Propserpina (Before 1895?) is written for a chorus of female voices, and soloist and for orchestra, the second Romance of the Roses (1895) has lyrics written by Ellis Walton, a British composer and lyricist, the 3rd cantata was The Sands o' (of) Dee written in 1897-98 with words based on text by Charles Kingsley. 1900-Death After 1900 there is very little recorded activity, it is known he still composed, however often re-published previous works, newer significant works were The Three Fishers (1908), the Carol-anthem In A Stable Lowly (1913) and Ye Shall Go Out with Joy (1913), which was mentioned in the Press after publication and The Musical Times giving praise. His works were still popular, even used in teachings and were examples in music competitions. On 23 August 1923, the unmarried and childless Oliver King was announced dead, in the December 1923 publishings of The Musical Times, a separate section titled "The late Oliver King" was made written by a friend whose initials are "H. K." and lived in The Clergy House and in Wilton Place. The person states how talented King was in his young age, however failed to "fulfill the promise of his early youth." Compositions Although a prolific composer in choral work, many of King's works have been forgotten, and none have a recording except for a Pavan for Organ in Track 4 of PRCD1193 (Priory Records) and Prelude for Lent, (Op 10 No. 2; for Organ and Choral or just Organ) which is on Hyperion Records. This is not an exhaustive list, it will only feature the more notable of pieces. List of Compositions Vocal 50+ anthems, canons, part songs, vocal duets, songs, hymns etc. Curfew (1879-80) Slumber Song (1879-80) The star that now is shining (before 1883) Sing a song of praise (before 1883) Soldier rest, thy warfare o'er (1883) Israfel (1885?, published 1890; based on the poem Israfel by Edgar Allan Poe) In A Stable Lowly for 4 voices and organ (1913) Ye Shall Go Out with Joy (1913) Cantatas Propserpina (Before 1895?) Romance of the Roses (1895), with lyrics by women composer and lyricist Ellis Walton The Sands o' Dee (1897-98), with lyrics based on text by Charles Kingsley The Naiades (????) Other Psalm 137, by the Waters of Babylon (1888) (For solo, chorus, and orchestra) The Three Fishers (1908) a ballade and poem for chorus and orchestra based on Charles Kingsley's poem Three Fishers Orchestra with/without accompaniment Only Orchestra Symphony in F major (1880) Overture (1880) Concert-Ouverture "Among the Pines" (1883) Concert-Ouverture in D minor (1888) With Instrument soloist Piano concerto (1877, rev. 1885) Violin concerto in G minor (1887) Other Improptu-Caprice (Unknown instrumentation; 1883 or before) Gavotte (For piano; 1882 or before) Organ sonata (1891) Violin and Piano sonata in D minor (Before 1887) 12 morceaux caracteristiques pour Violin et Pianoforte (1895) Berceuse for Organ (~1898) Prelude for Lent Op. 10 no. 2 (~1883) Fantasia based on a theme by Hermann Goetz (1883) In Collaboration with Ernest Halsey (all for organ; 1908): Cantillena in A-flat Toccata in C March Funebre 2 Compositions for Organ (1895) Andatino for Organ (1913) Berceuse, Andatino, Meditation, and Valse (1879) Ballade (dedicated to Teresa Russel; 1893) Composition style The works of Oliver King tends to reflect the German styles in the Leipzig University, particularly his admiration for Richard Wagner. In an 1882 interview with Pennsylvanian Newspaper Quiz, King recalls a story of his time in Leipzig, where he and his friends would often (drunkenly) play Wagner pieces using a piano, tables, and drawers, usually the Tannhauser Overture. In that same interview, Quiz described King's style as "modern", and this "modern" description would carry on through King's lifetime, although "modern" in the 1880s and 1890s sense. as King got older, his German influence got lesser, and King began developing his own style. Even besides choral work, his pieces contained a polyphonic structure with a strong and bold texture yet still able to have emotional meanings and technical difficulty. The Musical Times describe King as very "ambitious" and with "high-aspirations" and "thorough conscientiousness", however some piano pieces were described "crowding as many notes as possible", and that King "must speak his art in a plainer language." However, overall his works seemed "effective" and well-appreciated among the musical society of England, Canada, and America. His style post-1900 was still considered "effective" and in his piece The Three Fishers (1908), his musical output was "fresh" as reviewed positively by The Musical Times. References Notes External Links IMSLP British male composers 20th-century British composers 1855 births 1923 deaths Musicians from London 19th-century British composers
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Principles of Model Checking is a textbook on model checking, an area of computer science that automates the problem of determining if a machine meets specification requirements. It was written by Christel Baier and Joost-Pieter Katoen, and published in 2008 by MIT Press. Synopsis The introduction and first chapter outline the field of model checking: a model of a machine or process can be analysed to see if desirable properties hold. For instance, a vending machine might satisfy the property "the balance can never fall below €0,00". A video game might enforce the rule "if the player has 0 lives then the game ends in a loss". Both the vending machine and video game can be modelled as transition systems. Model checking is the process of describing such requirements in mathematical language, and automating proofs that the model satisfies the requirements, or discovery of counterexamples if the model is faulty. The second chapter focuses on creating an appropriate model for concurrent systems, where multiple parts of an algorithm (set of instructions) can be carried out simultaneously by different machines or parts of a machine. Chapters 3 explores types of rules that a transition system may satisfy: linear time properties. A safety property, such as "no deadlock states are possible", is of the form "an undesirable outcome can never occur". A liveness property, such as "a shared resource will always eventually be made available to a component that requests it", is of the form "a desirable outcome will eventually happen". Fairness properties such as "a traffic light never stops changing colour" can be used as preconditions i.e. assumptions from which other properties can be deduced. The fourth chapter is about regular and ω-regular language properties, and theoretical machines such as Büchi automata that model the languages. It gives model checking algorithms to verify properties or find counterexamples. The fifth and sixth chapters explore linear temporal logic (LTL) and computation tree logic (CTL), two classes of formula that express properties. LTL encodes requirements about paths through a system, such as "every Monopoly player passes 'Go' infinitely often"; CTL encodes requirements about states in a system, such as "from any position, all players can eventually land on 'Go'". CTL* formulae, which combine the two grammars, are also defined. Algorithms for model checking formulae in these logics are given. The seventh chapter explores formal ways to compare transition systems, such as bisimulation; the eighth is about partial order reductions that aim to reduce the computation required to verify properties of a model. The ninth and tenth chapters are about extensions to the logics and automata previously considered, including through addition of a clock speed (timed automata) or probabilities (probabilistic automata, based on Markov chains). Reception François Laroussinie, writing in The Computer Journal, recommended the book to researchers, lecturers, students and engineers, calling the book "impressive". Laroussinie found the textbook comprehensive and accessibly written, with a good number of examples, exercises and motivating ideas for key concepts. With a "unified framework", the first seven chapters cover classical theory and the last three chapters cover extensions of model checking. In ACM Computing Reviews, Gabriel Ciobanu believed the textbook could be used in advanced undergraduate or graduate courses, and would be useful to researchers. Ciobanu praised the "clear and intuitive" presentation and said it "should be appreciated for its pedagogical approach to covering basic concepts, deep theoretical results, and advanced topics in model checking research". In 2014, the book was one of the five most-cited academic texts monitored by the Book Citation Index (BKCI). References Further reading External links Official website 2008 non-fiction books Computer science education Textbooks
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The 1920 Copa Ibarguren was the 8h. edition of this national cup of Argentina. It was played by the champions of both leagues, Boca Juniors (Primera División of dissident league Asociación Amateurs de Football), and Tiro Federal (Liga Rosarina de Football), crowned during 1920. After the first match (where Boca Juniors had won 2–1) was annulled, Tiro Federal beat Boca Juniors 4–0 in the replay match at Boca Juniors Stadium. Qualified teams Overview Boca Juniors beat Tiro Federal 2–1 in the final held in Sportivo Barracas. However, the Liga Rosarina claimed that three Boca Juniors footballers had played for other teams during that season (which was forbidden). Players pointed were Américo Tesoriere (for Sportivo del Norte, Felipe Galíndez (for Sportivo Barracas, and Marcelino Martínez (for Vélez Sarsfield). On August 24, the Association decided that the score stood, proclaiming Boca Juniors as winner. Nevertheless, the Martínez case was still in doubt. Finally, in October 1921 both clubs agreed to replay the match. The Association accept that gentleman's agreement. Match details Final Rematch References Boca Juniors matches 1920 in Argentine football 1920 in South American football
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Alexander Vladimirovich Shcherbakov (born 12 March 1965) is a Russian politician. He has represented Vladivostok constituency in the State Duma since 2021. Electoral record |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Shcherbakov |align=left|United Russia | |34.59% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Artyom Samsonov |align=left|Communist Party | |22.40% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Andrey Andreychenko |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |10.09% |- |style="background-color: " | |align=left|Vitaly Libanov |align=left|Communists of Russia | |7.83% |- |style="background-color: " | |align=left|Maksim Beloborodov |align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth | |7.22% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Oleg Nisenbaum |align=left|Party of Pensioners | |4.75% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Sergey Matlin |align=left|Party of Growth | |2.29% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Darya Sapronova |align=left|The Greens | |2.18% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Svetlana Petropavlova |align=left|Rodina | |1.50% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Filkov |align=left|Russian Party of Freedom and Justice | |1.30% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} References 1965 births Living people 21st-century Russian politicians United Russia politicians People from Vladivostok
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Courtney Chase (born March 24, 1988) is an American former child actress. She is known for her 1994 role as Kennedy Russo on the TV series Blossom, and for playing Lynn Watson in the 1995 movie Nick of Time. In 1988, Chase appeared in several national US commercials. In 1992, at four years old, she played Sarah Roberts on the daytime soap opera One Life to Live. Chase was nominated for "Best Performance by a Young Actress Under 10" at the Young Artist Awards for her role in the 1995 film Roommates. In 1997, Chase was nominated for "Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series" at the Young Artist Awards for her portrayal of Meredith Weber in the TV series Soul Man. Chase was also nominated for "Best Performance in a TV Movie / Pilot / Mini-Series" for playing Young Mary Rose in the 1997 TV movie Rose Hill References External links 1988 births American film actresses American television actresses American people of German descent American people of Irish descent Living people People from Long Island
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Affandi Aboudou (born 3 January 2003) is a Seychellois footballer who plays as a defender for Seychelles First Division club La Passe FC and the Seychelles national team. He is the twin brother of fellow footballer Assad Aboudou. Club career In November 2019, while a member of La Passe FC of the Seychelles First Division, Aboudou traveled to Germany for a two-week training stint with VfL Lohbrügge of the Landesliga Hamburg-Hansa. He was joined on the trip by his twin brother, Assad, and Achille Esther. In September 2021 it was announced that Affandi and Assad had traveled to Portugal for a three-month trial with C.D. Trofense of the Liga Portugal 2. During this time the players were evaluated by the club and others from within and outside of the country. He returned to Portugal for a second stint in January 2022. International career In April 2018 Aboudou was part of the Seychelles football team that competed at the Indian Ocean Youth and Sports Commission Games in Djibouti. In July of that year, he was part of the Seychelles squad that competed in the 2018 COSAFA Under-17 Championship. He scored one goal in the tournament, coming in a 3–8 opening-match defeat to Namibia. He made his senior international debut on 1 September 2021 in a friendly against Comoros. He earned his second cap three days later against Burundi. International career statistics References External links Global Sports Archive profile 2003 births Living people Association football defenders Seychellois footballers La Passe FC players Seychelles international footballers Twin sportspeople Twin people from Seychelles
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Robert Edward Wiss (20 February 1929 – 23 October 1995) was a lawyer who served as a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces from 1992 until his death in 1995. He retired from the United States Naval Reserve Judge Advocate General's Corps as a rear admiral in 1988. Early life and education Born and raised in Chicago, Wiss graduated from the West High School in 1946. He attended the University of Illinois and earned a B.A. degree in 1950. Commissioned as an ensign through the NROTC program, Wiss served in the United States Navy during the Korean War and then transitioned to the Naval Reserve in 1953. Returning to school, he completed his J.D. degree at the Northwestern University School of Law in 1956. Career As a Navy ensign, Wiss served aboard the carriers and USS Sicily. He later held staff positions in Tokyo and at the United Nations Peace Conference in Kaesong. In 1959, Wiss joined Thomas A. Foran's law firm. He later became a senior partner in Foran, Wiss & Schultz. Wiss served as legal counsel for seven cases before the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and six cases before the United States Supreme Court, one of which was Elrod v. Burns. At various points during his legal career, Wiss served as special assistant attorney general for the state of Illinois, special assistant corporation counsel for the city of Chicago, special assistant states attorney for Cook County, Illinois and general counsel for the public administrator of Cook County. Wiss continued to served as a lawyer in the Naval Reserve and was advanced to commodore in 1983 and rear admiral in 1986. From 1984 to 1988, he served as director of the Naval Reserve Law Program. On 2 October 1991, President George H. W. Bush nominated Wiss and Herman F. Gierke to two new seats on the United States Court of Military Appeals. They appeared before the Senate Committee on Armed Services on 12 November 1991 and were confirmed by unanimous consent of the full Senate two days later. On 2 January 1992, Wiss joined the Court of Military Appeals (later renamed the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces). While still serving as a judge, he died at Sibley Memorial Hospital in 1995. Personal Wiss was married to Charlene J. Sternaman (14 July 1930 – 22 January 2017). They had three daughters and nine grandchildren. Wiss and his wife were interred at Arlington National Cemetery. References 1929 births 2017 deaths University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign alumni Military personnel from Illinois United States Navy personnel of the Korean War United States Navy reservists Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law alumni Lawyers from Chicago Recipients of the Legion of Merit United States Navy admirals Judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces United States Article I federal judges appointed by George H. W. Bush People from Washington, D.C. Burials at Arlington National Cemetery
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Charles Strong was lynched by in Mayo, Florida. According to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary it was the 5th of 61 lynchings during 1922 in the United States. Background Mailman W.R. Taylor was the son of a well-known naval stores operator in Mayo, Florida. On Saturday, January 14, 1922, he entered the home of Charles Strong to investigate a dispute. In this home, around midnight, he was shot and killed by a shotgun. Charles Strong, the alleged murderer claimed that another man held the shotgun but he fled anyway and was on the run for three days before he was arrested by police. Lynching The police were taking the Black man to jail when they were met by a white mob of 1,000 people. They seized the Black man hanged him from a tree and riddled his hanging corpse with bullets. National memorial The National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018, in a setting of . Featured among other things, is a sculpture by Kwame Akoto-Bamfo of a mother with a chain around her neck and an infant in her arms. On a hill overlooking the sculpture is the Memorial Corridor which displays 805 hanging steel rectangles, each representing the counties in the United States where a documented lynching took place and, for each county, the names of those lynched. Willie Lee Jenkins' name is on the column for Barbour County, Alabama. Bibliography Notes References 1922 riots 1922 in Florida African-American history of Florida Lynching deaths in Florida February 1922 events Protest-related deaths Racially motivated violence against African Americans Riots and civil disorder in Florida White American riots in the United States
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William Anderson "Dutch" McElreath (September 25, 1915 – April 18, 1993) was an American football coach and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Trinity University in San Antonio from 1952 to 1961, compiling a record of 47–42–2. McElreath was also the athletic director at Trinity from 1952 to 1962. A native of Sulphur Springs, Texas, McElreath attended Greenville High School in Greenville, Texas, where he played football as an end under coach Henry Frnka. He then played college football at Vanderbilt University, lettering in 1937, 1938, and 1940. A back injury he sustained late in 1938 prevented him from playing in 1939. In February 1941, McElreath was appointed head football coach at Morgan School in Petersburg, Tennessee. He graduated from Vanderbilt that June and coached at Morgan in the fall of 1941. McElreath enlisted in the United States Coast Guard in 1942 and was assigned to the Coast Guard's physical education program run by Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight boxing champion. During World War II, he spent 18 months in the Pacific theater on an amphibious cargo ship and served in the Bougainville campaign. After the war, McElreath returned to coaching and reunited with Frnka, who was then head football coach at Tulane University. McElreath worked for six seasons as an assistant at Tulane under Frnka. In February 1962, McElreath was reassigned to an administrative position as a development program counselor at Trinity. He was succeeded as head football coach by W. C. McElhannon. Head coaching record College References External links 1915 births 1993 deaths American football ends Trinity Tigers athletic directors Trinity Tigers football coaches Tulane Green Wave football coaches Vanderbilt Commodores football players United States Coast Guard personnel of World War II High school football coaches in Tennessee People from Greenville, Texas People from Sulphur Springs, Texas Coaches of American football from Texas Players of American football from Texas
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Chanel Terrero Martínez (born 28 July 1991), known as Chanel Terrero or simply as Chanel, is a Cuban-Spanish singer, dancer and actress. She has worked in several stage musicals in Spain, and she is set to represent Spain at the Eurovision Song Contest 2022, after having won Benidorm Fest 2022 with her debut single "SloMo". Early life Chanel was born in Havana, Cuba, and moved to Olesa de Montserrat in Catalonia, Spain, at the age of three. Part of her family was already of Spanish origin from Catalonia. She has taken singing, acting and ballet classes from a young age. She has studied with important artists such as Víctor Ullate, Coco Comín and Glòria Gella. At the age of sixteen she started her career in musical theatre. 2010-2020: MTV Europe Music Awards and musical theatre Chanel moved to Madrid to start her acting career. During the 2010s she participated in stage musicals such as Mamma Mia!, Flashdance, El guardaespaldas and El rey león. Her acting career includes various roles on television and cinema, both nationally and internationally. As a dancer, she has worked with different artists. In 2010, she was part of danced Shakira's performance at the MTV Europe Music Awards. She also was part of the dancing crew in the Spanish show Tu cara me suena on Antena 3. 2021-2022: Benidorm Fest and Eurovision Song Contest 2022 Chanel took part in the castings for the Spanish stage production of West Side Story. She was one of the three finalists for the role of Anita. She also was between the five finalists worldwide for the same role in Steven Spielberg's film version of the musical, West Side Story. She took part in Benidorm Fest in 2022 with her debut single "SloMo". Her performance was choreographed by Kyle Hanagami, who has also worked with Jennifer Lopez, Britney Spears and Blackpink, among other artists. She won the first semi-final on 26 January 2022, and also the final on 29 January, becoming the Spanish entrant for the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 in Turin, Italy. The song entered the Spanish Singles Chart at number thirteen. Theatre work She has taken part in several musical productions, becoming a regular name in this genre in Spain: Malinche (main character). 2021-2022 Fiebre Hamilton (musical homage to Lin Manuel Miranda in Madrid). El guardaespaldas. (Main character: Rachel Marron). Flashdance. (Actress/singer in Barcelona and tour). Nine (Main actress/singer). El rey león (Teatro Lope de Vega Madrid). Mamma Mia! (Actress, singer and dancer). Lío Ibiza (Cabaret: Actress, singer and dancer). El Gran Libro Mágico (Children musical: mainactress/singer). Show “Starlite Marbella”. (Leader singer). Delizia (Cabaret: actress, singer and dancer). La ratita presumida, centro estético (Children musical: leading role). El lobo y las 7 cabritas (Children musical: leading role). Tarzán (Children musical: singer and dancer). Mortadelo y Filemón (dancer and actress). Filmography Cinema Television Fiction Music shows Tu cara me suena Benidorm Fest 2022 Eurovision Song Contest 2022 Music videos Gigantes by Ruth Lorenzo, as dancer. 2014. Another day of sun - La La Land (Spanish version), by Fran Coem. 2017. México Mágico (as part of the original cast of Malinche El Musical by Nacho Cano). 2021. Discography Singles Collaborations Awards As an actress, she has been nominated as part of the cast of the short film La llorona by Ismael Olivares. References External links Living people 1991 births Actresses from Havana Musicians from Havana People from Baix Llobregat Spanish female dancers Spanish stage actresses Spanish television actresses Spanish film actresses Cuban emigrants to Spain Cuban female dancers Cuban stage actresses Cuban television actresses Cuban film actresses Eurovision Song Contest entrants for Spain Eurovision Song Contest entrants of 2022 21st-century Spanish women singers 21st-century Cuban women singers Spanish people of Cuban descent Spanish people of Catalan descent Cuban people of Catalan descent
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Kolbu Church () is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Østre Toten Municipality in Innlandet county, Norway. It is located in the village of Kolbu. It is the church for the Kolbu parish which is part of the Toten prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Hamar. The white, wooden church was built in a cruciform design in 1730 using plans drawn up by an unknown architect. The church seats about 400 people. History The earliest existing historical records of the church date back to the year 1381, but the church was not built that year. The first church in this area was a wooden stave church that was likely built in the 13th century. This church was built at Dyste, about to the south of the present church site. Not many details are known about this church, but it was a small long church with no tower. It was in use until around the Reformation when it was closed. After this, the building fell into disrepair. It is said to have stood as a ruin for centuries until 1784 when it finally was torn down. Around the year 1300, a new church was built at Molstad, about north of the old Dyste church. This new church was located on a plot of land about west of the present Kolbu Church. This building was a small long church and it was an annex chapel to the nearby Hoff Church. Both the Dyste Church and the Molstad Church were used at the same time for about 200 years. In the early 1500s, the Dyste Church was closed and consolidated with the nearby Molstad Church. At the Norwegian church auction, Molstad Church was bought by Bishop Bartholomæus Deichman, who asked for four years to carry out necessary repairs. At a meeting in 1726, it was determined that the church was difficult to repair and that it was too small. Planning for a new church building began around that time. A new church site was chosen about to the east of the Molstad church. The new site had more room. The new building was a wooden cruciform church with a strong central tower. This new building was consecrated on 22 February 1730. The Bishop owned this new building, but he died in 1731. The church was sold again and changed owner several times before it was purchased by the local villagers in 1789. Media gallery See also List of churches in Hamar References Østre Toten Churches in Innlandet Churches in Toten Deanery Cruciform churches in Norway Wooden churches in Norway 18th-century Church of Norway church buildings Churches completed in 1730 13th-century establishments in Norway
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Robin Wagener (born 16 August 1980) is a German judge and politician of the Alliance 90/The Greens who has been a member of the Bundestag in the 2021 German federal election, representing the Lippe I district. Political career In parliament, Wagener has been serving on the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Committee on European Affairs. In this capacity, he is also his parliamentary group’s rapporteur on Russia and Ukraine. Other activities German Red Cross (DRK), Member References External links Living people 1980 births Politicians from Bielefeld 21st-century German politicians Members of the Bundestag for Alliance 90/The Greens Members of the Bundestag 2021–2025
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The 1983–84 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team represented West Virginia University as a member of the Atlantic-10 Conference during the 1983-84 season. The team played their home games at WVU Coliseum in Morgantown, West Virginia. Led by 6th-year head coach Gale Catlett, the Mountaineers won the conference tournament and received an automatic bid to the 1984 NCAA Tournament as No. 11 seed in the Mideast region. In the opening round, West Virginia knocked off No. 6 seed Oregon State. The season came to an abrupt end in the round of 32 with a 102–77 loss to No. 3 seed Maryland. Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| Atlantic-10 Tournament |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament References West Virginia West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball seasons West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball West Virginia
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The Minnesota State Mavericks men's ice hockey statistical leaders are individual statistical leaders of the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs 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 leaders. The Bulldogs represent University of Minnesota Duluth in the NCAA's National Collegiate Hockey Conference. Minnesota-Duluth began competing in intercollegiate ice hockey in 1930. These lists are updated through the end of the 2020–21 season. Goals Assists Points Saves References Lists of college ice hockey statistical leaders by team Statistical
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Niall Murray (born 1990) is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Cavan Gaels and the Cavan county team. Playing career Club Murray joined the Cavan Gaels senior panel in 2008. On 19 October 2008, Murray came on as a substitute as Cavan Gaels defeated Denn in the Cavan Senior Football Championship final, winning his first county title. On 4 October 2009, Murray came on as a substitute in the county final as the Gaels defeated Denn for the second year in a row. On 26 September 2010, Cavan Gaels faced Kingscourt Stars in the county final. Murray started at full forward as the Gaels fell to a four-point loss. Cavan Gaels were back in the county final in 2011, facing Castlerahan on 2 October. Murray started as Cavan Gaels secured another senior championship. On 13 October 2013, Murray was in the half back line as the Gaels returned to the county final, facing Ballinagh. Ballinagh were winners on a 0–12 to 0-11 scoreline. On 11 October 2014, Cavan Gaels faced Kingscourt in another county final, with Murray starting in the full back line. A late Micheál Lyng point secured a one-point win for the Gaels, and Murray's fourth senior championship. It would be 2017 before Cavan Gaels would reach the county final again. On 8 October, Murray was at full back as they faced Castlerahan, coming out five-point winners. The Gaels would later defeat Lámh Dhearg and Derrygonnelly to reach the Ulster Club final. On 26 November, Murray started at full back as Cavan Gaels faced Slaughtneil in the Ulster final. It was Slaughneil's day as they ran out comfortable winners. Inter-county Minor and under-21 Murray first played for Cavan at minor level, however he had no success at this grade. Murray later joined the Under-21 team. On 13 April 2011, Murray was at centre forward in the Ulster Final against Tyrone. A first-minute goal from Murray was decisive as Cavan were winners on a 1–10 to 0-10 scoreline. Cavan defeated Wexford in the All-Ireland semi-final later that week to reach the final against Galway. On 1 May 2011, Murray started at centre forward in the All-Ireland final. Murray scored a point as Cavan fell to a 2–16 to 1–9 defeat. Senior Murray joined the senior squad after the under-21 success in 2011. On 12 June 2011, Murray made his championship debut at wing back in an Ulster quarter-final defeat by Donegal. On 3 April 2016, Murray scored a point against Galway in the National League as Cavan earned promotion to the top flight for the first time in 15 years. On 24 April, Murray came off the bench in the Division 2 Final against Tyrone, with Tyrone winning by five points. On 1 April 2018, Cavan faced Roscommon in the National League Division 2 Final. Murray came on as a substitute in the 4–16 to 4–12 loss. On 18 May 2019, Murray was in the forward line for the Ulster quarter-final against Monaghan, and scored two points in the 1–13 to 0–12 win. Murray scored five point in both games against Armagh as Cavan reached the Ulster final. On 23 June 2019, Murray started the Ulster final as Cavan lost to Donegal. In February 2020, it was announced that Murray had undergone surgery for a quad injury and would likely miss the rest of the 2020 season. On 18 October 2020, Murray came on as a substitute in a National League loss to Kildare, his first game for Cavan since his injury. Cavan would go on to reach the Ulster Final for the second consecutive year, facing Donegal on 22 November. Murray came on as a substitute as Cavan claimed their first provincial title in 23 years. Murray again came off the bench in the All-Ireland semi-final defeat to Dublin. Honours Cavan Ulster Senior Football Championship (1): 2020 Ulster Under-21 Football Championship (1): 2011 Cavan Gaels Cavan Senior Football Championship (5): 2008, 2009, 2011, 2014, 2017 References 1990 births Living people Cavan inter-county Gaelic footballers Cavan Gaels Gaelic footballers
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The Battle of Walker's Ford (December 2, 1863) saw three Confederate cavalry brigades led by Brigadier General William T. Martin attack a Union cavalry brigade under Colonel Felix W. Graham at Walker's Ford on the Clinch River during the Knoxville campaign of the American Civil War. After failing to trap Graham's brigade at Maynardville, Tennessee, Martin's cavalry pursued in the direction of Tazewell before encountering Graham's horsemen at Walker's Ford in the morning. At first, Martin's cavalry pressed Graham's troopers back. However, Brigadier General Orlando B. Willcox arrived with a Union infantry brigade and repulsed the Confederate cavalry. Martin sent a cavalry brigade to envelop the Union force, but it was blocked by one of Graham's regiments at a nearby ford. Martin's Confederates soon withdrew toward Knoxville. Willcox's tentative probe failed to relieve Major General Ambrose Burnside's defenders in the Siege of Knoxville, but Major General William T. Sherman's much larger forces soon accomplished that task. Background Union invasion Major General Ambrose Burnside launched the Union invasion of East Tennessee in late August 1863, using two infantry divisions and cavalry from the XXIII Corps stationed in Kentucky. The operation was largely unopposed, and a Federal cavalry brigade led by John W. Foster occupied Knoxville on September 1. Burnside consolidated his control of the region at the Battle of the Cumberland Gap when he accepted the surrender of its 2,000-man Confederate garrison on September 9. The strategic situation underwent a dramatic change when General Braxton Bragg's Confederate Army of Tennessee defeated the Union Army of the Cumberland at the Battle of Chickamauga on September 19–20, 1863. The result was that Bragg blockaded the Army of the Cumberland within Chattanooga. Burnside was left largely on his own while the Union government rushed reinforcements to Chattanooga. Major General John G. Parke reached East Tennessee with two divisions of IX Corps on September 20. Brigadier General Orlando B. Willcox and 3,000 6-month Indiana soldiers arrived at Cumberland Gap on October 3. Burnside ordered Willcox east to Bull's Gap to protect against a Confederate incursion from Virginia. The strength returns for October 1863 showed that Willcox's Left Wing Forces in East Tennessee counted 178 officers and 4,213 enlisted men present for duty. Willcox directed two infantry brigades, three artillery batteries, and two companies of cavalry. Colonel Wilson C. Lemert's brigade from IX Corps formed the garrison of Cumberland Gap but its troops were not counted as part of Willcox's Left Wing. In early October, department commander Major General Samuel Jones sent a Confederate force under Brigadier General John Stuart Williams to threaten the eastern part of the Union area of control. Burnside rapidly moved the IX Corps troops to defeat Williams at the Battle of Blue Springs on October 10 and chased the Confederates back to Virginia. On October 20, two Confederate cavalry brigades mauled Colonel Frank Wolford's Federal cavalry brigade at the Battle of Philadelphia. In consequence, Burnside abandoned Loudon and withdrew to the north bank of the Tennessee River while still holding Kingston. A cavalry force led by Brigadier General William E. "Grumble" Jones surprised and routed a Union cavalry brigade at the Battle of Rogersville on November 6, inflicting 655 casualties, mostly captured. Siege of Knoxville At the end of October 1863, Bragg decided to send Lieutenant General James Longstreet and two divisions to recapture Knoxville. Bragg was upset with Longstreet's bungled attempt to cut the Army of the Cumberland's newly established Cracker Line at the Battle of Wauhatchie on October 28. In addition, Bragg saw this as an opportunity to remove Longstreet from his army, since the two men disliked each other. Longstreet's two divisions under Major General Lafayette McLaws and Brigadier General Micah Jenkins and two artillery battalions began pulling out of Bragg's lines on November 4. Since Bragg ordered Major General Joseph Wheeler's cavalry to cooperate in the operation, Longstreet commanded 10,000 infantry, 5,000 cavalry, and 35 guns. On November 14, Longstreet's troops crossed to the north bank of the Tennessee River near Loudon. In the Battle of Campbell's Station on November 16, Longstreet attempt to stop Burnside's withdrawal to Knoxville was unsuccessful. At the same time, Wheeler tried to overrun Knoxville's defenses on the south bank, but ultimately failed. Longstreet imposed a semi-siege on Burnside's troops at Knoxville. The city was not besieged in the normal sense because Burnside's men were able to move supplies into the city via the south bank. On November 14, Burnside telegraphed Willcox to continue holding Bull's Gap and Greeneville, but to withdraw to Cumberland Gap if necessary. At the same time, Willcox was ordered to send Hoskins' brigade to Knoxville. This left Willcox with the four Indiana infantry regiments, three batteries, the 32nd Kentucky Infantry Regiment, the 11th Michigan Battery, a small North Carolina unit, and two battalions of East Tennessee recruits. In addition, Willcox directed a Union cavalry division under Colonel John W. Foster consisting of two cavalry brigades led by Colonels Israel Garrard and Felix W. Graham. Burnside sent a final order to Willcox before the telegraph line was cut; Willcox was to retreat to Cumberland Gap to protect the Union line of communications between there and Camp Nelson in Kentucky. By November 19, Willcox pulled his units back as far as Bean's Station. The next day, Willcox reached Cumberland Gap where he found scarcely enough provisions to feed its garrison, let alone his 6,000 troops. Fall rains made it nearly impossible for wagons to reach Cumberland Gap from Camp Nelson. Willcox dispersed his infantry in order for the soldiers to forage for food and posted most of his cavalry near Tazewell to observe Longstreet. Willcox's cavalry recaptured a herd of hogs near Jacksboro and even foraged in Lee County, Virginia. Meanwhile, hundreds of pro-Union refugees fled the Knoxville area, heading for Kentucky by way of Cumberland Gap. At this time, Major General Ulysses S. Grant planned to attack Bragg's Confederate army near Chattanooga, but he experienced delays. Grant criticized Willcox for retreating to Cumberland Gap, not realizing that Willcox followed direct orders from Burnside. Willcox was under pressure from Grant to march to the relief of Knoxville, yet no one issued explicit orders to do so. Burnside sent a message through the siege lines asking that cavalry be sent south of the Clinch River. Hearing by telegraph from Grant that the Battle of Missionary Ridge had commenced, Willcox passed this information through the siege lines to Burnside via secret messenger. Knowing that Grant's forces were finally in motion, Willcox determined to carry out Burnside's instructions. At about this time, 250 soldiers from the 16th Illinois Cavalry Regiment led by Major Beeres rode northeast from Cumberland Gap and surprised Colonel Campbell Slemp's 64th Virginia Mounted Infantry Regiment at Jonesville, Virginia. Beeres claimed that the Confederates lost 20 killed and 26 captured and were routed. Battle Burnside had requested to be relieved of command, but his replacement, Major General John G. Foster did not reach Cumberland Gap until November 30. Meanwhile, Willcox assigned Garrard's brigade to hold Bean's Station and sent Graham's brigade to Tazewell on November 27. Following the Straight Creek Road, Graham crossed the Clinch River at Walker's Ford and reached Maynardville on November 29. The next day, Graham advanced farther south but pulled back to Maynardville. That day, "Grumble" Jones' Confederate brigade skirmished with Graham's troopers near Maynardville. When Foster arrived to take command, he approved Willcox's strategy. Longstreet responded to Graham's incursion by ordering Brigadier General Frank Crawford Armstrong's division to oppose it. Armstrong withdrew his two brigades under Colonels George Gibbs Dibrell and Thomas Harrison from Cherokee Heights on the south side of Knoxville on November 30 and crossed to the north bank. By the evening of December 1, Armstrong's troops joined Jones near Maynardville. Martin was in overall command of the three Confederate cavalry brigades. Graham's brigade consisted of 57 officers and 1,031 enlisted men, for a total strength of 1,088. Attached artillery included 4 guns of Colvin's Illinois Battery and 2 rifled guns belonging to the 5th Indiana Cavalry Regiment. Leaving Cumberland Gap with a minimum garrison and with Foster's approval, Willcox started south toward Tazewell with the infantry on December 1. Graham sensed that the Confederate forces facing him had increased, so he abandoned Maynardville at midnight. Leaving Company M, 5th Indiana Cavalry in Maynardville as a picket, Graham's brigade marched northeast and stopped at 5 am on December 2 at Brock's House, about south of Walker's Ford. This place was in a wide gap in Lone Mountain, which runs southwest to northeast, like the other ridges in the area. Hind's Ridge was south of Brock's House. Willcox arrived at Tazewell with the infantry late on December 1 to receive Graham's latest situation report. Martin tried to cut off Graham's brigade at Maynardville using Armstrong's two brigades, but found that the Union cavalry were largely gone. Jones' brigade stormed into the town from the southwest, capturing some of Company M and routing the others. Dibrell mounted a swift pursuit with the 8th Tennessee Cavalry. While riding over the icy road across Hind's Ridge, the Confederates were ambushed by a Union vedette but fought their way through it. Rushing on, they surprised and pushed back Graham's brigade at 7:30 am. Graham's cavalrymen withdrew a short distance to Yeadon's Farm where they dismounted and formed along a fence line, their position buttressed by a log house that they converted into a fort. Graham posted two battalions of the 5th Indiana in the center, the 65th Indiana Mounted Infantry on the left, one company each of the 5th and 65th Indiana on the right, and two companies of the 5th Indiana and a section of Colvin's Illinois Battery in reserve. The other 2-gun section of Colvin's Battery was posted on the north bank at Walker's Ford. The Confederates tried to overrun the position with a cavalry charge, but it was driven off and Dibrell was wounded; Colonel Daniel W. Holman assumed command of Dibrell's brigade. After more fighting, the 11th Tennessee dismounted and turned the Union right flank, causing Graham to order a retreat closer to Walker's Ford and ask for assistance. Meanwhile, Willcox set out from Tazewell at dawn on December 2 and reached the north bank of Walker's Ford with Colonel George W. Jackson's brigade. Receiving Graham's message for help, Jackson led the 116th Indiana and 118th Indiana Infantry Regiments and Captain James W. Patterson's 21st Ohio Battery across the river. Showing remarkable spunk for untested recruits, the Indiana foot soldiers formed a line about south of Walker's Ford and let the cavalry, which was almost out of ammunition, retreat through them. When Armstrong's cavalry attacked with artillery support, the Indianans and Patterson's guns repulsed them without much trouble. Before the clash at Yeadon's Farm, Graham noticed that part of the Confederate cavalry was leaving the field. Anticipating that his opponents were trying to outflank his position, Graham ordered Colonel Horace Capron to take his 14th Illinois Cavalry Regiment and cover the next ford. Accordingly, the 14th Illinois crossed to the north bank at Walker's Ford and rode east to a ford at the mouth of Black Fox Creek. Crossing to the south bank, Capron's 324-man regiment rode about south. At 10 am Jones' Confederate brigade attacked the 14th Illinois and pressed it back. Capron posted one battalion and four mountain howitzers on the north bank of the Clinch River for a final stand. However, this was not necessary because the other two battalions brought Jones' brigade to a halt on the south side of the river by 3 pm. With the regiment almost out of ammunition, Capron left two companies with most of the remaining ammunition to defend the ford and rejoined the brigade at Walker's Ford. The two companies were soon relieved by an infantry regiment. Willcox's infantry division was commanded by Colonel John I. Curtin. While Jackson's brigade was sent to Walker's Ford, a second brigade was sent on a road farther east. When Willcox sent Curtin and two infantry regiments to Walker's Ford, he held back one infantry regiment under Colonel John R. Mahan as a reserve. The unit that arrived at the ford at Black Fox Creek was the 129th Ohio Infantry Regiment, which was part of Lemert's IX Corps brigade. Results According to the Official Records, the Union force sustained 64 casualties. Historian Earl J. Hess estimated Confederates losses as 100 out of 3,000 men engaged and Union strength as 1,500. The Confederates did not report their losses, but Graham suggested that they lost 25 killed, 50 wounded, and 28 prisoners. Martin's cavalry withdrew a short distance before camping for the night. The next morning, they headed for Knoxville. Hess called the battle a Union tactical victory, but it was barren of strategic results because Martin blocked Willcox's cautious probe. However, Longstreet could not ignore Sherman's army of 30,000 Union infantry and 3,000 cavalry. This mass of soldiers began moving north from Chattanooga on November 28. By December 3, Sherman's troops were in Loudon. That day, Longstreet sent his wagon train moving northeast toward Virginia. On the night of December 4, the Confederates lifted the siege of Knoxville and withdrew northeast toward Rutledge. Forces Brigadier General Orlando B. WillcoxCommanding Left Wing, Army of the Ohio Brigadier General William T. MartinCommanding Cavalry Corps, Army of Tennessee Locations of interest Union County, Tennessee Walker's Ford Road and Walker Ford Lookout Tower Notes Footnotes Citations References Conflicts in 1863 1863 in Tennessee Knoxville campaign Battles of the Western Theater of the American Civil War Union victories of the American Civil War Battles of the American Civil War in Tennessee December 1863 events
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Leandro Carvalho is a given name. It may refer to: Leandro Carvalho (footballer, born 1983), Brazilian football defensive midfielder Leandro Carvalho (footballer, born 1995), Brazilian football forward Leandrinho (footballer, born 1996), born Leandro Alves de Carvalho, Brazilian football midfielder
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