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Perth Guildhall is a building at today's 102–106 High Street, Perth, Scotland. The structure, which stands at the corner of High and King Edward Streets, a block north of Perth City Hall, is Category B listed, dating to 1907. It stands on the site of a former guildhall that existed between 1722 and 1907. The previous building, which was torn down in May 1907, also used to hold theatre plays. Unlike today's three-storey structure, its predecessor was only two levels, the ground floor occupied by merchants, including D. Robertson booksellers and James Wotherspoon's hatters shortly before its demolition.
The foundation stone of today's structure was laid in the second half of 1907 by incumbent Dean of Guild, James Barlas. It was opened on 29 August 1908. The building hosted the Guild's activities until 1988, at which point it suffered collateral damage from construction work on an adjacent building. The hall was deemed beyond economic repair, and was sold for development. The Guild used the funds to purchase new premises at 5 Atholl Street, near the North Inch.
Its façade features sculptures in its segmental pediment, the work of H. H. Morton.
Previous structure and architectural detail
See also
List of listed buildings in Perth, Scotland
References
Guildhalls in the United Kingdom
1908 establishments in Scotland
Listed buildings in Perth, Scotland
Category B listed buildings in Perth and Kinross | [
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Gilbert Epars (born 10 April 1969) is a Swiss former footballer who played in the 1980s and 90s. He played mainly in the position as defender, but also as midfielder.
Football career
Epars played his youth football by Servette and joined their first team in the 1986–87 Nationalliga A season. He stayed with them for five and a half seasons, but was not always regular starter.
Epars joined Basel during the winter break of their 1991–92 season under head coach Ernst August Künnecke. After playing in six test games Epars played his domestic league debut for his new club in the home game in the St. Jakob Stadium on 1 March 1992 as Basel played a 1–1 draw with Yverdon-Sports.
He remained with the club for the second half of the season and then moved on again. Epars played a total of 19 games for Basel without scoring a goal. 10 of these games were in the Nationalliga A, 3 in the Swiss Cup and 6 were friendly games.
Epars joined Urania Genève Sport, who at that time played in the second tier of Swiss football. Here he spent two seasons and then he moved on to play for Étoile Carouge.
References
Sources
Die ersten 125 Jahre. Publisher: Josef Zindel im Friedrich Reinhardt Verlag, Basel.
Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv" Homepage
Servette FC players
FC Basel players
Urania Genève Sport players
Étoile Carouge FC players
Swiss footballers
Association football defenders
Association football midfielders
Swiss Super League players
1969 births
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Jacob Franckaert or Jacob Franquart (the Elder) (1550–51 – 6 September 1601 (buried)) was a Flemish painter and draftsman. After training in Antwerp, he worked in Brussels and later moved to Italy where he worked in Naples and Rome. He is known for his religious subjects, landscapes and architectural scenes.
Life
Franckaert was born in Antwerp in 1550 or 1551. It is not known with whom he studied. He became a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1571. He married Michaela del Tronco. A son, also called Jacob was born in 1582 or 1583 and a daughter named Suzanna was born around 1584. Jacob the Elder was still recorded as a master painter at the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1585.
He travelled with his family via Paris to Italy in 1591. In Naples he started a collaboration with Wenceslas Cobergher, a Flemish painter who had trained in Antwerp with the leading history painter Maerten de Vos. They executed several paintings for the city's churches. It is difficult to discern in these works the contribution of either artist.
Jacob the Elder moved with his family to Rome in 1594. Cobergher joined them and the two artists continued their collaboration. Four months after the death of his first wife, Cobergher married Jacob's daughter Suzanna in Rome on 20 November 1599. At the time the Franckaert family was registered in the register of the parish of San Lorenzo in Rome and they were still registered there in March 1601. Jacob the elder was likely the teacher of his son Jacob the younger.
Jacob died on 6 September 1601 in Rome. His widow died not long after. Their son Jacob the went to live with his sister Susanna and her husband Cobergher.
Work
Franckaert painted and drew religious subjects, landscapes and architectural scenes. He collaborated on various paintings with Cobergher. He is now mainly known for a small number of landscape and architectural drawings. The only known signed drawing is The Temple of Minerva Medica and other ruins on the Esquiline, Rome in the collection of the Vatican, which is signed 'Van Franckaert'. This drawing has served as the basis of attributions of other drawings of Roman views in the Berlin Kunstbibliothek, the Louvre and the Rijksmuseum.
On 23 February 1601 Franckaert together with three other Flemish painters working in Rome entered into a contract with the Spanish noble Don Pietro di Toledo, fifth marquis of Villafranca for the execution of ninety paintings of hermits at the price of 15 escudos per piece and 400 paintings of Roman emperors and other prominent figures of Antiquity. The other Flemish painters were Paul Bril, a leading landscape painter, the rather obscure landscape artist Willem van Nieulandt the Elder and Franckaert's son-in-law and collaborator Cobergher. Thirty of the paintings of hermits are now in the collection of the Monastery of the Anunciada in Villafranca del Bierzo. These works were partially based on prints after designs by the Flemish artist Maerten de Vos. The contribution of each of the artists in the paintings cannot be determined with certainty.
References
External links
1550s births
1601 deaths
Flemish Renaissance painters
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Pleuropoma is a genus of land snails with an operculum. It is a genus of terrestrial gastropod mollusks in the subfamily Helicininae of the family Helicinidae.
Species
Pleuropoma albescens (Hartman, 1890)
Pleuropoma andamanica (Benson, 1860)
Pleuropoma arakanensis (W. T. Blanford, 1865)
Pleuropoma articulata (L. Pfeiffer, 1854)
Pleuropoma brecanrio Stanisic, 2010
Pleuropoma dichroa (Möllendorff, 1890)
Pleuropoma draytonensis (Pfeiffer, 1857)
Pleuropoma dunkeri (Zelebor, 1867)
Pleuropoma extincta (Odhner, 1917)
Pleuropoma falcistoma van Benthem Jutting, 1963
Pleuropoma gilvum van Benthem Jutting, 1963
Pleuropoma gladstonensis (Cox, 1864)
Pleuropoma gouldiana (E. Forbes, 1852)
Pleuropoma jana (Cox, 1872)
Pleuropoma macleayi (Brazier, 1876)
Pleuropoma mariae A. J. Wagner, 1911
Pleuropoma nicobarica (L. Pfeiffer, 1847)
Pleuropoma nonouensis Neal, 1934
Pleuropoma pelewensis (Sykes, 1901)
Pleuropoma queenslandica Stanisic, 2010
Pleuropoma raiatensis (Garrett, 1884)
Pleuropoma reflexilabiata Stanisic, 2010
Pleuropoma richardson Stanisic, 2010
Pleuropoma rogersi (Bourne, 1911)
Pleuropoma rotella (G. B. Sowerby II, 1842)
Pleuropoma scrupula (Benson, 1863)
Pleuropoma simulans (Garrett, 1884)
Pleuropoma sophiae (Brazier, 1876)
Pleuropoma spatei Stanisic, 2010
Pleuropoma sphaeridium (Möllendorff, 1896)
Pleuropoma sphaeroconus (Möllendorff, 1895)
Pleuropoma subrufa (Garrett, 1884)
Pleuropoma taeniata (Quoy & Gaimard, 1832)
Pleuropoma talusata Stanisic, 2010
Pleuropoma varians (Sykes, 1903)
Pleuropoma vicina A. J. Wagner, 1911
Pleuropoma walkeri (E. A. Smith, 1894)
Synonyms
Pleuropoma aruana (L. Pfeiffer, 1859): synonym of Aphanoconia aruana (L. Pfeiffer, 1859)
Pleuropoma calamianica (Möllendorff, 1898): synonym of Aphanoconia trichroa calamianica (Möllendorff, 1898) (chresonym)
Pleuropoma chichijimanum Kuroda, 1956: synonym of Ogasawarana chichijimana (Kuroda, 1956) (original combination)
Pleuropoma laciniosa (Mighels, 1845): synonym of Sturanya laciniosa (Mighels, 1945)
Pleuropoma maugeriae (Gray, 1824): synonym of Orobophana maugeriae (Gray, 1824) (new combination)
Pleuropoma mediana (Gassies, 1870): synonym of Sturanya mediana (Gassies, 1870)
Pleuropoma metamorpha Kuroda, 1956: synonym of Ogasawarana metamorpha (Kuroda, 1956) (original combination)
Pleuropoma primeana (Gassies, 1863): synonym of Sturanya sphaeroidea (L. Pfeiffer, 1855) (synonym)
Pleuropoma subsculpta Neal, 1934: synonym of Sturanya subsculpta (Neal, 1934) (new combination)
Pleuropoma sublaevigata (L. Pfeiffer, 1852): synonym of Sturanya sublaevigata (L. Pfeiffer, 1852)
Pleuropoma togatula (Morelet, 1857): synonym of Sturanya macgillivrayi (L. Pfeiffer, 1855) (junior synonym)
Pleuropoma yorkensis (L. Pfeiffer, 1863) (uncertain > nomen dubium)
References
Delsaerdt A. , 2016 Land snails on the Solomon Islands. Vol. III. Trochomorphidae and systematical review of all other families. Ancona: L'Informatore Piceno. 160 pp
Bank, R. A. (2017). Classification of the Recent terrestrial Gastropoda of the World. Last update: July 16th, 2017
External links
Möllendorff, O. F. von. (1893). Materialien zur Fauna der Philippinen. XI. Die Insel Leyte. Bericht der Senckenbergischen Naturforschenden Gesellschaft. 1892/1893: 51-154
Helicinidae
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Fall River, Massachusetts between 1877 and 1949. Fall River teams played as members of the New England Association (1877), League Alliance (1877), New England League (1893–1898, 1902–1913), Colonial League (1914–1915) and New England League (1946–1949).
The Fall River Indians were a minor league affiliate of the Chicago White Sox from 1946 to 1949.
Baseball Hall of Fame members Ned Hanlon in 1877, Nap Lajoie in 1896 and Roger Connor in 1897 played for Fall River teams.
History
New England Association 1877/League Alliance 1877
In 1877, minor league baseball began in Fall River, when the Fall River Cascades played in two leagues in their first season. Initially, Fall River became charter members of the eight–team New England Association and also played in the 1877 League Alliance.
The Fall River Cascades placed 3rd in the 1877 New England Association, compiling a 19–21 record under manager Jim Mutrie. The New England Association folded after the 1877 season. The Cascades had corresponding play in the 1877 League Alliance, where the team finished 2–12 in alliance contests. The League Alliance structure also folded after the 1877 season.
Baseball Hall of Fame member Ned Hanlon played for the 1877 Falls River Cascades at age 19.
New England League 1893–1898
In 1893 the Fall River Indians joined the six–team New England League and won the first of four consecutive league Championships.
Capturing their first New England League championship, the 1893 Fall River Indians ended the regular season with a 60–30 record playing home games at the Athletic Grounds. Fall River was 1st in the standings under manager Mike McDermott, finishing 5.5 games ahead of 2nd place Lewiston. The New England League had no playoffs, using the regular season standings to determine the league champions. On July 5, 1893, Fall River Indian pitcher Ezra Lincoln threw the first known Fall River No-hitter in a 9–0 victory over Dover.
McDermott and the Fall River Indians defended their championship in 1894 as the New England League expanded to eight teams. The Indians again finished 1st in the New England League standings, ending the 1894 season 7.5 games ahead of 2nd place Haverhill with a record of 62–35.
The 1895 Fall River Indians won the championship again as the New England League became a Class B level league. With Mike McDermott again managing the Indians, Fall River ended the regular season with a 67–39 record. Fall River finished 6.5 games ahead of the 2nd place New Hartford Whalers and 11.0 games ahead of the 3rd place Bangor Millionaires in the final standings of the eight–team league.
The Fall River Indians won their 4th consecutive New England League Championship in 1896, with a future hall of fame player on the roster. Falls River completed the season with a record of 68–39 behind manager Charley Marston. The Indians finished 2.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Bangor Millionaires in the final standings.
Baseball Hall of Fame member Nap Lajoie left his $7.50 per week job as a taxi driver to join the 1896 Fall River Indians. Lajoie played as a center fielder, first baseman and catcher for the Indians, while earning $25 per week at age 22.
With the Indians in 1896, Nap Lajoie hit .429 with 17 triples, 15 home runs, slugging .726 for Fall River. Indians owner Charlie Marston rejected an offer of $500.00 from the Pittsburgh Pirates for Lajoie, who was also scouted by the Philadelphia Phillies and Boston Beaneaters. On August 9, 1896, the Philadelphia Phillies purchased Lajoie and Indian teammate Phil Geier from Fall River for $1,500. Phillies' manager Billy Nash originally went to Fall River to sign Geier, but obtained Lajoie when the team agreed to include him in their asking price. Lajoie made his major league debut shortly after being obtained.
In 1897, the Fall River Indians championship run ended. Fall River ended the 1897 New England League season with a 47–59 record, as Mike McDermott and owner Charley Marston served as managers. The Indians finished 22.5 games behind the champion Brockton Shoemakers and Newport Colts (tie) in the six–team New England League final standings.
Baseball Hall of Fame member Roger Connor played for the Fall River Indians in 1897 at age 39, hitting .287 in 47 games after beginning the 1897 season with the St. Louis Browns.
The 1898 Fall River Indians placed 3rd in the six–team Class B New England League standings. Fall River ended with a 28–25 record under Manager Phenomenal Smith, finishing 6.5 games behind the 1st place Brockton Shoemakers and percentage points behind the 2nd place Pawtucket Tigers. On June 22, 1898, Indians pitcher Tom Flanagan threw a no–hitter. Flanagan defeated the Brockton Shoemakers 5–0.
The Fall River franchise folded after the 1898 season and did not return to the 1899 New England League.
New England League 1902–1913
In 1902, the Fall River Indians resumed play, returning to the eight–team Class B level New England League and playing home games at Athletic Park. The Fall River Indians finished last in the 1902 New England League standings. The Indians finished with a record of 37–74, as Sandy McDermott served as manager, beginning a five-year tenure. Falls River finished 37.5 games behind 1st place Manchester.
Fall River placed 5th in the 1903 New England League standings. With a 57–56 record, the Indians finished 15.0 games behind the 1st place Lowell Tigers in the final standings. Sandy McDermott served his second season as the Fall city manager as the Indians continued play in the eight–team Class B league.
With Sandy McDermott continuing as manager, the Fall River Indians finished 3rd in the 1904 New England League. Fall River ended the season with a 65–60 record in the eight–team league, 18.0 games behind the 1st place Haverhill Hustlers (82–41).
The 1905 New England League standings saw the Fall River Indians finish a close 2nd place. Fall River finished the season with a record of 66–40, 2.0 games behind the 1st place Concord Marines, who had a 69–39 record. Sandy McDermott again managed the Indians.
Placing 6th in the eight–team 1906 New England League, Sandy McDermott managed the Falls River Indians for the final time. Ending the season with a record of 55–59, Fall River finished 18.0 games behind the champion Worcester Busters in the final standings.
Manager John O'Brien began a six–season tenure as the 1907 Fall River Indians placed 5th in the Class B level New England League. The Indians ended the 1907 season with a record of 56–56, finishing 20.0 games behind the 1st place Worcester Busters.
As the Worcester Busters again won the league championship, the Fall River Indians placed 6th in the 1908 New England League. Fall River had a final record of 53–70 under the direction of manager John O'Brien, finishing 26.5 games behind Worcester in the eight–team league.
The 1909 Fall River Indians placed 4th in the New England League, as Worcester again won the championship. With a 71–53, record, Fall City finished 6.0 games out of 1st place as John O'Brien again managed the Indians.
The Fall River Indians of the New England League ended the 1910 season with a record of 61–60. Fall River placed 5th in the standings under manager John O'Brien, finishing 15.0 games behind the New Bedford Whalers. On June 8, 1910, Fall River pitcher Harry Wormwood threw an 11–inning no-hitter against the Worcester Busters. Wormwood and Fall River won the game 1–0.
The Fall River franchise changed monikers and became the Fall River Brinies for the 1911 New England League season. The Fall River Brinies ended the 1911 season with a 59–57 season record, as John O'Brien served as manager. The Brinies placed 4th in the standings, finishing 14.0 games behind the Lowell Tigers. Fall River had three pitchers throw three no–hitters in 1911, On June 7, 1911, Fred Reiger, pitching for Fall River, defeated Haverhill 7–2 in while throwing the first no–hitter. Fall River had the second no–hitter in 1911 when Fred Blum defeated Lawrence 4–0 in a 7–inning game on July 31, 1911. On August 28, 1911, Harry Wormwood threw his second Fall River no–hitter, pitching a 13–inning no-hitter against Lawrence in a game that ended in a 0–0 tie.
The 1912 Fall River Brinies finished last in the eight–team New England League. With John O'Brien finishing his tenure as manager, Fall River finished with a 46–74 record. The 1st place Lawrence Barristers (76–47) were 28.5 games ahead of the Brinies in the league standings. On May 29, 1912, Harry Wormwood threw his third Fall River no–hitter against Worcester. Wormwood threw 12–innings of no-hit ball in a game that ended with a 2–2 tie.
The 1913 team had a new moniker as the Fall River Adopted Sons continued play in the 1913 New England League. Ending the season in 7th place, the Fall River Adopted Sons had a 45–76 record under manager Dan Clohecy. Fall River finished 33.5 games behind the champion Lowell Grays.
Colonial League 1914–1915
Fall River captured the 1914 Colonial League Championship.Fall River did not return to the 1914 New England League as the franchise joined the 1914 six–team Class C level Colonial League, playing as the Fall River Spindles. The Fall River Spindles ended the 1914 season with a record of 62–37, finishing 2.5 games ahead of the 2nd place New Bedford Whalers, as John Kiernan was manager of the championship team. On June 18, 1915, Merdic McLeod, pitching for Fall River, threw a no–hitter against the Springfield Tips in a 3–0 Fall River victory.
In 1915, the Colonial League essentially became the minor league feeder for the Federal League. This structure was a financial downfall for the Colonial League and the league folded after the 1915 season, with defending champion Fall River folding before the end of the 1915 season.
The Fall River Spindles disbanded on July 10, 1915. The Colonial League became an Independent league and the Spindles ended the 1915 season with a record of 22–24. The Taunton franchise disbanded with Fall River on July 10. Frank Connaughton and Bill Phoenix served as managers of the Spindles.
New England League 1946–1949
In 1946, Fall River returned to minor league play. Fall River returned to play as members the Class B level New England League, which reformed for the 1946 season with eight teams. The Falls River Indians resumed play as a minor league affiliate of the Chicago White Sox and began playing home games at Fall River Stadium. The Fall River Indians placed 7th in 1946 New England League regular season standings and did not qualify for the playoffs, finishing 53.0 games behind the 1st place Lynn Red Sox. With a record of 30–94, Falls River was 7th in the standings playing under Manager Jack Burns.
The 1947 Fall River Indians continued as an affiliate of the Chicago White Sox, a relationship which continued in subsequent seasons. Fall River played under manager Joe Holden and finished the 1947 season with a record of 49–76, placing 6th in the New England League regular season standings, finishing 37.5 games behind the 1st place Lynn Red Sox. Season attendance at Fall River Stadium was 57,468, an average of 919 per game.
The 1948 Fall River Indians finished last in the New England League. Fall River ended the 1948 season with a record of 38–87, placing 8th in the standings, finishing 47.0 games behind the 1st place Lynn Red Sox. Frank Zubik and Luke Urban were the 1948 managers. Playing at Fall River Stadium, the overall home attendance was 22,589, an average of 361.
The Fall River Indians played their final season in 1949. The Fall River Indians played their final game on July 19, 1949, After falling to the Nashua Dodgers 10–5, the Indians withdrew from the league with a 27–42 record. The Lynn and Manchester franchises folded on the same day.The New England League folded following the 1949 season. Minor league baseball has not returned to Fall River.
The ballparks
from 1893 to 1915, Fall River teams played home games at the Athletic Grounds. Also known as the "Bedford Street Grounds" (1893–1898), the ballpark had a capacity of 3,000. The Athletic Grounds were located on Bedford Street at Oak Grove Avenue & Beattie Street in Fall River, Massachusetts.
The Fall River Indians played home games at Fall River Stadium from 1946 to 1949. The ballpark was located at Wordell Street & Plymouth in Fall River, Massachusetts. The site today is still in use as a soccer filed.
Timeline
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Roger Connor (1897) inducted, 1976
Ned Hanlon (1877) inducted, 1996
Nap Lajoie (1896) inducted, 1937
Notable alumni
Hugh Bedient (1910)
Curt Bernard (1898)
George Brickley (1915)
Benny Bowcock (1902-1906, 1908–1912)
George Bristow (1896)
Jack Burns (1946, MGR)
Buster Burrell (1893)
Art Butler (1910, 1912)
Jack Cameron (1908)
Bill Carrick (1904-1905)
Jim Connor (1897)
Joe Connor (1897, 1907–1908)
Fred Cooke (1894)
Jack Cronin (1897-1898)
Bill Day (1904)
Joe Delahanty (1897)
Fred Doe (1897)
Mike Donovan (1908)
Pat Duff (1897)
Frank Dupee (1902)
Tom Earley (1946)
Frank Fennelly (1893)
Alex Ferson (1895)
William Fischer (1909)
Ed Flanagan (1894)
Phil Geier (1896)
Billy Gilbert (1897)
George Gore (1877)
Mert Hackett (1877)
Joe Harrington (1893-1895, 1898)
Joe Harris (1903-1905)
Dave Howard (1913-1914)
Tom Hurd (1947)
Happy Iott (1903-1904)
Bill Karns (1902)
Jack Katoll (1898)
Doc Kennedy (1895-1896)
Fred Klobedanz (1894, 1896)
Larry Kopf (1911) Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame
Charlie Kuhns (1897)
Hi Ladd (1893-1894, 1896–1898, 1904)
Henry Lampe (1896)
Steve Libby (1877)
Ezra Lincoln (1893-1894, 1896))
Michael McDermott (1893-1895, 1897, MGR)
Sandy McDermott (1902-1906, MGR)
Art McGovern (1913)
Bill McGunnigle (1877)
Frank McManus (1897-1898))
Bobby Messenger (1907-1908)
Ralph Miller (1897)
Willie Mills (1896)
Cy Morgan (1903)
Danny Murphy (1897)
Jim Mutrie (1877, MGR)
Andy O'Connor (1907)
Kid O'Hara (1906)
Joe Patanelli (1947)
Rube Peters (1915)
Bob Peterson (1904)
Tom Raftery (1902)
Ernie Ross (1902)
Ed Rowen (1877)
Ossee Schreckengost (1897)
Biff Sheehan (1894)
Phenomenal Smith (1898, MGR)
Stub Smith (1898)
Allan Sothoron (1913)
Gene Steere (1902)
Dummy Stephenson (1895)
Jack Stivetts (1897)
Andy Sullivan
Jack Sullivan (1910)
Doc Tonkin (1906)
Tom Walker (1898)
Bert Weeden (1914)
Frank Whitman (1947)
Pop Williams (1896)
Nick Wise (1897)
Arthur C. Woodward
Dan Woodman (1913)
George Yankowski (1946-1947)
See also
Fall River Adopted Sons playersFall River Brienies playersFall River Casscade playersFall River Indians playersFall River Spindles players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Sports in Fall River, Massachusetts | [
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VfL Lohbrügge is a German association football club based in Hamburg. As of the 2021–22 season, the club plays in the Oberliga Hamburg.
References
External links
Official website
Fussball.de profile
Football clubs in Hamburg
Multi-sport clubs in Germany
Association football clubs established in 1892
1892 establishments in Germany | [
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The 2022 Idemitsu Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by BF Goodrich is a single-make motor racing championship, the 18th season of the Mazda MX-5 Cup and the 2nd under a new sanctioning agreement with the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA). The series began on January 27 at Daytona International Speedway, and will conclude on October 1 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta after 14 rounds.
Schedule
The schedule was announced on August 6, 2021, featuring 14 rounds across seven double-header weekends. All races are 45 minutes in length.
Entry list
All competitors utilize the Mazda MX-5 Cup car, modified to their homologated racing specification by Flis Performance.
= Eligible for Rookie's Championship
Race Results
Bold indicates overall winner.
Championship Standings
Points System
Championship points are awarded at the finish of each event according to the chart below.
For each race, bonus points are awarded for the following:
The ten (10) additional points for achieving pole position are not awarded if the starting grid is determined by “Other Means”.
In the case of a tie for the most laps led, the competitor that finishes the highest in the running order is declared the winner.
In the case of a tie for the fastest Race lap, the competitor that first achieves the fastest Race lap is declared the winner.
Driver's Championship
IMSA recognizes Driver champions based on the total number of championship points earned during the season.
Bold = Pole Position
Italics = Fastest Race Lap
Underline = Most Laps Led
References
External links
Official Website
Mazda MX-5 Cup
Mazda MX-5 Cup
Mazda MX-5 Cup | [
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On October 12, 1948, an Ilyushin Il-12 operating by Aeroflot crashed during a scheduled flight from Baku Airport to Tbilisi Airport. All ten people aboard the aircraft died.
Aircraft
The crashed aircraft was a twin-engine Ilyushin Il-12 (serial number: 25-17). The aircraft flew first time in 1948 and was given to the Uzbekistan fleet of Aeroflot. It got the tail number CCCP-L1450. It had 274 flight hours when the accident happened.
Flight and the accident
The crew and aircraft took off from Tbilisi Airport to go to Tashkent Airport via Baku Airport stopover. They arrived at Baku Airport on 11 October 1948 at 11:15 AM, but they couldn't go to Tbilisi Airport the same day because of bad weather conditions in the route. The next day, the crew prepared to go to Tbilisi Airport, but meanwhile Baku Airport has been closed to flights due to stormy weather. Nevertheless, the aircraft was allowed to take off. They took off on October 12, 1948, at 10:40 AM and climbed to 3000 meters. And then, the crew experienced navigation problems and decided to go back to Baku Airport. The aircraft could not be communicated again. The aircraft disappeared, and the debris was never found.
References
1948 in Azerbaijan
Aviation accidents and incidents in the Soviet Union
Aviation accidents and incidents in Azerbaijan
Aviation accidents and incidents in 1948
Accidents and incidents involving the Ilyushin Il-12
1948 in the Soviet Union
Aeroflot accidents and incidents | [
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Aeterna is a Russian fantasy TV series based on a series of novels by Vera Kamshi 'Reflections of Eterna'. The project is being produced by Black Prince. The premiere of the show took place on 20 January 2022 in the online cinema Kinopoisk. The sequel is scheduled for a 2023 release.
Plot
Kertiana, the world created by the four Gods, flourished under their rule for a thousand years. Four left this world and bequeathed to keep Kertiana to their heirs: King Rakan and four Lords. Every 400 years, the time of the Great Break comes, and only Rakan and the Lords keep the world from destruction. Thousands of years have passed, and the Gods have not returned. Rakan and the lords forgot their purpose, and troubled times fell on Karthian. At the turn of the eras, Ollar the Conqueror goes to war against King Rakan. The conqueror is supported by the Lord of the Wind and opens the gates of the impregnable capital. The King's heir is rescued by the Lord of the Rocks, sheltering him from the holy city of Agaris. 400 years of Rakani in exile, and usurpers on the royal throne. But the legend says: the powers of the Ollars will last 400 years. And now the Lord of the Rocks Oakdell raises a rebellion, but dies from the sword of the Lord of the Wind Alva. Deprived of their leader, the rebels flee. And only the clan of the Lord of Lightning Epine protects the retreating army. Everyone dies in battle, except for the younger Robert.
Actors and roles
Starring
Minor roles
Production
The start of work on the project began in September 2020. The series was produced by Evgeny Baranov and Evgeny Rene, with creative producers Nikita Sugakov and Vladislav Rubin. The director of the first part is Evgeny Nevsky and the screenwriters are Sergey Yudakov and Evgent Baranov. The production designer is Anastasia Karimulina and the cameraman is Alexander Simonov and Antoine Vivas - Denisov. The Black Prince company was created especially for filming the series. In 2019, a teaser for the series was filmed in Moscow.
The producer of the series, Yevgeny Baranov and Yevgeny Rene, planned to shoot five seasons with 10 episodes each.
Filming of the first part took place in Moscow and St. Petersburg, but the series was originally created for export.
References
Television series
Russian television series | [
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Tripunithura N. Radhakrishnan is a Ghatam exponent from Kerala, India. He is the first artist to receive the noted Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Fellowship for Ghatam. He has played the Ghatam in tens of thousands of venues across hundreds of countries.
Biography
N. Radhakrishnan is the youngest of four children of Alamelu Ammal and Poonithura Valiya Parambu Meethil house G. Narayanaswamy, a renowned musician fondly called as Achasamy by the people in music field in the region. It was his father who taught him the first lessons in mridangam. Thrippunithura Mahadevan, the son of his father's sister, was a Ghatam scholar. Many of the relatives were also percussion instrument artists. He started practicing the Ghatam from a young age, and made his debut at the age of ten. Later he got expert training from Parassala Ravi and his cousin Padmabhushan T. V. Gopalakrishnan.
He passed Gana Bhushan from RLV College of Music and Fine Arts, Thripunithura in 1982. Then he passed Gana Praveena from Swathi Thirunal College of Music in Thiruvananthapuram and later a master's degree in Mridangam from Mahatma Gandhi University. He later became a teacher in the college where he studied.
Radhakrishnan has been running the GN Swamy Memorial Music School near the Poornathrayesa Temple in Thripunithura for 21 years. During his fifty years as a Ghatam teacher, he was able to impart lessons to many. Many of these are now professional artists. He also leads a fusion band named Ghatalayatarangam, which includes Ghatam, Chenda and Tabla.
Personal life
He and his wife Lalithambika have 2 children, singer Renjith and a daughter. He now resides at Vikram Sarabhai Road, Poonithura.
Musical career
Radhakrishnan was one of those who sought to give due recognition to the Ghatam which was known only as a supporting instrument in Indian classical music. His first stage performance was on January 16, 1967. He has played the Ghatam in tens of thousands of venues across hundreds of countries.
Radhakrishnan has played the Ghatam in concerts by famous musicians like Chembai Vaidyanatha Bhagavatar, M. D. Ramanathan, Maharajapuram Santhanam, Madurai Somasundaram, Dr. M. L. Vasanthakumari, K. V. Narayanaswamy and Dr. M. Balamuralikrishna. In instrumental music, he has performed with noted artists like Lalgudi Jayaraman, T. N. Krishnan, Kadri Gopalnath, U. Srinivas, L. Subramaniam, N. Ravikiran and Shashank.
Radhakrishnan started playing Ghatam for Yesudas 'concert on March 31, 1976, and has been performing at Yesudas' concerts for the last forty one years. He was also involved in the background music of Malayalam films such as Pooram, Rakkuyilin Ragasadassil, Sriragam, Padamudra and Devaasuram.
Awards and honors
Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Fellowship 2020
Kerala Sangaatha Nataka Akademi Award 1997
Vasai Fine Arts Society's Lifetime Achievement Award 2019
Parakkadathu Koyickal Trust's Tripunithura Asthana Vidwan Puraskaram
References
Living people
Ghatam players
Indian percussionists
Malayali people
People from Ernakulam district
20th-century Indian musicians | [
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The 1968 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders football team represented Middle Tennessee State University—as a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) during the 1968 NCAA College Division football season. Led by 22nd-year head coach Charles M. Murphy, the Blue Raiders compiled a record an overall record of 2–8 with a mark of 1–6 in conference play, tying for seventh place in the OVC. The team's captains were Daniel, Mathews, and Claxton.
Schedule
References
Middle Tennessee
Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders football seasons
Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders football | [
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1996,
3380,
2690,
5298,
2630,
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2374,
2136,
3421,
2690,
5298,
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Archibald Hope Gibson (8 March 1888 – 12 February 1920) was a Canadian first-class cricketer.
Gibson was born at Hamilton in March 1888. A member of the Hamilton Cricket Club and the Toronto Cricket Club, he toured England in 1910 with the Toronto I Zingari. He later made a single appearance in first-class cricket for a combined Canada and United States of America cricket team against the touring Australians at Toronto in 1913. Batting twice in the match, he scored 19 runs in the Canada/United States first innings before being dismissed by Arthur Mailey, while in their second innings he was dismissed for 2 runs by Jack Crawford, with the Australians winning the match by an innings and 147 runs. It was noted by Wisden that "he was an excellent all-round athlete". Gibson died at Hamilton in February 1920.
References
External links
1888 births
1920 deaths
Sportspeople from Hamilton, Ontario
Canadian cricketers
Canada and United States of America cricketers | [
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Manifesto: On Never Giving Up is a 2022 memoir by Bernardine Evaristo. The book has four "positive" reviews and ten "rave" reviews according to review aggregator Book Marks.
References
2022 non-fiction books
English-language books
Grove Press books
Memoirs | [
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Linda Heitmann (born 2 August 1982) is a German politician. Heitmann became a member of the Bundestag in the 2021 German federal election. She is affiliated with the Alliance 90/The Greens party. She represents the constituency of Hamburg Altona.
References
Living people
1982 births
Politicians from Hamburg
21st-century German politicians
21st-century German women politicians
Members of the Bundestag for Alliance 90/The Greens
Members of the Bundestag 2021–2025
Female members of the Bundestag | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Lawrence, Massachusetts between 1877 and 1946. Lawrence minor league baseball teams played as members of the New England Association (1877), Massachusetts State Association (1884), Eastern New England League (1885), New England League (1886–1887, 1892, 1899), New England Association (1895), New England League (1899, 1902–1915), Eastern League (1916–1917) and New England League (1919, 1926–1927, 1933, 1946–1947).
Lawrence played as a minor league affiliate of the New York Giants in 1933.
History
Beginnings: 1877 to 1895
In 1877, minor league baseball began in Lawrence, when the Lawrence team became founding members of the eight–team New England Association. The Lawrence team's 1877 record is unknown, as the team folded during the season.
The Massachusetts State Association played in 1884, with Lawrence as a member of the eight–team league. Lawrence finished in 4th place playing under five managers, who were Harry Clarke, L.S. Dow, Charles Freleigh, Matthew Barry and Frank Selee. Lawrence finished 7.0 games behind 1st place Springfield team in the final standings with a 7–15 record. The Massachusetts State Association folded and played only the 1884 season, with four teams folding on July 21, 1884.
The Lawrence team won a championship in 1885. Lawrence played as members of the Eastern New England League and ended the 1885 season with a record of 48–31, placing 1st in the Eastern New England League standings. Walter Burnham served as manager in leading Lawrence to the championship of the five–team league. The Eastern New England League played in only the 1885 season.
In 1886, Lawrence began a long association with the New England League. The team finished with a record of 42–55 and placed 5th in their first season of New England League play under manager Frank Cox. Lawrence finished 21.5 games behind 1st place Portland team in the six–team league.
The Lawrence team moved to Salem during the 1887 New England League season. Lawrence, with a 29–34 record, moved to Salem, Massachusetts on July 26, 1887, and became the Salem Witches. The team ended the season with a 45–50 overall record, placing 5th in the New England League, finishing 21.5 games behind the champion Lowell Browns in the eight–team league. The Lawrence/Salem team was managed by Pat Pettee and Harry Putnam. Salem continued play in the 1888 New England League.
Lawrence was without a team until rejoining the New England League in mid–season in 1892. On July 2, 1892, the Manchester Gazettes of the New England League moved to Lawrence. The team then disbanded before the conclusion of the regular season. The Manchester/Lawrence team had a 26–45 record when the team folded in Lawrence. The 1892 managers were Jim Cudworth and W.J. Freeman.
The Lawrence Indians became members of the reformed Independent New England Association in 1895. Lawrence was in 1st place with a 31–19 record under manager John Irwin when the league permanently folded on July 8, 1895. Lawrence was 3.0 games ahead of 2nd place Nashua when the six–team league stopped play.
New England League 1899, 1902–1915
Fitchburg of the New England League, with a 3–7 record, moved the franchise to Lawrence on May 24, 1899. The franchise then disbanded on June 1, 1899. The Fitchburg/Lawrence team ended the 1899 season with a record of 3–14. Ed Norton served as manager.
In 1902, Lawrence adopted the Lawrence Colts moniker and began play as members of the Class B level New England League. Playing home games at Glen Forest Park, the Lawrence Colts finished in 3rd place in the 1902 New England League standings. The Colts finished with a record of 60–51, as William Parsons served as manager. The Colts finished 14.5 games behind 1st place Manchester.
Lawrence finished 6th in the 1903 New England League standings. With a 48–62 record, the Colts were 22.5 games behind the Lowell Tigers in the final standings. William Parsons and Steve Flanagan were the managers as Lawrence continued play in the eight–team Class B league.
The Lawrence Colts finished 8th and last in the 1904 New England League. Under manager Steve Flanagan, Lawrence ended the season with a 36–86 record in the eight–team league, 45.5 games behind the 1st place Haverhill Hustlers and 23.5 games behind the 7th place Lowell Tigers. The Lawrence Colts folded after the 1904 season.
The 1905 New England League began play without Lawrence as a member. On July 20, 1905, the Manchester team relocated to Lawrence. The Manchester/Lawrence Colts team finished in 6th place with a record of 52–54, 16.0 games behind the 1st place Concord Marines, who had a 69–39 record. Win Clark managed the team in both locations.
Continuing play in the New England League, the 1906 Lawrence Colts finished 3rd in the eight–team league. Phenomenal Smith, Al Weddige and James Rolley managed the Lawrence Colts. Ending the season with a record of 65–52, Lawrence finished 9.5 games behind the champion Worcester Busters in the final standings.
The 1907 Lawrence Colts finished 8th and last in the Class B level New England League. The Colts ended the 1907 season with a record of 40–74, finishing 37.0 games behind the 1st place Worcester Busters playing under manager James Rolley.
As the Worcester Busters again won the league championship, the Lawrence Colts finished 2nd in the 1908 New England League final standings. Lawrence had a final record of 75–49 under the direction of manager Mal Eason. The Colts finished 5.0 games behind the 1st place Worcester Busters in the eight–team league.
The 1909 Lawrence Colts were last in the New England League standings. With a 41–82 record, Lawrence finished in 8th place, 35.5 games behind 1st place Worcester in the eight–team league as Mal Easton again managed the Colts.
The Lawrence Colts of the New England League ended the 1910 season with a record of 53–70. Lawrence was 6th in the standings under manager Jimmy Bannon. The Colts finished 24.0 games behind the champion New Bedford Whalers. On September 5, 1910, the Colts and Lowell Tigers played three games in one day. In the first game at Lawrence in the A.M., Lowell defeated Lawrence 3–1. The teams then traveled to Lowell for two more games. Lowell beat Lawrence 4–1 in the second game and the teams tied 4–4 in 7–innings in the final game.
The Lawrence franchise changed monikers and became the Lawrence Barristers for the 1911 New England League season. The Lawrence Barristers ended the 1911 season with a 65–55 season record, as Louis Piper served as manager. The Barristers were 3rd in the standings, 10.5 games behind the 1st place Lowell Tigers. On August 28, 1911, Harry Wormwood of Falls River threw a no-hitter against Lawrence, pitching a 13-inning no-hitter in a game that ended in a 0–0 tie.
The Lawrence Barristers won the 1912 New England League championship. With Louis Piper continuing his tenure as manager, Lawrence finished with 76–47 record and were 2.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Lowell Grays in the league standings. The Class B level league had no playoff structure.
The Lawrence Barristers continued play in the 1913 New England League and were unable to defend their championship. Ending the season in 4th place, Lawrence finished the season with a 67–53 record playing again under manager Louis Piper. The Barristers finished 11.0 games behind the champion Lowell Grays.
Lawrence won the 1914 New England League Championship. The Barristers had a 84–39 record in their final season under manager Louis Piper to finish 1st in the Class B league's final standings. Lawrence was 8.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Worcester Busters in the eight–team league to win their second title in three seasons.
In 1915, Alex Pearson served as manager the Lawrence Barristers after a tenure as a player for Lawrence. The Barristers finished 2nd in the New England League season standings. The Barristers had a record of 62–54, finishing 13.5 games behind the 1st place Portland Duffs. After the 1915 season, the Class D New England League folded.
Eastern League 1916–1917
After the New England folded, the Lawrence Barristers immediately became members of the Class B level Eastern League in 1916. However, Lawrence folded on September 4, 1916. The Lawrence Barristers had a record of 51–57 under managers Jesse Burkett, Ned O'Donnell, Larry Mahoney and Jack O'Hara at the time the franchise folded.
In 1917, the Lawrence Barristers returned to play and finished 2nd in Eastern League standings. Lawrence ended the 1917 season with a record of 64–45 in the eight–team league, playing under manager John Flynn and finishing behind the 1st place New Haven Murlins. Lawrence folded from the league after the 1917 season.
New England League 1919, 1926–1927, 1933
Lawrence fielded a team in rejoining the reformed Class B level New England League in 1919. After resuming play, the Lawrence Barristers folded on July 20, 1919. Lawrence had a record of 20-24 under manager William Page when the team folded. the New England League itself folded on August 2, 1919.
Lawrence resumed play in 1926 when the New England League reformed as a Class B level league. The Lawrence Merry Macks finished with a 46–49 record, with Lefty Tyler managing the team. The Merry Macks placed 5th in the final standings, finishing 12.5 games behind the 1st place Manchester Blue Sox.
In 1927, the Lawrence Merry Macks ended the regular season with a record of 36–53, placing 7th in the New England League. William McDonough and Freddy Parent served as managers as the Merry Macs finished 23.0 games behind the 1st place Lynn Papooses. The Lawrence Merry Macks folded after the 1927 season.
Lawrence briefly returned to the Class B level New England League as the Lawrence Weavers in 1933. On May 26, 1933, Attleboro, with a 2–6, record moved to Lawrence. After playing in Lawrence, the team relocated for a third time as the franchise was moved to Woonsocket, Rhode Island on July 18, 1933. Overall, the team finished with a 27–58 record and were 6th in the standings. The team was last in the six–team league and were an affiliate of the New York Giants.
New England League 1946–1947
In 1946, Lawrence again returned to play as members the Class B level New England League. The New England League reformed for the 1946 season with eight teams. The Lawrence Millionaires had played in the semi–pro New England League in 1945, as the New England League kept baseball during World War II on a less formal level. The 1946 Millionaires finished 5th in the 1946 New England League regular season standings and did not qualify for the playoffs, finishing 15.0 games behind the 1st place Lynn Red Sox. With a record of 65–53, Lawrence finished in 5th place in the standings, playing under Manager George Kissell. Crash Davis, the namesake for the character in the movie Field of Dreams, played for Lawrence in 1946, hitting .298. while playing with his brother Hudson Davis.
In a June 1946 game against the Nashua Dodgers, Dodger player Roy Campanella became the first African-American manager of a major league affiliated game. Campanella managed Nashua against the Millionaires after the Nashua manager, Walter Alston was ejected during a game. Nashua won the game over the Lawrence Millionaires 7–5 on a home run by Don Newcombe. Alston had previously told Campanella that he would replace him as manager if he were to be ejected from a game.
The Lawrence franchise played their final minor league season in 1947, relocating during the season. The Lawrence Millionaires relocated to become the Lowell Orphans on July 15, 1947, with a 29–38 record. The team finished had an 11–46 record after the franchise relocated to Lowell. Playing under manager George Kissell, the team finished the 1947 season with an overall record of 40–84, placing 8th and last in the New England League regular season standings, 46.0 games behind the 1st place Lynn Red Sox. Lawrence has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballparks
The Lawrence teams reportedly first played home games at Association Grounds. Lawrence played at the ballpark in the seasons between 1884 and 1892. The Association Grounds were located on City Island on the Merrimack River. The Union Street Bridge leading to and from City Island burned in 1887, isolating the park from the mainland. The Lawrence team was forced to play games in Nashua until the bridge was rebuilt.
From 1895 to 1910 Lawrence teams were noted to have played minor league home games at Glen Forest Park. The ballpark was located at the end of the Electric Car line, with the site in the Methuen area. The Glen Forest Park land was sold in 1922 and re–purposed.
In the minor league seasons between 1911 and 1947, Lawrence teams were noted to have played home games at O'Sullivan Park. From 1911 to 1915, the ballpark was known as Riverside Park. O'Sullivan Park was in use until the 1960s and was located on Water Street in Lawrence, Massachusetts. The Lawrence Boys and Girls Club now occupies the site at 136 Water Street.
Timeline
Notable alumni
Jim Adams (1899)
Eddie Ainsmith (1908–1910)
Harry Armbruster (1905)
Chub Aubrey (1914)
Jimmy Bannon (1907, MGR)
Tom Bannon (1910)
Frank Barberich (1906–1907)
Joe Bean (1909)
Ned Bligh (1886)
George Brickley (1915)
Frank Bruggy (1913–1914)
Jesse Burkett (1916)
Jack Bushelman (1910)
Jack Cameron (1908)
Swede Carlstrom (1910–1913)
Hugh Canavan (1917)
Doc Casey (1892)
Tom Catterson (1909, 1911)
Win Clark (1905, MGR)
Frank Connaughton (1906)
Bill Conway (1885–1887)
Dick Conway (1885–1886)
Henry Cote (1905–1906)
Jack Coveney (1903–1904, 1907)
Frank Cox (1884, MGR)
Pat Crisham (1910–1911)
Lem Cross (1905)
John Crowley (1886)
Tony Cuccinello (1926–1927) 3x MLB All-Star
Jud Daley (1917)
Charlie Daniels (1884)
Crash Davis (1946)
Lee DeMontreville (1902)
Patsy Donovan (1886–1887)
Frank Dupee (1902)
Howard Earl (1887)
Mal Eason (1908–1909, MGR)
Jack Fanning (1886)
Duke Farrell (1887)
Pembroke Finlayson (1910)
Dennis Fitzgerald (1886–1887)
Jocko Flynn (1884–1885)
John Flynn (1917, MGR)
Lou Galvin (1895)
Jim Garry (1892)
Alex Gaston (1917)
Jack Gorman (1886)
Lew Groh (1910)
Jack Hammond (1909)
Joe Harris (1903)
Tom Hart (1895)
George Henry (1887)
Harry Hinchman (1917)
Red Hoff (1912)
Will Holland (1886)
Dave Howard (1914)
Del Howard (1916)
Jerry Hurley (1884, 1886)
Roy Hutson (1926–1927)
John Irwin (1895, MGR)
Charlie Jordan (1910–1912)
Mike Jordan (1884–1885)
Doggie Julian (1926) Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted 1967
Ray Keating (1912)
Jim Kelly (1926)
John Kiley (1884, 1886–1887)
George Kissell (1946–1947, MGR)
Fred Klobedanz (1902–1904)
Elmer Knetzer (1909)
George Knothe (1926–1927)
Karl Kolseth (1911)
Charlie Krause (1892, 1902)
Andy Kyle (1910)
Otto Krueger (1910)
Fred Lake (1906)
Henry Lampe (1895)
Frank Lausche (1917)
Art LaVigne (1916)
Bill Leith (1905–1907)
Red Long (1902)
Pat Martin (1913)
Bill Massey (1909)
Harry McCaffery (1886)
Pat McCauley (1892)
Michael McDermott (1892)
Art McGovern (1914)
Ed McLane (1908)
Bill Merritt (1905)
Jim Miller (1910)
George Moolic (1884–1885)
Hank Morrison (1886)
Frank Morrissey (1903)
Jack Morrissey (1905)
Jim Moroney (1907)
Simmy Murch (1903–1904, 1908)
Connie Murphy (1902)
Dave Muprhy (1903, 1906)
John Murphy (1903)
Willie Murphy (1885, 1887)
John O'Brien (1904)
Pat O'Connell (1885–1886, 1895)
Kid O'Hara (1903–1904)
Frederick V. Ostergren (1915–1916)
Alex Pearson (1910–1914, 1916), (1915, MGR)
Kewpie Pennington (1914–1916)
Pepper Peploski (1914)
Pat Pettee (1886–1887, MGR)
Lerton Pinto (1927)
John Pomorski (1926–1927)
Irv Porter (1917)
Augie Prudhomme (1926)
Irv Ray (1887)
Bill Rollinson (1885)
Ernie Ross (1902–1903)
Bobby Rothermel (1906)
Hank Schreiber (1917)
George Shears (1915)
Jack Slattery (1909)
Phenomenal Smith (1905, MGR)
Mike Sullivan (1884)
John K. Tener (1885)
Walt Thomas (1909)
Harry Thompson (1914–1915)
Lefty Tyler (1926, MGR)
Gene Vadeboncoeur (1885)
Rube Vinson (1908–1909)
Jake Volz (1905)
Jesse Whiting (190–1906, 1908)
George Wheeler (1892)
Gary Wilson (1905–1908)
See also
Lawrence Barristers players,
Lawrence Players
Lawrence Colts players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Baseball Reference
Team photo/history
Lawrence, Massachusetts
Essex County, Massachusetts | [
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The Maple Fire was a wildfire on Jefferson Ridge in the Olympic Mountains, approximately 23 miles north of Shelton, Washington in the United States. The fire was caused by illegal logging activites, and the resulting criminal trial was the first time that tree DNA has ever been used in a federal trial in the United States.
Fire
The Maple Fire was started by a crew of timber poachers who were attempting to steal Big-Leaf Maple trees from the Olympic National Park. The crew discovered a potential target tree on August 3, but were unable to harvest it due to a wasp nest at the base of the tree. After failing to exterminate the nest with insecticides, the crew deliberately set fire to the nest. The fire grew out of control, and the logging crew fled.
The fire was reported the following day, August 4. It was not considered contained until October 10, and continued to smolder until seasonal rains finally extinguished it in November. The Maple Fire ultimately burned of wildland. A command center was initially established at nearby Brinnon, Washington, but quickly grew too large, and was relocated to Shelton, Washington. At one point, as many as 258 personnel were involved in firefighting efforts. Some unmanned aerial vehicles, and two Washington Air National Guard helicopters were also dispatched to combat the blaze. The firefighting efforts cost $4.5 million.
Criminal proceedings
One member of the illegal logging crew plead guilty to theft of public property and setting timber afire in December 2019. He was sentenced to 30 months in prison in September 2020. After a 6 day jury trial in July 2021, another member of the crew was convicted of conspiracy, theft of public property, depredation of public property, trafficking in unlawfully harvested timber, and attempting to traffic in unlawfully harvested timber. He was sentenced to 20 months in prison in November 2021.
Key evidence in the jury trial was DNA samples from wood the crew had sold to nearby mills. These samples were compared with samples in a database of Big Leaf Maple DNA. Analysis showed a very high likely-hood that the wood had been poached. This was the first time that tree DNA had ever been used in a federal trial.
References
2018 Washington (state) wildfires
Jefferson County, Washington
August 2018 events in the United States
September 2018 events in the United States
October 2018 events in the United States | [
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The 1903 Howard Bulldogs football team was an American football team that represented Howard College (now known as the Samford University) as an independent during the 1903 college football season. Under head coaches W. T. O'Hara (games 1–2) and Houston Gwin (games 3–5), the team compiled a record of 2–3.
Schedule
References
Howard
Samford Bulldogs football seasons
Howard Bulldogs football | [
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The 2012 European Cadet Judo Championships is an edition of the European Cadet Judo Championships, organised by the International Judo Federation. It was held in Bar, Montenegro from 22 to 24 June 2012.
Medal summary
Medal table
Men's events
Women's events
Source Results
References
External links
European Cadet Judo Championships
European Championships, U18
Judo
Judo competitions in Montenegro
Judo
Judo, European Championships U18 | [
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Pushpdeep Bhardwaj is an Indian film director and writer. He is mainly known for his work in Hindi Film Industry. He made his directing debut with his film Jalebi starring Rhea Chakraborty, Varun Mitra and Digangana Suryavanshi.
Early life
Bhardwaj was born in Delhi. He is a graduate from National Institute of Fashion Technology. After completing his study in NIFT, he started the job of visual merchandising in Reliance but he left the job for films. Later he contributed in several acting workshops as an instructor. He was also associated with theatre in Delhi.
Career
In his early days, Bhardwaj directed and acted in various short films.
In 2018, He made his debut as a director and writer in Hindi Film Industry with the musical romantic drama film Jalebi produced by Vishesh Films.
In 2020, he wrote the additional dialogues of the Mahesh Bhatt directed action thriller film Sadak 2.
In 2022, Bhardwaj written and directed the web-series Ranjish He Sahi.
Filmography
References
Indian film directors
Indian writers
Living people | [
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28 Air Defence Regiment is part of the Corps of Army Air Defence of the Indian Army.
Formation
The Regiment was raised as 28 Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment on 14 May 1956 at Ibrahim Bagh Lines, overlooking the Golconda Fort in Hyderabad. The first commanding officer was Lieutenant Colonel Gurpratap Singh.
The regiment was raised from troops from 16th Battalion, The Madras Regiment (Travancore), which itself traces its origins to the 2nd Travancore Nayar Infantry. The battalion was raised on 28 January 1819 in the erstwhile kingdom of Travancore. In August 1965, the regiment was re-designated as 28 Air Defence Regiment.
Class composition
Most of the troops are from the four southern states of Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh.
Operations
Indo-Pak War (1965) The regiment participated in Operation Riddle and was responsible for providing air defence to two airfields. It took down two Sabre jets during the war. Lance Naik Madalai Muthu of 104 Air Defence Battery was awarded the Vir Chakra for shooting down a Sabre jet over Kalaikunda Air Force Station on 7 September 1965.
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 During Operation Cactus Lily, the regiment provided air defence protection in the eastern sector till 6 December 1971, following which it provided protection to airfields and ammunition depots in the western sector.
Other Operations -
The regiment took part in rescue operations in Jhajjar during the 1977 floods in Haryana. For its role, the regiment received one Sena Medal, one Vishisht Seva Medal and four Chief of Army Staff Commendation Cards.
Counter-insurgency operations – The regiment took part in Operation Rakshak in Punjab. On 21 September 1992, a noted leader of the terrorist group Khalistan Commando Force, Kulbinder Singh was killed. The regiment was awarded a Chief of Army Staff Commendation Card. It was deployed for counter insurgency operations in Jammu and Kashmir in early 2000s.
While operating in the Northern Sector near the Line of Control, the regiment was responsible for destroying a Pakistani bunker on 23 August 2004, for which a GOC-in-C (Northern Command) Commendation Card was awarded.
The regiment was deployed for air defence roles during Operation Shakti in 1988, Operation Vijay in 1999 and Operation Parakram between 2001 to 2002.
Affiliation
The regiment was affiliated with the Madras Regiment in November 2018 at an official ceremony held at the Madras Regiment Centre at Wellington.
Other achievements
Havildar V Srinivasa was awarded the Chief of Army Staff Commendation Card in August 2016.
The regiment celebrated the Diamond Jubilee of its formation in 2016.
References
External links
Affiliation ceremony of 28 AD Regiment with the Madras Regiment on YouTube (Tamil)
Military units and formations established in 1956
Regiments of the Indian Army | [
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The 25th South American U18 Championships in Athletics were held in Encarnación, Paraguay, on 25 and 26 September 2021.
Medal summary
Boys
Girls
Mixed
Medal table
References
South American U18 Championships in Athletics
South American U18 Championships in Athletics
South American U18 Championships in Athletics
South American U18 Championships in Athletics
International athletics competitions hosted by Paraguay
South American U18 Championships in Athletics | [
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Honor No More is a villainous professional wrestling stable appearing in the Impact Wrestling promotion. The group, led by Eddie Edwards, is composed of former Ring of Honor wrestlers Matt Taven, Mike Bennett, PCO, Vincent, Kenny King and Maria Kanellis-Bennett, and are billed as being an invading faction.
History
Honor No More debuted at the Hard To Kill pay-per-view on January 8, 2022, attacking Eddie Edwards, Rich Swann, Willie Mack, Heath and Rhino. At the No Surrender pay-per-view on February 19, 2022, Edwards revealed himself as Honor No More's leader by attacking Rhino, costing him and Team Impact a 10-man tag team match against Honor No More.
Members
Current
Sub-groups
Current
{|class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
!Affiliate
!Members
!Tenure
!Type
|-
|The OGK || Mike BennettMatt Taven || 2022–present || Tag team
|-
|Taven, Bennett and King ||Matt Taven Mike Bennett Kenny King ||2022-present ||Trio
References
Impact Wrestling teams and stables | [
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A hyperphoton is a hypothetical particle with a very low mass and spin equal to one. The hypothesis of the existence of hyperphotons is an explanation for the violation of CP-invariance in the two-pion decay of a long-lived neutral kaon . According to this hypothesis, there is a long-range very weak field generated by hypercharged particles (for example, baryons), whose quantum carrier is a hyperphoton, which acts differently on and mesons whose hypercharges differ in signs.
Criticism of the hypothesis
This hypothesis contradicts a number of experimental data and theoretical principles of physics. Thus, it follows that the probability of two-photon decay of a long-lived neutral kaon is proportional to the square of the kaon energy in the laboratory reference frame, which does not agree with experimental data on its independence from the kaon energy. The experimental data also contradict such a consequence of this hypothesis as a very high probability of hyperphoton emission during the decay of a long-lived neutral kaon and when a charged kaon decays into a one charged pion. This hypothesis implicitly uses the action at a distance rejected by modern physics. In addition, it implies a violation of the equivalence principle.
See also
Fifth force
References
Hypothetical elementary particles
Physics beyond the Standard Model | [
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St Paul's Church is a church building of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland in the Scottish town of Milngavie in East Dunbartonshire, near Glasgow. It is at the junction of Glasgow Road which carries the A81 through the city, and Baldernock Road. In 1978, St Paul's Church was listed as a Category C monument in Scotland. The church is still in use today.
History
In 1787 members of the New Kilpatrick Parish Church in Bearsden (then known as Newkirk) broke from the Established Church. Permission was sought from the Relief Church in Glasgow. Thus, in 1788, the Kilpatrick Relief Church was established. Initially open-air services were held on Barloch Moor in a hollow beside the Tannoch Burn known as the "preaching braes". A church was finally built on the Barloch Estate, finished in 1799 at a cost of £500.
After several mergers within the church and the constantly growing congregation, the construction of new church buildings became necessary at the end of the 19th century. First, in 1903, the Cairns Church (named after John Cairns) was completed. In 1903, a competition was held prior to the construction of St Paul's Church; a design by the Edinburgh architectural practice Leadbetter & Fairley won the competition. Violet Graham, Duchess of Montrose laid the memorial stone on 20 May 1905. The church was opened on 12 January 1906.
With the reintegration of most of the United Free Church of Scotland into the Church of Scotland in 1929, the parish of Milngavie was divided into three parishes. Although St Paul's Church was the largest building, it became the parish church of the smallest and most sparsely populated parish. Over the decades, the building has been constantly renovated. The original bell tower no longer exists.
Building description
When completed, the building was considered the finest church building in the Dumbarton area. The structure is made of roughly hewn red sandstone. The transept has, unusually, two gables on each side. The window design is based on late Gothic architecture.
References
External links
Milngavie
Category C listed buildings in East Dunbartonshire
Churches completed in 1906
Listed churches in Scotland | [
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Silja Anna Skulstad Urang (born 6 January 2000) is a Norwegian competitive figure skater. She is the 2020 Norwegian Champion. She is also the 2019 Norwegian Junior silver medalist.
Programs
References
2000 births
Sportspeople from Bergen
Norwegian female single skaters
Living people | [
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Percy Elmo Henderson (1879 – 16 January 1934) was a Canadian first-class cricketer.
Henderson was born in Canada in 1879. A member of the Toronto Cricket Club, he toured England in 1910 with the Toronto I Zingari. He later made a single appearance in first-class cricket for a combined Canada and United States of America cricket team against the touring Australians at Philadelphia in 1913. Playing as a wicket-keeper, he scored he scored 2 runs in the Canada/United States first innings before being dismissed by Arthur Mailey, while in their second innings he was dismissed for 7 runs by Sid Emery, with the Australians winning the match by 409 runs. He toured England again in 1922, with a team headed by Norman Seagram, President of the Toronto Cricket Club. Henderson died at Toronto in January 1934, aged 55.
References
External links
1879 births
1934 deaths
Canadian cricketers
Canada and United States of America cricketers | [
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Assault Suit Leynos is a side-scrolling run and gun shooter video game and a remake of the eponymous 1990 game, formerly called Target Earth in North America. It is part of the Assault Suit series. Developed by Dracue, it was published by EXTREME Co.,Ltd in Japan and Rising Star Games elsewhere. It was released on December 23, 2015, in Japan and July 14, 2016, in North America and Europe for PlayStation 4, with its Steam release being on August 30, 2016. As with the original, the plot revolves around humanity being attacked by an unknown force and retaliating with the Assault Suit Squadron.
Reception
The game's PS4 version received an aggregate score of 67/100 on Metacritic, indicating "mixed or average reviews".
Jeremy Peeples of Hardcore Gamer rated the game 4/5 points, saying that "it takes everything that worked about the original and improves upon it with modern flourishes". Expressing surprise that the original game was even playable without a modern stick setup, he called the remake more forgiving, yet still challenging. He praised the new graphics as a "huge upgrade", but criticized the explosions as too large. He also called the soundtrack unexciting.
Ramón Nafria of Vandal rated the game 7.5/10, calling it "difficult, intense and epic", but said that it would most appeal to older retro gamers. He praised the dramatic, space opera story, and called the graphics visually excellent and much better than the original game.
Robert Ramsey of Push Square rated the game 7/10 stars, calling it a "solid mech shooter" and praising the fact that the entire original Genesis title was included. Calling the gameplay satisfying and accurate to being a large mech, he further described it as "uncompromising", but, on Easy or Normal difficulties, "far from being soul-crushingly brutal". He criticized the game for sometimes being overwhelming when its important dialog overlays intense gameplay.
References
Assault Suit
2015 video games
PlayStation 4 games
Side-scrolling video games
Shoot 'em ups
Single-player video games
Video game remakes
Video games developed in Japan
Windows games | [
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The 2010 European Cadet Judo Championships is an edition of the European Cadet Judo Championships, organised by the International Judo Federation. It was held in Teplice, Czech Republic from 2 to 4 July 2010.
Medal summary
Medal table
Men's events
Women's events
Source Results
References
External links
European Cadet Judo Championships
European Championships, U18
Judo
Judo in the Czech Republic
Judo
Judo, European Championships U18 | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Fitchburg, Massachusetts between 1877 and 1929. Fitchburg minor league teams played as members of the New England Association in 1877 and 1895, the New England League in 1899, 1914–1915 and 1919, the Eastern League in 1922 and New England League in 1929.
The legendary athlete Jim Thorpe played for the 1922 Fitchburg Boosters.
History
In 1877, minor league baseball began in Fitchburg, Massachusetts. The Fitchburg team was a charter member of the eight–team New England Association. The Fitchburg team's 1877 final record, roster and statistics are unknown, as the team folded during the season.
The 1895 "Fitchburg" team became members of the reformed six–team New England Association. On June 20, 1895, Fitchburg had compiled a 12–25 record, playing under managers William Dwyer and William Laverty, when the team folded. The New England Association permanently folded on July 8, 1895.
"Fitchburg" resumed minor league play as members of the 1899 New England League, but relocated during the season. On May 24, 1899, Fitchburg had a record of 3–7 when the team moved to Lawrence. Playing under manager Ed Norton, the Fitchburg/Lawrence team had an overall record of 3–14 when the franchise disbanded on June 1, 1899.
In 1914, Fitchburg rejoined the eight–team Class B level New England League, with the team relocating during the season and finishing last in the standings. On July 30, 1914, the Fitchburg Burghers had a record of 24–52 when the franchise moved to Manchester, New Hampshire, finishing the season as the Manchester Textiles. After a 12–35 record while based in Manchester, the Fitchburg/Manchester team finished the season with an overall record of 36–87 to place 8th in the final league standings. Playing under manager Fred Lake, Fitchburg/Manchester finished 48.0 games behind the 1st place Lawrence Barristers.
The Fitchburg use of the "Burghers" moniker corresponds phonetically and the word refers to a Burgher being a "privileged citizen" in medieval times.
On May 25, 1914, it was reported Fitchburg was defeated by the Lowell Grays by the score of 5–3. Lowell pitcher Jimmy Ring made his first professional career start and threw a compete game five–hitter for Lowell.
The 1915 Fitchburg Burghers franchise resumed New England League play, despite relocating the previous season, as the Manchester Textiles franchise also continued play. The Burghers again finished last in the standings. Fitchburg ended the season with a record of 46–89 to place 8th, playing under manager Hugh McCune. The Burghers finished 28.0 games behind the 1st place Portland Duffs in the final standings. After the 1915 season, the New England League folded.
The 1919 New England League resumed play as a six-team league. The Fitchburg Foxes placed 3rd in the reformed Class B level league, after the league stopped play on August 2, 1919. The Foxes had a record of 31–36, playing under managers John F. Quinn, Bill Phoenix and Bill Page. Fitchburg was 9.0 games behind the 1st place Lowell Grays franchise when the league folded.
The Fitchburg Boosters resumed play in 1922. Playing as members of the eight team Class A level Eastern League, Fitchburg relocated during the season as the combined team finished last in the standings. On July 30, 1922, Fitchburg moved to Worcester, Massachusetts with a record of 18–46. After an 29–59 record playing in Worcester, the Fitchburg/Worcester team finished with an overall record of 47–105, to place 8th in the standings. The team was managed by Jack Mack and John Flynn, finishing 54.0 games behind the 1st place New Haven Indians. Olympic Champion, former major league player and Pro Football Hall of Fame member Jim Thorpe played for the 1922 Boosters, in his final professional baseball season at age 35. It was reported that Thorpe was recruited to Fitchburg by team owner John Kiernan after being released by the Hartford Senators of the Eastern League. Thorpe hit .344 for the season, 2nd in the league, adding 9 home runs in 96 games.
In 1929, Fitchburg played in their final minor league season. The Fitchburg Wanderers had a short appearance as members of the Class B New England League. On July 28, 1929, the Haverhill Hillies moved to Fitchburg with a record of 11–10. After compiling a record of 5–20 while based in Fitchburg, the team relocated to become the Gloucester Hillies on August 25, 1929. the Haverhill/Fitchburg/Gloucester team ended the regular season with an overall record of 39–79. The team placed 8th in the standings, playing under managers Jack Driscoll and William McDonough. The combined team finished 37.5 games behind the 1st place Manchester Blue Sox. The New England League reduced to six teams in 1930, folding the Gloucester team.
Fitchburg, Massachusetts has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
The Fitchburg minor league teams were reported to played home games at the Fitchburg Driving Park. Reportedly, manager Fred Lake created a batters eye on the 1914 outfield fence, as the rest of the fence had advertisements. It was noted the ballpark was also known as the "Summer Street Grounds."
Timeline
Year-by-year record
Notable alumni
Jim Adams (1899)
Bill Clay (baseball) (1915)
Wilson Collins (1915)
Fred Donovan (1895)
Rich Durning (1915)
Alex Gaston (1915)
Tom Hart (1895)
Nat Hickey (1922)
Jack Hoey (1915)
Pat Kilhullen (1914)
Fred Lake (1914, MGR)
Al Lawson (1895)
Axel Lindstrom (1922)
Dick Loftus (1919)
Bill Magee (1895)
Allie Moulton (1915)
Dominic Mulrenan (1915, 1922)
Connie Murphy (1899)
Frederick V. Ostergren (1914)
Kewpie Pennington (1915)
Pop Smith (1899)
Jim Thorpe (1922) Pro Football Hall of Fame
Red Torphy (1914)
See also
Lawrence Barristers players
Fitchburg (minor league baseball) players
Fitchburg Foxes players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Baseball Reference
Fitchburg, Massachusetts | [
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S. Devadas Pillai (born 1935) was an Indian sociologist.
Life
Pillai completed his MA and PhD at the Department of Sociology at the University of Bombay. His 1964 PhD thesis was subsequently published as Men And Machines (1968). Pillai was an urban sociologist trained in the 'Bombay School' of G. S. Ghurye and colleagues like A. R. Desai and K. M. Kapadia. Pillai's research into urban slums in Bombay was supervised by Desai. He co-authored with Desai and Kapadia, and in 1997 published a dictionary to Ghurye's sociology.
In later life Pillai devoted effort to cultural research. He was executive editor of the 2011 Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Music of India, and in 2019 published a study of the stories of the Malayalam writer Karoor Neelakanta Pillai.
Works
Men and machines. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1968.
(ed with A. R. Desai) Slums and urbanization. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1970.
(with K. M. Kapadia) Young runaways: a study of children who desert home. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1971.
'The Study of Age at Marriage – Some Neglected Issues', The Indian Journal of Social Research, Vol. 12, No. 3 (Dec 1971)
(with A. R. Desai) Profile of an Indian slum. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1972.
(with K. M. Kapadia) Industrialization and rural society: a study of Atul-Bulsar region. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1972.
'A Note on the Joint Family', Sociologische Gids, No. 6 (Nov-Dec 1974)
'Pattern of Family among the Dhodiyas of Bulsar Region', in Dhirendra Narain (ed.) Explorations in the Family and other Essays: Essays in Memory of K. M. Kapadia, Bombay: Thackers, 1975.
'Gujaratis', in Family of Man, Marshall-Cavendish Encyclopaedia, Vol. 3, Part 38, London, 1975.
(ed.) Aspects of changing India: studies in honour of Prof. G.S. Ghurye. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1976.
Rajahs and prajas: an Indian princely state, then and now. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1976.
(ed.) The Incredible elections, 1977: a blow-by-blow document as reported in the Indian express. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1977.
(ed. with Chris Baks) Winners and losers: styles of development and change in an Indian region. Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1979.
Indian sociology through Ghurye: a dictionary. Mumbai : Popular Prakashan, 1997.
Sociology Through Literature: a study of Kaaroor's stories. New York: Routledge, 2019.
References
1935 births
Indian sociologists
Living people | [
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Achille Esther (born 24 May 2002) is a Seychellois footballer who plays as a defender for Seychelles First Division club La Passe FC and the Seychelles national team.
Club career
In November 2019, while a member of La Passe FC of the Seychelles First Division, Esther traveled to Germany for a two-week training stint with VfL Lohbrügge of the Landesliga Hamburg-Hansa. He was joined on the trip by twin brothers, Assad and Affandi Aboudou.
International career
Esther made his senior international debut on 1 September 2021 in a friendly against Comoros.
International career statistics
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
Association football midfielders
Seychellois footballers
Seychelles international footballers
La Passe FC players | [
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The 2009 European Cadet Judo Championships is an edition of the European Cadet Judo Championships, organised by the International Judo Federation. It was held in Koper, Slovenia from 26 to 28 June 2009.
Medal summary
Medal table
Men's events
Women's events
Source Results
References
External links
European Cadet Judo Championships
European Championships, U18
Judo
Judo competitions in Slovenia
Judo
Judo, European Championships U18 | [
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Tadeusz Milewski (17 May 1906 – 5 March 1966) was a Polish linguist and Professor at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, specializing in the study of the Slavic languages, general linguistics and linguistic typology.
Education and career
Tadeusz Milewski was born in Kolomyia and studied linguistics at the University of Lviv (1960-1967), under the supervision of Tadeusz Lehr-Spławiński, from 1925 to 1929. His dissertation research was on the Polabian language. Together with his professor, he moved to the Jagiellonian University in Kraków in 1929 and took up a teaching position there.
Like other professors of the Jagiellonian University, he was arrested by the Gestapo on 6 November 1939 (as part of the Sonderaktion Krakau), and he spent a year in concentration camps in Sachsenhausen and Dachau. After his release, he participated in clandestine teaching in German-occupied Poland, and also started working on his book “Outline of general linguistics”.
Milewski became a professor at the Jagiellonian University in 1946, and taught there in various roles until his death on 5 March 1966 in Kraków, after a long illness. The funeral was held by Archbishop Karol Wojtyła, a former student and longtime friend.
Scientific contributions
Milewski is internationally best known for his contributions to linguistic typology, in particular his dictinction between concentric and excentric language types, which is widely recognized as a precursor to the well-known distinction between head-marking and dependent-marking languages. He is also the originator of Milewski's typology. In addition to his interests in Slavic and Indo-European linguistics, he had a strong interest in the languages of North America.
Selected works
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1936. L’Indo-hittite et l’indo-européen. Cracovie: Imprimerie de l’Université.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1950. La structure de la phrase dans les langues indigènes de l'Amérique du Nord. Lingua Posnaniensis 2. 162-207.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1951. The conception of the word in languages of North American natives. Lingua Posnaniensis 3. 248–268.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1962. Wstęp do jezykoznawstwa. Łódź: Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1964. Typological similarities between Caucasian and American Indian languages. Actas y Memorias (XXXV Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, Mexico 1962), vol. 2, 533–539. México, D.F.: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1965. Językoznawsto. Warszawa: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1967. Études typologiques sur les langues indigènes de l’Amérique/Typological studies on the American Indian languages (Prace Komisji Orientalistycznej, 7.). Kraków: Polska Akademia Nauk.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1970. Voraussetzungen einer typologischen Sprachwissenschaft. Linguistics 8(59). 62–107.
Milewski, Tadeusz. 1973. Introduction to the study of language. The Hague: Mouton. (= English translation of Milewski 1965)
Notes
1906 births
Jagiellonian University faculty
Linguists from Poland
1966 deaths | [
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The Remaining Days () is a Canadian short comedy film, directed by Simon-Olivier Fecteau and released in 2004. The film stars Isidore Lapin as Gaston, an elderly man who discovers an old forgotten copy of his bucket list while cleaning out his closet, and decides to use his remaining days to carry out all the things he still hasn't done.
The film premiered at the Abitibi-Témiscamingue International Film Festival in 2004.
The film received a Genie Award nomination for Best Live Action Short Drama at the 26th Genie Awards in 2006.
References
External links
2004 films
2004 short films
Canadian films
Canadian short films
Canadian comedy films
French-language films
2004 comedy films
Comedy short films | [
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It's Time! is an album by the American singer Candi Staton. It was released in 1995. The album was nominated for a National Association of Independent Recording Distributors and Manufacturers Award, in the "Gospel/religious" category.
"Mama" was a minor hit, and became a popular song to play on Mother's Day. It was named "Song of the Year" for the 1996 National Parents' Day; Staton performed the song for the Clintons at a Parents' Day event.
Production and promotion
The album was produced by Staton's son, Marcus Williams. "Mama" was written by Staton in 1992. Staton promoted the album by appearing on BET's Our Voices Thanksgiving program.
Critical reception
The Washington Post wrote that Staton "punctuates the Lord's praises with songs that are firmly rooted in everyday concerns and issues ... there's nearly always a fire burning in Staton's voice when she sings, a tone of unwavering passion and commitment." The Dallas Morning News thought that the album "combines the best elements of [Staton's musical past]: gospel heart, Southern enunciation as sweet and measured as molasses and upbeat disco rhythms."
AllMusic noted that "'The Blood' and 'I Want To Grow' express light jazz elements, while 'Rapture Me' is pure funk."
Track listing
References
Candi Staton albums
1995 albums | [
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The 2021–22 season is the 121st season in the existence of Amiens SC and the club's second consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Amiens participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France.
Players
First-team squad
Other players under contract
Out on loan
Transfers
In
Out
Pre-season and friendlies
Competitions
Overall record
Ligue 2
League table
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
The league fixtures were announced on 25 June 2021.
Coupe de France
References
Amiens SC seasons
Amiens | [
101,
1996,
25682,
1516,
2570,
2161,
2003,
1996,
12606,
3367,
2161,
1999,
1996,
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6132,
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Satyendranath Tagore (1 June 1842–9 January 1923) was an Indian Bengali civil servant, poet, composer, writer, social reformer and linguist from Kolkata, West Bengal. He was the first Indian who became an Indian Civil Service officer in 1864. He was a member of Bramho Samaj.
Biography
He was born to Maharshi Debendranath Tagore and Sarada Devi on 1 June 1842 at Tagore family of Jorasanko in Kolkata. His wife was Jnanadanandini Devi. They had one son and one daughter Surendranath Tagore and Indira Devi Chaudhurani respectively. He was a student of Presidency College. He was the first Indian officer of Indian Civil Service (ICS). He joined the service in 1864.
Literary works
Sushila O Birsingha
Bombai Chitra
Nabaratnamala
Striswadhinata
Bouddhadharma
Amar Balyakotha O Bombai Prabas
Bharatbarsiyo Ingrej
Raja Rammohan Roy
Birsingha
Amar Balyakotha
Atmakotha
Shrimadbhagvatgita
He wrote many songs. His patriotic Bengali language song "Mile Sabe Bharat Santan, Ektan Gago Gaan" (unite, India's children, sing in unison), which was hailed as the first national anthem of India.
Death
He died on 9 January 1923 in Kolkata.
See also
Tagore family
List of Indian members of the Indian Civil Service
List of Kolkata Presidencians
Hindu Mela
References
External links
Satyendranath Tagore at Bengali wikisource
https://indianmasterminds.com/features/tales-from-the-legends/satyendranath-tagore-the-first-indian-civil-servant/
https://www.thebrahmosamaj.net/samajes/adibrahmosamaj.html
https://iasbabuji.com/ias-ips-officers/satyendranath-tagore/
https://granthagara.com/writer/1854-satyendranath-tagore/
1842 births
1923 deaths
Bengali writers
Bengali people
Bengali Hindus
Indian writers
Linguists
People from Kolkata
Indian civil servants
Indian Civil Service (British India) officers
Indian composers
Indian social reformers | [
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Group 1 CD1-restricted T cells are a heterogeneous group of unconventional T cells defined by their ability to recognize antigens bound on group 1 CD1 molecules (CD1a, CD1b and CD1c) with their TCR. Natural killer T (NKT) cells are a similar population with affinity to CD1d (the only group 2 CD1 molecule). Both groups recognize lipid antigens in contrast to the conventional peptide antigens presented on MHC class 1 and 2 proteins. Most identified T-cells that bind group 1 CD1 proteins are αβ T cells and some are γδ T cells. Both foreign and endogenous lipid antigens activate these cells.
The TCR usually recognizes the hydrophilic part of the antigen which protrudes outwards from the CD1 protein after the lipid chains are bound in a groove. Small hydrophobic antigens lacking a polar part have also been shown to activate CD1a-restricted T cells, indicating that in this case the TCR may bind CD1 directly following displacement of nonimmunogenic ligands.
Group 1 CD1 proteins
Group 1 CD1 (CD1a, CD1b, CD1c) is a family of surface glycoproteins expressed on Dendritic cells, Langerhans cells and in some stages of thymocyte maturation. Some subsets of B cells express CD1c. These proteins are related to MHC class 1 molecules but have a high affinity for the lipidic moieties of antigens. Mice lack any counterpart for group 1 CD1 proteins, which has complicated the research of in vivo fuction.
CD1 proteins are structurally similar to MHC class 1 proteins, containing 3 domains and non-covalently bound β2 microglobulin. They lack the genetic diversity typical of MHC genes and have a very limited number of polymorphisms, most of which produce silent mutations. Their variability reflects the limited scale of the lipid repertoire found in organisms compared to the large variety of proteins. Proteins can also easily aquire mutations, whereas the multi-step process of lipid synthesis is much less likely to change.
On their way through the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus they aquire nonimmunogenic lipid spacers. These spacers were identified to be diacylglycerides or deoxyceramides and their variety may explain the broad range of lipid chain lengths that group 1 CD1 proteins can accommodate, as the spacers have been observed to slide into different positions for different antigens. After CD1 proteins reach the surface of the cell, they are internalized and the members show different patterns of localization with CD1b trafficking through late endosomes and lysosomes and CD1a localizing mostly in early endosomes. CD1c broadly localizes in a combination of the above mentioned compartments. CD1 proteins exchange their spacers for immunogenic ligands in endosomes and lysosomes with the help of several lipid transfer proteins (including CD1e).
Function
In vivo studies have been hindered by the lack of orthologous proteins in mice. Humanized or transgenic mice are used to overcome this discrepancy and some studies use different animal species. Their function in Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection has been the main focus in past research.
Group 1 CD1-restricted T cells are more similar to conventional T cells because their response takes days to weeks and they exhibit an accelerated response after prior immunization. This differs from their group 2 counterparts (Natural killer T ceCortical thymocyteslls) which react swiftly but undergo anergy following reexposure.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection
Many lipid antigens of Mycobacterium tuberculosis have been indentified, including: mycolic acid, glucose and glycerol monomycolates, lipoarabinomannan, phosphatidylinositol mannoside, diacylsulfoglycolipid, mannosyl-β-1-phosphomycoketide and didehydroxymycobactin. Most of these antigens are bound to CD1b.
Group 1 CD1-restricted T cells are activated after Mycobacterium infection and produce IFN-γ and TNF-α (Th1 type response). These cells can be double negative (CD4-CD8-), CD4+ or CD8+ and posses strong cytotoxic capabilities. Studies using CD1b tetramers presenting the mycobacterial product glucose monomycolate identified two CD4+ TCRαβ+ T cell populations which differ from the otherwise variable TCR composition of previously isolated subsets, one termed 'GEM (Germline-encoded, mycolyl-reactive)' for their conserved TCR repertoire (specifically TRAV1-2+TRAJ9+) and 'LDN5-like' (TRBV4-1+). These cells are rare in individuals that have not encountered Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
CD1 expression is downregulated in antigen presenting cells infected with live Mycobacteria, perhaps as a means of immune evasion. This downregulation can be also found in some leukemia cells.
Autoreactivity
Group 1 CD1-restricted T cells can be activated by endogenous lipids, including gangliosides (GM1,GD1a, GD1b, GT1b, and GQ1b), sulfatides, sphingomyelin, phophatidylglycerol, lysophospholipids, squalene, wax esters, and triacylglycerides.
Methyl-lysophosphatidic acids (mLPAs) are rare in healthy monocytes and B cells but are abundant in leukemic cells. CD1c self-reactive T cells were found to kill acute leukemia cells expressing CD1c binding these lipids.
CD1a self-reactive T cells were found in the blood of healthy individuals. These cells express skin-homing receptors and produce interleukin 22 after binding CD1a on Langerhans cells. CD1a binds many endogenous lipids found in skin-oil and is able to activate T-cells even with ligands that lack a hydrophilic part, e.g. squalene.
CD8+ TCR αβ+ CD1b T cells have been found in the central nervous system of patients with multiple sclerosis. They recognized glycolipids and secreted IFN-γ and TNF-α.
Other autoimmune diseases where group 1 CD1 restricted T cells might contribute include psoriasis and systemic lupus erythematosus.
References
Cells
Immune system | [
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Splish Splash may refer to
"Splish Splash" (song)
Splish Splash (amusement park) | [
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The 2022 McDonald's All-American Girls Game is an all-star basketball game that is scheduled be held on March 29, 2022. The game's rosters featured the best and most highly recruited high school girls graduating in the class of 2022. The game will be the 20th annual version of the McDonald's All-American Game first played in 2002. Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the game has not been held since 2019.
The 24 players were selected from over 700 nominees by a committee of basketball experts. They were chosen not only for their on-court skills, but for their performances off the court as well.
Rosters
Eleven of the 24 players will be heading to the Pac-12 Conference, while the SEC and ACC each grabbed 5. Arizona, Oregon, Oregon State, South Carolina, Stanford, UCLA, and UConn each lead the way with 2 McDonald's All-Americans.
References
External links
McDonald's All-American on the web
2022 in American women's basketball
2022 | [
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The Stadio Gino Alfonso Sada is a multi-purpose stadium in Monza, Italy, and the home of Fiammamonza. Mostly used for football matches, the stadium was built in 1945 and has a capacity of 2,000.
History
In 1945, following World War II, the "San Gregorio" field was built on the parade ground of the former Gioventù Italiana del Littorio (GIL),. It was inaugurated on 21 October, with Monza's 2–0 friendly win over Pavia. Following Monza's promotion to the Serie B in 1951, a grandstand and stands were built, and the stadium was promptly renamed "Stadio Città di Monza"; the supporters, however, continued calling it with its traditional name.
In 1965, the stadium was renamed "Stadio Gino Alfonso Sada", in honour of the deceased former president of Monza. The club's last game at the "Sada" was played on 11 June 1988, in the away game of the 1987–88 Coppa Italia Serie C final against Palermo, which Monza won 2–1.
References
Bibliography
Sada
Buildings and structures in Monza
Multi-purpose stadiums in Italy
Sports venues in Lombardy
A.C. Monza
Sports venues completed in 1945
Sport in Monza | [
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The 1922 Howard Bulldogs football team was an American football team that represented Howard College (now known as the Samford University) as a member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) during the 1922 college football season. In their first year under head coach Harris G. Cope, the team compiled a 2–6–2 record.
Schedule
References
Howard
Samford Bulldogs football seasons
Howard Bulldogs football | [
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Abu Dharr Ali, also known by the regnal name of Nur al-Din Muhammad, was the 35th imam of the Qasim-Shahi branch of the Nizari Isma'ili community.
He succeeded his father, al-Mustansir Billah III, upon his death in 1498, at Anjudan. He apparently married a sister or daughter of the Safavid shah of Persia, Tahmasp I. Despite this close connection to the rulers of Persia however, the Safavids began to persecute all other varieties of Shi'ism that rivalled their own Twelver creed, and Tahmasp launched a persecution of the Nizaris during the reign of Abu Dharr Ali's son and successor, Murad Mirza.
References
Sources
15th-century births
16th-century deaths
Nizari imams
15th-century Iranian people
16th-century Iranian people
Iranian Ismailis
15th-century Ismailis
16th-century Ismailis
15th-century Islamic religious leaders
16th-century Islamic religious leaders | [
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The year 2022 in Japanese music.
Debuting
Debuting groups
Debuting soloists
Returning from hiatus
Returning groups
Doping Panda
Mrs. Green Apple
Returning soloists
Events
Number-ones
Oricon number-one albums
Oricon number-one singles
Hot 100 number-one singles
Awards
2022 MTV Video Music Awards Japan
Albums released
January
March
Disbanding and retiring artists
Disbanding
Retiring
Going on hiatus
Hikaru Yaotome
Yoshimotozaka46
Mary's Blood
Kiyoshi Hikawa
References
2022 in Japanese music | [
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Zvijezda () is a mountain in central Bosnia and Herzegovina, between towns of Breza, Vareš, Kakanj and Olovo, and between the rivers Bosna, Krivaja and Ljubina. It has several peaks higher than above sea level, the highest of which is eponymous Krš at . It is comprised mostly of limestone, and covered with lush forests, predominately coniferous.
Hydrography
Beneath the mountain lies a rich aquifer, which makes a source of fresh clean waters for the mountain's numerous streams and rivers, flowing toward Bosna on the southern and western side of the mountain, and the Krivaja on the northern and eastern side. Most important rivers belonging to the Bosna watershed are the Stavnja, Misoča, Zgošća, Goruša, Lužnica, Trstionica with its tributary Bukovica, Ribnica, Pepelarska rijeka, Gostović with the tributary streams Trbušnica, Otežna, Buretina, Suha, while the most significant rivers and streams belonging to the Krivaja river watershed are Gnjionica, Tribija with Vijačica and Kruškovica, Očevlja with Orlja, Vojnica, Vozućica, Duboštica, Gosovica, Dištica, Džinića rijeka, Lipovac.
Heritage, ecology and tourism
The main settlement, situated in the river Stavnja valley, is old mining town of Vareš. Zvijezda mountain is rich in ores, such as iron, zinc, manganese, lead and coal, and is historically known to be place of mining and ore exploitation, while in the villages and towns located around the mountain the processing of these metals and the production of tools and weapons has always been a traditional activity and the center of production in Bosnia and Herzegovina since the Middle Ages. Some remnants of these trades and old craft skills among blacksmith are still present today.
The peat bog named Đilda is located on the mountain, with a refugium of endemic and medicinal plant mustard. The tourist resort Doli is established, where guests can use bungalows and are served homemade dishes.
The main road between Tuzla and Sarajevo runs in the southeastern foothills of Zvijezda. Also, several sport clubs from neighbouring towns bears its name.
See also
Bobovac
Kraljeva Sutjeska
References
External links
kraljeva-sutjeska.com
Mountains of Bosnia and Herzegovina | [
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Sergey Shurkhal () is a retired Ukrainian professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
Career
Sergey Shurkhal, started his career with Avanhard Koryukivka and then in 1999 he moved to Desna Chernihiv the main club of Chernihiv. In 2001 he moved to Yevropa Pryluky where he played 5 matches, before playing 5 matches for Kherson. In summer 2002 he moved back to Desna Chernihiv in Ukrainian Second League where in the season 2002–03 he played 7 matches, where he managed to get third place.In January 2003 he moved to Sokil Zolochiv in the Ukrainian First League where he managed to play one match in the 2002–03 season.
References
External links
Sergey Shurkhal at footballfacts.ru
1980 births
Living people
Footballers from Chernihiv
FC Desna Chernihiv players
FC Krystal Kherson players
FC Sokil Zolochiv players
Ukrainian footballers
Ukrainian Premier League players
Ukrainian First League players
Ukrainian Second League players
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Hypogymnia australica is a species of foliose lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. Found in Australia, it was formally described as a new species by lichenologist John Elix in 1989. The type specimen was collected from the Great Dividing Range in New South Wales (about 12 km east of Bungendore) at an altitude of . Here it was found growing on a species of Leptospermum.
The lichen has a foliose (leafy), light grey thallus that is loosely attached to its bark substrate and reaches up to in diameter. It contains the secondary compounds atranorin, chloroatranorin, and physodic acid as major metabolites.
References
australica
Lichens described in 1989
Lichens of Australia
Taxa named by John Alan Elix | [
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Louis Micheels House was a single family home in Westport, Connecticut, designed in the style of the Sarasota School of Architecture by founder Paul Rudolph. Built in 1972, it was considered an example of Modern and Brutalist architecture. The home was commissioned by Louis Micheels, and it was razed in 2007.
History
Construction
The Louis Micheels House was a home in Westport, Connecticut, a town on Long Island Sound. It was designed by Paul Rudolph, a founder of the Sarasota School of Architecture, and completed in 1972. The building is named for the owners who commissioned the project, Dr. and Mrs. Louis Micheels. The land was purchased by the Micheels on 12 July 1971 and Rudolph was hired to design a home which had a "light, airy feeling".
Demolition
In 2005 Louis and Ina Micheels began trying to sell the property. The asking price was 5 million dollars and by late 2006 the building had not found a buyer. The town of Westport began to take an interest in saving the building in 2006. The town issued 92 demolition permits for buildings in the area in 2006 alone and they feared that a new buyer would demolish the building to make way for a modern home. One media outlet reported on the potential for a raze permit to demolish the house in a section they entitled "Teardown of the Day." Because of the publicity the town's Historic District Commission took an interest. At 34 years old, the building was not old enough to trigger the town's "Delay of Demolition" ordinance. The National Trust for Historic Preservation determined the home was of "great significance". Next, the State Historic Preservation Office became involved. On December 21, 2006, the Connecticut Trust filed suit to stop the planned demolition of the building. A buyer who wanted to preserve the building was found. When no deal happened Connecticut's Attorney General Richard Blumenthal filed an injunction prohibiting demolition. Despite the efforts of the officials to stop the building's demolition, the Micheels made a deal with a couple who planned to raze the building.
David and Yvette Waldman purchased the building in 2007, paying $3.234 million for the property. The couple immediately had the building razed to make way for a larger home, and attended the demolition. In 2013, the Sarasota Herald Tribune reported, "Micheels himself opposed a historic designation that could have impeded demolition. He had 3.2 million reasons." Louis Micheels died less than one year after the sale of the home.
Design
The home was designed in the style of Brutalist architecture. It was designed with floating sections that can be seen in Rudolph's later designs (like the Bass Residence in Fort Worth Texas). It had a multiple levels and cantilevered geometric flat planes. The master bedroom was cantilevered from a hillside, and supported with thin piers. To provide shade, thin panels were cantilevered above the windows. The interior of the building was filled with stark white wallboard and white cabinetry.
The exterior walls took on a rough stucco-like appearance: there were pieces of quartz in the finish which gave the walls a rough texture. The home sat on top of a hill and was supported on one side and cantilevered on the other.
References
External links
Paul Rudolph buildings
Houses completed in 1972
Modernist architecture
Houses in Connecticut
Brutalist architecture in Connecticut
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Brooke D'Hondt (born 9 March 2005) is a Canadian snowboarder who competes internationally in the halfpipe discipline.
Career
D'Hondt made her debut at the age of 14 at the 2020 Winter X Games, where she would finish sixth.
On January 19, 2022, D'Hondt was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team in the halfpipe event. D'Hondt was the youngest person named to the Canadian team.
References
External links
2005 births
Living people
Canadian female snowboarders
Sportspeople from Calgary
Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic snowboarders of Canada | [
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David Buckley (born October 2001) is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays at club level with Newcetsown and at inter-county level with the Cork senior football team. He usually lines out as a forward.
Career
Buckley first came to prominence as a dual player at juvenile and underage levels with the Newcestown club. He was part of the Newcestown minor teams that claimed a minor double in 2019, while also making his senior team debut that year. Buckley first appeared on the inter-county scene as a member of the Cork minor football team in 2018. He later won a Munster Championship title with the under-20 side. Buckley 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
Honours
Cork
Munster Under-20 Football Championship: 2021
References
2001 births
Living people
MTU Cork Gaelic footballers
Newcestown Gaelic footballers
Newcestown hurlers
Cork inter-county Gaelic footballers | [
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The ROH Hall of Fame is a hall of fame that honors professional wrestlers and wrestling personalities who contributed to the history of the U.S. based wrestling promotion Ring of Honor.
History
ROH established its hall of fame on January 26, 2022, as part of the celebration of the promotion's 20th anniversary. They announced that four inductees will make up the inaugural class.
Inductees
Individuals
Group inductions
References
External links
Official site
2022 establishments in the United States
Awards established in 2022
Hall of Fameta
Professional wrestling-related lists
Professional wrestling halls of fame | [
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Il Nuovo Mondo was an Italian language anti-Fascist daily newspaper which was published in New York City and then, in Chicago between 1926 and 1931. The paper was the first anti-Fascist daily published abroad by the Italians.
History and profile
Il Nuovo Mondo was started in New York City in 1925, and the first issue appeared on 16 November. Frank Bellanca was the founder and also, served as its director. The members of the Anti-Fascist Alliance of North America, a socialist-syndicalist group, were also instrumental in the establishment of the paper. The financier of the paper was Local 89 which was a unit of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. The general secretary of the Local 89 was an Italian, Luigi Antonini. The paper was published by Avanti News Company daily except for Mondays.
Il Nuovo Mondo mostly featured the articles written by the Italian exiles who left Italy due to the oppression of the Fascist rule in Italy. The paper also covered writings of the American critics of Fascism. It published the manifesto of the North American Anti-Fascist Alliance on 26 August 1926.
The paper was initially a labor organ, but it was sold to the Italian socialist exiles in April 1929. From 2 October 1929 to 8 February 1930 the paper was published in Chicago. The final issue of Il Nuovo Mondo was 282 which was published on 29 November 1931.
References
1925 establishments in New York City
1931 disestablishments in New York (state)
Italian-language newspapers
Defunct newspapers published in New York City
Defunct newspapers published in Chicago
Publications established in 1925
Publications disestablished in 1931
Socialist newspapers published in the United States | [
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Princess Amelias origins are obscure. Between 1803 and 1804 she made one voyage from London as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She apparently was broken up in the West Indies after having delivered the slaves that she had brought from West Africa.
Career
Princess Amelia first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1803.
Captain Peter Bogle acquired a letter of marque on 24 June 1803. However, he had sailed from London on 26 March. Princess Amelia started acquiring slaves on 10 May at Cape Coast Castle. She then gathered more at Whydah, which was where she made most of her purchases. She stopped at Barbados, and sailed for Demerara. She arrived at Kingston, Jamaica, with John Laten, master, on 1 January 1804 with 306 slaves.
Fate
Princess Amelia then disappeared from Lloyd's Lists ship arrival and departure data. She was condemned and broken up after having disembarked the slaves she was carrying. Her entry in the Register of Shipping (RS) for 1806 bears the later annotation "Broke up".
Notes
Citations
1800s ships
London slave ships | [
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The 1980 ECAC Metro Men's Basketball Tournament was held February 28–March 1. The quarterfinal and championship rounds were played at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York.
Jim Valvano’s Iona Gaels defeated in the championship game, 64–46, to win their second ECAC Metro men's basketball tournament in as many years. The Gaels earned a bid to the 1980 NCAA Tournament as No. 6 seed in the East region and advanced to the round of 32.
Bracket
Notes
Conference did not play a formal schedule
References
1979–80 ECAC Metro men's basketball season
MAAC Men's Basketball Tournament
ECAC Metro Men's Basketball Tournament | [
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Damini Kanwal Shetty is an Indian film actress, writer and producer She acted in serial like Parampara, Alif Laila and played Yashoda’s role in famous mythological show Shri Krishna in 1993 which was telecasted in DD National. Presently she is running production house named 'Eternal Flame Productions'.
Career
Damini has started her career from theater; she joined theater named 'Drikshravan' at her schooling stage.
Television
Filmography
References
External links
Living people
Indian television actresses
Indian film actresses | [
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Sir George Dalston, 4th Baronet ( 13 July 1718 – 7 March 1765) was a British baronet. He inherited the title from his father at a young age, and subsequently joined the Royal Navy, in which he served until 1742, reaching the rank of lieutenant. In 1754 he was elected to the parliamentary seat of Westmorland at the behest of his relations the Lowther family. Unaligned throughout his time in politics, Dalston retired in 1761 amidst increasing financial difficulties. He sold his seat of Dalston Hall soon afterwards, and died in relative poverty in 1765. Having only a daughter from his marriage, the baronetcy died with him.
Naval career
George Dalston was born in the first half of 1718 and baptized on 13 July 1718, the son of Sir Charles Dalston, 3rd Baronet and his wife Susan Blake. On 5 March 1723 his father died, leaving Dalston to inherit his baronetcy. Having been educated at Westminster School between 1727 and 1733, he enrolled as a scholar at the Royal Naval Academy on 1 May 1735, and on 29 July 1737 he joined the 50-gun fourth-rate HMS Gloucester as a volunteer. Gloucester sailed to join the Mediterranean Fleet soon afterwards. Dalston was promoted to midshipman and sent to join the 20-gun frigate HMS Dursley Galley, which was also part of the fleet, on 19 September. He returned to Gloucester as a volunteer on 12 October, and became a midshipman again, this time still on Gloucester, on 20 October 1738. Dalston transferred as a midshipman to the 54-gun fourth-rate HMS Chester on 17 March 1739 or 1740, still in the Mediterranean.
Dalston moved ships again on 10 April 1740, this time to the newly commissioned 70-gun ship of the line HMS Prince Frederick, which was part of the Channel Fleet. He stayed in Prince Frederick for around six months before being transferred to the 70-gun ship of the line HMS Nassau on 3 October, just before Prince Frederick sailed to the West Indies Station. While serving in Nassau Dalston passed his examination for promotion to the rank of lieutenant on 6 May 1741, and in 1742 the ship sailed to the Mediterranean. There on 20 January, he was sent to the 80-gun ship of the line HMS Russell to serve as her fourth lieutenant. His stint in Russell was short, as he left her on 23 April of the same year. This was his last service in the Royal Navy.
Political career
Dalston's first public position came in 1752 when he served a one-year term as Sheriff of Cumberland. In 1754 Dalston began a career in politics when he was elected unopposed to the parliamentary seat of Westmorland. This was brought about by the Lowther family, relations of Dalston, who paid for his election at the cost of £628 15s 9d. Dalston was not politically aligned with any one group in parliament, and was classed by the Tory Viscount Dupplin as "doubtful". Dalston stayed close to his family, organising the election of Sir William Fleming to the seat of Cumberland on 19 May 1756. For this he was paid £200 by Sir James Lowther.
In early 1757 Fleming died and the Cumberland seat was open again. This time it was decided that Lowther himself would run for election, but it was thought that if he personally turned out on 27 April for the voting it would look like a sign of respect for his opponents. Instead Dalston served as his proxy at the event, and Lowther won the seat. When the 1761 British general election was called Dalston did not stand for re-election, and Lowther replaced him with John Upton.
By the time of Dalston's retirement from politics he had come into severe financial difficulties, and in June of the same year he sold his family seat of Dalston Hall to the London grocer Monkhouse Davison for £5,060, and also rid himself of several other properties in the Cumberland area. At Christmas Dalston began to receive a £200 annual income from the government to help alleviate his difficulties, but he lost this when the Duke of Newcastle relinquished his position as prime minister in May 1762. Dalston had also been drawing a small income as lieutenant-colonel of the Yorkshire militia, but this unit was disbanded at around the same time and he thus lost two of his major sources of income in short order. Sir John Ramsden commented that these losses would "totally break [Dalston's] back", and that his finances were very dilapidated. Dalston died, having failed to rescue his income, on 7 March 1765. He was buried on 9 March at Warmfield.
Family
Dalston married Anne Huxley, the daughter of the commissary general George Huxley, on 28 October 1742. Together they had one daughter, Elizabeth, on 21 April 1751. She married a French officer named Captain Theobald Dillon. Having no male heir, Dalston's baronetcy went extinct upon his death.
Citations
References
1718 births
1765 deaths
Baronets in the Baronetage of England
British MPs 1754–1761
Royal Navy officers | [
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The Amazing World of Borjamari and Pocholo () is a 2004 Spanish comedy film directed and written by Juan Cavestany and Enrique López Lavigne starring Javier Gutiérrez and Santiago Segura.
Plot
The plot follows Borjamari and Pocholo, a couple of (unadapted) posh brothers in their thirties still pending for finishing a licentiate degree in law, mentally stuck on the 1980s' musical scene (specifically obsessed by Mecano), and who refuse to leave the family home. Their once bullied cousin, Pelayo, now a successful person and womanizer, tells them that Mecano is reuniting and playing a gig in the outskirts of Madrid, where they travel together with their female counterpart, Paloma.
Cast
Production
The film was produced by Santiago Segura (on behalf of Amiguetes Entertainment), Enrique López Lavigne (Apache Films) and Álvaro Augustin (Estudios Picasso).
Release
Distributed by Warner Sogefilms, the film was theatrically released in Spain on 3 December 2004.
It grossed over 3 million € at the domestic box office.
Reception
Reviewing for Fotogramas, Mirito Torreiro gave the film a negative review, scoring 1 out of 5 stars, highlighting Pilar Castro's performance as the best of the film while negatively assessing pretty much everything else, considering the film to be "one of the comedies with the least capacity to make people laugh of all the comedies that have been made in Spain in recent years".
Jonathan Holland of Variety wrote that the infantilism of the lead characters "is largely duplicated by the script, which tacks cliches and deja vu gags onto a threadbare plotline", considering that "teenage auds will find some ’80s references baffling, and older viewers, who may once have identified with the protags, will be relieved to find they’ve outgrown this sort of thing".
See also
List of Spanish films of 2004
Informational notes
References
External links
The Amazing World of Borjamari and Pocholo at ICAA's Catálogo de Cinespañol
Films set in Spain
2004 films
Spanish comedy films
2004 comedy films
2000s Spanish-language films
Apache Films films | [
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The Elnu Abenaki Tribe is a state-recognized tribe in Vermont, who claim descent from Abenaki people.
They are not federally recognized as a Native American tribe. Vermont has no federally recognized tribes.
Leadership
Roger Longtoe Sheehan served as chief since at least 2016.
State recognition
Vermont recognized the Elnu Abenaki Tribe as a state-recognized tribe in 2011. The other state-recognized tribes in Vermont are the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation, Koasek Abenaki Tribe, and the Mississquoi Abenaki Tribe.
Nonprofit organization
In 2020, the group created 'Elnu Abenaki Incorporated, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, based in Brattleboro, Vermont. Their registered agent is Rich Holshuh.
Heritage
The Elnu Abenaki Tribe are the smallest of Vermont's four state-recognized tribes. They had 60 members in 2016.
St. Mary's University associate professor Darryl Leroux's genealogical and historical research found that the members of this and the other three state-recognized tribes in Vermont were "comprised primarily of French descendants who have used long-ago ancestry in New France to shift into an 'Abenaki' identity."
The State of Vermont reported in 2002 that the Abenaki people migrated north to Quebec at the end of the 17th century.
Activities
They participate in Abenaki Heritage Weekend, held at the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum in Vergennes, Vermont.
Proposed legislation
Vermont H.556 is a state bill introduced in 2022 and "An act relating to exempting property owned by Vermont-recognized Native American tribes from property tax."
Notes
References
External links
Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs
Abenaki heritage groups
Cultural organizations based in Vermont
French American
Native American tribes in Vermont
Non-profit organizations based in Vermont
State recognized Native American tribes | [
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Jasmine Baird (born 29 June 1999) is a Canadian snowboarder who competes internationally in the big air and slopestyle disciplines. Baird was born in Mississauga, but was raised in Georgetown, Ontario.
Career
At the start of the 2021–22 FIS Snowboard World Cup, Baird won the bronze medal in the big air event at the stop in Chur, Switzerland.
On January 19, 2022, Baird was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team in the halfpipe event.
Life
She was 18 months old when she started snowboarding and at age 12 she started getting into slopestyle. She started competing competitively at age 15.
She was very inspired by many people but in particular other female snowboarder .
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Canadian female snowboarders
Sportspeople from Mississauga
Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic snowboarders of Canada | [
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A multifunctional furniture is a furniture with several functions combined. The functions combined may vary, but a common variant is to incorporate an extra storage function into chair, tables, and so forth, making them so-called storage furniture. Multifunctional furniture can accommodate more efficient use of living spaces. Lack of space can be an important reason for choosing such furniture, but combination furniture is also seen in larger homes for more space-efficient utilization.
Examples
Some common examples of multifunctional furniture are:
Chair-table, a table where the tabletop can be hinged to form the back of a seat to serve as a chair, if necessary
Chest-chair, a type of chair where the seat doubles as the lid of a chest for storage
Chest-table, a chest used as a table, with storage space underneath a hinged tabletop. Today more commonly seen as coffee tables, since persons' legs are not commonly rested underneath such tables.
Coffee table with extra storage on their underside is a type of multifunctional furniture
Daybed, a combination furniture which can be used as a bed, for sitting, or for rest and relaxation in common rooms
Lambing chair, a type of unchair commonly with storage under the seat in form of a drawer
Monks bench, a table/bench
Ottoman, a stool where the seat often is hinged with a hollow inside which can be used for storage
Pull-down bed, a folding bed that is hinged on one end so that it can be stored vertically against a wall or inside a cupboard
Recliner, a chair which can be folded out to a near supine position for sleeping
Storage bed, a bed with built in storage
Sofa bed, a sofa where the seating area can be pulled or folded out to form a bed for sleeping
Storage bench, a bench where there is storage beneath the seat
Step chair and onit chair (the latter has an ironing-board mode)
See also
Hidden compartment
:Category:Mechanical furniture
Modern furniture
:Category:Portable furniture
Literature
Møbler i Norge (1976) by Trond Juul Gjerdi
References
External links
"kombinasjonsmøbel" at DigitaltMuseum
Small spaces need smart solutions - Designing furniture for small spaces, in connection with human wellbeing. Kristoffer Thøgersen, Department of Design, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Furniture | [
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The Norwegian Women's Curling Championship () is the national championship of women's curling in Norway. It has been held annually since 1979. It is organized by the Norwegian Curling Association ().
List of champions and medallists
(Team line-up in order: skip (marked bold), third, second, lead, alternate(s), coach)
References
See also
Norwegian Men's Curling Championship
Norwegian Mixed Curling Championship
Norwegian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship
Norwegian Junior Curling Championships
Women's curling competitions in Norway
National curling championships
Recurring sporting events established in 1979
1979 establishments in Norway
Curling | [
101,
1996,
5046,
2308,
1005,
1055,
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Discomyzinae is a subfamily of shore flies in the family Ephydridae.
Genera
Tribe Discomyzini Acloque, 1897
Actocetor Becker, 1903
Discomyza Meigen, 1830
Clasiopella Hendel, 1914
Tribe Psilopini Cresson, 1942
Achaetorisa Papp, 1980
Ceropsilopa Cresson, 1917
Clanoneurum Becker, 1903
Cnestrum Becker, 1896
Helaeomyia Cresson, 1941
Leptopsilopa Cresson, 1922
Psilopa Fallén, 1823
Risa Becker, 1907
Rhynchopsilopa Hendel, 1913
Scoliocephalus Becker, 1903
Trimerina Macquart, 1835
References
Ephydridae
Brachycera subfamilies
Taxa named by Alexandre Noël Charles Acloque | [
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Gandhinagar is an established upmarket residential area located in the south of Dharwad conurbation,India named after prominent Indian leader Mahatama Gandhi . It is located in proximity to Malmaddi and some Deccan areas of the city.
Gandhinagar is located south east of Dharwad city which is 21 kilometres away from the city of Hubballi, The nearest railway station is Dharwad railway station in Malmaddi.
See also
Saraswatpur
Malmaddi
Dharwad railway station
References
External links
Gandhinagar
Dharwad
Cities and towns in Dharwad district | [
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The 1978 Bank of Oklahoma Grand Prix was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the Shadow Mountain Racquet Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma in the United States that was part of the 1978 Colgate-Palmolive Grand Prix. It was the inaugural edition of the tournament was held from April 24 through April 30, 1978. Eddie Dibbs won the singles title and earned $8,500 first-prize money.
Finals
Singles
Eddie Dibbs defeated Pat DuPré 6–7, 6–2, 7–5
It was Dibbs' 1st singles title of the year and the 14th of his career.
Doubles
Van Winitsky / Russell Simpson defeated Carlos Kirmayr / Ricardo Ycaza 4–6, 7–6, 6–2
References
External links
ITF tournament edition details
Bank of Oklahoma Grand Prix
Bank of Oklahoma Grand Prix
Bank of Oklahoma Grand Prix
Tennis in Oklahoma | [
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Goodbye Happiness () is a Canadian comedy-drama film, directed by Ken Scott and released in 2021. The film centres on Nicolas (François Arnaud, Thomas (Antoine Bertrand), Charles-Alexandre (Louis Morissette) and William (Patrice Robitaille), four brothers who do not get along but are attempting to set aside their differences at their father's funeral.
The cast also includes Julie Le Breton, Charlotte Aubin, Marilyse Bourke, Élizabeth Duperré, Geneviève Boivin-Roussy and Pierre-Yves Cardinal.
The film premiered in theatres on December 17, 2021.
Awards
The film received two Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 10th Canadian Screen Awards in 2022, for Best Editing (Yvann Thibaudeau) and Best Original Song (Nicolas Errèra and Craig Walker for "Drop the Rock").
References
External links
2021 films
2021 comedy-drama films
Canadian films
Canadian comedy-drama films
Films shot in Quebec
Films set in Quebec
Films directed by Ken Scott
2020s French-language films | [
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Oleksandr Tsybenko () is a retired Ukrainian professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
Career
Oleksandr Tsybenko sarted his career with Yunist Chernihiv, the young team in the city of Chernihiv. In 1993 he moved to Dynamo-3 Kyiv in Ukrainian Football Amateur League where he played 1 match in the 1993–94 season.In 1995 he moved to Ros Bila Tserkva where he played 13 matches and finished 13th in the 1995–96 Ukrainian Second League season.In 1999 he moved to Desna Chernihiv, the main club in Chernihiv, in Ukrainian Second League. Here he played 12 matches in 1999–2000 where he finished in 9th place with the club. In 2001 he moved to Yevropa Pryluky where he played until 2002 and where he played 34 matches and scored 16 goals. In 2003 he moved to FC Nizhyn where he played 4 matches, scored 1 goal, and won the Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup.
Honours
Nizhyn
Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup: 2003
References
External links
Oleksandr Tsybenko at footballfacts.ru
1980 births
Living people
Footballers from Chernihiv
FC Desna Chernihiv players
FC Yunist Chernihiv players
FC Dynamo-3 Kyiv players
FC Ros Bila Tserkva players
Ukrainian footballers
Ukrainian Premier League players
Ukrainian First League players
Ukrainian Second League players
Association football midfielders | [
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Railway Murders is a documentary series narrated by Nicholas Day. It debuted in May 2021 on Yesterday. In September 2021 it was broadcast on ZDFinfo. Regular contributors include Donald Rumbelow, Judith Rowbotham and Alan Moss.
Episode list
Series 1
See also
History of rail transport in Great Britain
References
External links
3dd Productions
2020s British documentary television series
2021 British television series debuts
English-language television shows
Documentary television series about crime
Documentary television series about railway transport
Railway accidents and incidents in Great Britain
UKTV original programming | [
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Edward Weil (April 12, 1872 – March 4, 1932) was a Jewish-American lawyer, politician, and judge from New York.
Life
Weil was born on April 12, 1872 in New York City, New York. His father was Isaac Weil, a German immigrant and garment worker.
Weil attended Grammar School No. 15 and the old Fifth Street school. He then went to the New York University School of Law, graduating from there with an LL.B. in 1893. He was admitted to the bar in 1898 and developed an extensive law practice in New York City. He initially had a private practice in Harlem, later practicing in Yorkville.
In 1910, Weil was elected to the New York State Assembly as a Democrat, representing the New York County 22nd District. He served in the Assembly in 1911, 1912, and 1913. He lost the 1913 re-election to Republican Benjamin E. Moore. He worked as Assistant District Attorney from 1916 to 1922, first under Edward Swann and then under Joab H. Banton. In 1922, Mayor John F. Hylan appointed him Magistrate to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Magistrate Raphael Tobias. At the end of the three-year term, he was reappointed Magistrate for a full ten-year term.
Weil was president of the Harlem Old Timers, Past Regent of the Manhattan Council of the Royal Arcanum, and a member of the Grand Street Boys Association, the Elks, the Tribe of Ben-Hur, and the Freemasons. His wife died in 1927, and his children were Robert and Joseph Edward.
Weil died at home from a cardiac attack on March 4, 1932. His funeral took place in the Free Synagogue, with Rabbi Louis I. Newman delivering the eulogy. The pallbearers were members of the Harlem Old Timers Club (which he headed for many years), and his funeral was attended by (among other people) Surrogate John P. O'Brien and a number of magistrates and judges. He was buried in Mount Neboh Cemetery.
References
External links
The Political Graveyard
1872 births
1932 deaths
American people of German-Jewish descent
New York University School of Law alumni
19th-century American lawyers
20th-century American lawyers
Lawyers from New York City
People from Harlem
People from Yorkville, Manhattan
19th-century American Jews
20th-century American Jews
Jewish American attorneys
Jewish American state legislators in New York (state)
20th-century American politicians
New York (state) Democrats
Politicians from Manhattan
Members of the New York State Assembly
20th-century American judges
New York (state) state court judges
American Freemasons
Burials in New York (state) | [
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The 2022 Southeastern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament is the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Southeastern Conference to be held at the Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida, from March 9 to 13, 2022.
Seeds
All 14 SEC teams are scheduled to participate in the tournament. Teams will be seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.The top 10 teams will receive a first round bye and the top four teams will receive a double bye, automatically advancing them into the quarterfinals.
Schedule
Bracket
Game summaries
First round
Second round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
See also
2022 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament
References
2021–22 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season
SEC Men's Basketball Tournament
Basketball in Florida
College sports in Florida
Sports competitions in Tampa, Florida
2022 in sports in Florida | [
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Oscar Manuel Collazo (born January 15, 1997) is an American professional boxer.
Professional boxer
During his seven-year amateur career, Collazo won five national amateur boxing titles, the bronze medal the 2017 Panamerican Championships and the gold medal at the 2019 Pan American Games.
Collazo made his professional debut as a light flyweight against Vicente Castro Cheneque on 15 February 2020. He won the fight by a third-round technical knockout. Collazo was next booked to face Kevin John Cruz Jusino on 5 December 2020. He won his second professional bout a round quicker than his first, as he won the fight by a second-round technical knockout.
Collazo moved up to flyweight for his next bout, against Francisco Bonilla on 25 March 2021, on the Amanda Serrano vs. Daniela Romina Bermúdez undercard. He won the fight by a career-first unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring the fight 60–54 in his favor. Collazo moved down to mini flyweight to face Pedro Villegas for the vacant WBO Latino minimumweight title on 3 December 2021. He won the fight by a third-round technical knockout.
Professional boxing record
References
1997 births
Living people
American male boxers
Boxers from Newark, New Jersey
Mini-flyweight boxers
Light-flyweight boxers
Flyweight boxers
Southpaw boxers
Puerto Rican male boxers
Pan American Games gold medalists for Puerto Rico
Pan American Games medalists in boxing
Boxers at the 2019 Pan American Games
Medalists at the 2019 Pan American Games | [
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Public Commercial Assets are the assets owned by the public sector able to generate income if managed professionally. These include operational assets (such as utilities) and transportation assets (such as airports, ports, and subway systems) as well as real estate.
Public Commercial Assets are a sub-sector of the asset side of the Public Sector Balance Sheet, that reports the totals of assets and liabilities that the government controls. It extends the scope of fiscal analysis beyond the standard cash flow measures of debt and budgets.
Assets are resources controlled by an entity as a result of past events and from which future economic benefits or service potential are expected to flow to the entity.
According to IMF research, total public sector assets have a value equivalent to 2×GDP globally. These assets consist of public infrastructure such as bridges and roads, financial assets such as bank deposits. Net worth (assets minus liabilities) would be equivalent to some 21% of GDP.
Real estate is the single largest segment of all assets, globally. According to research from McKinsey Global Institute, Global net worth has risen as interest rates have fallen, since 2000 mainly due to the prices of real estate triple in value between 2000 to 2020. Most governments do not keep a complete record of all the real estate it owns owns, thus making it difficult to value, manage or develop and put these assets to their most productive uses. The dearth of information about public commercial assets promotes inefficiency, and an IMF study estimates a cost to this—about 1.5 percent of the total value of assets per year, equivalent to about 3 percent of global GDP.
References
Accounting terminology
Finance
Public finance | [
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was a Japanese samurai, swordsman, marksman, firearm inventor, gunsmith, soldier, and military officer. He also used the assumed names and .
Biography
He was born the eldest son of , a retainer of the Shimazu clan. In his youth he studied the of swordsmanship, a derivative of Jigen-ryū, as well as Western gunnery. Murata joined the revolutionary Imperial Japanese Army at the outbreak of the Boshin War. He rapidly developed a reputation as one of the best marksmen in the army, and led the , a sniper fireteam contributed by the Satsuma forces. Engagements in which Murata was involved included the battles of Toba–Fushimi, Bonari Pass, and Aizu. In 1871, he was assigned to the Imperial Guard Division in Tokyo where he became a .
In 1875, he was sent to Europe to study modern firearms technology and gunnery techniques. During his tour, he was received by, among others, France, Germany, Holland and Sweden-Norway. However, local authorities blocked him from visiting any formal facilities due to a prevailing fear of arms development in Asia. Despite the obstruction, he was somehow able to acquire at least one Gras rifle and Beaumont rifle respectively and studied their mechanical and ergonomic designs. In 1877, after returning to Japan, he was promoted to and participated in the supression of the Satsuma Rebellion. In 1880, he developed Japan's first indigenously produced standardized service rifle, the Murata rifle. Around that time, Murata built a summer house in Ōiso, Kanagawa Prefecture.
At the Koishikawa arsenal in the early 1880s, Murata oversaw the manufacturing of the first batches of Murata rifles to be distributed to the Japanese armed forces. Many units were personally inspected by him, and early production models were engraved with his signature.
In 1890, he was promoted to and transferred to the reserve. On June 5, 1896, he was created a for his military service in the Boshin War and Satsuma Rebellion. Murata's research on firearm design was taken over by his student Arisaka Nariakira. Murata remained in reserve throughout the First Sino-Japanese and Russo-Japanese Wars, but did not play an active role.
In 1891, Murata collaborated with of the on Japan's first professionally published book on hunting, the
Privately, Murata was an avid practicioner of precision target shooting. In his later years, he often travelled to Europe to participate in long range shooting competitions where he won a number of championships.
He died of liver failure in 1921 at the age of 83. Murata's grave is located at Yanaka Cemetery in Taitō, Tokyo.
References
1838 births
1921 deaths
Samurai
People of the Boshin War
Meiji Restoration
Military snipers
People from Kagoshima Prefecture
Japanese inventors
Gunsmiths
Japanese soldiers
Deaths from liver failure
Military_personnel_from_Kagoshima_Prefecture | [
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We Need to Talk About Cosby is an American documentary miniseries directed and produced by W. Kamau Bell. It explores the life and career of Bill Cosby up to his sexual assault cases. It premiered on January 30, 2022, on Showtime.
Plot
Comedians, journalists, and survivors have a conversation about the career and sexual assault cases of Bill Cosby.
Episodes
Release
The series had its world premiere at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2022. It was released on January 30, 2022, on Showtime.
Reception
Critical reception
Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the series a score of 84 out of 100 based on 21 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".
Cosby's response
A representative for Bill Cosby issued a statement days prior to the series's premiere, stating: "Mr. Cosby has spent more than 50 years standing with the excluded; made it possible for some to be included; standing with the disenfranchised; and standing with those women and men who were denied respectful work because of race and gender within the expanses of the entertainment industries, (e.g. when he perceived Janis Ian as a lesbian and tried to have her blacklisted), continues to be the target of numerous media that have, for too many years, distorted and omitted truths… intentionally. Mr. Cosby vehemently denies all allegations waged against him, Let's talk about Bill Cosby. He wants our nation to be what it proclaims itself to be: a democracy."
Notes
References
External links
Official trailer
2022 American television series debuts
2020s American documentary television series
2020s American television miniseries
Showtime (TV network) original programming
Documentary films about actors
English-language television shows
Bill Cosby | [
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The 1979–80 Iona Gaels men's basketball team represented Iona College during the 1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Gaels, led fifth-year by head coach Jim Valvano, played their home games at the Hynes Athletic Center. The Gaels won the ECAC Metro Basketball Tournament to receive a bid to the 1980 NCAA Tournament. As the No. 6 seed in the East region, the Gaels defeated No. 11 seed in the opening round – the first and only NCAA Tournament victory in school history. Iona was narrowly defeated by No. 3 seed Georgetown in the round of 32. As of the 2020–21 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, this is the furthest any Iona men's team has ever advanced in the NCAA Tournament.
On February 21, Iona halted No. 2 Louisville’s 18-game winning streak by dominating the Cardinals, 77–60, at Madison Square Garden. It was the last game Louisville would lose during the season en route to winning the 1980 NCAA Championship. It was the 12th straight of what would end up being a 17-game win streak for the Gaels.
Roster
Schedule and results
|-
!colspan=9 style=| Regular Season
|-
!colspan=9 style=| ECAC Metro Tournament
|-
!colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament
Rankings
Awards and honors
Jeff Ruland – All-American, Haggerty Award, Great Alaska Shootout Tournament MVP
NBA draft
References
Iona Gaels men's basketball seasons
Iona
Iona | [
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Edward Russell Ogden (17 June 1862 – 15 May 1913) was a Canadian-born American first-class cricketer and medical doctor.
The son of Dr. Edwy J. Ogden, he was born in June 1862 at Oakville, Ontario. He was educated at the Upper Canada College, where he played for the college cricket team, before following in his father's footsteps by becoming a medical doctor.
He was initially a member of the Toronto Cricket Club, in addition to playing minor matches for Canada against the United States in 1881, 1883 and 1884. From Toronto he relocated his medical practice to Chicago in the United States; there he played for the Chicago Cricket Club, which had been founded by his father in 1876. Considered the best all-rounder in North America at the time, Ogden made a single appearance in first-class cricket for the United States against the Gentlemen of Philadelphia at Philadelphia in 1883. Batting twice in the match, he was dismissed in the United States first innings by Walter Clark for 49 runs, while in their second innings he shared in a match-winning partnership of 26 with William Bottomore in which Ogden contributed 16 runs. With his right-arm medium pace bowling, he bowled eight wicketless overs in the Philadelphia first innings. He returned to play for Canada as captain on their 1887 tour of England, scoring 701 runs and taking 91 wickets. Wisden noted that he "was clearly the best all-round player in the side". Ogden died at Chicago in May 1913.
References
External links
1862 births
1913 deaths
People from Oakville, Ontario
Upper Canada College alumni
19th-century Canadian physicians
Canadian emigrants to the United States
Canadian cricketers
American cricketers
20th-century Canadian physicians | [
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The 1924 Spring Hill Badgers football team was an American football team that represented Spring Hill College as an independent during the 1924 college football season. Led by Edward J. "Mickey" Connors in his second season as head coach, the Badgers compiled an overall record of 4–4–1.
Schedule
References
Spring Hill
Spring Hill Badgers football seasons
Spring Hill Badgers football | [
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Arup Kumar Baidya (; born 7 September 1987) is a Bangladeshi footballer who plays as a left back and can also be deployed as a left midfielder. He currently plays for and captains Brothers Union in the Bangladesh Championship League and is a former player for the Bangladesh national football team.
International goals
Bangladesh national team
Honours
Sheikh Russel KC
Bangabandhu Gold Cup: 2017
References
Living people
1987 births
Bangladesh Football Premier League players
Bangladeshi footballers
Bangladesh international footballers
Association football defenders
Abahani Limited (Dhaka) players
Muktijoddha Sangsad KC players
Sheikh Russel KC players
Mohammedan Sporting Club (Dhaka) players
Brothers Union players
Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club players | [
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Ameen Khan is an Indian politician currently serving as an MLA from Sheo (Rajasthan Assembly constituency). He is a former cabinet minister in the Government of Rajasthan. He is a national level leader of the Indian National Congress.
References
Indian National Congress politicians from Rajasthan
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Rajasthan MLAs 2018–2023
People from Barmer, Rajasthan | [
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Joe Kendall may refer to:
Joe Kendall (American football) (1909–1965), American football player
Joe Kendall (rugby league) (1882–1958), Australian rugby league footballer
Elton Joe Kendall (born 1954), American judge
See also
Jo Kendall (1938–2022), British actress
Joseph Kendall (disambiguation) | [
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Cian Kiely (born 27 December 1996) is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays at club level with Ballincollig and at inter-county level with the Cork senior football team. He usually lines out as a defender.
Career
Kiely first came to sporting prominence playing basketball. He won an All-Ireland U-14 title with his club and also played on Cork and Munster U-14 and U-15 squads. Kiely concentrated on Gaelic football after earning selection on the various Cork development squads at underage level. In 2014 he enjoyed a hugely successful year, winning Munster and All-Ireland titles with Coláiste Choilm, playing for the Cork minor football team, and lining out on the Ballincollig club team that won their first ever Cork SFC title. Kiely's inter-county progression continued and he came on as a substitute when Cork were beaten by Mayo in the 2016 All-Ireland under-21 final. He joined the Cork senior football team in 2018. Kiely also captained University College Cork to the Sigerson Cup title in 2019.
Honours
Coláiste Choilm
All-Ireland Post-Primary Schools Senior B Football Championship: 2014
Munster Post-Primary Schools Senior B Football Championship: 2014
University College Cork
Sigerson Cup: 2019 (c)
Ballincollig
Cork Senior Football Championship: 2014
Cork
Munster Under-21 Football Championship: 2016
References
External link
Cian Kiely profile at the Cork GAA website
1996 births
Living people
UCC Gaelic footballers
Ballincollig Gaelic footballers
Cork inter-county Gaelic footballers | [
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Alan Persching Dexter (October 21, 1918 – December 19, 1983) was an American film, stage and television actor.
Life and career
Dexter was born in Oklahoma. He began his career in 1943, where Dexter appeared in the film This Is the Army, playing the uncredited role of a "Soldier". Later in his career, he guest-starred in numerous television programs including, The Andy Griffith Show, Bonanza, Shotgun Slade, The Dick Van Dyke Show, That Girl, The Virginian, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, Perry Mason, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., The Jack Benny Program, The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, Navy Log, The Twilight Zone, The Odd Couple, The Fugitive, Man with a Camera, Get Smart, Have Gun, Will Travel, The Untouchables, Ironside and Gunsmoke. Dexter also played the role of "Frank Ferguson" in the soap opera television series Days of Our Lives from 1965 to 1966.
In his film career, Dexter appeared in films such as, Forbidden, Operation Petticoat, The Enemy Below, The Mississippi Gambler, My Man and I, Cell 2455, Death Row, The Eternal Sea, Voice in the Mirror, Down Three Dark Streets, Column South, Sailor Beware, Girls in the Night, City of Bad Men, and It Came from Outer Space. He played the role of "Roy the Photographer" in the 1958 film Step Down to Terror, with also playing the role of Bill Farrell's friend "Sam Benson" in the film I Married a Monster from Outer Space, in the same year. Dexter also appeared in playing the role of "Joe" in the 1964 film The Brass Bottle and as "Parson" in the 1969 film Paint Your Wagon.
Death
Dexter died in December 1983 of a heart attack in Oxnard, California, at the age of 65.
References
External links
Rotten Tomatoes profile
1918 births
1983 deaths
People from Oklahoma
Male actors from Oklahoma
American male film actors
American male television actors
American male stage actors
20th-century American male actors | [
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Anja Liebert (born 19 September 1969) is a German politician. Liebert became a member of the Bundestag in the 2021 German federal election. She is affiliated with the Alliance 90/The Greens party.
References
Living people
1969 births
Politicians from Dortmund
21st-century German politicians
21st-century German women politicians
Members of the Bundestag for Alliance 90/The Greens
Members of the Bundestag 2021–2025
Female members of the Bundestag | [
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Here Be Monsters is the fifteenth studio album by the melodic hard rock band Ten. The first single from the album, the track "Fearless", was released on 6 December 2021., while the second one, "Hurricane", was released on 12 January 2022.
Track listing
All songs written by Gary Hughes.
"Fearless" – 6:53
"Chapter and Psalm" – 8:18
"Hurricane" – 4:35
"Strangers on a Distant Shore" – 6:07
"The Dream That Fell to Earth" – 6:25
"The Miracle of Life" – 5:48
"Anything You Want" – 4:47
"Immaculate Friends" – 5:19
"Follow Me into the Fire" – 7:11
"The Longest Time" – 4:55
Personnel
Ten
Gary Hughes – vocals, guitars, backing vocals
Dann Rosingana – lead guitars
Steve Grocott – lead guitars
John Halliwell – rhythm guitars
Darrel Treece-Birch – keyboards, programming
Steve Mckenna – bass guitar
Markus Kullman – drums and percussion
Production
Gary Hughes – production
Charts
References
Ten (band) albums
2022 albums | [
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Şehzade Mehmed Burhaneddin (; 23 May 1849 – 4 November 1876) was an Ottoman prince, the son of Sultan Abdulmejid I and his wife Nükhetsezâ Hanım.
Early life
Şehzade Mehmed Burhaneddin was born on 23 May 1849 in the Old Beylerbeyi Palace. His father was Sultan Abdulmejid I, son of Sultan Mahmud II and Bezmiâlem Sultan and his mother was Nükhetsezâ Hanım. He was circumcised on 9 April 1857 in the Dolmabahçe Palace, together with his brothers Şehzade Mehmed Reşad (future Mehmed V), Şehzade Ahmed Kemaleddin and Şehzade Ahmed Nureddin.
Personal life
Burhaneddin married three times and had one son. One of his wives was Mestinaz Hanım. She was born on 20 September 1851 in Tbilisi, Georgia. They married on 4 May 1872 in the Dolmabahçe Palace. In 1874, she gave birth to Şehzade Ibrahim Tevfik. She died on 20 April 1909 in the Dolmabahçe Palace, and was buried in Yavuz Selim Mosque. Another wife was Şadruh Hanım. They married in 1873. She died in 1930. Another wife was Aşkıdilber Hanım.
In widowhood, Mestinaz, Şadruh and Aşkıdilber received a pension of 10,000 kuruş, 2880 kuruş, and 4000 kuruş respectively. In 1909, Şadruh's and Aşkıdilber's pension was raised to 10,000 kuruş each.
He owned a villa in Üsküdar. The villa was built in 1860, and was located on a hill between the Tophanelioğlu-Kısıklı road the Bosphorus Bridge ring road.
Later life and death
Sultan Abdul Hamid II trusted Burhaneddin. During his reign, he had tightened the security ring around the Çırağan Palace, where Murad V and his family were confined. Access to the palace was so severely curtailed that visitors were practically limited to the princes, such as Burhaneddin and Mehmed Reşad.
Burhaneddin died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-seven on 4 November 1876, and was buried in the mausoleum of his father in Yavuz Selim Mosque, Istanbul. His brother, Abdul Hamid named a battleship and one of his sons after him. He also brought up his son in his care.
Issue
Ancestry
References
Source
1849 births
1876 deaths
People from Istanbul
Sons of Ottoman sultans
19th-century people of the Ottoman Empire | [
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Artem Perevozchikov () is a retired Ukrainian professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
Career
Artem Perevozchikov started his career in 1999 with Desna Chernihiv, the main club in the city of Chernihiv, in Ukrainian Second League where he played 11 matches and with the club finished 9th in the league. In January 2003 he moved to Sokil Zolochiv where he played 1 match. In summer 2003 he moved back to Desna Chernihiv where he won the 2005–06 Ukrainian Second League. He also played 9 matches with Spartak Sumy. In summer 2007 he moved to Hirnyk-Sport Horishni Plavni, where he played 2 matches in the 2007–08 Ukrainian Second League season. In 2012 he moved to Stroitel-Energy Repki where he played 4 matches and then he moved to Avanhard Koryukivka where he won the Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship. In 2015 he moved to Kobra-2000 Chernihiv where he played 8 matches and in 2016 he moved to FC Frunzivets Nizhyn scoring 4 goals and winning the Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship and the Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup.
HonoursFrunzivets Nizhyn Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship: 2016
Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup: 2016Avangard Korukivka Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship: 2012Desna Chernihiv'
Ukrainian Second League: 2005–06
References
External links
Artem Perevozchikov at footballfacts.ru
1980 births
Living people
Footballers from Chernihiv
FC Desna Chernihiv players
FC Sokil Zolochiv players
FC Spartak Sumy players
FC Hirnyk-Sport Horishni Plavni players
FC Avanhard Koriukivka players
Ukrainian footballers
Ukrainian Premier League players
Ukrainian First League players
Ukrainian Second League players
Association football midfielders | [
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Admiral Andrews may refer to:
Adolphus Andrews (1879–1948), U.S. Navy vice admiral
Annie B. Andrews (born 1959), U.S. Navy rear admiral
Philip Andrews (admiral) (1866–1935), U.S. Navy vice admiral
See also
William Andrewes (1899–1974), Royal Navy admiral | [
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Admiral Arbuthnot may refer to:
Charles Ramsay Arbuthnot (1850–1913), Royal Navy admiral
Geoffrey Arbuthnot (1885–1957), Royal Navy vice admiral
Mariot Arbuthnot (1711–1794), Royal Navy admiral
Sir Robert Arbuthnot, 4th Baronet (1864–1916), Royal Navy rear admiral
See also
Alexander Dundas Young Arbuthnott (c. 1789–1871), Royal Navy rear admiral | [
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Admiral Ashmore may refer to:
Edward Ashmore (1919–2016), Royal Navy admiral
Leslie Ashmore (1893–1974), Royal Navy vice admiral
Peter Ashmore (1921–2002), Royal Navy vice admiral | [
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Admiral Ogle may refer to:
Chaloner Ogle (1681–1750), Royal Navy admiral
Sir Chaloner Ogle, 1st Baronet (1726–1816), Royal Navy admiral
Sir Charles Ogle, 2nd Baronet (1775–1858), Royal Navy admiral | [
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Maxim Novoselov (born 15 May 1973, in Chelyabinsk) is a Russian sambist and mixed martial arts fighter, and a European champion in combat sambo and mixed martials arts.
Biography
For several months he served in Nagorno-Karabakh as a military instructor. After returning, he began to participate in underground fights without rules. In the early 1990s, he participated in criminal showdowns. In 1993, he was sentenced to 14 years in prison on charges of murder. Despite this, he still continued to participate in underground battles.
A week after the release, he already participated in the battles. In japan, he was given the nickname 'Mad Max'. In 2012, he was sentenced to three and a half years for patronizing the drug business.
During his imprisonment, he managed to convince the leadership of the colony of the need to create conditions for sports. The convicts adapted two rooms for training and equipped them with home-made simulators. Under the leadership of Novoselov, 40 prisoners trained.
Mikhail Koklyaev made a report about his section 'Real rocking chair'. The issue about Novoselov's section was watched by several million people.
He has fought 14 fights on a professional level. At the beginning of his career in mixed martial arts, he won only one fight in his first tour, but later, after a long absence (he had only won one fight between 2008 and 2016), he won 10 fights in a row, finishing all of them in the first round. For almost all rivals, the fight with Novoselov was the debut in professional MMA, and for many the only one, with the exception of Jimmy Ambris.
On 29 June 2019, Novoselov was supposed to fight with Vyacheslav Datsik. However, on June 16, Datsik's jaw broke in the True Gym Fights tournament and the fights had to be cancelled.
Battle statistics
References
1973 births
Living people
Russian male mixed martial artists
Mixed martial artists utilizing sambo
Russian sambo practitioners
Russian murderers | [
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Admiral Oliver may refer to:
David R. Oliver Jr. (born 1941), U.S. Navy rear admiral
Daniel T. Oliver (born 1945), U.S. Navy vice admiral
Geoffrey Oliver (1898–1980), Royal Navy admiral
Henry Oliver (1865–1965), Royal Navy admiral
James Harrison Oliver (1857–1928), Royal Navy rear admiral
Robert Don Oliver (1895–1980), Royal Navy vice admiral
Robert Dudley Oliver (1766–1850), Royal Navy admiral
See also
Manuel Villar Olivera (1801–1889), Peruvian Navy rear admiral | [
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2141,
3874,
1007,
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Admiral Ommanney may refer to:
Erasmus Ommanney (1814–1904), Royal Navy admiral
John Ommanney (1773–1855), Royal Navy admiral
Robert Nelson Ommanney (1854–1938), Royal Navy vice admiral | [
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Admiral Osborn may refer to:
Henry Osborn (Royal Navy officer) (1694–1771), Royal Navy admiral
Peregrine Osborne, 2nd Duke of Leeds (1659–1729), Royal Navy vice admiral
Sherard Osborn (1822–1875), Royal Navy rear admiral | [
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Alexander Gyan is a Ghanaian politician and member of parliament for the Kintampo South constituency in the Bono East region of Ghana.
Early life and education
Alexander was born on 26 March 1980 and hails from Ampomah-Kintampo South in the Bono East region of Ghana. He had his SSSCE in 1999. He further had his BSc. in Agriculture Education in 2012.
Career
Alexander was the District Chief Executive at the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development for Kintampo South District.
Political career
Alexander is a member of NPP and currently the MP for Kintampo South Constituency.
Committees
Alexander is a member of the Government Assurance Committee and also a member of the Communications Committee.
Philanthropy
In November 2021, Alexander provided free food and transportation to about 1357 students who were BECE candidates in the Kintampo South constituency.
Controversy
In October 2020 when he was the then DCE of the Kintampo South District, he presented an award to his father as the 'best farmer' in the district. According to Mathew Atanga, a Communication's officer for NDC claimed other deserving farmers were robbed in a statement.
References
Living people
1980 births
New Patriotic Party politicians
Ghanaian MPs 2021–2025 | [
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Walter Crosbie Baber (21 September 1880 – 1959) was a Barbadian-born Canadian first-class cricketer.
Baber was born at British Barbados in September 1880. He later emigrated to Canada, where he played for several provincial teams. He also played club cricket in the United States and was a member of the Staten Island Cricket Club. He made a single appearance in first-class cricket for a combined Canada and United States of America cricket team against the touring Australians at Rosedale in 1913. He took the wickets of Charlie Macartney, Sid Emery, and Austin Diamond for the cost of 101 runs. Batting twice from the middle order, he scored 17 runs in the Canada/United States first innings before being dismissed by Leslie Cody, while following-on in their second innings he was dismissed by without scoring by Macartney.
He attended McGill University in 1913, before serving in the First World War as a lieutenant in the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Following the war, he returned to McGill to complete his studies. Crosbie was living in New York City in 1937 as a partner in the firm Bayliss, Baber & Co., in evidence given to a tax evasion hearing to the Joint Committee on Tax Evasion and Avoidance before the United States Congress. He died in 1959.
References
External links
1880 births
1959 deaths
Barbadian emigrants to Canada
Canadian cricketers
Canada and United States of America cricketers
McGill University alumni
Canadian military personnel of World War I
Canadian Expeditionary Force officers
Canadian expatriates in the United States | [
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The 1979 Bank of Oklahoma Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the Shadow Mountain Racquet Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma in the United States that was part of the 1979 Colgate-Palmolive Grand Prix. It was the second edition of the tournament was held from April 9 through April 15, 1979. First-seeded Jimmy Connors won the singles title and earned $8,750 first-prize money.
Finals
Singles
Jimmy Connors defeated Eddie Dibbs 6–7, 7–5, 6–1
It was Connors' 4th singles title of the year and the 75th of his career.
Doubles
Eliot Teltscher / Francisco González defeated Colin Dibley / Tom Gullikson 6–7, 7–5, 6–3
References
External links
ITF tournament edition details
Bank of Oklahoma Classic
Bank of Oklahoma Classic
Bank of Oklahoma Classic
Tennis in Oklahoma | [
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The Bicolored snake eel Ophichthus bicolor is an eel in the family Ophichthidae (worm/snake eels), found around Taiwan. This species reaches a length of .
References
Ophichthus
Taxa named by John E. McCosker
Taxa named by Hans Hsuan-Ching Ho
Fish described in 2015 | [
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Carl "Calle" Björk (born 4 February 1992) is a Swedish footballer who plays as a forward for Värtans IK.
Career
Björk came to Djurgårdens IF from his childhood club Tungelsta IF in 2004, and progressed through the youth teams. During the 2010 pre-season, he was promoted from Djurgården's youth team. He made his Allsvenskan debut on 11 April 2011 against Kalmar FF as a substitute, scoring in a 3–2 loss.
In early July 2011, he was sent on loan to Superettan club Jönköpings Södra IF for one month. At the same time, his U21 contract was extended for one year with Djurgårdens IF. The loan deal was then extended for the rest of the season, with an opportunity for Djurgården to recall him if deemed necessary. During the 2012 season, he was sent on loan to IK Brage, with an option to end the loan prematurely in August.
In the 2013 and 2014 seasons, Björk played for Norwegian Third Division club Brattvåg IL, where he scored 70 goals in 54 matches. In 2015, he signed with Eliteserien club Aalesunds FK.
In July 2017, Björk signed for Vasalunds IF. Before the 2018 season, he moved to Division 4 club Värtans IK. Björk scored 16 goals in 19 matches for the club during the 2018 season as they won promotion to Division 3. In the 2019 season, he scored five goals in 14 league matches. The following season, Björk scored one goal in seven league matches. In the 2021 season, he played seven games and scored two goals in Division 4.
Career statistics
References
External links
1992 births
Living people
Swedish footballers
Sweden youth international footballers
Swedish expatriate footballers
Djurgårdens IF Fotboll players
Jönköpings Södra IF players
IK Brage players
Västerås SK Fotboll players
Brattvåg IL players
Aalesunds FK players
Nyköpings BIS players
Vasalunds IF players
Allsvenskan players
Superettan players
Ettan Fotboll players
Eliteserien players
Expatriate footballers in Norway
Swedish expatriate sportspeople in Norway
Association football forwards | [
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The Hotel Otlet (, ) is an Art Nouveau building designed by Octave van Rysselberghe on the corner of Rue de Florence/Florencestraat and Rue de Livourne/Livornostraat in Brussels, Belgium.
This work marks the still cautious insertion of Van Rysselberghe into the current of Art Nouveau.
History
The Hotel Otlet was built from 1894 to 1898 for the jurist, bibliographer and entrepreneur Paul Otlet. Van Rysselberghe completed this project more than ten years after the completion of his Hôtel Goblet d'Alviella in 1882.
It was classified as a monument in 1984 and restored from 2001 until 2003. It currently houses a law office.
Location
The hôtel particulier is located in Brussels, at the corner of Rue de Livourne/Livornostraat (no. 48) and Rue de Florence /Florencestraat (no. 13) in the same street where Van Rysselberghe built his personal house (Maison Van Rysselberghe, rue de Livourne no. 83), in the heart of a district that is home to many masterpieces of Brussels Art Nouveau such as the Hôtel Solvay, the Hôtel Tassel and the Hankar House.
Exterior architecture
Style
Like Octave Van Rysselberghe 's other creations, the Hôtel Otlet was built in a very sober Art Nouveau style, at odds with the rococo excesses of certain Art Nouveau architects such as Gustave Strauven.
Material
The hotel is built in very carefully paired pierre de Savonnières, a golden-colored cut stone from Lorraine, with the exception of the basement, which is made of blue stone.
Asymmetries and sets of volumes
The façade has a turbulent appearance which results from the abandonment of symmetry and the interplay of incoming and outgoing volumes, and which is tempered by an impression of unity conferred by the horizontal lines of the basement and the cornice.
The two completely asymmetrical facades are linked together by a corner oriel window with the most beautiful effect.
These facades offer a subtle interplay of volumes (bow-window, oriel, cubicles, balcony, loggia and porch), asymmetrical in their shape, their layout and the number of their bays. All these elements are subtly linked together by the cordon which delimits the ground floor and the first floor.
Facade of the rue de Florence
Ground floor
The ground floor of the rue de Florence facade is pierced by an “in-work” porch, whose vault is made of glazed white bricks. This porch houses a door adorned with a handle with whiplash lines typical of floral Art Nouveau. The door is surmounted by a stained glass window in orange, green and black tones, also featuring floral motifs characteristic of Art Nouveau.
First Floor
The porch is surmounted by a loggia embedded in the facade of the first floor: vaulted with glazed bricks like the porch, it houses two rows of windows, one of which consists of windows of increasing size.
This loggia is framed by a cubicle and a bow window.
Facade of the rue de Livourne
The facade of the rue de Livourne, of a “stunning variety”, is just as asymmetrical as the facade of the rue de Florence.
It begins with a triangular oriel which extends from the ground floor to the first floor to continue with a set made up of three windows surmounted by a rectangular box framed by two small balconies "in-work" and finally to end with a double balcony supported by elegant consoles.
Exterior decoration
Apart from the games of volumes mentioned above, the only ornament on the facades consists of a frieze of arabesques and scallop shells on a blue background placed under the cornice.
Interior decoration
The centerpiece of its interior design, a stained glass window with a floral motif separates the living room from the grand staircase while providing the latter with additional light. Architect Henry van de Velde helped with the interior decoration.
References
External links
Houses in Belgium
City of Brussels
Octave van Rysselberghe buildings
Houses completed in 1898 | [
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Adiba Jaigirdar is a Bangladeshi-Irish writer. Her debut novel, The Henna Wars, is listed as one of TIME's 100 Best YA Books of All Time, alongside novels such as Little Women, Lord of the Flies, and The Catcher in the Rye.
Personal life
Jaigirdar was born in Dhaka, Bangladesh, then alternated between living in Saudi Arabia and Bangladesh as a child. At age ten, she and her family immigrated to Tullamore, Ireland; she has lived in the Dublin region ever since.
Throughout much of her life, she has been one of the few people of color in a room, an experience which has shaped her writing.
Jaigirdar identifies as a queer Muslim woman of color. Like characters from her novel Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating, Jaigirdar "has been told that parts of her identity cancel out others and couldn’t exist in the same person." Her writing is now inspired by her history and with hopes that young Muslim people of color can embrace their queer identities.
Education
After immigrating to Ireland at age 10, Jaigirdar attended an all-girls Catholic school.
Jaigirdar has a Bachelor of Arts in English and History from the University of Kent, as well as a Master of Arts in Postcolonial Studies from University College Dublin.
Career
Aside from writing young adult novels, Jaigirdar has been a writer for Book Riot. She also teaches English as a foreign language to recent immigrants to Ireland.
Jaigirdar, choosing to write about people like herself, has stated, "My very existence is political, so the things that I write will also be seen as inherently political." Like characters from her novel Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating, Jaigirdar "has been told that parts of her identity cancel out others and couldn’t exist in the same person." Her writing is now inspired by her history and with hopes that young people of color can embrace their queer identities.
Selected texts
The Henna Wars (2020)
The Henna Wars was published May 12, 2020 in the United States and October 2021 in the United Kingdom. The book follows Nishat, a Bangladeshi teenager who comes out as a lesbian while in high school.
The novel deals with a number of themes, including racism, homophobia, Islamophobia, and coming-of-age. The intersection between Nishat's cultural identity and her sexual identity is a central theme of the novel. Lana Barnes of Shelf Awareness described Nishat's struggle as "the dichotomy of wanting to break from the constraints of tradition while still maintaining strong ties to culture and beliefs."
The Henna Wars has received generally positive reviews, including starred reviews from Kirkus Reviews and Shelf Awareness. TIME included The Henna Wars on their list of the 100 Best Young Adult Books of All Time, alongside novels such as Little Women, Lord of the Flies, and The Catcher in the Rye. It was listed as one of the best young adult books of 2020 and 2021 by Teen Vogue, American Library Association, The Irish Times, Autostraddle and NPR.
Publications
The Henna Wars (2020)
Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating (2021)
A Million to One (2022)
Donut Fall In Love (2023)
Untitled (2024)
Anthology contributions
200 CCS: Year One (2017)
Momentum (2018)
Keep Faith (2019)
Allies: Real Talk About Showing Up, Screwing Up, And Trying Again, edited by Dana Alison Levy (2021)
References
External links
Official website
Living people
Alumni of the University of Kent
Alumni of University College Dublin
Writers from Dhaka
Irish Muslims
LGBT people from Bangladesh
21st-century Irish writers
Irish lesbian writers | [
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