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Walter Gendall (died September 19, 1688) was a 17th-century English sawmill owner in and prominent citizen of North Yarmouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony (now Yarmouth, Maine). He was also a captain in King Philip's War of 1675–1678 and King William's War of 1688–1697, in which was killed.
Early life
Gendall, a native of Cornwall, England, arrived on American shores from England around 1640. There was a record held at the Trelawney Plantation on Richmond Island, off Cape Elizabeth, Massachusetts (now in Maine), that he was resident in the area. From that point, however, nothing is known of Gendall for around two decades.
Career
During King Philip's War, while at Fort Lyall in Falmouth in August 1676, Captain Gendall decided that the "furious natives" were of sufficient anger that he sent word to Boston for reinforcements. He was granted a detachment of 130 soldiers. A short while later, he was held captive, for ransom, by the natives with whom he had been on good terms for years. He had visited their settlements and traded with their chiefs for animal skins. "He was much esteemed by all the tribes," wrote Charles Banks.
In September 1677, a court in Boston found Gendall guilty of treason for his relationship with the Native Americans. In the ensuing three days, Gendall escaped and returned, it is believed, to Scarborough, Massachusetts (now in Maine). A bond was paid by Gendall's friend Nathaniel Fryer as part of an agreement with the court, and the incident came to a conclusion.
Peace was reached with the Indians on August 12, 1678, when three English commissioners met chief Squando and two other sagamores to sign a treaty.
On July 12, 1681, Gendall founded Casco Mill at the eastern side of the First Falls in Yarmouth, on land formerly occupied by Henry Sayward's mill. Gendall's dwelling was beside the mill. He built a boarding home "of rude construction" for his mill workers on the opposite shore. Three years later, he claimed all of the owned by fellow Englishman, early settler George Felt. He had purchased from Felt a few years prior.
Gendall was selected to a committee in charge of laying out the town of North Yarmouth, which was incorporated on September 22, 1680. Also on the committee were Bartholomew Gedney, Joshua Scotton and Silvanus Davis. The town was designed on a location then known as Maine's Point. The committee was superseded by the appointment of Gendall and three others as trustees of the town.
Personal life
Gendall was married to Joane and had a family, with whom he had lived during his time as a military officer in Scarborough (from around 1661) and Falmouth, Massachusetts (now Portland, Maine). His father-in-law was John Guy, a fisherman in Falmouth.
His farm incorporated Duck Cove, beyond Town Landing Road in today's Cumberland Foreside.
Death
Gendall, "one of the bravest and foremost men of the early days", died on September 19, 1688, shortly after the outbreak of Second Indian War, having been shot by Indians near Callen Point while taking supplies to his troops building a fort on the southern side of the Royal River. He had mistaken the cessation of their gunfire to mean that they were out of ammunition, and he set out to cross the river. He made the journey without incident, but was shot upon reaching the opposite shoreline. His last words were: "I have lost my life in your service." The Indians burned three houses and two barns of Gendall's.
Gendall's estate was not probated until 1700, twelve years after his death.
A stone marker honoring Gendall stands to the north of 28 Lafayette Street in the area of Yarmouth that came to be known as Grantville. It was installed by Yarmouth’s Village Improvement Society.
References
1688 deaths
People from Cornwall
17th-century English businesspeople
American textile industry businesspeople
Kingdom of England emigrants to Massachusetts Bay Colony
Kingdom of England emigrants to the Thirteen Colonies
People of colonial Massachusetts
People from colonial Boston
People from North Yarmouth, Maine
King Philip's War
King William's War
Military personnel killed in action | [
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The In the Margins Award, established in 2013, is an annual literary award presented to fiction and nonfiction "self published books by, for and about people of color living in the margins." The primary audience of the books is generally individuals aged 9-21 who are Black, Indigenous People of Color; "youth from a street culture," "youth in restrictive custody," and/or "youth who are reluctant readers."
The In the Margins Award was established as part of the Library Services for Youth in Custody but since 2017, has operated independently.
Recipients
References
Awards established in 2013
American literary awards | [
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Lourdes Pérez Iturraspe (born 16 February 2000) is an Argentinian field hockey goalkeeper.
Hockey career
In 2022, Pérez was called into the senior national women's team.
References
Argentine female field hockey players
Living people
2000 births
People from Buenos Aires | [
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Salaudin Khan (born 13 December 1933) is a Ugandan former first-class cricketer.
Khan was born in Uganda Protectorate in December 1933. A figure in Ugandan cricket since the 1950s, Khan made a single appearance in first-class cricket for the East Africa cricket team against the touring Indians at Kampala in 1967. Batting twice in the match, he was run out for 15 runs in the East African first innings, while in their second innings he was dismissed for 39 runs by B. S. Chandrasekhar.
References
External links
Salaudin Khan at CricketArchive
1933 births
Living people
Ugandan people of Indian descent
Ugandan cricketers
East African cricketers | [
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(English: Publisher Encyclopedia) was an East-German publishing house located in Leipzig. It was founded on 1 November 1956 by the German Democratic Republic (GDR) as a VEB. In 1964, the publishing house was merged with the larger (BI), with which it had previously cooperated already, but it retained its legal independence.
was originally intended to export works from nationalized encyclopedic publishers, but this plan failed. The publishing house then specialized in languages, its program included dictionaries, grammar books, language textbooks and phrasebooks as well as linguistic magazines. From 1980, this included the (Journal for English and American Studies) and the (Journal for German Studies).
A complete bibliographic catalog published by the publisher in 1981 listed 800 titles in 60 languages. In 1988, the number of titles published by the 235 employees together with the was 246, including 121 first editions.
After the German reunification, the publishing houses and were converted into the on 27 June 1990. At the end of May 1991 it was sold to BIFAB Mannheim, and on 1 November 1991 it was resold to Langenscheidt.
References
Further reading
(Update 2013: , , ; Update 2012: , , ; first edition: / . . . . NB. This work is based on the author's dissertation at under the title (, ) in 2008.)
Volkseigene Betriebe
Publishing companies of Germany
Book publishing companies of Germany
Publishing companies established in 1956
Publishing companies disestablished in 1991 | [
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is a 1991 horizontally scrolling shooter video game developed and published by Data West for the PC Engine CD-ROM². It is the sequel to Rayxanber, which was released earlier in 1990 for the FM Towns. In the game, the player assume the role of a fighter pilot controlling a space craft to protect Earth against an alien invasion led by the returning Zoul Empire. The title was created by Team 50, a group within Data West that previously worked on the first entry for FM Towns. The music was scored by Yasuhito Saito, who composed for the original entry and also worked on titles such as Layla and The 4th Unit series.
Rayxanber II became a success when it released in Japan but garnered mixed reception from critics, including French publications reviewing it as an import title; praise was given to the visuals, audio, controls, introduction of various innovations into its gameplay and longevity, but most noted its difficulty and criticized its presentation. Retrospective commentary have been equally mixed, some of which found it to be an improvement over its predecessor but concurred in regards to its high difficulty nature. A follow-up, Rayxanber III, was released for the PC Engine Super CD-ROM² in 1992.
Gameplay
Rayxanber II is a science fiction-themed horizontal-scrolling shooter game reminiscent of R-Type, in which the player takes control of a fighter pilot controlling a space craft to protect Earth against an alien invasion led by the returning Zoul Empire. It retains the same gameplay as its predecessor, as the player controls the ship through six increasingly difficult stages over a constantly scrolling background, populated with an assortment of alien enemy forces and obstacles, and the scenery never stops moving until a boss is reached, which must be fought in order to progress further.
There are three types of weapon units in the game the player can acquire by collecting their respective colors when dropped by carriers when shot down and alternate between each one by obtaining another weapon during gameplay, ranging from fire (red), lightning (green), and multi-directional laser (blue). Each weapon can be powered-up before they are maxed out and collecting any weapon unit also equips the ship with a set of two satellite-like options that fire at the specific direction the unit, which is constantly rotating, faces before being obtained. By holding down the attack button, the player can charge the ship's cannon to unleash a more powerful blast against enemies. The ship is also capable of performing a dash maneuver to evade incoming enemy fire or obstacles.
As with the original Rayxanber, the title employs a checkpoint system in which a downed player will start off at the beginning of the checkpoint they managed to reach before dying. Getting hit by enemy fire or colliding against solid stage obstacles will result in losing a live, as well as a penalty of decreasing the ship's firepower and loss of the weapon that was currently in use, and the game is over once all lives are lost, though the player has unlimited continues to keep playing.
Development and release
Rayxanber II was developed by Team 50, a group within Data West, which previously worked on the original Rayxanber (1990) for FM Towns. It was designed by Kazuhide Nakamura and produced by Naokazu Akita, with Fumio Minami and Yoshiyuki Washizu acting as co-programmers. Artist Takeharu Igarashi was responsible for the pixel art. The music was scored by Yasuhito Saito, who composed for the original entry and also worked on titles such as Layla and The 4th Unit series. The game was published in Japan by Data West on June 7, 1991 for the PC Engine CD-ROM². After its release, the title was demonstrated at the 1991 Tokyo Toy Show during summer. In a 2020 interview with Japanese gaming website DenFaminicoGamer, a Data West representative commented that there were no current plans for a digital re-release of the Rayxanber series through their official online store, but would consider it if there is demand.
Reception
Rayxanber II became an "instant success" when it released in Japan according to Electronic Gaming Monthly, but garnered mixed reception from critics, including French publications reviewing it as an import title. In contrast to the critical response, public reception was positive; readers of PC Engine Fan voted to give the title a 22.21 out of 30 score, ranking at the number 155 spot in a poll, indicating a popular following.
Japanese gaming magazine Gekkan PC Engine gave Rayxanber II a positive review, with its five critics giving it a score of 84 points out of 100. Another Japanese gaming publication, Marukatsu PC Engine, gave it game an average review and its four reviewers giving the game a score of 23 points out of 40 instead. Kaneda Kun of Consoles + praised the graphics and audio for taking advantage of the CD-ROM format, as well as the playability and longevity, but noted its difficulty after the third stage despite the unlimited continues feature and panned the game's presentation. Joysticks Jean-Marc Demoly commended the animated visuals, controls and catchy soundtrack but remarked that he did not felt as grabbed by the title compared to Seirei Senshi Spriggan. Reviewing for Player One, Olivier "Iggy" Scamps gave positive remarks to the introduction of various innovations into its gameplay, graphics, smooth scrolling, audio and longevity, regarding it as a fun shoot 'em up but noted its difficulty.
Retrospective coverage
Retrospective commentaries for Rayxanber II have been equally mixed. Writing for his website Illusionware, Marco D'Andrea commended the austere visual style and melancholic CD-quality music, but noted the game's difficulty and remarked that the weapons felt underpowered. Joel Schander of SHMUPS! (a classic network of GameSpy) stated that the title was heavily influeced by R-Type, giving positive remark to the detailed graphics. However, Schander found the music forgettable and also noted its difficult nature, stating " If you can't (or don't want to) memorize a rigid -- and convoluted -- path through each level and follow it every time you play, the game will likely frustrate you to no end by the third or fourth level. If this isn't your thing, avoid the game at all costs."
Nicolas Gilles of Obsolete Tears wrote that "Rayxanber II is a masochistic shooter, to be reserved only for hardcore R-Type fans, as it is difficult and annoying." David Borrachero and Antxiko of Spanish magazine RetroManiac regarded both Rayxanber II and Rayxanber III as two of the best games on the PC Engine platform, noting the need of memorizing stage patterns in a similar fashion to R-Type. They also commended both visuals and playability for being "exceptional", as well as the soundtrack for taking advantage of the CD-ROM format. Hardcore Gaming 101s John Sczepaniak found it to be an improvement over its predecessor but concurred with the other reviewers regarding its high difficulty nature, due to lack of balance and "broken" checkpoint system, recommending its follow-up instead.
Notes
References
External links
Rayxanber II at GameFAQs
Rayxanber II at Giant Bomb
Rayxanber II at MobyGames
1991 video games
Alien invasions in video games
Horizontally scrolling shooters
Japan-exclusive video games
Single-player video games
TurboGrafx-CD games
TurboGrafx-CD-only games
Video games developed in Japan
Video game sequels
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Curculionichthys piracanjuba is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it is known only from Brazil. It reaches 2.7 cm (1.1 inches) SL.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 2012 | [
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1,
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1,
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1,
1,
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1
] |
Notable events of 2019 in webcomics.
Events
Awards
Eisner Awards, "Best Webcomic" won by Erica Eng's Fried Rice
Harvey Awards, "Digital Book of the Year" won by Matt Bors' The Nib
Ignatz Awards, "Outstanding Online Comic" won by Ariel Ries' Witchy
Webcomics started
January 12 — Josou-shite Off-Kai ni Sanka Shite Mita by Kurano
February 23 — Kiruru Kill Me by Yasuhiro Kanō
May 16 — Excuse Me Dentist, It's Touching Me! by Sho Yamazaki
October 3 — Josou o Yamerarenaku Naru Otokonoko no Hanashi by Kobashiko
Webcomics ended
Kimi ga Shinu Made Ato Hyaku Nichi by Migihara, 2018–2020
Otokonoko Zuma by Crystal na Yousuke, 2016–2020
References
Webcomics by year | [
101,
3862,
2824,
1997,
10476,
1999,
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2982,
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Fulgerul_CFR_Chișinău was a football club from Chisinău, Kingdom of Romania, Fulgerul(The Lightning) was the first champion of Bessarabia region and along with rival Mihai Viteazul Chisinau was one of the strongest teams in Bessarabia.
History
The club was founded in the early 1920s with the name "CFR Chisinau Regiment" and was the first team from Bessarabia to participate in the final tournament of the Divizia A, achieving this in the 1924-1925. In that season, the team won the regional championship and qualified for the final phase of the Romanian championship where it met the team Oltul Slatina, defeating it 2–0. In the quarterfinals, Fulgerul played with the team Jahn Cernăuți, which they defeated 2–1. At the same time, Oltul Slatina challenged the result of the match with Fulgerul, claiming that Fulgerul CFR Chișinău had players from other teams in the team, consequently Fulgerul CFR was disqualified, and the results were annulled.
1924–25 Divizia A
Preliminary round
Quarters
1 Fulgerul was disqualified, the result being annulled.
In 1925 the "CFR Chisinau Regiment" team was renamed the Fulgerul CFR Chișinău. In the next season(1925–26 Divizia A) the team won the Bessarabia championship again. In the quarterfinals of the Romanian championship, they met Hakoah Chernivtsi, defeating them with the score of 1–0. In the semifinals, Fulgerul dueled with Juventus Bucharest, in the first match there was a tie, 2-2, and in the replay Chisinau lost 4–1.
Among the most important players who played for Fulgerul CFR Chișinău are Iozsef Kilianovits and Albert Ströck, both of whom also played for the Romania national football team.
References
Football clubs in Chișinău | [
101,
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6820,
2140,
1035,
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Gustavo Eduardo Viveros Le-Borgne (born 1 December 1947), nicknamed El Flaco, is a Chilean former footballer and coach who played as a midfielder. He is the uncle of fellow professional footballers and Juan Francisco Viveros.
He was international with the Chilean National Team between 1971 and 1973. He played 10 games for the national team, scoring two goals against Argentina and Peru.
Honours
Club
Unión Española
Chilean Primera División: 1973
Deportes Concepción
Segunda División de Chile: 1967
References
External links
1947 births
Chilean footballers
Chile international footballers
Association football midfielders
Sportspeople from Concepción, Chile
Living people | [
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Jesús Abdallah Castillo Molina (born 11 June 2001) is a Peruvian professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Peruvian Primera División club Sporting Cristal and the Peru national team.
Honours
Sporting Cristal
Peruvian Primera División: 2020
Copa Bicentenario: 2021
References
2001 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Callao
Peruvian footballers
Association football midfielders
Sporting Cristal footballers
Peruvian Primera División players
Peru international footballers | [
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Admiral Palmer may refer to:
Henry Palmer (Royal Navy officer, born 1582) (1582–1644), Royal Navy vice admiral
Frederick F. Palmer (1925–1992), U.S. Navy rear admiral
James Shedden Palmer (1810–1867), U.S. Navy rear admiral | [
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Magnesium cyanide is a chemical compound with the formula Mg(CN)2. It is a toxic white solid. It has been theorized that it is a nitrile compound, but it has been disproved. If heated to 500 °C, it decomposes to magnesium nitride.
Preparation
The first attempt to prepare magnesium cyanide was attempted in 1924. It was attempted by reacting a solution of hydrogen cyanide in water with magnesium metal:
HCN + Mg → Mg(CN)2 + H2
The instant it was formed, it reacted with water to form magnesium hydroxide. To avoid this problem, instead of using water as the reaction medium, pure ammonia was used at -30 °C. This formed magnesium cyanide ammoniate, which in turn was heated to 180 °C to produce magnesium cyanide. Then, the ammoniate was then heated to 180 °C which decomposed back to magnesium cyanide.
Other methods are possible, such as the decomposition of magnesium ferricyanide in an electric carbon tube, which produces iron carbide as a byproduct.
Complexes
Magnesium cyanide reacts with silver nitrate to form magnesium silver cyanide, with the formula MgAg2(CN)4. When this compound is heated it produces hydrogen cyanide gas and magnesium hydroxide, which meant it could not be used as a pathway for the production of magnesium cyanide. When silver nitrate reacts with magnesium cyanide, it also produces another magnesium silver cyanide, with the formula MgAg(CN)3.
References
Magnesium compounds
cyanides | [
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24983,
22330,
7088,
3207,
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On this page you can find all the Romanian clubs that have played in the national leagues (league 1,2,3) in Romania, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire (Bulgaria) or the Russian Empire, by place of residence.
On the first column the first name as the founding name in Romanian, on the second column the name as it appeared in the documents of the time(if the town did not belong to Romania at the time), on the third column the foundation date, in parenthesis the polisportive club, outside the football section of the club and on fourth column the date the club was dissolved(if it is the case).
Alba County
Arad County
Argeș County
Bacău County
Bihor County
Bistrița-Năsăud County
Botoșani County
Brașov County
Brăila County
Bucharest
Buzău County
Călărași County
Caraș-Severin County
Cernăuți County
Cluj County
Constanța County
Covasna County
Dâmbovița County
Dolj County
Durostor County
Galați County
Giurgiu County
Gorj County
Harghita County
Hunedoara County
Ialomița County
Iași County
Ilfov County
Lăpușna County
Maramureș County
Mehedinți County
Mureș County
Neamț County
Olt County
Prahova County
Sălaj County
Satu Mare County
Sibiu County
Suceava County
Teleorman County
Timiș County
Tulcea County
Vâlcea County
Vaslui County
Vrancea County
References
Romania | [
101,
2006,
2023,
3931,
2017,
2064,
2424,
2035,
1996,
7056,
4184,
2008,
2031,
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Francis Beaufort (1774–1857) was a Royal Navy rear admiral. Admiral Beaufort may also refer to:
John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset (c. 1371–1410), Admiral of the Irish Fleet
Thomas Beaufort, Duke of Exeter (c. 1377–1426), Admiral of the North and West | [
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The girls' 500 metres speed skating competition of the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics was held at Hamar Olympic Hall on 13 February 2016.
Results
The races were held at 10:30.
References
Girls' 500m | [
101,
1996,
3057,
1005,
3156,
3620,
3177,
10080,
2971,
1997,
1996,
2355,
3467,
3360,
3783,
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2218,
2012,
10654,
2906,
4386,
2534,
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2410,
2337,
2355,
1012,
3463,
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3837,
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2012,
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1024,
2382,
1012,
7604,
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ABC with Kenny G is a Canadian animated television series developed and produced at Big Bad Boo Studios in Vancouver. The musical ABC series is a spin-off from 16 Hudson. ABC with Kenny G is created and directed by Shabnam Rezaei and airs on TVOKids, and Knowledge Kids.
References
External links
ABC with Kenny G Official TVOKids website
ABC with Kenny G Official Knowledge Kids website
2010s Canadian animated television series
2010s preschool education television series
2018 Canadian television series debuts
TVOntario original programming
Canadian children's animated television series
Canadian preschool education television series
Animated television series about cats | [
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Carmelo Conte (born 1938) is an Italian lawyer and socialist politician who served as the minister for urban areas problems for three terms.
Biography
Conte was born in Piaggine, Salerno, on 9 November 1938. He has a bachelor's degree in law. He was a member of the Italian Socialist Party. He was first elected to the Italian Parliament in 1979 for the Italian Socialist Party from Benevento. He served in the Parliament for three more terms until 1994. Patrick McCarthy, an American scholar, argues that Conte created a nepotic network in his election region based in Salerno like other leading socialist politicians of the period.
Conte was appointed minister without portfolio for urban problems on 22 July 1989 to the sixth cabinet of Giulio Andreotti. He also held the post in the next cabinet of Giulio Andreotti and in the first cabinet of Giuliano Amato. Conte's term ended on 28 April 1993.
Conte has been the author of several books last of which was published in 2019.
References
External link
20th-century Italian lawyers
1938 births
Living people
Italian Socialist Party politicians
Government ministers of Italy
Deputies of Legislature VIII of Italy
Deputies of Legislature IX of Italy
Deputies of Legislature X of Italy
Deputies of Legislature XI of Italy
People from Salerno
20th-century Italian writers
21st-century Italian writers | [
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Yeskovo () is a rural locality () in Nozdrachevsky Selsoviet Rural Settlement, Kursky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia. Population:
Geography
The village is located on the Vinogrobl River (a left tributary of the Tuskar in the basin of the Seym), 109 km from the Russia–Ukraine border, 12 km north-east of the district center – the town Kursk, 2 km from the selsoviet center – Nozdrachevo.
Climate
Yeskovo has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification).
Transport
Yeskovo is located 18 km from the federal route Crimea Highway (a part of the European route ), 5 km from the road of regional importance (Kursk – Kastornoye), on the road of intermunicipal significance (38K-016 – Nozdrachevo – Vinogrobl), 5 km from the nearest railway halt 18 km (railway line Kursk – 146 km).
The rural locality is situated 11 km from Kursk Vostochny Airport, 131 km from Belgorod International Airport and 196 km from Voronezh Peter the Great Airport.
References
Notes
Sources
Rural localities in Kursk Oblast | [
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Bublichki (Russian: бублички, "hot buns" or "bagels") is a Soviet song from the New Economic Policy (NEP) era written by . Тhe song's depiction of the harsh reality of the NEP era resulted in it being banned until the late 1980s. Despite state repression, the song remained popular underground.
Background
Bublichki was written in the context of the New Economic Policy, an early Soviet economic plan designed to boost the country's collapsed economy. The NEP's mixed economy featured private enterprise, in contrast to the previous war communism. While the NEP led to a resurgence in industrial and agricultural production, a large portion of the gains went to the wealthy NEPmen, leaving much of the general populace poor. The singer in Bublichki is one of those left behind by the NEP, forced to resort to selling food in the street in order to survive.
While there have been multiple claims to authorship, most scholars agree that the song was written by Yakov Yadov. Yadov was inspired to write the lyrics after a conversation with his friend, the performer Grigory Markovich Krasavin. Krasavin had seen many signs asking for people to buy bagels, and, playing a familiar violin melody, asked Yadov to write lyrics to go along with the tune. According to scholar Patricia Herlihy, the resulting blatnaya pesnya was one of the most popular songs of the NEP era. The song's subversive themes resulted in the government banning it until the late 1980s; despite the ban, it remained popular by being passed down through word of mouth, though this resulted in many different versions of the song.
The song proved persistently popular in translation among Yiddish-speaking Jews, though the translation lost the political nature of the original.The American duo the Barry Sisters performed that Yiddish version as late as after World War II. Bandleaders including Benny Goodman recorded English-language versions with the subtitle "The Pretzel Seller's Song." Bublichki was also reworked into a jazz song by Soviet singer and bandleader Leonid Utyosov, who performed it with his orchestra. Utyosov often performed songs from the blatnaya pesnya genre, including Bublichki and other songs by Yadov.
Lyrics
As with many underground songs from the era, multiple versions of the lyrics exist.
References
Russian songs
Soviet songs
Russian chanson
Bagels
Year of song unknown | [
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Curculionichthys sabaji is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to the Xingu River basin in Brazil. The species reaches 2.4 cm (0.9 inches) SL. It was described in 2015 by Fábio Fernandes Roxo, Gabriel Souza da Costa e Silva, Luz E. Orrego, and Claudio Oliveira, alongside the description of the genus Curculionichthys to include several species formerly classified in the genus Hisonotus.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 2015 | [
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McGraths Flat is an Australian research site containing fossils and other evidence of animals and plants that existed in Miocene Australia. Located in central New South Wales, specimens at the site are in an exceptional state of preservation, described in paleontology as a Konservat-Lagerstätten, deposited in unusual conditions that record microscopic details of soft tissues and delicate structures. Fossil evidence of animals with soft bodies, unlike the bones of mammals and reptiles, is rare in Australia, and discoveries at McGraths' Flat have revealed unknown species of invertebrates such as insects and spiders.
The site, named for its discoverer, John McGrath, occurs on private land near the town of Gulgong. The degree of preservation at this Lagerstätte has been compared to the quality of that found at Crato Formation, Lake Eckfeld, and Libros. Other fossil sites in Australia, such as Riversleigh, Bullock Creek and Alcoota, are rich in the skeletal remains of Miocene fauna, but none provide the diversity of organisms, their interactions, or exquisite detail found at this site. The finely layered fossiliferous strata is associated with permanent water, perhaps an oxbow lake, in a mesic rainforest, habitat that once dominated the continent.
At the time of deposition of the fossil strata, from 16 to 11 million years ago, the site was a slow moving or still water body, perhaps a billabong. Along with fish, the fossilised remains of insects include an abundance of pupae and adult stages of aquatic species. Evidence of an isolated ecosystem at a stable and permantly wet site is supported by preliminary examination of taxa that includes midges.
References
https://australian.museum/blog/amri-news/discovery-of-new-Australian-fossil/
Lagerstätten
Paleontological sites of Australia | [
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Mauá Shipyard SA is the oldest private Brazilian shipyard, being surpassed only by the state-owned Arsenal da Marinha do Brasil, which was founded in 1808. Its origin is the Anglo-Brazilian company Estabelecimento de Fundição e Estaleiros da Ponta d'Areia, located in Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, and was bought on August 11, 1846, by Irineu Evangelista de Sousa, at the time Baron of Mauá.
In 2000, the company entered into a joint-venture with Jurong Shipyard in Singapore, creating the company Mauá Jurong S/A (MJ). The new company, in addition to the construction and repair of ships, specializes in the construction of platforms for oil and gas exploration.
Recent vessel production
A not extensive list of Mauá's production:
See also
List of ships of the Brazilian Navy
Arsenal de Marinha do Rio de Janeiro
Ishikawajima do Brasil Estaleiros
Further reading
References
External links
Official site
Arsenals
Brazilian Navy
Companies based in Rio de Janeiro (state)
Manufacturing companies of Brazil
Engineering companies of Brazil
Manufacturing companies established in 1845
Military history of Brazil
Shipbuilding companies of Brazil
1845 establishments in Brazil | [
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Curculionichthys sagarana is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it occurs in the drainage basins of the Das Velhas River and the São Francisco River. It reaches 2.4 cm (0.9 inches) SL. The species was described in 2015 by Fábio Fernandes Roxo, Gabriel Souza da Costa e Silva, Luz E. Orrego, and Claudio Oliveira, alongside the description of the genus Curculionichthys to include several species formerly classified in the genus Hisonotus.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 2015 | [
101,
12731,
11890,
24825,
8713,
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The Aotou–Changtingzhen railway or Huolonggou railway is a railway line in Hailin, Mudanjiang, Heilongjiang, China. It is a branch from the Harbin–Suifenhe railway.
There is one daily morning service from the terminus of the branch, Changtingzhen, to Mudanjiang railway station and one daily evening service from Mudanjiang to Changtingzhen. The line is also used for freight.
References
Railway lines in China
Rail transport in Heilongjiang
Mudanjiang | [
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The Research Centre For Islamic History, Art and Culture (; abbreviated as IRCICA), also known as the Istanbul Research Center for Islamic Culture and Arts is the first cultural centre and a subsidiary organ of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation established in 1979 after the Republic of Turkey proposed IRCICA in the 7th Islamic Conference of Foreign Ministers (now the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers), in Istanbul, 1976. The proposal was adopted by the OIC under the resolution no. 3/7-ECS. It formally started inaugural functioning on 23 May 1982.
The Research Center for Islamic History, Art and Culture is focused on various academic principles concerning the history of Muslim ccountries, arts and sciences in Islam, Islamic culture, and
civilization. Likewise the OIC, Research Centre For Islamic History, Art and Culture works under the 57 members of the OIC and are permanent representatives of the IRCICA.
History
The IRCICA was originally introduced by the OIC after the Republic of Turkey, a member of the OIC proposed the idea. However, the establishment of Statute of the centre was created later when the OIC adopted a resolution in the 9th summit of foreign ministers held in Dakar in 1978. It later redesigned by adopting a resolution no. 1/6-Org (IS) in the 6th summit held in Dakar, 1991.
It was officially made operational in 1980 when the foreign ministers of the 57 members states held 11th summit in Islamabad. IRCICA functioned under its own mandate from 1983 to 2000 and thereafter, it serves as a secretariat and executive organ of the International Commission for the Preservation of Islamic Heritage (ICPICH), which became fully operational after the 13th summit of foreign ministers was held in Niamey, 1982. The International Commission for the Preservation of Islamic Heritage (ICPICH) was later merged into IRCICA in June 2000 after the 27th summit of foreign ministers was held in Kuala Lumpur. The decision was taken soon after chairperson of the ICPICH, Faisal bin Fahd Al Saud died in 1999. He was also serving as the president of the Youth Welfare, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. After merger took place, all works of the ICPICH were incorporated to work programs of the IRCICA.
Abbreviated name
The Research Centre For Islamic History, Art and Culture – RCIHAC was so difficult to pronounce and remember, the OIC took a decision to change it into IRCICA which means I Istanbul or international, R Research, C Centre, I Islamic, C Culture, and A Arts. Due to its common usage and scope, the organisation was to be identified with this rare abbreviation and it was adopted as the official abbreviation of the organisation than being known as RCIHAC.
Logo
IRCICA's logo do not indicate its significance or background, but it was created coincidentally in 1985 when the organisation was making documentary films about calligraphy. At the same time, a Turkish architecture named Özkul Eren presented a logo that was subsequently adopted by the IRCICA as its official identify.
Motto
The verse number 13 of surah Al-Hujurat, the 49th chapter of the Quran was adopted organization's motto.
Illuminated by a Turkish writer, Rikkat Kunt, motto is calligraphed by Hasan Çelebi, a Turkish Islamic calligrapher.
Organisational structure
IRCICA's organizational structure is collectively known as boards and departments. It consists the general assembly, the governing board and director general that perform different functions in its various departments.
General Assembly issues guidelines concerning its activities. It determines budget proposals for its submission to the Council of Foreign Ministers.
Governing Board is a governing body of the organisation. It consists representatives of nine member states, including one representative from the host country Turkey. They are elected by the General Assembly the Islamic Commission for Economic, Cultural and Social Affairs.
Departments it consists four main departments for the different purposes:
Research and Publications Department
Studies on the Holy Quran
Islamic Civilization and Muslim Nations
Cultural and Architectural Heritage
Islamic Arts and Handicrafts
Library and Archive Department
Library
Archive
Administration and Finance Department
Finance
Personnel
General services
Information Technology Department
The first director general of the organisation was Doğan Kuban, who also served a professor at Istanbul Technical University while the second and current director general is Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu. The board of directors consists of a secretary general or any representative of the OIC, a director general, and 10 academician with significant experience in arts and culture. They are elected from member states for a term of 3 years. All representatives, including director general is approved by the Supreme Council of the Organization of the Islamic Conference. The board of directors also served at the International Commission for the Preservation of Islamic Cultural Heritage (ICPICH), however, it was disestablishments in 2000 and all its duties were transferred to IRCICA. ICPICH was established in 1983.
The IRCICA's director general is recruited through an advertisement issued to 57 member states. It receives basic salary amounting $5,500, including other allowance under the OIC Personal Regulations.
Al-Farabi Digital Library
IRCICA Al-Farabi Digital Library specialises in digital library using latest technology and software such as optical character recognition (OCR) technology. It took 5 years to update and maintain. The library software was developed in 2011 and Ottoman Turkey became readable after software upgradation took place. The publishing material in library is used by researchers across the 75 countries, including the United States, Germany, Greece, Iran, Britain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and France, in addition to Turkey.
It consists 85,000 books, including thesis in 145 languages. The library houses 120,000 periodicals, 12,250 grey literature, 4,300 offprints, 1,700 maps, 264,000 archival research, 1,650 audio and video cassettes, and 750 CDs and DVDs. It also consists 23,500 transparencies, 1,150 microfi ches and microfi learning management system.
Considered one of the prominent libraries in Turkey, it is housed in imperial residence, Yıldız Palace, Istanbul.
Objectives
The organisation is objectively focused on conducting and publishing research concerning Islamic civilization, organize conferences, in addition to conducting symposiums and art exhibitions. It also conduct research in the field of Islamic history, art and culture across the world. Development of cooperation between the Muslim nations is also one of its duties. Its academic disciplines are also focused on the history of Science, archaeology, architecture, fine arts and traditional handicrafts, and preservation of cultural development.
It also publish books within the framework of its objectives. It has published a total number of 72 books between 1980 and 2000. Between that time, it conducted 160 art exhibitions, 192 conferences, in addition to conducting 40 international meetings across the world. Within the scope of its objectives, the organisation has published books on the history and cultures of Turkic, Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, the Balkans, Caucasus, Eastern Europe, and African Muslim.
It has published books on the history of Turkey titled Excluding the Ottoman State (Ankara 1994) and the Ottoman State and Civilization History (I-II, Istanbul 1994, 1998). The organisation conducted several conferences across the world that were subsequently turned into books. The history of Pakistan book titled Islam in South Asia, Islamabad 1995 was also published by the organisation. It has conducted conferences, later turned into books on various countries such as Malaysia and other Muslim countries. The history of Malaysia is covered by a book titled Islamic Civilization in the Malay World, Kuala Lumpur 1997 while the West Africa's civilization is covered by Islamic Civilization in West Africa in Dakar in 1996, Islamic Civilization in the Caucasus published in 1998 and Islamic Civilization in the Balkans published in 2000. Science and Education in the Ottoman World book was published.
The research centre has written a bibliography of translations of the Quran which into 65 different languages. Done between 1515 and 1980, all copies of manuscript were published in Istanbul, 2000. Its audio translation has also been distributed into various languages such as Wolof language, Hevsâ, Tamasheq, Songhay, Kanuri and Fula languages.
A book titled Calligraphy in the Islamic Cultural Heritage was published in 1992 which was later printed in Turkish, Arabic, Japanese, English, and Malay languages. Islamic Architecture in Bosnia and Herzegovina concerning culture of Bosnia and Herzegovina was published in 1994, The Old Bridge (Stari Most) in Mostar (Istanbul 1995), Studije o Bosni, and Historijski Prilozi iz Osmansko-Turskog Perioda was published in 1994, in addition to publishing books titled Population of Bosnia in the Ottoman Period, 1994. The End of the 19th Century in Bosnia was published in 1996, concerning disestablishments of Ottoman Empire in Bosnia.
Headquarters and buildings
IRCICA was initially headquartered in Fatih, Istanbul. It served its headquarters from its 1979 until July 2017. The organisation was relocated to Yıldız Palace, Istanbul. The president of Turkey allocated five buildings for the organisation in Istanbul. Yıldız Palace was the last palace of the Ottoman Empire. Other buildings donated by the government of Turkey are; Seyir Pavilion, Çit Qasr, Yaveran Qasr and Silahhane (armoury) Building. Çit Qasr was allotted in 1982 and Yaveran Qasr in 1984. Both Çit Qasr and Yaveran Qasr were either redesigned, restore or reconstructed by the organisation by raising funds contributed by the states and individuals.
Silahhane Building has been its library which was restored by funds granted by the prime minister of the United Arab Emirates and Emir of Dubai, Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. It was formally inaugurated as a library of the organisation by the president of Turkey, the then prime minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 17 May 2009.
Bab-ı Ali Complex, headquarters of the IRCICA was moved from Yıldız Palace to Fatih. As of July 2017, Fatih district serves headquarters of the organisation. The building previously served as a repository of the Ottoman archives until 2014 after the president of Turkey allotted the building to IRCICA. Sublime Porte serves as Directorate General as well as exhibition hall of IRCICA. Other four buildings houses the department of research, library and documentation, department of finance and administration.
The main conference hall of Sublime Porte is used by the organisation as its library.
Awards establishment
The IRCICA has been distributing awards to those who have made significant contribution to the IRCICA cultural heritage and education. Sultan bin Muhammad Al-Qasimi was one of the recipients of IRCICA's award.
It also conducts the International Calligraphy Competition award ceremony which is awarded to calligraphers who participate in the ceremony. The ninth competition held in 2013 involved in different writing styles such as jaly thuluth, thuluth, and naskh among others.
A Turkish calligrapher Seyit Amhet Depeler achieved 1st position, while 2nd was Abdah Muhammad Hasan Al-Camal from Egypt and Ehab Ebraheem Thabet from Palestine was nominated as the 3rd winner.
See also
Statistical, Economic and Social Research and Training Centre for Islamic Countries
International Islamic Fiqh Academy
Islamic World Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
References
Further reading
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation subsidiary organs
Research institutes in Turkey
Islamic culture
Islamic architecture
History of Islamic science
1979 establishments in Turkey
1979 establishments in Asia
1979 establishments in Europe
Cultural centers in Turkey
Libraries in Turkey
Educational institutions in Turkey
International organizations based in Turkey
Organizations based in Istanbul
Civic and political organizations of Turkey | [
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4th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement took place on 5–9 September 1973 in Algiers, the capital city of Algeria. The event took place in the Palace of Nations outside of the capital city. The general agenda for the summit was initially defined at the 1973 ministerial meeting in Kabul where Algerian delegation welcomed primary contribution of Guyana, India and SFR Yugoslavia. 76 countries in total participated in the summit calling upon the United States and the Soviet Union not to take important decisions on disarmament, world trade or the world monetary system without the effective participating on the Third World.
Argentina, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Malta, Oman, Peru and Qatar joined as the Non-Aligned Movement at the time of the conference. Algerian host underlined the need for concrete measures to help liberation movements in the Portuguese Africa and Palestine. Secretary-General of the United Nations Kurt Waldheim welcomed “very useful” talks on the peace in the region. While the event coincided with the attack on the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Paris the attack was not commented and the delegation of the country led by King Faisal maintained cordial interaction with Yasir Arafat. United States Mission to the United Nations noticed increased coordination among the member states where Sub-Saharan African countries showed unified front on the question of Apartheid regime in South Africa and Arab states on the issue of Palestine. The mission also noted increasing importance of the core Arab-African members with decreasing prominence of the original leaders of the movement such as Indonesia, India and even SFR Yugoslavia. With the strong support by Fidel Castro, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev sent an letter to the Algerian President ahead of the event asking him to try to direct the movement towards the Soviet strategic interests. Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi accused Castro of being the representative of the USSR in the movement, while some expected guests were absent as was the case with the king Hussein of Jordan (due to concerns over disagreements with Palestinian delegation) and Suharto (due to Sihanouk's participation). In this sensitive context Yugoslav delegation, prepared in advance at the meeting in Igalo, carefully drafted the speech for the President of Yugoslavia Josip Broz Tito in which he decided not to mention a word socialism for a single time.
The conference adopted the decision on the mandate and the name of the future Coordinating Bureau which would include 15 countries responsible for the organization of the following summit. The final document of the conference gave "unreserved support to the application of the principle that nationalization carried out by States [is understood] as an expression of their sovereignty...". The United Nations General Assembly reaffirmed the declaration with an resolution supported by 108 countries and 1 vote (United Kingdom) against.
See also
1973 Non-Aligned Standing Committee Conference
References
Summit 4th
Foreign relations of Algeria
Algiers
1973 conferences
1973 in politics
1973 in Algeria
Diplomatic conferences in Algeria | [
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Graziadio (Hananel) Nepi (; 1759 – January 18, 1836), also known by the acronym Ḥen (), was an Italian rabbi, Kabbalist, and physician.
Biography
Graziadio Nepi studied at Ferrara for twelve years under Rabbi and subsequently was himself the teacher of many disciples in his native city. On account of his great Talmudic learning he was sent as deputy to the Assembly of Jewish Notables convened by Napoleon I at Paris in 1806. Upon his return he was called to the congregation at Cento, where he held the position of rabbi until his death, his pupil Isaac Reggio becoming his successor at Ferrara.
Nepi, who lived an ascetic life, was one of the highest religious authorities of his time in Italy. Among his publications were Livyat Ḥen, a collection of the responsa which he sent to different rabbis, and Derushim, a collection of his sermons. His Zekher tsadikim li-verakhah, consisting of biographical and bibliographical sketches of rabbis and Jewish scholars, was intended to complete Azulai's Shem ha-gedolim but left unfinished. It was completed by M. S. Ghirondi under the title Toledot gedole Yisrael, and published by the latter's son (Triest, 1853). A catalogue of his library was published in Lemberg in 1873.
Selected publications
References
External links
Works by Graziadio Nepi at the National Library of Israel
1759 births
1836 deaths
19th-century Italian physicians
19th-century Italian rabbis
Jewish physicians
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Yeh Na Thi Hamari Qismat is a Pakistani drama television series produced by Six Sigma Productions. It is directed by Syed Ali Raza Usama and written by Seema Munaf. It stars Hira Mani, Noor Hassan, Muneeb Butt and Aiza Awan. It first aired on 24 January 2022 on ARY Digital.
Cast
Noor Hassan Rizvi as Yasir
Aiza Awan as Alishba
Muneeb Butt as Ayaan
Hira Mani as Muntaha
Annie Zaidi as Asiya; as Yasir Mother
Khalid Anam as Khalid; Ayan Father
Kinza Malik as Shireen; Khalid's sister and Saniya Mother
Raja Haider as Wajahat Muntaha and Alishba Father
Saba Faisal as Sajida; Ayan Mother
Salma Hassan as Anila; Muntaha and Alishba Mother
Shehryar Zaidi as Sarmad Yasir Father
Amna Malik as Saniya; Shireen's Daughter
Hafsa Tariq Butt as Mehnaz; as Ayaan Sister
References
Pakistani drama television series
2022 Pakistani television series debuts | [
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Robin Bertrand (born 15 March 2003) is a French tennis player.
Bertrand has a career high ATP singles ranking of 874 achieved on 31 January 2022. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of 1456 achieved on 31 January 2022.
Bertrand made his ATP main draw debut at the 2022 Open Sud de France after receiving a wildcard into the doubles main draw with Antoine Hoang.
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
French male tennis players
Sportspeople from Nîmes | [
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"Ace of Hearts" is a song by British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, which was released by Magnet in 1984 as the fourth and final single from his sixth studio album Wired to the Moon. The song was written by Rea, and produced by Rea and Dave Richards.
"Ace of Hearts" reached number 79 in the UK Singles Chart in October 1984. A re-issue saw the single peak one position higher at number 78 in November 1985. In 1988, Rea re-recorded "Ace of Hearts" for his album New Light Through Old Windows.
Critical reception
In a review of the 1985 re-issue, Paul Benbow of the Reading Evening Post wrote, "Old gravel voice with a re-release due to popular demand." In a retrospective review of Wired to the Moon, Sharon Mawer of AllMusic described the song as a "soft rock number – almost MOR" and one which is "crying out for daytime radio play or a top-selling commercial artist to cover [it]". In a 2021 retrospective on Rea's "30 best tracks for the open road", Dig! picked "Ace of Hearts" as number 12 on the list. They considered the song to be a "soft rock slow burner" and felt the lyrics were "as much about a heartbroken soul longing for love as it is about a down-on-his-luck gambler waiting for a winning hand".
Track listing
7-inch single (UK release)
"Ace of Hearts" (Special Remix) – 3:49
Excerpts from "I Can Hear Your Heart Beat" (Recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival) – 7:00
7-inch double-pack single (UK release)
"Ace of Hearts" (Special Remix) – 3:49
Excerpts from "I Can Hear Your Heart Beat" (Recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival) – 7:00
"Bitter Sweet" – 1:13
"Auf Immer" – 4:41
7-inch single (German and French release)
"Ace of Hearts" (Special Remix) – 3:49
"True Love" – 3:40
12-inch and cassette single (UK release)
"Ace of Hearts" (Special Remix) – 6:34
"I Can Hear Your Heart Beat" – 3:28
"From Love to Love" – 3:31
"True Love" – 3:40
"Smile" – 3:27
12-inch single (German release)
"Ace of Hearts" (Special Remix) – 6:34
Excerpts from "I Can Hear Your Heart Beat" (Recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival) – 7:00
12-inch single (French release)
"Ace of Hearts" – 6:34
"I Can Hear Your Heart Beat" – 3:28
"Love to Love" – 3:31
"True Love" – 3:40
Personnel
Credits are adapted from the UK CD1 and CD2 liner notes and the Wired to the Moon sleeve notes.
"Ace of Hearts"
Chris Rea – vocals, guitar, fretless bass, keyboards, piano
Jerry Stevenson – guitar, all acoustics
Kevin Powell – bass
Jeff Seopardi – drums, brushes
Production
Chris Rea, Dave Richards – producers
Other
The Artful Dodgers – sleeve design
Charts
References
1984 songs
1984 singles
1985 singles
Chris Rea songs
Magnet Records singles
Songs written by Chris Rea | [
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Horsens railway station is a railway station serving the town of Horsens in East Jutland, Denmark.
The station is located on the Fredericia-Aarhus railway line from Fredericia to Aarhus. It opened in 1868 and was moved to its current position in 1929. It offers direct InterCity services to Copenhagen, Hamburg, Aarhus and Aalborg as well as regional train services to Aarhus and Fredericia. The train services are operated by the railway company DSB.
History
Horsens station was opened in 1868 with the opening of the Fredericia-Aarhus railway line from Fredericia to Aarhus. In 1929, the station was moved to its current position.
Operations
The train services are operated by the railway company DSB. The station offers direct InterCity services to Copenhagen, Hamburg, Aarhus and Aalborg as well as regional train services to Aarhus and Fredericia.
References
Citations
Bibliography
External links
Banedanmark – government agency responsible for maintenance and traffic control of most of the Danish railway network
DSB – largest Danish train operating company
Danske Jernbaner – website with information on railway history in Denmark
Buildings and structures in the Central Denmark Region
Railway stations opened in 1868
Railway stations in Denmark
1868 establishments in Denmark
Knud Tanggaard Seest railway stations | [
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Cleaver Square (formerly Prince's Square ) is an 18th-century garden square in the London Borough of Lambeth, dating from 1789. It is notable for having been the first garden square in South London.
History
Cleaver Square was laid out in 1789, and was the first garden square in South London.
Features
There is a residents' association, which hosts an annual outdoor carol service and other events.
Until the middle of the 18th-century, the locality consisted of hedgerows, fields and meadows, traversed by Kennington Road from the City to Clapham. Mary Cleaver inherited the estate in 1743; at that point it consisted of a large open pasture, screened from the high road by a line of trees and known as White Bear Field. In 1780 she leased it to Thomas Ellis, the landlord of the Horns Tavern on Kennington Common, who laid out and developed the square. The terraces at the entrance of Kennington Park Road were built in 1788, houses on the north west side of the square in 1789, followed by other houses on the north side in 1792. Other houses were built later, between 1815 and 1824, and 1844 and 1853. By the 1870s the area had reduced in status, and the houses were overcrowded. Originally named Prince's Square, it was renamed Cleaver Square in 1937.
The centre of the square was enclosed by Ellis in 1792 as a grazing ground. By 1871 it was a garden circumscribed by a formal path, and by 1898 it had been cultivated as a nursery with greenhouses. The centre of the square was acquired by the Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth in 1927 in order to prevent development on it. From 1995 the centre of the square was restored as a public space with a grant from the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association.
Cleaver Square is within the Kennington Conservation Area, which was first designated in 1968 and extended in 1979 and 1997. It is a registered historic square. Many but not all, of the houses on the square are Grade II listed. Those that are listed are 1-20; 21–25; 26–33; 34–41; and 50, 51 and 52.
Features
There is a residents' association, which hosts an annual outdoor carol service and other events.
To the south-east, the square is bordered with the City and Guilds of London Art School (formerly the Lambeth School of Art).
In the north-west corner is the Prince of Wales public house, dating originally from 1792 but refaced in 1901. A Shepherd Neame tied house until 2019, the Prince of Wales is now a free house. It has pétanque sets available for hire, for use in the gravelled centre of the square.
Notable residents
Notable residents have included the artist Innes Fripp, the Tate & Lyle businessman Sir Saxon Tate Bt, and former Prime Minister, Sir John Major.
Cultural references
Patrick McGrath's 2021 novel Last Days in Cleaver Square (2021: Hutchinson) is about the end of life of a resident of the square.
Peter Snow's 1988 oil painting Cleaver Square from Kennington Park Road is held by Southwark Art Collection. His 1985 oil painting, The Passing World, from a similar perspective, is held by the Museum of London.
References
Squares in the London Borough of Lambeth
Conservation areas in London
Garden squares in London | [
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The 2022 Cleveland Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the fourth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2022 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Cleveland, Ohio, United States between January 31 and February 6, 2022.
Singles main draw entrants
Seeds
1 Rankings are as of January 17, 2022.
Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
William Blumberg
Aleksandar Kovacevic
Keegan Smith
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
Ulises Blanch
Sebastian Fanselow
Alexis Galarneau
Rinky Hijikata
Emilio Nava
Roberto Quiroz
Champions
Singles
Dominic Stricker def. Yoshihito Nishioka 7–5, 6–1.
Doubles
William Blumberg / Max Schnur def. Robert Galloway / Jackson Withrow 6–3, 7–6(7–4).
References
2022 ATP Challenger Tour
2022 in sports in Ohio
January 2022 sports events in the United States
February 2022 sports events in the United States
2022 in American tennis | [
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Orienspace (also named Orien Space Shandong Technology and oSpace) is a Chinese private space launch enterprise founded in 2020 and developing the medium-class orbital launch vehicle named Gravity-1 (Yinli-1).
Intended for a first flight in 2023, the rocket would have the capacity to lift 3 tons to low Earth orbit.
In June 2021, the company raised $62 million in funding.
In November 2021 the company appointed Yao Song as Co-CEO who was formerly founder of Shenjian Technology, a company that developed semiconductors for autonomous driving, smart security, cloud computing, and AI.
In January 2022 the company has secured nearly $47.3 million in its pre-Series A round of financing to develop powerful rocket engines.
Marketplace
Orienspace is in competition with several other Chinese solid rocket startups, being Galactic Energy, LandSpace, LinkSpace, ExPace, i-Space, OneSpace, Deep Blue Aerospace
References
External links
Official website
Aerospace companies of China
Space launch vehicles of China
Private spaceflight companies
Commercial spaceflight
Commercial launch service providers
Chinese companies established in 2020 | [
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Miguel Ardiman Ramírez (born 10 June 1967) is a Chilean football manager and former player who played as a defender. He served as a right back at Deportes Concepción, and as a central defender at O'Higgins, Universidad Católica, Santiago Wanderers, Coquimbo Unido, Deportes Iquique and Fernández Vial. With Universidad Católica he won the international title of the Copa Interamericana in 1993, scoring a goal in extra time in the final. He also won the Copa Chile in 1995 with the same team.
Honours
Universidad Católica
Copa Interamericana: 1993
Copa Chile: 1995
References
1967 births
Chilean footballers
Chile international footballers
Association football midfielders
People from Concepción, Chile
Living people | [
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Lee Jin-yong (Hangul: 이진용, born September 9, 1987), better known by his stage name Loopy (Hangul: 루피), is a South Korean rapper.
Discography
Studio albums
Extended plays
Charted singles
References
1987 births
Living people
South Korean male rappers
South Korean hip hop singers
21st-century South Korean male singers | [
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Lestidium nudum , the deep water pike smelt, is a species of fish. It is found in the Pacific Ocean.
This species reaches a length of .
References
Tinker, S.W., 1978. Fishes of Hawaii, a handbook of the marine fishes of Hawaii and the Central Pacific Ocean. Hawaiian Service Inc., Honolulu. 568 p.
Paralepididae
Fish of the Pacific Ocean
Fish of Hawaii
Taxa named by Charles Henry Gilbert
Fish described in 1905 | [
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LHA 120-S 79 is an RV Tauri variable star located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, located about 163,000 light years away in the constellation of Dorado, with a period of 37.203 days. The star is extremely hot for a star of its type, as its temperature is over 10,000 K, and it is hot enough to be classified as a B-type blue giant, as well as being the hottest star of its type in the LMC. LHA 120-S 79 is also extremely luminous, at over 14,000 L☉, and it is the most luminous known star of its type in the galaxy.
However, the star may be less luminous than it seems, as its spectral energy distribution is contaminated by a very nearby star, 2MASS J05044388−6858371, which is also a long-period variable star and is just 8 arcseconds from LHA 120-S 79.
Notes
References
RV Tauri variables
Large Magellanic Cloud
B-type giants
Dorado (constellation) | [
101,
1048,
3270,
6036,
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1055,
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Bonheur Mugisha is a Rwandan footballer who currently plays for Rwanda Premier League club APR and the Rwanda national team.
Club career
Mugisha joined the Heroes Football Academy located in Mayange in the Bugesera District at age 15. By age 17 he was promoted to the first team which played in the Second Division. In 2019 he helped the club earn promotion to the Rwanda Premier League. The club was relegated back to the Second Division after one season and Mugisha joined Mukura Victory Sports on loan for the 2020–21 campaign. In July 2021 Mugisha joined Rwanda Premier League club APR on a 2-year contract. In August 2021 Mugisha appeared in a friendly against AS Maniema Union of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in preparation for APR's fixtures in 2021–22 CAF Champions League qualifying. After defeating Mogadishu City Club in the First Round, APR fell to Étoile Sportive du Sahel of Tunisia 1–5 with Mugisha playing both legs of the Second Round series.
International career
Mugisha was invited to join the national under-23 team in summer 2021 but did not because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. In January 2022 he received his first call-up to the senior team for a pair of friendlies against Guinea. He made his senior international debut in the first match on 3 January 2022 and went on to appear in both fixtures.
International career statistics
References
External links
National Football Teams profile
Soccerway profile
APR FC profile
Living people
Rwandan footballers
Rwanda international footballers
Association football midfielders
APR F.C. players | [
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Jean-Pierre Tiéhi (born 24 January 2002) is a French professional footballer who plays for Rodez, on loan from Fulham, as a striker.
Early and personal life
Born in Paris, Tiéhi is the son of Ivorian footballer Joel Tiéhi, and the brother of Christ Tiéhi.
Career
Tiéhi moved from Le Havre to English club Fulham in summer 2018. He returned to France on loan in January 2022, signing with Rodez. He made his senior debut for the club on 19 February 2022, one of four new players to do so in that match.
References
2002 births
Living people
French people of Ivorian descent
French footballers
Le Havre AC players
Fulham F.C. players
Rodez AF players
Ligue 2 players
Association football forwards
French expatriate footballers
French expatriates in England
Expatriate footballers in England
Black French sportspeople | [
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Epactionotus bilineatus is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it occurs in the Maquiné and Três Forquilhas basins. It reaches 4 cm (1.6 inches) SL.
References
Loricariidae
Fish described in 1998 | [
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The Japan High School Teachers' Union (, Nikkokyo) was a trade union representing workers at high schools in Japan.
The union was founded in 1956, when the All Japan High School Teachers' Union merged with some small, independent, unions of teachers. It affiliated to the National Council of Government and Public Workers' Unions and, although initially opposed to the Japan Teachers' Union, by 1959 the two had agreed to merge at some point in the future. Many members of Nikkokyo opposed this plan, and the merger plan was dropped.
By 1980, the union had 30,747 members, and in 1990 membership stood at 29,186. In April 1991, the union merged with the recently founded All Japan Council of Teachers and Staff Union, to form the All Japan Federation of Teachers' and Staff Unions.
References
Education trade unions
Trade unions established in 1956
Trade unions disestablished in 1991
Trade unions in Japan | [
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Lestidium prolixum is a species of fish. It is found in the waters of Japan and China.
This species reaches a length of .
References
Masuda, H., K. Amaoka, C. Araga, T. Uyeno and T. Yoshino, 1984. The fishes of the Japanese Archipelago. Vol. 1. Tokai University Press, Tokyo, Japan. 437 p.
Paralepididae
Fish of the Pacific Ocean
Fish of Japan
Fish of China
Fish described in 1953 | [
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The Chantada stabbing occurred March 8, 1989 when Paulino Fernández killed 7 people and wounded 6–7 in the Chantada municipality, Province of Lugo, Galicia, Spain.
Attack
On March 8, 1989, Paulino Fernández left for Chantada. There, he spoke with his lawyer about the land acquired. According to the lawyer, he was nervous and depressed more than usual. He then talked to his notary, and later did some work with his brother. At noon he returned to Surribas. There he dined with his brother and his wife. He talked about the land they wanted to take from him. After lunch, the brother and wife went to friends. At 2:30 p.m., he left his house with a knife and met his neighbor, who was chopping wood. He asked a neighbor what a group of people standing on the street was doing. A neighbor told him that they were waiting for a bus to take them to the funeral. He stabbed a neighbor several times and ran after him, but the neighbor ran away from him. A neighbor asked for help from people on the street and he was taken by car to a hospital in Chantada. Neighbors did not pay much attention to the attack, got on a bus and went to the funeral. Paulino then returned home, drove the cows out to graze, and drove them to Quinzán. He saw 4 people working on the farm "A Lamela". Despite the fact that they all had sickles, Paulino killed three with a knife on the spot and wounded one woman. She tried to run away, but he caught up and killed her. He then met a neighbor and seriously injured him. He then went to Surribas via Quinzán. Along the way, he attacked seven neighbors. Two of them died on the spot, one died 20 days later in hospital and 4 or 5 others were injured. He also did not attack some people along the way. He also used an ax during the attack. At the end of the attack, one man managed to take a knife from him and Paulino went home. His brother learned of the massacre and took Paulino's wife out of the house. When he returned, he set fire to the house and lay down on the bed. He died in the fire. During the fire, his body fell to the ground floor of the stable and was found there. His neighbors also heard a tractor explode during the fire.
Perpetrator
Paulino Fernández Vázquez, 64 was born in Surribas in 1925. He lived in Surribas, Chantada municipality. He was a farmer, had 14 cows and bought a tractor shortly before the attack. He lived with his wife, they had no children. He married 30 years before the attack. His wife was 12 years older than him. She was blind, deaf, and had a hip fracture. Neighbors and acquaintances described him as calm and closed and stingy. He had no conflicts with neighbors. Some time before the attack, he bought several plots of land from his relatives in Brazil. After the purchase, he did not register the land in the cadastre in his own name. Tax receipts were received in the names of previous owners. This was done so as not to pay taxes. After the purchase, he began to worry that this land would be taken away from him. He told his relatives that he was afraid that his neighbors would take the land from him. He also became nervous and complained of severe headaches. His lawyer reassured him that no one would take his land. In 1971 he was diagnosed with depressive syndrome with a pathological reflex that affected his stomach and liver. Also this year, he went to a psychiatrist. Three years later, he returned to a psychiatrist and his diagnosis largely coincided with the previous one. He also found an organic reflection of the rheumatic disease. He last consulted a psychiatrist in 1988. His wife recalled that he had a single attack of insanity as a child and that there were many images of saints on his bedside table.
Film
This event is mentioned in the film Cannibal Massacre.
References
External links
Galicia 112 - Reconstrucción do crime múltiple de Chantada de 1989
matanza de Chantada. Programa 29.
Stabbing attacks in Spain
1989 crimes in Spain
Arson in Spain
1980s murders in Spain | [
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The third RMS St. Patrick was a steam packet ferry ordered by the St George Steam Packet Company after the loss of the second one and was registered B129 by her builders in Liverpool. Not much is known about her service life, but her sinking is a dramatic one. She was sold to Waterford Steam Packet Company in 1836.
Research is currently being done from newspaper archives to compile the full sinking article with as much accuracy as is possible.
Loss
The St. Patrick departed from Liverpool at 6/7 am on Tuesday, 27 November 1838 loaded with her usual load of cargo and at least 29 passengers. As she progressed on her journey, she braced the winds of a near-hurricane that had been blowing S.S.W. for about a week. At half-past one, her entire fore-gaff was ripped away by the wind. The storm kept going through the night, and at 1 am she took on water via her hatches, settling her down a little. This was not a serious concern, however, as steamers like these often faced serious damage during rough seas. At 4:30, the Tuskar light was spotted and estimated to be around 4 miles away. She then steered west-half-north until 8 am, when she was hauled to and headed westward. Around that time, a brig, which was suffering the storm just as much as her, passed, but the St. Patrick was unable to help. She then lay to until 12:30, still battling the heavy gale and thick rain. Afterwards, she bore away for the final stretch to Waterford harbour. The carpenter was working hard on securing the crank hatches as the ship further struggled with the storm and took on considerable water. At 2:30pm, the foresail was destroyed by a large wave, while there was still no land in sight, and the ship hauled to under the mainsail on starboard. The sea was measured to be 15 fathoms (27m, 90 ft) deep at this time.
At 3pm, a heavy wave struck behind the starboard paddle box, taking out the starboard lifeboat, part of her bulwarks, her binnacle, some of her railing, and the main hatches were caved in. 5 seamen were injured and the carpenter was then put to work securing the destroyed hatches with tarps. At 3:20, another squall took the galley and main winch and poured down the broken hatches, which caused her to settle down by the stern. The clouds began to part at 4:10pm, and the crew spotted Hook Light 4 miles away at N.N.W., to which they took the mainsail in and bore away. Soon afterwards, the aftcastle was washed over, taking out the helm, skylights, companionway, first mate John Tucket and seaman Rowley Tone; the relieving tackles were immediately hooked on in a desperate attempt to keep control, which proved effective as the vessel answered very well. At 5pm, the hook of the portside tackle broke and second mate William Trace/Trail was carried away. Now completely out of control, she was carried into the rocks of Hook Point, near the small village of Churchtown, which she struck at 5:10pm. The main gangway was broken in and the hull began to rapidly flood, and the passengers and crew were assembled on the forecastle, where they were able to drop onto the rock from the bowsprit. One of the passengers, Mr. Fitzgerald, got off safely, but climbed back aboard to look for his missing wife. He found her successfully, but just then the ship broke in two abaft of the paddles, and they were both drowned. The couple were born in the nearby town Tipperary, but had been living in America for the past 3 years, and had presumably taken a ship across the Atlantic to Liverpool, where they boarded the St. Patrick in hopes to return home; alas they met their fate together. Captain Schutz notably broke his arm during his escape. When the tide went out, the survivors were able to be rescued by the locals of Churchtown, in particular a Mr. King and another known only as "Power", gave up their beds and food for the survivors. In the words of the Waterford Mirror, 1st Dec 1838, We have to mention the kind, hospitable treatment received from the poor inhabitants of the place, especially one of the name of Power, who gave up their beds for our use, and their scanty supply of provisions, Capt. Dickens of the Fort of Duncannon, the Rev Mr. Lowe, Chaplain of the Fort, and the Rev Charles William Doyne, of Feathard, were most attentive to the Captain and shipwrecked seamen, supplying them with money and necessaries of life, for which they desire to record their lively and grateful remembrance.
Her wreck continued to be destroyed to the point that "not a plank remained". The loss was estimated at £24,000.
References
1833 ships
Steamships of the United Kingdom | [
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Elyse Kopecky is a nutrition coach, marathoner and the co-author with Shalane Flanagan of three running cookbooks which introduced superhero muffins.
Run Fast. Eat Slow was Kopecky and Flanagan's debut book, followed by Run Fast, Cook Fast, Eat Slow and Rise and Run (2021). Each of the books, which focus on nutrition for runners, became a best-seller.
Kopecky is a UNC Chapel Hill graduate.
References
External links
American writers
American marathon runners
American female long-distance runners
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill alumni | [
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The HEX.com diamond is the largest cut diamond in the world as of 2006, holding the Guinness World Record. Containing 55 facets and weighing in at 555.55 carats (111.11 grams), it was commissioned and inspired by Ran Gorenstein (Belgium) and completed in 2004 after several years of cutting and faceting. The repetitive use of the number five in the design of the gem is intentional deriving from the hamsa, a palm shaped amulet popular among Muslims and Jews in the Middle East and North Africa.
The diamond is a carbonado or black diamond. It is semi-transparent with a dark brown color. Typically, black diamonds have been reserved for industrial uses with larger specimens considered as collectors’ stones, and in fact most of gem-quality used in contemporary jewelry design have been treated to produce the black color. A natural faceted black diamond of this size is an extremely rare occurrence.
The origin of the diamond is uncertain, but it is believed to either be the result of a meteoric impact or part of an asteroid that crashed on Earth.
In February 2022, the diamond was bought by cryptocurrency entrepreneur Richard Heart for £3.16 million and renamed from its original name of the Enigma.
References
Black diamonds
Guinness World Records | [
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John Arthur Sullivan (September 15, 1913June 11, 1992) was a Canadian journalist and writer. He worked for The Canadian Press from 1929 to 1975, and served as its sports editor for 27 years, where he covered the Olympic Games, the Stanley Cup, the Commonwealth Games, and the Grey Cup. He amassed background information on players, coaches, when no previous database had existed, which was subsequently used a reference by sports media across Canada. He served as the head researcher for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation from 1975 to 1976, was inducted into the builder category of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1983, and was posthumously inducted into the Football Reporters of Canada section of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1994.
Journalism and writing
John Arthur Sullivan was born on September 15, 1913, in Toronto, Ontario. The Canadian Press (CP) hired him as a courier at age 16 in 1929, then promoted him to the editorial staff in 1937. In 1948, he became the first person to serve as the sports editor for CP. He oversaw the sports department at CP for 27 years, and covered a variety of events including the Olympic Games, the Commonwealth Games, the Stanley Cup, and the Grey Cup. During this time, he amassed background information on the sports, players, and coaches, when little information was previously available. His collection of information was subsequently used for decades by sports media in Canada.
Sullivan authored three books. His book, The Stanley Cup: First official history of hockey's most famous trophy, 1893–1957, was published in 1958. He also researched stories and statistics related to the Grey Cup, wrote The Grey Cup Story released by Beattie Publications in 1955, then expanded on his work with The Grey Cup story: The dramatic history of football's most coveted award, released by Pagurian Press in 1975. He retired from CP in 1975, then worked for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as its head researcher until 1976. He prepared the information kits on the athletes used by the CBC for the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal.
Personal life
Sullivan was married to Jackie, and had one son and one daughter. He resided in Toronto for many years before relocating to Langley, British Columbia. He died after a six-month illness in Langley, on June 11, 1992, and was interred in St. Mary's Catholic Cemetery in Barrie, Ontario.
Awards and legacy
Sullivan's columns were described by his colleagues as entertaining, informative, accurate, and balanced. Toronto Star sports editor Milt Dunnell referred to Sullivan as "the newsman's newsman".
Sullivan was inducted into the builder category of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1983, and was posthumously inducted into the Football Reporters of Canada section of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1994.
References
1913 births
1992 deaths
20th-century Canadian journalists
20th-century Canadian male writers
20th-century Canadian non-fiction writers
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation people
Canadian Football Hall of Fame inductees
Canadian male journalists
Canadian sportswriters
Journalists from Toronto | [
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The Russell Sage Rink in Clinton, New York is an indoor, artificial ice rink owned and operated by Hamilton College. The venue was the first on-campus rink built in the United States, predating the Hobey Baker Memorial Rink by a year.
History
Hamilton founded its ice hockey team shortly after the end of World War I. In its third season, the team finished with a perfect 10–0 record. In response, head coach Albert I. Prettyman convinced the school to allow a permanent indoor rink to be built. A donation from the Russell Sage Foundation was used to fund the project and, in honor of the gift, the new arena was named the 'Russell Sage Rink'. The building allowed Hamilton to both practice and play on a consistent ice surface years before most other teams had access to similar facilities. It allowed the Continentals to not only ignore weather conditions, but flourish throughout the 20's and 30's.
In the decades since its completion, Hamilton continued to use Sage Rink as its home and the arena was renovated in 1993. The rink is a non-standard size, being 10 feet longer than the typical 200' x 85' dimensions.
References
External links
Sports venues completed in 1921
Hamilton Continentals
College ice hockey venues in the United States
Indoor ice hockey venues in the United States
Indoor ice hockey venues in New York (state)
Sports venues in Oneida County, New York | [
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Sterile males are deliberately produced by humans in several species for several unrelated purposes:
Sterile insect technique for insect pest control
Cytoplasmic male sterility for plant breeding
Sterile male plant for plant breeding
Humans and other species | [
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The Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski" Museum of Paleontology and Historical Geology (SUMPHG) (), is a paleontology museum located in the Main Building of Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski, Sofia, Bulgaria.
History
The museum is within the Main Building of Sofia University, designed by Jean Bréasson, re-designed by Yordan Milanov, and later by Ljuben Konstantinov. Its collections are primarily intended for research and are, thus, not accessible to the public. A limited number of fossils from the collection is on display in the SUMPHG. Although located in the Main Building of Sofia University, the museum is one of the primary localities for storing fossils collected in Bulgaria. The original fossils, around which the current collection has grown, were those gathered by the first Bulgarian state geologist Georgi Zlatarski (1854 - 1909) and those purchased from Reinische Mineralen-Comptoir Dr. A. Krantz. Later specimens collected by doctoral students and as part of the Bulgarian geological surveys were added.
Faculty
Many notable Bulgarian paleontologists have worked at SUMPHG, including Peter Bakalov, Vassil Tzankov, Ivan Nikolov, Natalia Dimitrova, Milka Entcheva, Emilia Kojumdjieva, Nonka Motekova, Stoycho Breskovski etc.
Public access
Admission is free to the Museum for all visitors. The Museum is open 10am - 12am, 1pm - 4pm Monday to Friday. It is closed on Saturdays and Sundays. SUMPHG is an important venue for widening interest in Paleontology, Evolutionary biology and Earth sciences.
The Museum logo is based on the Deinotherium skeleton displayed by the entrance.
References
External links
See also
National Museum of Natural History, Bulgaria
Museums established in 1897
Paleontology websites
University museums
Natural history museums in Bulgaria
Geology museums
Museums in Bulgaria
Paleontology in Bulgaria
Evolutionary biology
Fossil museums
Historical geology
Museums in Sofia
Geology museums in Bulgaria | [
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The All Japan Federation of Teachers' and Staff Unions (, Zenkyo) is a trade union representing workers in the education sector in Japan.
The union was established in April 1991, when the Japan High School Teachers' Union merged with the recently founded All Japan Council of Teachers and Staff Union. It affiliated to the National Confederation of Trade Unions (Zenroren). By 2019, it was Zenroren's third-largest affiliate, with 63,349 members.
References
External links
Education trade unions
Trade unions established in 1991
Trade unions in Japan | [
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Alistair Green is a British comedian, known for his videos on Twitter.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
British comedians | [
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Choi Seok-bae (Hangul: 최석배, born February 28, 1992), better known by his stage name Nafla (Hangul: 나플라), is a South Korean rapper. He was the winner of Show Me the Money 777.
Discography
Studio albums
Extended plays
Charted singles
References
1992 births
Living people
South Korean male rappers
South Korean hip hop singers
21st-century South Korean male singers | [
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Katherine Anne Hirschfeld is an Australian chemical engineer and business executive.
Early life and education
Hirschfeld was born in Brisbane, Queensland. She was educated at Ascot State School and then Brisbane Girls Grammar School. She completed a Bachelor of Chemical Engineering at the University of Queensland in 1982.
Career
On graduation, Hirschfeld joined BP and during a 20-year career worked for them in Australia, Turkey and the United Kingdom. She was managing director of BP's Bulwer Island Refinery from 2005 to 2010.
She has been a member of the Senate of the University of Queensland since 2010, following in the footsteps of her grandfather, Otto Hirschfeld (1953–1957) and great-grandfather Eugen Hirschfeld (1910–1914).
Hirschfeld joined the board of Powerlink Queensland in 2018 as chair and was appointed to the board of Central Petroleum Limited in the same year.
Awards and recognition
Hirschfeld was elected a fellow of the Institution of Chemical Engineers in 2005 and of the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering in 2009. She has been an honorary fellow of Engineers Australia since 2014. In 2015 she was named one of the Top 25 Most Influential Female Engineers by Engineers Australia and also one of the AFR/Westpac 100 Women of Influence. She was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2019 Queen's Birthday Honours for "significant service to engineering, to women, and to business".
References
External links
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
University of Queensland alumni
Members of the Order of Australia
Fellows of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering
Australian chemical engineers
Australian women business executives | [
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Sam Barnard (c. 1776 – 29 June 1846) was a three times Classic-winning jockey.
In 1811, he won the third running of the 2000 Guineas on the black colt, Trophonius winning "easy" at odds of 5/2. He also won the third running of the 1000 Guineas in 1816 on the prolific filly Rhoda. She would become the most successful horse in Britain of her day, winning 21 of her 45 races.
His other Classic victory came in the Oaks of 1814, which he won on Medora.
He also won the Wokingham Stakes at Royal Ascot in 1823, though by the end of the century he had become a "less known member of the early jockeys."
His career was ended after 76 winners when his horse fell with him at Ascot. As a result of the fall, he was totally blinded. He died in Newmarket on 29 June 1846.
Major wins
Great Britain
1000 Guineas Stakes - Rhoda (1816)
2000 Guineas Stakes - Trophonius (1811)
Oaks Stakes - Medora (1814)
See also
List of jockeys
References
1776 births
1846 deaths
English jockeys | [
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Damase Potvin (born October 16, 1882 – 1964) was a writer and journalist born in Bagotville. He is the son of Charles Potvin and Julie Hudon.
Biography
He obtained his baccalauréat ès arts at the Séminaire de Chicoutimi where he contributed to the newspaper of the Institution L'Oiseau-Mouche, then enrolled, in 1894, in a business course. In 1903, he entered the White Fathers of Africa and unable to adapt to the climate of Algiers, he returned to the country in 1905. Subsequently, he opted for journalism and in 1905 founded the first newspaper in the Saguenay region, Le Travailleur. He directed Le Progrès du Saguenay (1906) for a year. He will then move to Quebec where he will be assistant editor at La Semaine Commerciale and La Vérité then editor-in-chief at Quotidien in Lévis. He will then found Le Petit Québécois in which he will write controversial columns under the pseudonym of Jean Yves. In 1910, he moved to Montreal where he worked for Devoir (1910), while contributing to various newspapers and magazines: Chasse et Pêche, Culture, Saturday, French Canada. In July 1918, he founded the review Le Terroir, organ of the Society of Arts, Sciences and Letters, which will be published until 1940.
In December 1917 he co-founded, with Georges Morisset and Alonzo Cinq-Mars, the Society of Arts, Sciences and Letters of Quebec. In 1938, he organized the Quebec Journalists Club. He will be a member of the Press Gallery in the Parliament of Quebec, of the Montreal Historical Society and of Quebec, of the Canadian Institute of Quebec, of the Literary School of Montreal and the Society of French-Canadian Writers.
In 1938, he received the Prix David for his novel Peter McLeod and in 1940, the Prize of the Ministry of Mines for his novel Sous le signe du quartz. His work is mainly focused on the terroir and the return to the land.
The Damase-Potvin Literary Prize is awarded in his memory.
From 1985 to 1995, the Damase-Potvin Prize was awarded to scientists on the occasion of the Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean Regional Scientific Merit.
Works published
Restons Chez Nous, Québec, Guay, 1908.
Le Membre: roman de mœurs politiques québécoises, Québec, L'Événement, 1916.
l'Appel de la Terre, Québec, Imprimerie de l'événement, 1919.
Le Tour du Saguenay, 1920.
Le Français: roman paysan du Pays de Québec, Montréal, 1925.
La Baie: récit d'un vieux colon canadien-français, Montréal, Éd. Édouard-Garand, 1925.
Sur la Grand'Route : nouvelles, contes et croquis, 1927.
Les Îlets Jérémie: histoire d'une ancienne mission du domaine du roi, Québec, Éd. du Terroir, 1928.
En Zig-Zag sur la Côte et dans l'Île, Québec, 1929.
Plaisant Pays de Saguenay, Québec, 1931.
La Robe Noire: récit des temps héroïques où fut fondée la Nouvelle France, Mercure de France, 1932.
La Rivière-à-mars, 1934.
Peter McLeod, 1937.
Puyjalon: Le solitaire de l'Ile-à-la chasse, 1938.
Sous le signe du quartz, Montréal, Éd. Bernard-Valiquette, 1940.
Un ancien contait..., Montréal, Éd. Bernard-Valiquette, 1942.
Les oubliés. Écrivains nordiques, Québec, Édition Roch Poulin, 1944, 237 p.
Thomas, le dernier de nos coureurs de bois. Le Parc des Laurentides, Québec, Éditions Garneau ltée, 1945, 272 p.
Le Saint-Laurent et ses îles, Québec, Garneau, 1945.
La "Dame française" du duc de Kent : récits historiques canadiens, Québec, Éd. Garneau, 1948.
Le roman d'un roman. Louis Hémon à Péribonka, Québec, Éditions du Quartier Latin, 1950, 191 p.
Le Roi du Golfe. le Dr P-E Fortin, ancien commandant de « La Canadienne », Québec, Éditions du Quartier Latin, 1952, 181 p.
Trois petits clochers. Émouvante petite odyssée de colonisation sur la Côte-Nord, Québec, 1953, 94 p.
Un héros de l'air: l'heureuse aventure de Roméo Vachon, 1955, 62 p.
La Baie des Ha! Ha!. histoire et description, légendes et anecdotes. Paroisses, vieilles familles, gens et choses de la région, Baie des Ha! Ha!, Édition de la Chambre de commerce de la Baie des Ha! Ha!, 1957, 427 p.
Contes et Croquis
L'Appel des Souvenirs
The Saguenay Trip
Magazines and newspapers
Je Vois Tout
L'Oiseau-Mouche
L'Événement
Le Petit Québécois
Le Progrès du Saguenay
Revue Populaire
Samedi
Le Terroir
Le Soleil
Bibliography
Klaus-Dieter Ertler: Damase Potvin, "La robe noire", en: Der kanadische Roman der dreißiger Jahre. Eine ideologieanalytische Darstellung. Canadiana Romanica, 14. Max Niemeyer, Tübingen 2000; repr. De Gruyter, Berlin 2015, pp 160 – 185.
Column "À la découverte de notre littérature" (Discovering our literature), by Yvon Paré, journal Le Quotidien, 14 juillet 1979, p. 8, biographical summary of Damase Potvin.
Honors
1938 - Prix David
References
External links
Biographie Marianopolis
Laurentiana
Writers from Quebec
Journalists from Quebec
1882 births
1964 deaths | [
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Sam Barnard may refer to:
Sam Barnard (actor) (born 21 October 1985), British actor
Sam Barnard (jockey) (c. 1776 - 1846), British jockey
See also
Sam Bernard
Sam Bernardo
Samuel Bernard
San Barnard, Georgia | [
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The 2020-21 season was Ulster's 27th season since the advent of professionalism in rugby union, and Dan McFarland's third season as head coach. They competed in the Pro14, the Pro14 Rainbow Cup, the European Rugby Champions Cup, and the European Rugby Challenge Cup.
Due to the mid-season break during the 2019–20 season caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020–21 season started later than usual.
New arrivals were scrum-half Alby Mathewson, formerly of Munster, and out-half Ian Madigan from Bristol Bears, although due to the delays caused by Covid-19, both had actually made their debuts and the end of the previous season. Hooker Bradley Roberts was signed from Rainey Old Boys as short-term injury cover, and ended up being kept on permanently. Wing Angus Kernohan departed for Ealing Trailfinders, hooker Zack McCall, prop Tommy O'Hagan and flanker Clive Ross were released.
It was announced in December 2020 that the 2020–21 Pro14 season would conclude after 16 rounds, with the winners of each conference advancing straight to the final on 27 March 2021. Four South African Super Rugby teams - the Bulls, Lions, Sharks and Stormers - would then be introduced in the Rainbow Cup. Ulster finished second in Conference A, missing out on the final.
The EPCR agreed a new format for the 2020–21 European Rugby Champions Cup in response to COVID-19: the top eight eligible teams from the Pro14, the Gallagher Premiership and Top 14 competed in a 24-team tournament divided into two pools of twelve teams, with each team playing four games in the pool stage - two at home and two away. After the first two rounds, the EPCR took the decision to temporarily suspend rounds 3 and 4, and later confirmed that rounds 3 and 4 would not take place. Having lost their opening two pool matches, Ulster were eliminated from the Champions Cup and joined the Challenge Cup in the round of 16. After strong performances in away wins against Harlequins and Northampton Saints, Ulster faced a semi-final away to Leicester Tigers. They controlled the game in the first half, but after John Cooney departed with a head injury, Ulster's performance fell away, and a masterclass by England fly-half George Ford won the tie for Leicester.
Leading try-scorer Marcell Coetzee left in April. He had announced his intention to go home to South Africa and join the Bulls, but after he sustained a season-ending injury in March, the club agreed to release him from his contract early.
Ulster's poor performance in the second half of the Challenge Cup semi-final followed them into the Rainbow Cup, and they finished tenth of twelve in the European pool.
Academy players Cormac Izuchukwu, Nathan Doak, David McCann, Callum Reid and Aaron Sexton all made their senior debuts this season. Billy Burns and Eric O'Sullivan made their international debuts with Ireland.
Staff
Squad
Academy squad
Player transfers
Players in
Alby Mathewson unattached
Ian Madigan from Bristol Bears
Bradley Roberts from Rainey Old Boys, initially as short-term injury cover, later permanent.
Players out
Zack McCall released
Clive Ross released
Tommy O'Hagan released
Angus Kernohan to Ealing Trailfinders
Callum Reid to Munster (6-week loan)
Marcell Coetzee to Bulls
Bill Johnston to Ealing Trailfinders (short-term loan)
Louis Ludik retired
European Rugby Champions Cup
Pool B
European Rugby Challenge Cup
Round of 16
Quarter-final
Semi-final
Pro14
End of season awards
Fullback Michael Lowry, scrum-half John Cooney, number 8 Marcell Coetzee and loosehead prop Eric O'Sullivan were named in the Pro14 Dream Team. Marcell Coetzee was named Players' Player of the Year., and was joint top try scorer, alongside Leinster's Scott Penny and Connacht's Alex Wootton.
Pro14 Rainbow Cup
Ulster Rugby Awards
The Heneken Ulster Rugby Awards ceremony was held online on 7 June 2021. Winners were:
Heineken Ulster Rugby Personality of the Year: Iain Henderson
Bank of Ireland Player of the Year: Alan O'Connor
Ulster Rugby Supporters' Club Player of the Year: John Cooney
Rugby Writers' Player of the Year: Nick Timoney
Openreach Young Player of the Year: James Hume
Season reviews
Ulster 2020-21 - Who Did What?, The Front Row Union, 12 August 2021
Don’t Cry In Front Of The Mexicans: Ulster’s 2020-21 Season (And How They Must Keep Twirling, Twirling, Twirling Towards Freedom in 2021-22), Digging Like a Demented Mole, 28 June 2021
"The Ulster depth chart: A World Cup winner and the thrilling back three", The42, 17 September 2021
References
2020-21
2020–21 in Irish rugby union
2020–21 Pro14 by team
2020–21 European Rugby Champions Cup by team | [
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Aisin Gioro Hongsheng (恭恪貝勒 弘昇; 6 April 1696 – 22 April 1754) was Qing dynasty imperial prince as the first son of Yunki, Prince Hengwen of the First Rank.
Life
Hongsheng was born on 6 April 1696 to lady Liugiya, Secondary Princess Consort Hengwen of the First Rank.
In 1719, Hongsheng was designated an hereditary prince Heng of the First Rank (世子). Since 1721, Hongsheng guarded the imperial tombs Xiaoling, Zhaoling together with Hongzhi, Yunlu and Yunli. Hongsheng received an appointment in the imperial stables and supervised the affairs of the Bordered White Banner. In 1727, Hongsheng was stripped of his title because of negligence in meddling the official affairs and mistrust. Hongsheng's father was instructed to impose a strict treatment on him and dedicate time for his study. In 1735, Hongsheng was appointed as a commander of Artillery.
In 1739, Hongsheng and 6 other princes generation were embroiled in unsuccessful coup d'état initiated by Hongxi, the eldest son of the deposed crown prince Yinreng. The princes met at the Prince Zhuang Manor to discuss the plan to overthrow the Qianlong Emperor and transfer the throne to Hongxi. During the Mulan hunt, Hongsheng was the first prince to declare Hongxi an emperor. After the plan of fractionists was exposed by Hongpu, Hongsheng did not plead his innocence. He was perpetually imprisoned because of having been stripped of the title.
Hongsheng died in 1754 and was posthumously honoured as Prince Gongke of the Third Rank (恭恪贝勒, meaning "reverent and respectful").
Family
Consorts and issue
Primary consort of the Daigiya clan (嫡夫人戴佳氏)
Second primary consort, of the Tatara clan (继夫人他他拉氏)
Mistress, of the Ilari clan (妾伊拉里氏)
Second son
Mistress, of the Joogiya clan (妾兆佳氏)
Yongrui (永瑞; 1716–1789), first son
Mistress, of the Yang clan (妾杨氏)
Prince of the Fourth Rank Yongze (贝子永泽;1741-1810)
Family tree
References
Qing dynasty imperial princes
Prince Heng | [
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The Okmulgee Downtown Historic District is the original downtown area of Okmulgee, Oklahoma, roughly bounded by 4th Street, 8th Street, Okmulgee Avenue, and the Frisco tracks. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 17, 1992.
History
The district comprises 41 blocks, 9 of which were identified in a Phase I survey, and 32 in a Phase 2 survey, both conducted in 1990. The district includes 151 contributing structures, while many of the remaining 46 structures could be contributing if intrusive sheeting elements were to be removed. The buildings range from the Creek National Capitol, built in 1878, to the five- to eight-story buildings constructed during the late 1910s and the 1920s of the oil boom. The predominant architectural style of the district is Early Commercial, but some other represented styles are Renaissance Revival, Richardsonian Romanesque, Italian Renaissance Revival, Second Renaissance Revival, Spanish Colonial Revival, Neoclassical Revival, Beaux Arts, Italianate, and Art Deco. The district includes the predominantly African-American commercial area which built up on 5th & 6th Streets.
The Okmulgee Historic Preservation Commission was established in 1988 as part of that Historic Preservation Ordinance passed by the town's City Council to provide protection to the district. The Commission oversees architectural changes within the area.
At least one subsequent architectural survey has identified other districts and structures in Okmulgee which might qualify for historical listing, but no action has been taken.
References
Geography of Okmulgee County, Oklahoma
National Historic Landmarks in Oklahoma
National Register of Historic Places in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma
Buildings and structures completed in 1878
Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Oklahoma | [
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Hugo Ott (20 August 1931 – 22 January 2022) was a German historian and academic.
Biography
Ott earned a doctoral degree in 1959 with a thesis on the history of Saint Blaise Abbey in the Black Forest. From 1972 to 1997, he was chair of economic and social history at the University of Freiburg. In 1980, he wrote a biography of Hans Filbinger alongside and . He was a member of the scientific advisory board of the research center Forschungsstelle Widerstand gegen den Nationalsozialismus im deutschen Südwesten, headed by at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. He held discussions with pastor , who talked of the inequity within concentration camps between clergy and their fellow prisoners.
From 1952, Ott had been a member of and, since 1988, the of Cartellverband.
Ott died in Merzhausen on 22 January 2022, at the age of 90.
Works
Studien zur Geschichte des Klosters St. Blasien im hohen und späten Mittelalter (1963)
Die Vogtei über das Kloster St. Blasien seit dem Aussterben der Zähringer bis zum Übergang an das Haus Habsburg (1965)
Die Klostergrundherrschaft St. Blasien im Mittelalter. Beiträge zur Besitzgeschichte (1969)
Hans Filbinger. Der „Fall“ und die Fakten (1980)
Wirtschafts-Ploetz. Die Wirtschaftsgeschichte zum Nachschlagen (1985)
Martin Heidegger. Unterwegs zu seiner Biographie (1988)
Martin Heidegger: A Political Life (1994)
Annäherungen an Martin Heidegger. Festschrift für Hugo Ott zum 65. Geburtstag (1996)
Geschichte in Verantwortung. Festschrift für Hugo Ott zum 65. Geburtstag (1996)
Laubhüttenfest 1940 (2007)
References
1931 births
2022 deaths
German historians
German academics
Heidegger scholars
Historians of Nazism
Cartellverband members
University of Freiburg alumni
University of Freiburg faculty
People from Lauda-Königshofen | [
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Lenape canoes were dugout canoes of Lenapehoking. Tree trunks used were primarily of the American tulip tree (, "tree from which canoes are made”), and also of elm, white oak, chestnut or red cedar. Birch bark canoes were not used in the region.
Design
Most examples were vessels intended for inland or harbor waters, of different sizes: mahelo possibly denoted a larger type, and amochol a smaller type. Some larger canoes are depicted in early Dutch illustrations with prow and stern extensions, possibly for tying up with hemp dogbane, though these depictions may be inaccurate. Lenape canoes were related to the mishoon dugouts of southern New England. recorded a kind of double-hulled catamaran among Lenape at New Sweden capable of travelling to New England or Virginia.
Colonial interactions
Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524 and Henry Hudson in 1609 were both met in New York Bay by an assembly of about 30 Lenape canoes.
Both dugout and birch bark canoe designs were copied by European settlers for local use.
In the early 18th century, according to the testimony of Abraham Houpt, Robert Durham of Durham Furnace developed the Durham boat based on an indigenous design, originally meant to haul pig iron down Scotts Creek through the Delaware to Philadelphia, and most famously used in George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River in 1776.
Legacy
A preserved canoe in the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian was excavated from the Hackensack River by Frank Speck, and the institution also has a Lenape-attributed canoe paddle from Burlington County, New Jersey. The Bergen County Historical Society also claims to have an indigenous canoe from the Hackensack area. Another possibly indigenous canoe is in the American Museum of Natural History, excavated by New York Edison workers in 1906 from Manhattan's Cherry Street, though a later report describing its shape and repair with "rose-headed" hand wrought nails may exclude this. A dugout found at Wallenpaupack Creek in 1957 and on display at the Wallenpaupack Historical Society is likely too young to be of indigenous origin.
A 1996 Lenapehoking Festival pow wow at Sandy Hook in New Jersey included a canoe race starting at Red Bank's Oyster Point. Since 2002, the Lenape Nation of Pennsylvania has held the Rising Nation River Journey by canoe trip along the Delaware every four years, to commemorate the Treaty of Shackamaxon and to raise awareness for state recognition. The legacy of Lenape canoes is celebrated at the Whitehall Crossing, a 2005 permanent installation of stylized benches at the Staten Island Ferry Whitehall Terminal in New York City. A 2019 living history canoe ride by the Bronx River Alliance also commemorated this heritage.
References
Indigenous boats
Canoes
Lenape
Port of New York and New Jersey
Water transportation in New Jersey
Water transportation in New York City
Water transportation in New York (state)
Water transportation in Pennsylvania | [
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Gordon L. Rottman (born February 24, 1947) is an American author of mainly non-fiction, military history books.
Rottman joined the United States Army Special Forces in 1967 as a non-commissioned officer. He was initially trained as a weapons specialist and took part in the Vietnam War with the 5th Special Forces Group from 1969 to 1970. In 1974, he transferred to the Texas Army National Guard where he served as an operations sergeant. In 1986 he became a part-time reservist in the United States Army Reserve, where he developed training scenarios. He later continued this activity as a freelancer for the Joint Readiness Training Center at Fort Polk.
Rottman has been writing military history books since 1984, initially as a part-time job, mainly for Osprey Publishing. He resides in Texas. He has written over 130 books and novels.
References
1947 births
Living people
American writers | [
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The girls' 1500 metres speed skating competition of the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics was held at Hamar Olympic Hall on 15 February 2016.
Results
The races were held at 10:30.
References
Girls' 1500m | [
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Ana María Pechen de D'Angelo (born 19 June 1949) is an Argentine biochemist and former politician who served as Vice Governor of Neuquén Province from 2007 to 2015, under Governor Jorge Sapag. She also served as rector of the National University of Comahue (UNCo) from 2002 to 2006.
Early life and education
Born in Bahía Blanca, Buenos Aires, Pechen studied biochemistry at the Universidad Nacional del Sur, graduating with a licenciatura and later completing her PhD in the same university in 1976.
Career
She later became a professor at the UNCo, in Neuquén. In addition, she is a scholar at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council.
In the 2007 provincial elections, she was the running mate of Jorge Sapag in the Neuquén People's Movement (MPN) ticket to the governorship of Neuquén. The MPN ticket won 48.27% of the vote, and upon taking office on 10 December 2007, she became the first female vice governor of Neuquén. As vice governor, Pechen was the constitutionally-recognized president of the provincial legislature. Sapag and Pechen were re-elected in 2011 with 48.88% of the vote. Ahead of the 2013 legislative election, she unsuccessfully ran to be the MPN's senatorial candidate, ultimately losing to Guillermo Pereyra.
Following the end of her second term, Pechen retired from electoral politics and returned to her research positions. She currently works as a lavender producer.
References
External links
Profile at the website of the Legislature of Neuquén (archived)
1949 births
Living people
Argentine biochemists
Argentine women in politics
People from Bahía Blanca
Neuquén People's Movement politicians
Universidad Nacional del Sur alumni
Universidad Nacional del Sur faculty
National University of Comahue faculty
21st-century Argentine politicians
21st-century women politicians | [
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Aleksander Andresen (born 6 April 2005) is a Norwegian footballer who plays as a forward for Stabæk.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2005 births
Living people
People from Moss, Norway
Norwegian footballers
Norway youth international footballers
Association football forwards
Moss FK players
Stabæk Fotball players
Eliteserien players
Norwegian Second Division players
Norwegian Third Division players | [
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Jip Cornelis Willem Molenaar (born 15 November 2001) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a defender for Eerste Divisie club SC Telstar. He is the son of former professional footballer Keje Molenaar and brother-in-law of Juventus defender Matthijs de Ligt.
References
2001 births
Living people
Dutch footballers
People from Zaanstad
Footballers from North Holland
Association football defenders
FC Volendam players
Eintracht Frankfurt players
SC Telstar players
Eerste Divisie players
Tweede Divisie players | [
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The 2003 Sirius Satellite Radio at The Glen was the 22nd stock car race of the 2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series season and the 18th iteration of the event. The race was held on Sunday, August 10, 2003, before a crowd of 100,000 at the shortened layout of Watkins Glen International, a 2.454 miles (3.949 km) permanent road course. The race took the scheduled 90 laps to complete. At race's end, Robby Gordon of Richard Childress Racing would stretch out a fuel run in the last 39 laps of the race to win his third and final career NASCAR Winston Cup Series win and his second and final win of the season. To fill out the podium, Scott Pruett of Chip Ganassi Racing and Dale Earnhardt Jr. of Dale Earnhardt Jr. would finish second and third, respectively.
Background
Watkins Glen International (nicknamed "The Glen") is an automobile race track located in Watkins Glen, New York at the southern tip of Seneca Lake. It was long known around the world as the home of the Formula One United States Grand Prix, which it hosted for twenty consecutive years (1961–1980), but the site has been home to road racing of nearly every class, including the World Sportscar Championship, Trans-Am, Can-Am, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, the International Motor Sports Association and the IndyCar Series.
Initially, public roads in the village were used for the race course. In 1956 a permanent circuit for the race was built. In 1968 the race was extended to six hours, becoming the 6 Hours of Watkins Glen. The circuit's current layout has more or less been the same since 1971, although a chicane was installed at the uphill Esses in 1975 to slow cars through these corners, where there was a fatality during practice at the 1973 United States Grand Prix. The chicane was removed in 1985, but another chicane called the "Inner Loop" was installed in 1992 after J.D. McDuffie's fatal accident during the previous year's NASCAR Winston Cup event.
The circuit is known as the Mecca of North American road racing and is a very popular venue among fans and drivers. The facility is currently owned by International Speedway Corporation.
Entry list
Practice
First practice
The first practice session was held on Friday, August 8, at 11:00 AM EST, and would last for 2 hours. Dale Earnhardt Jr. of Dale Earnhardt, Inc. would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 1:10.981 and an average speed of .
Second practice
The second practice session was held on Saturday, August 9, at 9:30 AM EST, and would last for 45 minutes. Tony Stewart of Joe Gibbs Racing would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 1:12.050 and an average speed of .
Third and final practice
The third and final practice session, sometimes referred to as Happy Hour, was held on Saturday, August 9, at 11:10 AM EST, and would last for 45 minutes. Greg Biffle of Roush Racing would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 1:12.050 and an average speed of .
Qualifying
Qualifying was held on Friday, August 8, at 3:05 PM EST. Drivers would each have one lap to set a lap time. Positions 1-36 would be decided on time, while positions 37-43 would be based on provisionals. Six spots are awarded by the use of provisionals based on owner's points. The seventh is awarded to a past champion who has not otherwise qualified for the race. If no past champ needs the provisional, the next team in the owner points will be awarded a provisional.
Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports would win the pole, setting a time of 1:10.798 and an average speed of .
Four drivers would fail to qualify: Ken Schrader, Joe Varde, Scott Maxwell, and Larry Foyt.
Full qualifying results
Race results
References
2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
NASCAR races at Watkins Glen International
August 2003 sports events in the United States
2003 in sports in New York (state) | [
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William Marcus de la Poer Horsley-Beresford, 4th Baron Decies DL JP (12 January 1865 – 30 July 1910) was an Anglo-Irish aristocrat.
Early life
Beresford was born on 12 January 1865. He was the eldest of five sons born to William Horsley-Beresford, 3rd Baron Decies, a Captain in the 10th Hussars and Grenadier Guards, and Catherine Anne Dent, daughter of Commander William Dent. His paternal grandparents were John Horsley-Beresford, 2nd Baron Decies and the former Charlotte Philadelphia Horsley (only daughter and heiress of Robert Horsley of Bolam House).
He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford.
Career
Upon his father's death on 3 July 1893, he succeeded as the 4th Baron Decies. He served as Deputy Lieutenant of Northumberland and Justice of the Peace for Northumberland.
A "well-known and popular sportsman," he had an interest in hunting and "all outdoor sports." At the time of his death he had several horses in training with Pickering at Newmarket and with Maj. Morris at Wallingford.
Personal life
On 12 March 1901, Lord Decies was married to Maria Gertrude Willoughby at St Michael's Church in Chester Square (in the Belgravia district of West London). As Maria's father, Sir John Willoughby, 4th Baronet, had died in 1866, her brother, Maj. Sir John Willoughby, Bt of Jameson Raid fame, gave her away and William's groomsman was his brother, Capt. the Hon. John Graham Beresford, aide-de-camp to the Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught. She was known for her "remarkable collection of cats."
Lord Decies died, suddenly, on 30 July 1910, aged 45, at the Cottage Hospital in Hornsey, after having been "overcome by the oppressive heat" while attending the races at Alexandra Park. As he died without issue, he was succeeded in the barony by his younger brother, John.
References
1865 births
1910 deaths
19th-century Anglo-Irish people
20th-century Anglo-Irish people
Barons in the Peerage of Ireland
William
Deputy Lieutenants of Northumberland
People educated at Eton College
Alumni of Christ Church, Oxford | [
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The 2021–22 Oregon State Beavers women's basketball team represents Oregon State University during the 2021–22 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Beavers are led by twelfth-year head coach Scott Rueck and they play their games at Gill Coliseum as members of the Pac-12 Conference.
Roster
Schedule
|-
!colspan=9 style=| Non-conference regular season
{{CBB schedule entry
| date = December 17, 2021
| nonconf = yes
| time = 7:00pm
| tv = Live Stream
| neutral = yes
| opponent = Idaho
| gamename = Maui Jim Maui Classic Semifinals
| score = 79–49
| record = 6–3
| highscorer = Kampschroeder
| points = 16
| highrebounder = | rebounds = 7
| highassister = Adams
| assists = 7
| site_stadium = Lahaina Civic Center
| attend = 0
| site_cityst = Lahaina, HI
}}
|-
!colspan=9 style=| Pac-12 regular season
|-
!colspan=9 style=|Pac-12 Women's Tournament
Rankings*The preseason and week 1 polls were the same.^Coaches did not release a week 2 poll.''
See also
2021–22 Oregon State Beavers men's basketball team
Notes
References
Oregon State Beavers women's basketball seasons
Oregon State
Oregon State Beavers women's basketball
Oregon State Beavers women's basketball | [
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Runar Robinsønn Norheim (born 14 February 2005) is a Norwegian footballer who plays as a forward for Tromsø.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2005 births
Living people
Norwegian footballers
Norway youth international footballers
Association football forwards
Tromsø IL players
Norwegian First Division players
Eliteserien players
Norwegian Third Division players | [
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Martin Erhard Süskind was a German journalist and author.
Life
Süskind was born in Ambach at Starnberger See. His father was the journalist W. E. Süskind, his younger brother the writer Patrick Süskind.
Martin Süskind studied history in Munich and Edinburgh. He began his career as a journalist at United Press International (UPI). In 1971 he was one of the former employees of the German service of the UPI, who founded the German Dispatch Service (ddp). He then worked for the Süddeutsche Zeitung as a correspondent in Bonn. In 1975 he became a speechwriter for Willy Brandt. In 1979 he returned to the "Süddeutsche Zeitung" and later became its office manager in Bonn.
In 1992 he was awarded the Theodor Wolff Prize. From 1997 to 1999 he was editor-in-chief of the Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger, in the same position he led the Berliner Zeitung until 2001. Since 2001, Martin E. Süskind has worked as a freelance author and journalist. In 2002 he co-wrote a biography of Johannes Rau. In 2005 he worked with professional advice and as a co-author in the television series Kanzleramt.
References
German male journalists
20th-century German journalists
1944 births
2009 deaths
German male writers
News agency founders
Süddeutsche Zeitung | [
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Mera Maan Rakhna () is a Pakistani television family drama serial aired on TV One from 8 July 2020. It is produced by Rafiq Ahmed Chaudhry under RC Films. It stars Sania Saeed, Wahaj Ali and Maryam Fatima in lead roles.
Cast
Sania Saeed as Momina
Wahaj Ali as Mohid
Maryam Fatima as Muqaddas
Alyy Khan as Sajjad
Sukaina Khan as Amal
Saad Qureshi as Asad
Haris Waheed as Sheraaz
Sangeeta as Farida, Muqaddas's grandmother
Jia Ali as Samina
Saman Ansari as Fozia
Mojiz Hasan as Faris
Farhan Ally Agha
Tara Mahmood
Dania Anwar
Agha Sajjad
Shareef Baloch
Amir Shah
Ammara Saeed
Soundtrack
The OST is composed by Naved Nashad where as lyrics are penned down by Khalilullah Farooqui and Madiha Fasahat.
References
2020 Pakistani television series debuts
2020 Pakistani television series endings
External Links | [
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A beauty filter is a software effect applied to still photographs, or to video in real time, to enhance the physical attractiveness of the subject. Typical effects of such filters include smoothing skin texture and modifying the proportions of facial features, for example enlarging the eyes or narrowing the nose.
Filters may be included as a built-in feature of social media apps such as Instagram or Snapchat, or implemented through standalone applications such as Facetune.
Critics have raised concerns that the widespread use of such filters on social media may lead to negative body image, particularly among girls.
Background
The manipulation of photos to enhance attractiveness has long been possible using software such as Adobe Photoshop and, before that, analogue techniques such as airbrushing. However, such tools required considerable technical and artistic skill, and so their use was mostly limited to professional contexts, such as magazines or advertisements.
By contrast, filters work in an automated fashion through the use of complex algorithms, requiring little or no input from the user. This ease of use, in combination with the increase in processing power of smartphones, and the rise of social media and selfie culture, have led to photographic manipulation occurring on a much wider scale than ever before.
One of the earliest examples of a content-aware digital photographic filter is red-eye reduction.
Effects
Typical changes applied by beauty filters include:
Smoothing skin texture; minimizing fine lines and blemishes
Erasing under-eye bags
Erasing naso-labial lines ("laugh lines")
Application of virtual makeup, such as lipstick or eyeshadow
Slimming the face; erasing double chins
Enlarging the eyes
Whitening teeth
Narrowing the nose
Increasing fullness of the lips
Beauty filters most frequently target the face, though in some cases they may affect other body parts. For example, the app "Retouch Me" was reported to have a feature which allows users to superimpose visible abdominal muscles (a "six pack") onto photos featuring the subject's bare stomach.
Psychological effects
Some commentators have expressed concern that beauty filters may create unrealistic beauty standards, particularly among girls, and contribute to rates of body dysmorphic disorder. A correlation has been established between negative body image and the use of beautifying filters, though the direction of causation is unknown.
The inability to discern whether a particular image has been filtered is thought to exacerbate their negative psychological effects. Policymakers have advocated for social networks to disclose the use of filters; TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat all label filtered photos and videos with the name of the filter applied.
Cosmetic procedures
Filters have been implicated in greater demand for cosmetic surgery and injections. The term "Snapchat dysmorphia" was coined by cosmetic doctor Tijion Esho to describe patients who presented to plastic surgeons seeking procedures to mimic the effects of filters, such as a narrowed nose, enlarged eyes, fuller lips, and smoothed skin.
Instagram previously hosted a number of third-party filters which explicitly simulated the effects of cosmetic procedures, as well as a filter, "FixMe", which allowed users to annotate their face with areas for surgical improvement, as a plastic surgeon might do with a marker. After public controversy around these filters, Facebook banned them in October 2019, along with all "distortion" filters, which altered the proportions of the face. In August 2020, Facebook re-allowed distortion filters, but continued to ban filters which "directly promote cosmetic surgery". Facial distortion filters are also unlisted in the app's "Effects Gallery", which shows the most popular filters at the time.
Apps
Beauty filters are available as a built-in feature of many social media apps, most notably Instagram, Snapchat, and TikTok. In the case of Instagram and Snapchat, most filters are created by third-party developers rather than the app developers themselves. The video-conferencing app Zoom includes a "Touch-up My Appearance" filter which smooths blemishes and under-eye bags.
Beautifying effects may be bundled as part of other, more whimsical augmented reality filters, such as Instagram and Snapchat filters which give the user puppy ears or a flower crown.
Beauty filters may also be applied using standalone "beauty apps". One of the most popular such apps is Facetune. In 2017, Facetune was the most popular paid app on the Apple App Store. As of 2019, the paid app, and the free counterpart, Facetune2, had more than 55 million users between them. FaceApp is another image editing app which uses deep learning algorithms. Extreme use of the app's beauty filters was the subject of the "Yassification" Internet meme, in which photos are filtered to hyper-glamorour extremes to humorous effect.
Filters are most commonly applied to self-taken portraits ("selfies"). The close distance from which such photos are taken may create undesirable distortions, such as increasing the perceived size of the nose.
References
Photographic techniques
Social media
Digital media use and mental health | [
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Some national leaders, including heads of state and heads of government have tested positive for COVID-19 while in office.
Alexander Lukashenko, President of Belarus
Jair Bolsonaro, President of Brazil
Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
Emmanuel Macron, President of France
Alejandro Giammattei, President of Guatemala
Juan Orlando Hernandez, President of Honduras
Andrés Manuel López Obrador, President of Mexico
Prince Albert II of Monaco, Prince of Monaco
James Marape, Prime Minister of Papua New GuineaPNG
Imran Khan, Prime Minister of Pakistan
Andrzej Duda, President of Poland
Antonio Costa, Prime Minister of Portugal
Mikhail Mishustin, Prime Minister (head of government) of Russia.
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, President of Turkey
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine
Boris Johnson, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Australia, Canada, Jamaica, Grenada, The Bahamas, Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, Solomon Islands, St. Lucia, Beliza, St. Kitts and Nevis, Antigua and Barbuda, St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Donald Trump, President of the United States
References
Leaders
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Odessa Square (or Odeska Square; ) is one of the squares of Kyiv, Ukraine.
It is located in the neighborhood Teremky in the Holosiiv Raion of Kyiv.
It was named after big Ukrainian city port Odessa.
The square emerged in 1970s with name New (Нова), and in 1976 has received current name.
In fact Kyivan Odessa Square is a big crossroad and transport interchange spot on the way from Kyiv to Odessa, and via Kiltseva Road from south to west of the city, with a scarce public space.
References
Sources
Odessa Square on wek.kiev.ua (in Ukrainian)
Одеська площа // Вулиці Києва. Довідник / за ред. А. В. Кудрицького. — К. : «Українська енциклопедія» ім. М. П. Бажана, 1995. — С. 155. — ISBN 5-88500-070-0. (in Ukrainian)
Holosiivskyi District
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Lestidium australis is a species of fish. It is found in Eastern Australia.
References
Paralepididae
Marine fish of Western Australia
Taxa named by Hans Hsuan-Ching Ho
Taxa named by Ken Graham
Taxa named by Barry C. Russell
Fish described in 2020 | [
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Lestidium longilucifer is a species of fish. It is found in Western Australia and Taiwan.
References
Paralepididae
Marine fish of Western Australia
Taxa named by Hans Hsuan-Ching Ho
Taxa named by Ken Graham
Taxa named by Barry C. Russell
Fish described in 2020 | [
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The South Central Asian Gymnastics Championships is an artistic gymnastics competition held for gymnasts from Central and South Asian countries. It is governed by the Asian Gymnastics Union.
Participating nations
Bangladesh
Islamic Republic of Pakistan
Summary of championships
References
Gymnastics competitions
Gymnastics | [
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The lynching of F. W. Stewart occurred shortly after midnight on November 7, 1898, about a mile outside of Lacon, Illinois. Stewart had been accused of the assault of a miner's daughter in Toluca. About one hundred miners formed a mob and broke into the Marshall County jail to retrieve Stewart, who they hanged.
History
F. W. "George" Stewart was an African American from Toluca, Illinois, a mining town along the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway. Stewart had previously served a sentence in Peoria County for an 1896 burglary and had lived in Toluca for about four months following his release. The recent growth of Toluca stoked racial tensions; according to the Chicago Tribune, "many colored men were forced to leave town because feeling was running so high."
Mary O'Brien, the daughter of the pit boss of the Toluca mine, was allegedly assaulted on November 4, 1898. A man hit O'Brien in the head with a rock, but she was able to cry for help, scaring the assailant away. O'Brien was unable to provide a description of her assailant. A mob of about one hundred miners formed and were supposedly led to Stewart's residence by a bloodhound. Although Stewart succeeded in initially convincing the mob of his innocence, local police quietly arrested him for his own safety and held him in the Marshall County jail in the county seat of Lacon.
The mob of miners formed again the next morning and were dismayed that Stewart was in custody. In hopes of quelling the mob, the mayor and city marshal of Toluca procured a confession from Stewart. However, after they returned to town to relay the news, the mob set out for Lacon. They camped a mile east of town, and sent about fifty into town to retrieve Stewart.
The sheriff refused to turn Stewart over, so the miners used their mining implements to break down the door. They locked the sheriff in a side room and broke open Stewart's cell with a sledgehammer. A rope was placed around Stewart's neck, and then he was led back to the camp, where Stewart was hanged from a white oak tree. By the time the sheriff was able to escape and locate the camp, the mob had dispersed. It was ruled that Stewart's death came at the hand of "persons unknown" and the sheriff declined to press charges due to "public sentiment". Stewart was buried in the local potter's field.
See also
Pana riot
References
1898 in Illinois
1898 murders in the United States
Lynching deaths in Illinois
Marshall County, Illinois
Racially motivated violence against African Americans | [
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Lestidium rofeni is a species of fish. It is found in Taiwan and the Philippines.
Etymology
The fish is named in honor of Robert R. Rofen, a former research director of the George Vanderbilt Foundation at Stanford University.
References
Paralepididae
Taxa named by Hans Hsuan-Ching Ho
Taxa named by Ken Graham
Taxa named by Barry C. Russell
Fish described in 2020
Fish of Taiwan
Fish of the Philippines | [
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Gitty Daneshvari (born June 20th, 1978 in Los Angeles, California) is the author of multiple children’s and preteen books, including the School of Fear and The League of Unexceptional Children trilogies.
Life
Daneshvari was born in Los Angeles, California on June 20th, 1978 to an Iranian father and an American mother.
Growing up, Daneshvari developed into a very “chatty” child. She would constantly bombard her parents and sister with comments, questions, and general ramblings. Finally, when her chatterbox nature had evolved to the point where she had nobody to listen to anymore, she turned to writing down her thoughts. She wrote her first story when she was 9 on a typewriter, of which her sister quoted that it was "terrible". Undeterred, Daneshvari wrote short stories by hand in a notebook from the ages of 18 to 22. Daneshvari later gained a job in the film industry in her home city, but later quit her job at age 26-27 in order to pursue writing full-time.
Gitty's childhood ambitions included becoming an actress like Marilyn Monroe (which was thwarted due to stage fright) or becoming a lawyer in New York City.
Daneshvari suffered from multiple different phobias during her youth, including fears of spiders and alien abduction. These fears of hers later went on to become inspiration for her School of Fear series.
Becoming known as an average child, the kind who never made much of a mark academically, athletically, or socially, Gitty had some difficulty in her early school years.
In the fifth grade, Daneshvari was denied from her school’s Gifted and Talented program, one of only five students in her twenty five-person class to not gain admission to the program (two of which did not speak English as a first language). Daneshvari utilized this experience as influence for another one of her book series, The League of Unexceptional Children.
Daneshvari lives between Madrid, Spain and New York City. She also owns a French Bulldog named Marvin and previously owned an English Bulldog named Harriet.
Daneshvari has sold over 5 million books worldwide.
Bibliography
The Makedown (2009)
School of Fear (2009)
School of Fear: Class Is Not Dismissed! (2010)
School of Fear: The Final Exam (2011)
Monster High Ghoulfriends: Ghoulfriends Forever (2012)
Monster High Ghoulfriends: Ghoulfriends Just Want to Have Fun (2013)
Monster High Ghoulfriends: Who's That Ghoulfriend? (2013)
Monster High Ghoulfriends: Ghoulfriends Til The End (2014)
Monster High: Ghoulfriends the Ghoul-It-Yourself Book (2014)
The League of Unexceptional Children (2015)
The League of Unexceptional Children: Get Smart-ish (2016)
The League of Unexceptional Children: The Kids Who Knew Too Little (2017)
References | [
101,
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Ernst Schumacher (German Ernst Schumacher; September 12, 1921, Urspring, Bavaria - June 7, 2012, Schwerin, Brandenburg) - Deutsch theater expert, theater and literary critic. doctor philosophy (1965).
Biography
Ernst Schumacher was born in Bavaria in a poor peasant family. Thanks to the financial support of his uncle, a priest, in 1940 he graduated from the gymnasium in Kempten and in the same year he was drafted into the army.
In 1943, after being seriously wounded on the Eastern Front, Schumacher was demobilized and entered the University of Munich, where he studied germanistics and theater studies.
In the post-war years, Schumacher worked mainly as a journalist in Munich, published the anti-fascist magazine Ende und Anfang (Ende und Anfang); after joining the CPG in 1949 became a Bavarian correspondent East German "Deutsche Radio"; from 1954-1962 he was editor of the Munich newspaper "Deutsche Woche" (Die Deutsche Woche).
During the Third Reich, when the name of Bertolt Brecht in Germany remained in the memory of only a few, according to Ilya Fradkin, like some kind of oral legend, Schumacher nevertheless was able to get acquainted with his works of the 20s, and already in his student years, Brecht's work became the main topic of his research. By establishing personal contact with the playwright after his return to Germany and received from him the necessary materials, Schumacher wrote a dissertation on the topic "Dramaturgical Experiences of Bertolt Brecht, 1918-1933" (Die dramatischen Versuche Bertolt Brechts 1918—1933). However, in Munich, the topic of the dissertation did not arouse interest, and Schumacher in 1953 defended it at the University of Leipzig, from Hans Mayer, having received PhD. Published two years later, that dissertation laid the foundation for scientific Brecht studies.
In 1956 the KPD was banned in West Germany, and in 1962 Schumacher, fearing persecution, moved to the GDR. In 1965, he defended his doctoral thesis at the University of Leipzig on the topic “Drama and History. “The Life of Galileo” by B. Brecht and other plays” (Drama und Geschichte. B. Brechts “Leben des Galilei” und andere Stücke) and since 1966 was a professor at the Institute of Theater Studies at the University of Berlin named after Humboldt, where he taught performing arts theory. Since 1971, Schumacher was a member of the Academy of Arts of the GDR, President of the National Section of the International Association of Theater Critics, and since 1981 - honorary vice-president of the Association.
Awards and prizes
National Prize of the GDR in Science and Technology (1986).
Goethe Prize (1971)
Lessing Prize (1976)
Order of Merit to the Fatherland (Vaterländischer Verdienstorden, 1981)
Compositions
"Theater of time - the time of the theater" (Theater der Zeit — Zeit des Theaters, 1960)
"The case of Galileo. Drama of Science" (Der Fall Galilei. Das Drama der Wissenschaft, 1964)
Drama and History. “The Life of Galileo” by B. Brecht and other plays” (Drama und Geschichte. B. Brechts «Leben des Galilei» und andere Stücke, 1965)
"Brecht. Theater and Society in the 20th Century (1973)
"Critical articles on Brecht" (Brecht-Kritiken, 1976)
Brecht's Life in Word and Image (co-authored with Renata Schumacher, 1978)
"Life of Brecht" (Leben Brechts, 1984)
"My Brecht. Memoirs 1943-1956" (Mein Brecht. Erinnerungen 1943-56, 2006)
“The Bavarian communist in divided Germany. Notes by Brecht Researcher and Theater Critic in the GDR 1945-1991" (Ein bayerischer Kommunist im doppelten Deutschland. Aufzeichnungen des Brechtforschers und Theaterkritikers in der DDR 1945—1991, 2007)
"Who divided Germany?" (Wer hat Deutschland geteilt? 2008)
Literature
External links
Ernst Schumacher Wer hat Deutschland geteilt? — Ossietzky 7/2008
German press about books by Ernst Schumacher (abstract)
Schumacher, Ernst
Notes
1921 births
2012 deaths
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich alumni
Leipzig University alumni
Recipients of the Patriotic Order of Merit in silver
Recipients of the National Prize of East Germany
German theatre critics
German communists
Marxists
Bertolt Brecht
German people of World War II | [
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Mosrentgen (), known officially as Posolok zavoda Mosrentgen (), is a settlement in Mosrentgen Settlement, Novomoskovsky Administrative Okrug of the federal city of Moscow, Russia. Population:
References
Rural localities under jurisdiction of Moscow
Novomoskovsky Administrative Okrug | [
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For over a century, the bulldog mascot has been associated with Gardner-Webb University. Athletic marks, live bulldogs, and costumed versions of the mascot have represented Gardner-Webb on the field of play and within the community. The first reported use of the mascot for Gardner-Webb was in 1922.
Throughout the decades, the live bulldog mascots have carried names like Butch, Chins, Victor, Barney, Roebuck and Bo. The costumed mascots have been known as Mack, Mac and Lulu, while the trademarked Runnin’ Bulldog logo has been referred to by Mack and Mac.
In 2021, the university introduced the newest official live mascot, Bo, an English Bulldog. Bo makes appearances at home athletic events and campus and community activities.
Genealogy of Live Mascots at Gardner-Webb
Butch I (1944-1953)
The first live mascot was introduced during the transitional time of World War II (and the post-war years). The School was experiencing changes as well as it found a new name and focus; the name change from Boiling Springs College to Gardner-Webb was in honor of the former North Carolina Governor, O. Max Gardner and his wife Fay Webb Gardner.
Butch I was under the care of both football coach, Wayne Bradburn and College Dean, J.O. Terrell.
Butch II (1953-1955)
While a permanent replacement was being recruited to take over the collar from Butch I, Gerald Freeman, a football player at the school, offered his family bulldog to serve in the interim.
Chins (1955-1960)
Gardner-Webb is located in the small rural area of the southwestern Carolina town of Boiling Springs, N. C. Like many schools in communities of the like, local supporters engage in campus life; such was the case with Chins caretakers. Local dentist, H.S. Plaster and his wife, Ruth (a Gardner-Webb instructor) served as the mascot liaisons between the college and this live bulldog mascot.
Victor I (1960-1969) and Victor II (1969-1970)
Gardner-Webb alumnus, former clerk of court and postmaster for Boiling Springs, Horace C. “Bud” McSwain served as the caretaker for two bulldog mascots as Gardner-Webb prepared to transition to senior college status.
Barney (2010-2014)
The Gardner-Webb President, Dr. Frank Bonner and Student Development Vice President, Dr. Dee Hunt wanted to revive the live mascot program after 40 years without a four-legged runnin’ bulldog. Gardner-Webb registrar, Lou Ann Scates, offered family member, Barney, a young bulldog pup, to the university for the relaunch of the live mascot program.
Roebuck (2015-2021)
Mike Roebuck was a long-time university employee who worked in athletics and academic success; he passed away unexpectedly in 2015. The campus community choose to memorialize his name with the next live mascot. Brooke Greene and her family raised bulldogs, and they managed Roebuck’s appearances and engagements on behalf of Gardner-Webb.
Bo (2021-Present)
Bo was inaugurated as the eighth official live mascot at Gardner-Webb as a puppy on August 26, 2021. Bo became Gardner-Webb's first full-time mascot and stays on campus most weekdays and during home athletic events. Bo is also the first Gardner-Webb mascot to have a dedicated and active web and social presence. Campus and community groups are also able to request official appearances of Bo.
References
Gardner–Webb Runnin' Bulldogs
College mascots in the United States
Individual animals in the United States
Individual dogs | [
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John E. "Connie" Pleban was an ice hockey player and head coach who led Team USA to three medal finishes at international competitions.
Career
Pleban was a graduate of Eveleth High School in 1932 and continued his education at Eveleth Junior College. While there, Pleban was a member of the 1934 team that won an intercollegiate championship. After graduating, he became the player/coach for several teams and continued working in that capacity until 1942. After the United States entered World War II, Pleban entered the military and served until the end of the war.
In 1950, Pleban joined the US National Team as a player, coach and manager for the 1950 World Championships, and led the team to a silver medal. He retired as a player following the tournament but repeated the coaching feat two years later at the 1952 Winter Olympics. In 1955, Pleban was named head coach at Minnesota–Duluth and helped the program begin to transition to the top level of college hockey. He led the Bulldogs to the MIAC championship in each of his 4 years with the program, never losing a single conference game.
Pleban returned to Team USA in 1961 but couldn't get the defending Olympic gold medalists to find much success. Finishing with a 1–5–1 record, it was one of the program's poorest records, but Pleban was allowed to remain as coach and produced a far better result the following year. The US went 5–2 and ended up with the bronze medal. Afterwards, Pleban continued to work in the Duluth area, organizing amateur hockey throughout the 1960s and 70's.
He was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1990 and was the recipient of the Hobey Baker Legends of College Hockey Award in 1992.
Head coaching record
International
Note: GC = Games coached, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against
College
References
External links
1914 births
2001 deaths
American ice hockey coaches
Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs men's ice hockey coaches
Ice hockey people from Minnesota
People from Eveleth, Minnesota
Ice hockey coaches from Minnesota
American military personnel of World War II
Military personnel from Minnesota | [
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Feferman–Vaught theorem in model theory is a theorem by Solomon Feferman and Robert Lawson Vaught that shows how to reduce, in an algorithmic way, the first-order theory of a product of first-order structures to the first-order theory of elements of the structure.
The theorem is considered as one of the standard results in model theory.. The theorem extends the previous result of Andrzej Mostowski on direct products of theories.
It generalizes (to formulas with arbitrary quantifiers) the property in universal algebra that equalities (identities) carry over to direct products of algebraic structures (which is a consequence of one direction of Birkhoff's theorem).
Direct product of structures
Consider a first-order logic signature L.
The definition of product structures takes a family of L-structures for for some index set I and defines the product structure
, which is also an L-structure, with all functions and relations defined pointwise.
The definition generalizes direct product in universal algebra to relational first-order structures, which contain not only function symbols but also relation symbols.
If is a relation symbol with arguments in L and are elements of the cartesian product, we define the interpretation of in by
When is a functional relation, this definition reduces to the definition of direct product in universal algebra.
Statement of the theorem for direct products
For a first-order logic formula in signature 'L, with free variables, and for the interpretation of variables , we define the set of those indices for which holds in :
Given a first-order formula with free variables , there is an algorithm to compute its equivalent game normal form, which is a finite disjunction of mutually contradictory formulas.
Feferman-Vaught statement then gives an algorithm that takes a first-order formula and constructs a formula that reduces the condition that holds in the product to the condition that holds in the interpretation of sets of indices:
Formula is thus a formula with free set variables, for example, in the first-order theory of Boolean algebra of sets.
Proof idea
Formula can be constructed following the structure of the starting formula . When is quantifier free then, by definition of direct product above it follows
Consequently, we can take to be the equality in the language of boolean algebra of sets (equivalently, the field of sets).
Extending the condition to quantified formulas can be viewed as a form of quantifier elimination, where quantification over product elements in is reduced to quantification over subsets of .
Generalized products
It is often of interest to consider substructure of the direct product structure. If the restriction that defines product elements that belong to the substructure can be expressed as a condition on the sets of index elements, then the results can be generalized.
An example is the substructure of product elements that are constant at all but finitely many indices. Assume that the language L contains a constant symbol and consider the substructure containing only those product elements for which the set
is finite. The theorem then reduces the truth value in such substructure to a formula in the boolean algebra of sets, where certain sets are restricted to be finite.
One way to define generalized products is to consider those
substructures where the sets belong to some boolean algebra of sets of indices (a subset of the powerset set algebra ), and where the product substructure admits gluing. Here admitting gluing refers to the following closure condition: if are two product elements and is the element of the boolean algebra, then so is the element defined by "gluing" and according to :
Consequences
Feferman-Vaught theorem implies the decidability of Skolem arithmetic by viewing, via fundamental theorem of arithmetic, the structure natural numbers with multiplication as a generalized product (power) of Presburger arithmetic structures.
Model theory
References | [
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Ravi Shankar Menon (born 1964) is a Canadian-American biophysicist. He is a former Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging at the University of Western Ontario and director of the Centre for Functional and Metabolic Mapping at the Robarts Research Institute.
Early life and education
Menon was born in 1964 and lived in West Virgina, Virginia, Hawaii, Bombay and Maryland before graduating from University Hill Secondary School in Vancouver, British Columbia. He was born into an academic family as his mother was an electrical engineer and his father was an astronomer. Menon completed his entire post-secondary education in Canada. His Bachelor of Science degree was at the University of British Columbia, his Master of Science degree was at McGill University, and his PhD was at the University of Alberta. His thesis at the University of Alberta was conducted under the supervision of Peter S. Allen in 1990 and titled Some mechanisms of water proton NMR relaxation in model tissue systems. Following this, Menon completed his post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Minnesota where he was heavily involved in the development of a brain imaging technique called Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) with Seiji Ogawa and David W. Tank of Bell Labs and Menon's post-doctoral supervisor, Kamil Ugurbil. The aim of the technique was to measure changing blood flow and oxygenation to observe brain function.
Career
Following his post-doctoral fellowship, Menon joined the Robarts Research Institute to develop techniques to gather better images of the brain with MRIs through fMRI. By 2002, Menon was an associate professor in the Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine at the University of Western Ontario (UWO) and held a Canada Research Chair in Functional Neuroimaging. In these roles, Menon continued his research into fMRI and led a laboratory at the Robarts Research Institute. As a result of his research, Menon was named one of Canada's Top 20 researchers aged 40 and under in 2002. Following this, Menon was appointed a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Functional and Molecular Imaging in 2005. While working in this role, Menon was named a member of the steering committee that established the Canadian Action and Perception Network (CAPnet) between York University, Queen's University at Kingston, and UWO. The aim of the iniatiative was to "understand how the brain works, especially in human movement control and perception, and how disease and injury can disrupt these functions." In 2009, he was again recognized amongst the top 40 researchers under the age of 40.
Following the renewal of his Tier 1 Canada Research Chair, Menon collaborated with PhD candidate Matthew Quinn to discover if iron deposits in the brain are a cause or consequence of Multiple Sclerosis. They published a study in 2013 that suggested that iron deposits in deep gray matter occur very early on in the disease course. Based on this research, Menon then developed a new technique to track the progression of Multiple Sclerosis by measuring damage in specific areas of the brain called Quantitative Susceptibility Magnetic Resonance Imaging. His contributions to advancements in fMRI and ultra-high-field MRI were later recognized with an election of Fellowship to the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine and Canadian Academy of Health Sciences.
In July 2017, Menon was named Co-Scientific Director of BrainsCAN at UWO with Lisa Saksida. While working in his new role, Menon began to publish his research on concussions among young athletes who play ice hockey and rugby. In October 2017, he compared MRI brain scans from 17 Bantam-level hockey players who suffered a concussion compared to similarly aged non-concussed players. This subsequently raised concerns about the concussion protocols in youth hockey. Menon later revealed that there were significant structural and functional changes to the brain between concussed players and non-concussed. In 2019, Menon was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada for being a "pioneer in the use of MRI for structural and functional brain imaging."
References
External links
Living people
1964 births
Scientists from Vancouver
Canadian biophysicists
Canada Research Chairs
Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada
University of Alberta alumni
University of British Columbia alumni
McGill University alumni
University of Western Ontario faculty
Fellows of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences | [
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Hot Resort is a 1985 comedy film directed by John Robins and starring Bronson Pinchot, Dan Schneider, Marcy Walker and Samm-Art Williams. It was shot on St Kitts with an American cast and crew.
Plot
Several young American men go to St Kitts for a summer job at a resort hotel, hoping to earn money for college and meet women. They clash with a group of wealthy Ivy League rowers there to film a soup commercial.
Production
Hot Resort was filmed on an Arriflex 35BL camera and 35 mm film, on location at the Royal St Kitts Hotel, St Kitts.
Reception
The Blockbuster Video Guide to Movies and Videos described it as a "cold sophomoric comedy." Leonard Maltin rated Hot Resort a "bomb" and gave it a "D".
In the Radio Times, Keith Bailey gave it one star, saying "There's not much in the way of humour in this teen comedy […] Poor old Frank Gorshin wanders in and out of the virtually plotless story, while Bronson Pinchot shows none of the comic talent that would later make him famous."
References
External links
1985 comedy films
Films set in Saint Kitts and Nevis
Films shot in Saint Kitts and Nevis
Golan-Globus films
Films produced by Yoram Globus
Films produced by Menahem Golan
Films set in hotels | [
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Oleksandr Viktorovych Babor () is a retired Ukrainian professional footballer who played as a Defender.
Career
Oleksandr Babor, started his career in 1997 with Desna Chernihiv the main club of the city of Chernihiv. Here he played three seasons.In 2000 he moved to Ros Bila Tserkva where he managed to play 37 matches and scored 2 goals. In 2004 he moved to Desna Chernihiv where he won the Ukrainian Second League in the season 2005–06.He also played for Sokil Zolochiv, Dnipro Cherkasy and Mykolaiv. In 2009 he moved to Yednist-2 Plysky where he managed to win the Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship in 2009, 2010 and 2011, he also won the Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup in 2009 and 2010. In 2016 he moved to Frunzenets Nizhyn where he managed to win again the Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship and the Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup. After he played for Avanhard Koryukivka where he ended his career.
Honours
Frunzenets Nizhyn
Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship: 2016
Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup: 2016
Yednist-2 Plysky
Chernihiv Oblast Football Championship: 2009, 2010, 2011
Chernihiv Oblast Football Cup: 2009, 2010
Desna Chernihiv
Ukrainian Second League: 2005–06
References
1980 births
Living people
FC Desna Chernihiv players
FC Ros Bila Tserkva players
FC Sokil Zolochiv players
FC Dnipro Cherkasy players
MFC Mykolaiv players
FC Avanhard Koriukivka players
Ukrainian footballers
Ukrainian Premier League players
Ukrainian First League players
Ukrainian Second League players
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Victor Robert Dican (born 11 October 2000) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a Defensive midfielder for Liga I side FC Botoșani.
Club career
FC Botoșani
He made his league debut on 31 January 2022 in Liga I match against CFR Cluj.
References
External links
Victor Dican at lpf.ro
2000 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Râmnicu Vâlcea
Romanian footballers
Association football defenders
FC Universitatea Cluj players
FC Botoșani players
Liga I players
Liga II players
Liga III players
Romania youth international footballers | [
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Appenzeller may refer to either of two Swiss breeds of chicken:
The Appenzeller Barthuhn
The Appenzeller Spitzhauben | [
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XX Settembre is an urban zone of Rome, Italy, identified by the initials 1F.
It takes its name from the main road, Via Venti Settembre, established on 30 November 1871 and dedicated to the day in 1870 when Italian troops, led by General Raffaele Cadorna, entered Rome through a breach in the Aurelian Walls near Porta Pia.
References
Urban zones of Rome
Rome R. II Trevi
Rome R. XVI Ludovisi
Rome R. XVII Sallustiano
Rome R. XVIII Castro Pretorio | [
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Cyperus almensis is a species of sedge that is native to Brazil.
See also
List of Cyperus species
References
almensis
Plants described in 1993
Flora of Brazil | [
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Nolan M. Ellison is a former All-Big 8 basketball player and pioneering community college educator and administrator.
Early life
Nolen M. Ellison was born November 3, 1941, in Kansas City, Kansas. Ellison grew up in inner-city Kansas City, Kansas with his older brother Benoyd M. (Butch) Ellison. Ellison graduated from Wyandotte High School in 1959.
Basketball career
Ellison starred on 3 Kansas large class state championship teams (1957–1959) at Wyandotte High School under Coach Walter Shublom helping him to earn a basketball scholarship at the University of Kansas. Ellison was the first African-American player in the history of tradition-rich Wyandotte High School basketball.
Attending Kansas immediately after Kansas Jayhawks basketball African American pioneers Maurice King, Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Bridges, and Wayne Hightower, Ellison played three seasons at Kansas for Coach Dick Harp from the 1960-61 season through the 1962-63 season. Ellison earned All-Big 8 honors as the Jayhawks second leading scorer in both the 1961-1962 season and 1962-63 seasons, while serving as team captain his senior season.
Ellison's brother Butch, who attended Sumner High School and Kansas City Junior College also joined the Kansas Jayhawk basketball program and played during the 1960-61 season.
Upon graduation from the University of Kansas in 1963, Ellison was drafted in the 4th Round (29th overall) of the 1963 NBA draft by the Chicago Zephyrs (later relocated to Baltimore and then becoming the current day Washington Wizards).
Ellison declined the professional basketball opportunity with the Zephyrs, but later participated with a college all-star team in a 1964 Olympic basketball tour in Asia.
Academic career
Ellison graduated from the University of Kansas in 1963 with a Bachelor of Science in Education.
After starting his career as a student teacher in the Shawnee Heights USD 450 school district in Topeka, Kansas, Ellison taught and coached at Sumner High School in Kansas City, KS from 1963-1967.
During his tenure at Sumner, Ellison was the first African-American elected to the Kansas City Junior College Board of Trustees. While serving in the role of a trustee, Ellison met a representative of the Kellogg Foundation who convinced him that he could become a community college president. This Kellogg Foundation connection led to a post-graduate scholarship at Michigan State University that Ellison utilized to enter a graduate education program at Michigan State's campus in East Lansing in 1969.
Ellison earned his Ph.D. in Education/Leadership Management from Michigan State University in 1971. During his Ph.D. studies, Ellison served as Assistant to Michigan State University President Clifton R. Wharton Jr. from 1970-1971.
In the fall of 1971, Ellison was hired as Assistant to the Chancellor at Metropolitan Community College in Kansas City, MO for the 1971-1972 academic year.
After one year in Kansas City, Ellison returned in 1972 to Michigan State University as Dean of Students and Assistant Vice President of Student Affairs. Ellison was the first African-American to hold the Dean of Students position at Michigan State University
In 1972, at the age of 31, Ellison was hired as president of Seattle Central Community College. At the time he was the youngest CEO of a higher education institution in Washington and one of the youngest in the United States. Ellison held the position until 1974.
In 1974, Ellison was hired to be the second President and CEO in the history of the Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland, OH. At Cuyahoga Community College, Ellison was known as an educational innovator that pushed for the installation of computers on the campus. Ellison was also instrumental in the creation of the Tri-City Jazzfest Cleveland in 1980.
Ellison held this position until 1991.
In June 1992, Ellison was hired at the University of Missouri-Kansas City as the Endowed Chair - Missouri Schutte Professor of Urban Affairs in the Henry W. Bloch School of Management. Ellison held this position until 2001.
After retiring from UMKC, Ellison returned to Kansas City Kansas Community College in 2007 (retiring in 2009) in a consulting role while also serving as a trustee of the college for the second time. Ellison became the first KCKCC trustee to serve two non-conjoining terms on the board.
Honors
During his tenure as president of Seattle Central Community College, Ellison was named by the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce as one of its "10 Outstanding Young Men of the Year".
In 1981, Phi Delta Kappa awarded Ellison as one of the "75 Outstanding Educational Leaders in the United States".
In 1983, Ellison was awarded a distinguished service citation by the University of Kansas Alumni Association during its commencement exercises on May 14–15, 1983.
In 1984, the Black Professionals Association Charitable Foundation named Ellison as a "Black Professional of the Year".
In 2004, Cuyahoga Community College named a new building, the Nolen M. Ellison Building-Unified Technologies Center, on its campus after Ellison.
References
Living people
1941 births | [
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Paulnita Marais (born 27 September) is a South African politician who has been a member of the National Assembly of South Africa since January 2022, representing the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party. She is a former Metro Councillor of the Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality.
Biography
Marais was born in Cape Town on 27 September. She studied at the University of Cape Town. She was the manager of VeriCred Credit Bureau -Pty Ltd. Marais was married to the late ANC senator who later became an Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) member, Anthony Tony Marais. Anthony died in January 2019 in Heidedal, Bloemfontein where he had lived with Paulnita and their children.
In 2016, Marais was elected as an EFF councillor of the Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality. She served as leader of the EFF caucus in the metro during her tenure as a councillor. In January 2020, Marais said that the metro's members of the mayoral committee (MMCs) should be held accountable for the metro's problems. Marais accused the ANC's mayoral candidate Mxolisi Siyonzana of being part of divisions in the ANC caucus in August 2021.
On 26 January 2022, Marais was sworn in as a Member of the National Assembly of South Africa.
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
People from Cape Town
Coloured South African people
Members of the National Assembly of South Africa
Economic Freedom Fighters politicians
21st-century South African women politicians
Living people | [
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Virani Noordin (date of birth not known) is a Ugandan former first-class cricketer.
Noordin was born in Uganda Protectorate. A figure in Ugandan cricket since the 1960s, when he was considered the most prolific batsman in the country, Noordin made a single appearance in first-class cricket for the East Africa cricket team against the touring Indians at Kampala in 1967. Opening the batting twice in the match, he was dismissed for 20 runs in the East African first innings by Sadanand Mohol, while in their second innings he was dismissed for the same score by Venkataraman Subramanya.
References
External links
Date of birth unknown
Possibly living people
Ugandan people of Indian descent
Ugandan cricketers
East African cricketers | [
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2022 FC Tucson season is the twelfth season in the soccer team's history and their fourth in USL League One.
Players and staff
Current roster
Coaching staff
Front Office Staff
Competitions
Friendlies
All times from this point on Mountain Standard Time (UTC-07:00)
USL League One
Standings
Results summary
Match results
U.S. Open Cup
As a member of the USL League One, FC Tucson will enter the tournament proper in the Second Round. This will be their first appearance in the Open Cup since 2018.
References
FC Tucson
FC Tucson
FC Tucson
FC Tucson
FC Tucson seasons
FC Tucson | [
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