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Minor league baseball teams were based in Monmouth, Illinois in various seasons between 1889 and 1913. Monmouth teams played as members of the Central Interstate League in 1889, Illinois-Iowa League in 1890, Illinois-Missouri League from 1908 to 1909 and Central Association from 1910 to 1913.
History
Semi–pro and amateur baseball was popular in Monmouth, with early baseball teams playing in various leagues. In 1888, the Monmouth Athletic Association was incorporated and designed to support local baseball efforts.
Mommouth first hosted minor league baseball in 1889. Monmouth fielded a team in the 1889 Central Interstate League, consisting of Indiana, Illinois and Iowa teams. The league featured the Burlington Babies, Davenport Hawkeyes, Evansville Hoosiers, Peoria Canaries, Quincy Black Birds and Springfield Senators, who joined Monmouth in the eight–team league. The standings and statistics for 1889 are unknown,
In 1890 the Monmouth Maple Cities joined the new Illinois-Iowa League as a charter member. Monmouth began play along with the Aurora Hoodoos, Cedar Rapids Blackbirds, Dubuque Giants, Joliet Convicts, Ottawa Pirates, Ottumwa Coal Palaces and Sterling Blue Coats. The league did not allow Sunday games. Monmouth placed 2nd with a 64–48 record in 1890, finishing 4.5 games behind 1st place Ottumwa, playing under manager John Halpin. The Monmouth franchise folded from the league after the 1890 season and were replaced in the eight–team league by the Quincy Ravens in 1891.
In 1908, the Monmouth Browns were founded. The Browns joined the newly formed Class D level Illinois-Missouri League as charter members. Monmouth Mayor John S. Brown was instrumental in the forming of the Illinois–Missouri League and the Monmouth use of the "Browns" team moniker was in tribute to John Brown.
The Monmouth Browns finished with a 55–62 record to place 5th in the 1908 Illinois-Missouri League. The Browns were managed by Robert Hyde and Charles Karnell. Other charter members of the 1908 six–team league were the Canton Chinks (56–61), Galesburg Hornets (50–67), Hannibal Cannibals (68–49), Havana Perfectors (58–61) and Macomb Potters (66–53). Mommouth finished 13.0 games behind Hannibal in the final standings.
The Monmouth Browns captured the 1909 Illinois-Missouri League Championship. On September 19, 1909, Browns pitcher Notley Jones threw a no–hitter in a 2–0 victory over the Galesburg Boosters. Managed by Jack Corbett, the Monmouth Browns placed 1st in the Illinois-Missouri League with a 77–50 record in the six–team league. The Browns finished 1.0 game ahead of the 2nd place Beardstown Infants as the league had no playoffs following the regular seasons. Monmouth drew 23,000 for the season, 362 per game.
In 1910, the Monmouth Browns Monmouth left the Illinois–Missouri League after winning the championship and joined the eight–team Central Association. Monmouth finished with a record of 62–72, placing 6th in 1910, playing alongside the Burlington Pathfinders (56–81), Galesburg Pavers (69–67), Hannibal Cannibals (77–60), Keokuk Indians (67–70), Kewanee Boilermakers (49–91), Ottumwa Packers (80–57) and Quincy Vets (88–50). Monmouth was managed by Lew Drill in 1910 and finished 24.0 games behind Quincy. Season attendance for the Monmouth Browns was 25,000.
Monmouth finished with a 59–69 record to place 6th in the 1911 Central Association. The Browns were managed by Claude Stark and finished 28.0 games behind the Ottumwa Speedboys. In 1912, the Monmouth Browns finished with a 71–55 record, placing 4th under managers Bert Hough, Jack Corbett and R.L. Noven. Finishing 6.5 games behind the 1st place Ottumwa Speedboys in the Central Association standings, Monmouth drew 18,000 fans in 1912, an average of 286 per game.
In their final season, the 1913 Monmouth Browns finished in 3rd place in the eight–team Central Association. Monmouth ended the season with a 64–62 record, playing under manager Bert Hough. The Browns finished 8.0 games behind the 1st place Ottumwa Packers. The Monmouth franchise permanently folded after the 1913 season.
Minor league baseball has not returned to Monmouth, Illinois.
The ballpark
The Monmouth Browns were noted to have played minor league home games at 11th Street Park from 1908 to 1913. The ballpark was built by the city of Monmouth in 1907, spearheaded by Mayor John S. Brown. The ballpark was located in the 700 block of 11th Street, along the rail line. Today, the site houses the Birchwoood Apartments.
Timeline
Year-by-Year Record
Notable alumni
Dad Clark (1910)
Fritz Clausen (1890)
Bill Collins (1890)
Gus Creely (1890)
Billy Crowell (1890)
Lew Drill (1910, MGR)
Charlie Gessner (1889)
Irv Higginbotham (1910)
Bert Inks (1890)
Bumpus Jones (1890)
Lou Lowdermilk (1908)
Moxie Meixell (1909)
Gene Moriarty (1890)
Dutch Schliebner (1913)
Hosea Siner (1908–1910)
Gus Williams (1909–1910)
Bill Zies (1890)
See also
Monmouth Browns playersMonmouth (minor league baseball) players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Monmouth, Illinois
Warren County, Illinois | [
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Khairil Anwar (born 21 August 1997) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Liga 1 club Persiraja Banda Aceh.
Club career
Persiraja Banda Aceh
He was signed for Persiraja Banda Aceh to played in the Liga 1 on 2021 season. Anwar made his league debut on 16 January 2022 in a match against Persipura Jayapura at the Kompyang Sujana Stadium, Denpasar.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
Khairil Anwar at Soccerway
Khairil Anwar at Liga Indonesia
1997 births
Living people
Indonesian footballers
Persiraja Banda Aceh players
Association football midfielders | [
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Let Women Alone is a 1925 American silent comedy film directed by Paul Powell and starring Pat O'Malley, Wanda Hawley and Wallace Beery.
Synopsis
After her husband is reportedly drowned at sea, his wife supports herself and their child by setting up a small interior decorating shop. She falls in love with Tom Benham, an insurance agent but her uncle a Commodore opposes the match and tries to thwart her business. Things take a dramatic shift when her husband reappears alive and involved with a racket smuggling Chinese illegal immigrants into America. He kidnaps her and the commodore and Tom give chase and rescue her.
Cast
Pat O'Malley as Tom Benham
Wanda Hawley as Beth Wylie
Wallace Beery as Cap Bullwinkle
Ethel Wales as Ma Benham
J. Farrell MacDonald as Commodore John Gordon
Harris Gordon as Jim Wylie
Betty Jane Snowdon as Jean Wylie
Lee Willard as Alec Morrison
Marjorie Morton as Isabel Morrison
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1925 films
1925 comedy films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American comedy films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Paul Powell (director)
Producers Distributing Corporation films | [
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In fractal geometry, the open set condition (OSC) is a commonly imposed condition on self-similar fractals. In some sense, the condition imposes restrictions on the overlap in a fractal construction. Specifically, given an iterated function system of contractive mappings ψi, the open set condition requires that there exists a nonempty, open set V satisfying two conditions:
Each is pairwise disjoint.
Introduced in 1946 by P.A.P Moran, the open set condition is used to compute the dimensions of certain self-similar fractals, notably the Sierpinski Gasket. It is also used to simplify computation of the packing measure.
An equivalent statement of the open set condition is to require that the s-dimensional Hausdorff measure of the set is greater than zero.
Computing Hausdorff dimension
When the open set condition holds and each ψi is a similitude (that is, a composition of an isometry and a dilation around some point), then the unique fixed point of ψ is a set whose Hausdorff dimension is the unique solution for s of the following:
where ri is the magnitude of the dilation of the similitude.
With this theorem, the Hausdorff dimension of the Sierpinski gasket can be calculated. Consider three non-collinear points a1, a2, a3 in the plane R2 and let ψi be the dilation of ratio 1/2 around ai. The unique non-empty fixed point of the corresponding mapping ψ is a Sierpinski gasket, and the dimension s is the unique solution of
Taking natural logarithms of both sides of the above equation, we can solve for s, that is: s = ln(3)/ln(2). The Sierpinski gasket is self-similar and satisfies the OSC.
Strong open set condition
The strong open set condition (SOSC) is an extension of the open set condition. A fractal F satisfies the SOSC if, in addition to satisfying the OSC, the intersection between F and the open set V is nonempty. The two conditions are equivalent for self-similar and self-conformal sets, but not for certain classes of other sets, such as function systems with infinite mappings and in non-euclidean metric spaces. In these cases, SOCS is indeed a stronger condition.
See also
Cantor set
List of fractals by Hausdorff dimension
Minkowski–Bouligand dimension
Packing dimension
References
Fractals
Iterated function system fractals | [
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USS Hitchiti (ATF-103) was during the World War II, Korea and Vietnam. The ship was later sold to Mexico as ARM Chac (R-55). Her namesake is a tribe of Creek Indians who lived in Florida and Georgia. The word "Hitchiti" means "to look up the stream."
Design and description
The ship is displaced at standard load and at deep load The ships measured long overall with a beam of . They had a draft of . The ships' complement consisted of 85 officers and ratings.
The ships had two General Motors 12-278A diesel engines, one shaft. The engines produced a total of and gave a maximum speed of . They carried a maximum of of fuel oil that gave them a range of at .
The Abnaki class was armed with a 3"/50 caliber gun anti-aircraft gun, two single-mount Oerlikon 20 mm cannon and two twin-gun mounts for Bofors 40 mm gun.
Construction and career
The ship was built at the Charleston Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. at Charleston, South Carolina. She was laid down on 24 August 1943 and launched on 29 January 1944. The ship was commissioned on 27 May 1944, with Lt. H.A. Guthrie in command.
Service in the United States Navy
1944–1948
After shakedown in the Chesapeake Bay area, the fleet tug sailed for the Pacific, reaching Pearl Harbor with four tows 26 August 1944. Hitchiti was engaged in towing operations at Eniwetok and Ulithi until October, when she joined the supnort unit off the Philippine Islands during the momentous Battle of Leyte Gulf. She returned to Ulithi for further towing operations until 29 December when she joined the 3rd Fleet for the seizure of Luzon. Work off Okinawa alternated with operations in the Philippines that summer, and as the war ended, Hitchiti remained in the Pacific for salvage and towing operations.
In 1946, she performed harbor duty in Japanese waters as well as at various Pacific island bases, returning to the United States in September for overhaul at Bremerton. After further harbor work at Pearl Harbor and Kwajalein, Hitchiti reached San Francisco on 26 December 1947 and decommissioned there 30 April 1948.
1948–1956
Recommissioned at Alameda, California on 3 January 1951, amid the Korean War. Hitchiti joined the fleet in Jananese waters on 21 April to participate in operations off the Korean coast. Escort duties alternated with salvage operations along the war-torn peninsula until she returned to Pearl Harbor on 5 February 1952.
Hitchiti participated in towing and salvage work at Pearl Harbor and along the California coast until sailing for Alaskan waters on 23 March 1954. Her 7-month tour in the north was followed by further duty in Hawaii and off the West Coast until she returned for a brief tour in September 1955.
Hitchiti sailed for Sasebo, Japan on 22 May 1956, to begin her first Western Pacific cruise. This and six subsequent cruises took her to Hong Kong, Guam, Okinawa, and the Philippines for towing and salvage as well as tactical training.
1956–1967
Hitchiti's Western Pacific deployments, interspersed with duty at Pearl Harbor and off the California coast, were varied by visits to Mexico in 1959 and 1961 as well as a third cruise to Alaskan waters from 21 October 1960 until 14 January 1961. From 19 September to 14 November 1962, the veteran fleet tug participated in U.S. nuclear testing at Johnston Island in the Pacific. All of 1963 was spent serving the fleet in Hawaiian waters. On 26 October, Hitchiti freed Hai Fu off Honolulu after the Chinese merchant ship had grounded.
Hitchiti joined the 7th Fleet on 18 May 1964 and operated off Vietnam, during the Vietnam War. She once again returned to Pearl Harbor on 7 October for a brief refitting. From 25 January 1965 to 23 March, Hitchiti made a birdlife study on South Pacific islands for the Smithsonian Institute. She once again joined the 7th Fleet off Vietnam 25 October and operated in the war zone until 12 April 1966. Hitchiti arrived back at Pearl Harbor on 27 April having 9,000 miles of towing and four salvage operations to her credit during the deployment. She then operated in Hawaiian waters into 1967.
She was finally stricken on 30 September 1979.
Service in the Mexican Navy
The SEMAR highlighted that the ARM Cora (ARE-04) was acquired from the United States on September 1, 1976, under the Security Assistance Program to Mexico, and was discharged in the Mexican Navy on September 30, 1978, being flagged in the then Second Naval Zone based in Ensenada, BC. During the period from February 1, 1994, to May 16, 2001, it had the name Chac (R-55), later changing its name to the current name.
On 6 November 2001, by Secretarial Agreement and in accordance with the "Guidelines and Regulations for the Classification, Classification and Assignment of Names and Numbers of the Ships of the Mexican Navy", the unit was classified as Auxiliary Vessel, type: tug., with official name: Navy Republic of Mexico Cora (ARE-04).
On 16 May 2004, the ship was attached to the Flotilla of Auxiliary Ships of the Pacific Naval Force in Manzanillo, Colima.
On 16 July 2007, she was assigned to the 6th Naval Region, with the same headquarters, by instructions of the C. Admiral Secretary of the Navy, and by 1 July 2008, when the 8th Flotilla was created, in the same port and dependent on the 6th Naval Region, according to Secretarial Agreement Number 97 dated 17 June 2008, this unit was attached to this flotilla.
Awards
The ship has a total of 8 battle stars throughout her career.
Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation (2 awards)
American Campaign Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal (2 battle stars)
World War II Victory Medal
Navy Occupation Service Medal (with Asia Clasp)
National Defense Service Medal (2 awards)
Korean Service Medal (3 battle stars)
Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal
Vietnam Service Medal (3 battle stars)
Philippines Liberation Medal (1 award)
United Nations Service Medal
Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal
Republic of Korea War Service Medal (retroactive)
References
External links
NavSource Online: USS Hitchiti (ATF-103)
Hull Number : ATF-103 DEPLOYMENTS - MAJOR EVENTS
USS Hitchiti (ATF 103) Crew List
Hitchiti
Ships built in Charleston, South Carolina
1944 ships
World War II auxiliary ships of the United States
Cold War auxiliary ships of the United States
Korean War auxiliary ships of the United States
Vietnam War auxiliary ships of the United States
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Ottawa, Illinois in various seasons between 1890 and 1915. Ottawa minor league teams played as members of the Illinois-Iowa League in 1890 to 1891, Illinois-Missouri League in 1914 and the Bi-State League in 1915.
History
Minor league baseball began with the 1890 Ottawa Pirates, who played as charter members of the eight–team Illinois-Iowa League, an Independent league. Ottawa ended the 1890 season with a record of 58–50, placing 4th in the Illinois–Iowa League, while playing under managers James Hillery, William Sinon and Bert Merrifield. The Pirates finished 8.5 games behind the 1st place Ottumwa Coal Palace Kings in the final standings.
The Ottawa Modocs continued play in the eight–team 1891 Illinois–Iowa League League. The Modocs ended the 1891 season with a record of 53–49, placing 4th in the Illinois–Iowa League standings under manager Jack Remsen, 13.0 games behind 1st place Quincy. However, the Ottumwa Coal Palaces, Cedar Rapids Canaries, Davenport Pilgrims and Aurora Maroons franchises all folded before the season concluded, leaving the league with just four teams. The Quincy Ravens (65–35), Joliet Giants (62–48) and Rockford Hustlers (54–46) finished ahead of the Modocs in the final standings. The Ottawa franchisee did not return to the 1892 Illinois-Iowa League.
After a hiatus, minor league baseball returned to Ottawa in 1914. The Ottawa Indians became members of the six–team Class D level Illinois–Missouri League. The Indians finished the 1914 season with a record of 47–38, placing 2nd in the Illinois–Missouri League, 13.0 games behind the 1st place Champaign Velvets. Chuck Fleming served as manager. Ottawa finished in the final standings with Champaign-Urbana Velvets (62–27), Streator Boosters (40–48) and LaSalle Blue Sox (26–60). The Kankakee Kanks (14–33) and Lincoln Abes (32–15) both folded from the league on July 3, 1914, and the Illinois-Missouri League permanently folded after the 1914 season.
The Ottawa Indians continued play in a new league in 1915 and were the final Ottawa minor league team. Ottawa became charter members of the 1915 the Bi-State League, which formed as a Class D level league. The league permanently folded on July 7, 1915, during its first season of play. Ottawa ended the 1915 season with a record of 20–35 and were 6th in the Bi–State League standings when the league folded. Louis Ehrgott served as manager, as Ottawa finished in the standings with the Aurora Foxes (25–27), Elgin Watch Makers (27–26), Freeport Pretzels (23–29), Racine Belles (30–20) and Streator Boosters (30–18). The Bi-State League folded after the 1915 season.
Ottawa, Illinois has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
Ottawa teams were noted to have played minor league home games at Lincoln–Douglas Park. The ballpark was named for Ottawa being the site of the first of the 1858 Lincoln–Douglas debates at what was known as Washington Square Park. Washington Park is on the National Register of Historic Places. Today, the site has historical markers and is located at East 600 Utica Drive, Ottawa, Illinois.
Timeline
Year-by-year records
Notable alumni
Fritz Clausen (1890)
Bill Geiss (1890–1891)
Charlie Gray (1890)
Frank Hankinson (1891)
Charlie Jaeger (1914)
Ed Keas (1891)
Henry Killeen (1891)
George Lyons (baseball) (1914–1915)
Jack Remsen (1891, MGR)
Joe Wright (baseball) (1890)
See also
Ottawa Indians playersOttawa Modocs players
References
External links
Baseball Reference BullpenBaseball Reference
Ottawa, Illinois
LaSalle County, Illinois | [
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Several ships have been named Achilles for Achilles:
was a merchant vessel launched at Sunderland in 1781. She traded widely, particularly to the West Indies. She made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC). She was also the victor in 1799 in a sanguinary single-ship action against a French privateer. She herself fell victim in 1801 to a French privateer.
was launched in 1813 at Shields. She sailed from Shields to London and then operated for some years as a transport. She then traded more generally. In 1820 new owners moved her to Dundee. She became a whaler in the British northern whale fishery until she was lost there in 1830.
See also
– any one of six vessels of the British Royal Navy
– any one of four vessels of the British Royal Navy
Ship names | [
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2195,
3719,
2031,
2042,
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Viktor Andriyovich Slauta (born 2 January 1952) is a Ukrainian politician who was Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food in 2004 and 2010.
References
Living people
1952 births
Agriculture ministers of Ukraine
21st-century Ukrainian politicians
Vice Prime Ministers of Ukraine
Fifth convocation members of the Verkhovna Rada
Sixth convocation members of the Verkhovna Rada | [
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7677,
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1037,
5969,
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KBR Development was an American professional stock car racing team that last competed in the ARCA Menards Series. The team, founded by Mike Bursley in 2018, last fielded the No. 28 Chevrolet SS part-time for David Gravel. Veteran ARCA driver Frank Kimmel served as the team's general manager. KBR Development had a technical alliance with GMS Racing.
ARCA Menards Series
Car No. 35/28 history
2018
In 2018, the team would make their debut at Toledo Speedway, with Carson Hocevar driving the No. 35 for the team. Hocevar would finish 11th.
2019
On January 11, 2019, the team announced that they had entered a technical alliance with GMS Racing, with equipment bought from MDM Motorsports. Carson Hocevar would drive 11 races for the team, with Brandon McReynolds driving mostly big tracks for the team.
2020
The team would plan to make their second full-time season in 2020, with the team relocating to Statesville, North Carolina and becoming a satellite team of GMS Racing.
On January 10, 2020, the team would announce that dirt racer David Gravel would make his stock car debut for the team, driving the No. 28 at the 2020 Lucas Oil 200.
On January 27, 2020, Venturini Motorsports accused that former employees, Frank Kimmel and Griffin Rider, both who were now employees at KBR Development, had stole information from the team. Venturini Motorsports had said that in security camera footage, Rider had carried the crew chief's computer into an unknown hauler, had spent approximately 11 minutes with the computer, and returned it, with Rider allegedly stealing information with a USB flash drive. In addition, Venturini Motorsports testified that Kimmel took pictures of Venturini Motorsports' cars.
On May 9, 2020, the team would announce on its website that the team had ceased operations in a statement from Mike Bursley.
Car No. 35/28 results
(key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.)
References
External links
NASCAR teams
American auto racing teams | [
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2019,
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Ooencyrtus kuvanae is a species of chalcid wasp. It was introduced to North America in 1908 to control the gypsy moth. In North America, is has become an active parasitoid of the invasive spotted lanternfly.
References
Encyrtidae
Insects described in 1910 | [
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1051,
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The 2021–22 season is the 117th season in the existence of AJ Auxerre and the club's 10th consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Auxerre are participating in this season's edition of the Coupe de France.
Players
First-team squad
Out on loan
Transfers
In
Out
Pre-season and friendlies
Competitions
Overall record
Ligue 2
League table
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
The league fixtures were announced on 25 June 2021.
Coupe de France
References
AJ Auxerre seasons
Auxerre | [
101,
1996,
25682,
1516,
2570,
2161,
2003,
1996,
12567,
2705,
2161,
1999,
1996,
4598,
1997,
19128,
19554,
28849,
1998,
1996,
2252,
1005,
1055,
6049,
5486,
2161,
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2407,
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St Andrew's Academy may refer to:
St Andrew's Academy, North Ayrshire, school in Saltcoats, Scotland from 1971 to 2007, replaced by St Matthew's Academy
St Andrew's Academy, Paisley, school in Renfrewshire, Scotland since 1990
See also
St. Andrew's School (disambiguation) | [
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The 22nd season of the Top Chess Engine Championship began on 28 January 2022. The defending champion is Stockfish, which defeated Leela Chess Zero in the TCEC Season 21 superfinal.
Overview
Most of the rules of the TCEC remained unchanged for this season, but the infrafinal is now officially scheduled to occur after the end of Premier Division and before the Superfinal. The NNUE uniqueness guideline is also removed.
Results
Leagues
Qualification League
Several new engines participated in the Qualification League: Bit-Genie, BlackMarlin, Mantissa, Velvet, and Zahak all played for the first time. Former Premier Division engine Chiron also participated for the first time since TCEC Season 19. 4 of the 14 engines advanced to League 4. In its second season, Berserk won the division. Newcomer Bit-Genie, which still uses a handcrafted evaluation function, came second. Returning Chiron finished third, and the newcomer Zahak, which uses a neural network for its eval, finished a solid fourth. The lower promotion places were keenly contested, with two engines missing out despite scoring 59.62%.
<onlyinclude>
League 4
The first-place finisher in QL and rating favorite, Berserk, won the league with +16 =6 -0. Weiss finished second, with one loss, while newcomer and QL runner-up Bit-Genie took third. Drofa was the last engine to promote. The lower promotion places were keenly contested, with Chiron and Zahak, the other two engines that were promoted from QL, missing out by half a point and one point respectively.
At the other end of the table, 3 of the four engines that failed to be promoted or relegated in TCEC season 21, Monolith, Cheng, and Amoeba, were relegated this season. The final engine to be relegated was Nirvana, who along with Drofa was reprieved from relegation last season, due to engines in the upper leagues being removed from this season for not working on the new hardware, for crashing a lot, or for no longer being in active development.
<onlyinclude>
References
Top Chess Engine Championship
2022 in chess
TCEC | [
101,
1996,
13816,
2161,
1997,
1996,
2327,
7433,
3194,
2528,
2211,
2006,
2654,
2254,
16798,
2475,
1012,
1996,
6984,
3410,
2003,
4518,
7529,
1010,
2029,
3249,
3389,
2721,
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The Cabinet Strauss II (German: Kabinett Strauß II) was the state government of the German state of Bavaria from 27 October 1982 to 30 October 1986. The Cabinet was headed by Minister President Franz Josef Strauss and was formed by the Christian Social Union. It was replaced by the Cabinet Strauss III.
Composition
|}
References
Strauss I
1982 establishments in Germany
1986 disestablishments in Germany | [
101,
1996,
5239,
16423,
2462,
1006,
2446,
1024,
10556,
16765,
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2358,
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19310,
2462,
1007,
2001,
1996,
2110,
2231,
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2110,
1997,
11606,
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Robert Gage (March 20, 1952–June 12, 2019) was an American equestrian show jumping rider and coach. He was named West Coast Rider of the Year four times, received the American Grandprix Association's Rider of the Year Award two years in a row, and was a member of the U.S. World Cup team three times. Gage was banned on February 1, 2019, by the United States Center for SafeSport after it found that he had engaged in sexual misconduct with minors. On June 12, 2019, he died of suicide.
Biography
When Gage was 11 years old, he and his family moved from Hermosa Beach to Rolling Hills, Southern California horse country. He became the Pacific Coast Junior Rider of the Year when he was 13 years old. Gage trained under Jimmy A. Williams, of the 1989 United States Show Jumping Hall of Fame. At 18, he switched to training and coaching for a decade.
In his late 20s, for one year Gage rode competitively in Venezuela. For much of the 1980s, he was one of the highest ranking American riders, competing in the United States and Europe. He was named West Coast rider of the year four times. He won the American Grandprix Association's Rider of the Year Award two years in a row, and at one point was the top ranking rider for 80 consecutive weeks. He was a member of the U.S. World Cup team three times, and in 1987 he won the Grand Prix of Del Mar.
Gage was a three-time World Cup Grand Prix rider. He placed 3rd in puissance in 1991 at the L.A. Equestrian Center.
As a trainer, Gage worked in San Diego County. Gage also served as an equestrian judge and ran clinics. In 1986 he played himself in the drama film Lightning, the White Stallion. Gage was a resident of Fallbrook, California, in northern San Diego County.
At age 67, Gage was banned on February 1, 2019, by the United States Center for SafeSport for sexual misconduct with minors. He learned on June 11 while awaiting his appeal that another alleged victim had come forward. On June 12, 2019, he died of suicide by hanging in north San Diego County.
See also
Puissance
Show jumping
References
1952 births
2019 deaths
American show jumping riders
American male equestrians
People from Fallbrook, California
People from Hermosa Beach, California
People from Rolling Hills, California
Show jumping trainers
Sportspeople from Los Angeles County, California
Sportspeople from San Diego County, California
Suicides by hanging in California
1952 births
2019 deaths | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Frankfort, Kentucky in various seasons between 1885 and 1916. Frankfort teams played as members of the Interstate League in 1885, the Blue Grass League from 1908 to 1912 and Ohio State League in 1915 and 1916. Frankfort won Blue Grass League championships in 1908 and 1912.
History
Frankfort began hosting minor league baseball play in 1885, when the Frankfort team played as members of the six–team Interstate League. Shenkel was the Frankfort manager. The 1885 standings are unknown.
In 1908, the "Frankfort Statesmen" became charter members of the Class D level Blue Grass League and won the league championship. Frankfort finished the regular season in 1st place with a record of 47–23, playing under manager Neal Kennedy. The league had no playoffs and Frankfort finished 9.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Lexington Colts in the six–team league. The charter teams were Frankfort (47–23), Lawrenceburg Distllers (33–35), Lexington Colts (37–31), Richmond Pioneers (36–34), Shelbyville Millers (32–37) and Versailles Aristocrats/Winchester Reds (22–47). The Frankfort team was also known as the "Lawmakers" in some references. Both monikers reflect Frankford as the State Capitol of the state of Kentucky.
Continuing play in the 1909 Blue Grass League, the Frankfort Statesmen ended the season in 4th place. Frankfort had a final record of 56–60, finishing 17.5 games behind the 1st place Winchester Hustlers, playing under managers Neal Kennedy and Ben Marshall.
The 1910 season saw the team finish in 5th place in the Class D level Blue Grass League. The Frankfort Statesmen finished with a 60–61 record and were 17.0 games behind the 1st place Paris Bourbonites. Wallace Warren and Danny Harrell managed the 1910 Frankfort Statesmen.
In the 1911 Blue Grass League season the Frankfort Statesmen finished with a record of 48–65 The team placed 5th and finished 22.0 games behind the 1st place Paris Bourbonites under manager Ed Coleman. Frankfort's Ovid Nicholson stole 111 bases and scored 128 runs. The next stolen base league leader had 54. Nicholson was called up by the Pittsburgh Pirates after the conclusion of the Frankfort season.
The 1912 Frankfort Lawmakers won the Blue Grass League championship in the final season of the league. With a 85–42 record under manager Ollie Gfroerer in the final standings, Frankfort finished in 1st place. Following Frankfort were the Lexington Colts (60–65), Maysville Rivermen (82–47), Paris Bourbonites (60–69), Richmond Pioneers (66–64) and Mt. Sterling Orphans (31–97). The Blue Grass League folded following the 1912 season and Frankfort was unable to defend their championship.
Frankfort resumed minor league play in 1915. Frankfort became members of the Class D level Ohio State League. The Frankfort Old Taylors began play in the six–team league and finished the 1915 season in 4th place with a 45–65 record. The Old Taylors finished 24.5 behind the 1st place Portsmouth Cobblers, while playing under managers Pat Bohannon and Jack Hayden. The "Old Taylors" moniker was in reference to local industry, as Frankfort was home to the Old Taylor Distillery Company. The 1916 Ohio State League members were the Charleston Senators (58–63), Chillicothe Babes/Huntington/Maysville Angels (58–55), Frankfort Old Taylors (45–65), Ironton Nailers (47–69), Lexington Colts (63–48 )and Portsmouth Cobblers (71–42).
In their final season of play, the 1916 Frankfort Old Taylors folded during the season. On July 6, 1916, Frankfort folded with a 24–35 record under manager James "Ducky" Holmes. The Ohio State permanently folded on July 16, 1916.
Frankfort, Kentucky has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
The name of the Frankfort teams' home ballpark are not known. The campus of Kentucky State University at Alumni Field and State Stadium were venues in use in the era.
Timeline
Year-by-year record
(from BR Bullpen)
Notable alumni
Eddie Bacon (1915)
Jack Bellman (1885)
Bill Cramer (1910–1912)
Dick Crutcher (1908–1909)
Ed Glenn (1909)
Ernie Gust (1912)
Ducky Holmes (1916, MGR)
Jim McLaughlin (1885)
Ed Monroe (1915)
Ovid Nicholson (1911–1912)
George Yantz (1909)
See also
Frankfort (minor league baseball) playersFrankfort Lawmakers playersFrankfort Old Taylors playersFrankfort Statesmen players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Baseball Reference
Frankfort, Kentucky
Franklin County, Kentucky | [
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Leslie Russell Thoms (March 7, 1938 - December 5, 1999) was a Canadian politician, who represented the electoral district of Grand Bank in the Newfoundland House of Assembly from 1979 to 1982. He was a member of the Liberal Party.
Prior to his election to the legislature, Thoms had been a supporter of Bill Rowe's 1977 campaign for the Liberal leadership, although Rowe stepped aside in favour of Don Jamieson by the time of the 1979 Newfoundland general election. Thoms was elected to the legislature in that election. Due to the Liberal Party's loss, Jamieson stepped down as leader following the election and Thoms ran as a candidate in the resulting leadership convention, but ultimately lost to Len Stirling.
Thoms was defeated in the 1982 Newfoundland and Labrador general election by Bill Matthews of the Progressive Conservatives.
He subsequently worked as a staff lawyer in the provincial Ministry of Justice.
He died on December 5, 1999, in St. John's.
Electoral record
|NDP
|Harvey Tulk, Jr.
|align="right"|198
|align="right"|3.8
|align="right"|
|-
|}
|NDP
|Eric Miller
|align="right"|234
|align="right"|4.23
|align="right"|
|-
|}
References
1938 births
1999 deaths
Liberal Party of Newfoundland and Labrador MHAs
20th-century Canadian politicians | [
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8886,
5735,
19438,
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1006,
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The EMU101 is a medium-capacity train operating on Taipei Metro's Circular line. A total of 17 4-car trains were built by Hitachi Rail Italy (formerly AnsaldoBreda) in Reggio Calabria, Italy and Taiwan Rolling Stock Company (TRSC) in Hsinchu. This is the second time Taiwan has purchased trains made in Italy after Taiwan Railways' EMU300 series, built by Socimi.
This is Taipei Metro's third medium-capacity train, and officially entered service with the opening of the first phase of the Circular line on 31 January 2020.
History
In 2009, the Taipei City Government held a tender for the first phase of the construction of the Circular line, and the bid was awarded to AnsaldoBreda (now Hitachi Rail Italy) for designing and manufacturing the Driverless Metro trains. In August 2016, the AnsaldoBreda factory in Reggio Calabria held a delivery ceremony. In November, it arrived at South Depot for various tests and subsequent integration operations. Dynamic testing started in mid 2017.
Design
There are many differences from the designs and innovations of the existing medium-capacity trains of the Taipei Metro, except that the EMU101 uses the same steel wheels as the high-capacity trains, and the carriages have open-gangway connections. This greatly increases the capacity and the seats are more ergonomically designed.
Train formation
A complete four-car set consists of an identical twin set of one end car (A or B) and one intermediate car (C or D) permanently coupled together. The configuration of a Circular line train in revenue service is A–C–D–B.
Each carriage is assigned its own three-digit serial number, which ranges from 101 to 117.
The first digit after the carriage identification letter (A, C, D or B) is always a 1.
The other two digits are the identification number of the train the car is part of.
References
This article incorporates information from the corresponding articles on the Chinese and Japanese Wikipedia's.
External links
Electric multiple units of Taiwan
AnsaldoBreda multiple units
Taipei Metro | [
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Georgy Konstantinovich Arapov (born 11 September 1999) is a Russian politician who was elected to the State Duma on the federal list for the New People party in 2021.
He is the youngest member of the 8th State Duma.
References
1999 births
Living people
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
21st-century Russian politicians
Plekhanov Russian University of Economics alumni | [
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Dryinus sinicus is a species of dryinidae wasp. It is a parasitoid of the nymph stage spotted lanternfly in its native range of China.
References
Dryinidae
Insects of China
Insects described in 1987 | [
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Mary Florence Wells Slater (October 16, 1864 – January 22, 1941) was an American entomologist and educator. After graduating from St. Mary's School in 1882, she served on the faculty there as a science teacher. Slater went on to study entomology at Cornell University, working as a research assistant for John Henry Comstock. In 1899 she published the article The Egg-Carrying Habitat of Zaitha, which made corrections to an error in Comstock's earlier published work. She went on to teach within the New York City Department of Education, most notably at Washington Irving High School in Gramercy Park. Slater was an advocate for teacher pensions in New York and for equal pay for equal work in the United States.
Biography
Mary Florence Wells Slater was born in Salisbury, North Carolina on October 16, 1864. Her father was James Alexander Slater. Slater was the sister of Ada Slater Carter, James H. Slater, and Henry Fielding Slater. She enrolled at St. Mary's School, an Episcopal girls' boarding school in Raleigh, in 1877. She graduated from St. Mary's in 1882 and became a faculty member there in 1883, teaching botany and natural sciences.
In 1885, Slater attended Cornell University, where she was a member of Sigma Xi and the Wayside Club. While an undergraduate student, she studied and worked under John Henry Comstock. While working with Comstock in 1899, she reported in an article titled The Egg-Carrying Habit of Zaitha that male Zaitha flumineum carry eggs and that the females are "obliged to capture the male in order to deposit the eggs", corrected an error made by Comstock that had been published in American textbooks. She also wrote that "the male chafes under the burden" of carrying the eggs and "if attacked, he meekly receives the blows, seemingly preferring death.. to the indignity of carrying and caring for the eggs." Slater graduated from Cornell with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1900.
Upon graduating, Slater moved to New York City, teaching science in city public schools, most notably Washington Irving High School. While teaching at Washington Irving, she would borrow slides from the American Museum of Natural History and animals from the Bronx Zoo for her lectures. Every month, she would arrange for a member of the American Museum of Natural History's Department of Education to lecture to the entire 5,000-person student body in the school auditorium.
Slater was an advocate for equal pay for equal work and for adopting a pension system for teachers in New York public schools. When she retired from teaching, she was granted a pension that allowed her to remain financially independent for the remainder of her life. She moved back to North Carolina and guest lectured around the state. Jane Simpson McKimmon attended one of her guest lectures, at the North Carolina State College, where she lectured to six hundred and twenty-three students from rural North Carolina on a reel of film titled How Life Begins.
Slater was a parishioner and bible study teacher at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Winston-Salem.
She died on January 22, 1941, and is buried at Salem Cemetery.
References
1864 births
1941 deaths
20th-century American women educators
20th-century American women scientists
American entomologists
American high school teachers
American women biologists
Burials at Salem Cemetery
Cornell University alumni
Episcopalians from North Carolina
People from Salisbury, North Carolina
People from Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Schoolteachers from North Carolina
St. Mary's School (North Carolina) alumni
Women entomologists | [
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Axel Hallberg (born 12 June 1999) is a Swedish politician from the Green Party. He was previously associated with Young Greens. He has been the Baby of the House since September 2021.
See also
List of members of the Riksdag, 2018–2022
References
1999 births
Living people
Swedish environmentalists
21st-century Swedish politicians
Members of the Riksdag 2018–2022
Members of the Riksdag from the Green Party
People from Lund | [
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Zaw Myo Tin () is a Burmese politician and current chief minister of Kayah State. He is a retired Lieutenant general of Tatmadaw. He served as a MP of Kayah State Hluttaw, minister of Security and Border Affairs of Kayah State, Commander of Regional Operations Commands (Loikaw), Commander of Naypyitaw Regional Command and Chief of Armed Forces Training.
Career
Early life
He attended to Defence Services Academy as part of the 32nd intake.
Military career
In 2013, he was appointed as Minister of Security and Border Affairs of Kayah State in Khin Maung Oo's first cabinet. He was reappointed as minister in L Phaung Sho's cabinet. In 2017, he was promoted as Brigadier General and became the commander of Regional Operation Command (Loikaw) under the Eastern Regional Command.
Later, he moved to the Office of the Commander in chief of Defence Services in Naypyitaw with the rank Major General. In January 2021, he was appointed as the Commander of the Naypyitaw Regional Command. In September 2021 he was promoted as Lieutenant General and became the chief of Armed Forces Training.
Chief minister
In January 2022, the conflict between Tatmadaw and local defence forces in Kayah State forcing residents Loikaw district to flee. On 31 January 2022, the incumbent chief minister Khin Maung Oo was dimissied. Zaw Myo Tin retired from his military post and became the head of Kayah State Government on 1 February 2022.
References
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Burmese military personnel
Burmese soldiers
Government ministers of Myanmar
Region or state chief ministers of Myanmar | [
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I Can Quit Whenever I Want () is a 2019 Spanish crime comedy film directed by Carlos Therón starring David Verdaguer, Ernesto Sevilla and Carlos Santos. It is a remake of the 2014 Italian film of the same name.
Plot
Pedro, Arturo and Eligio are three university lecturers who are fired up from their jobs. Teaming up with Anabel (a lawyer turned gas station employee) and Jota (a wayward student), they find a new niche as producers and sellers of a drug originally developed by Pedro as a vitamin complex as part of a research project.
Cast
Production
A remake of the 2014 Italian film I Can Quit Whenever I Want (original title: ), the adapted screenplay was penned by Cristóbal Garrido and Adolfo Valor. was the director. Other crew members include Claudia Montero (music), Ángel Iguácel (cinematography) and Alberto de Toro (editing). The film is a Telecinco Cinema and MOD Producciones production and it had the participation of Mediaset España and Movistar+. The film was shot in the Summer of 2018 in Madrid.
Release
Distributed by Sony Pictures Entertainment Iberia, the film was theatrically released in Spain on 12 April 2019. The film was a box office hit in Spain, grossing over 11 million € and 1.8 million ticket sales.
Reception
Manu Piñón of Fotogramas rated the film with 3 out of 5 stars, considering that all actors know what they are doing.
Javier Ocaña of El País considered the film to be a farce with parodic elements, very well acted, effective in the physical humour and with great punch lines.
Raquel Hernández Luján of HobbyConsolas gave it 60 out of 100 points, deeming it to be an "uneven and somewhat stale comedy", praising the performances of Cristina Castaño, Miren Ibarguren and Ernesto Alterio, while negatively assessing that the lead trio of Verdaguer, Sevilla and Santos are neither charismatic nor funny.
Accolades
|-
| align = "center" | 2020 || 7th Feroz Awards || colspan = "2" | Best Comedy Film || ||
|}
See also
List of Spanish films of 2019
References
External links
I Can Quit Whenever I Want at ICAA's Catálogo de Cinespañol
Spanish remakes of Italian films
Spanish crime comedy films
2019 comedy films
2010s crime comedy films
Spanish films
Films shot in Madrid
Spanish-language films
Telecinco Cinema films
MOD Producciones films | [
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Onésimo Cepeda Silva (25 March 1937 – 31 January 2022) was a Mexican Roman Catholic prelate.
Biography
He was bishop of Ecatepec from 1995 to 2012.
He died from complications of COVID-19 on 31 January 2022, at the age of 84.
References
1937 births
2022 deaths
Bishops appointed by Pope John Paul II
Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico
Mexican Roman Catholic bishops
People from Ecatepec de Morelos | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Marinette, Wisconsin in various seasons between 1891 and 1914. Marinette partnered with neighboring Menominee, Michigan, playing as the Marinette–Menominee Twins in 1914. Marinette played in the 1891 Wisconsin State League. Marinette and Menominee, Michigan based teams played as members of the Wisconsin-Michigan League in 1892 and Wisconsin-Illinois League in 1914.
Baseball Hall of Fame member Hank O'Day played for the 1892 Marinette Badgers.
History
It was reported that a Marinette first fielded a minor league team in 1891. The Marinette Badgers became charter members of the Wisconsin State League. Marinette played in 1891 with the Appleton, Wisconsin, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, Green Bay Bays, Oconto, Wisconsin and Oshkosh, Wisconsin teams joining Marinette in the six–team Wisconsin State League.
The Marinette use of the "Badger" moniker corresponds to state history and folklore. The Badger is the mascot of the University of Wisconsin. The state of Wisconsin is known as the "Badger State" and the badger is the official state mammal of Wisconsin. Reportedly, early miners in Wisconsin were known to dig tunnels into hillsides, in which they also slept during winter months, leading to the nickname.
Marinette won the 1891 Wisconsin State League championship. Playing under manager Jake Aydelotte, the Badgers finished 1st in the league standings with a record of 51–39. Marinette finished 2.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Appleton Papermakers in the final standings.
Menominee, Michigan began minor league play in 1892. The Marinette Badgers continued play as charter members of the Michigan-Wisconsin League, playing along with the Menominee Wolverines. The league formed and played in the 1892 season as a non–signatory, Independent level league. The Green Bay Bays, Ishpeming-Negaunee Unions, Marquette Undertakers and Oshkosh Indians joined the Marinette and Menominee teams as charter members.
In 1892, the Marinette Badgers placed 3rd in the Michigan-Wisconsin League final standings. Marinette finished with a record of 45–44, playing under managers Joe Cantillon, Mike Morrison and Jim Donahue. After the season began on May 37, 1892, the Green Bay Bays won the 1892 Michigan-Wisconsin League with a 48–39 overall record in the six–team league, finishing 4.0 games ahead of Marinette. The final records were led by Green Bay, followed by the Menominee Wolverines (44–40 under manager William Lucas), Marinette Badgers (45–44) and Oshkosh Indians (41–50). The Marquette Undertakers (20–29) and Ishpeming-Negaunee Unions (24–20) teams folded during the season.
During the season, it was reported that Green Bay president Frank W. Murphy, who also served as president of the league, supplemented his roster with players obtained from the Terre Haute Hottentots and other teams en route to winning the championship. New manager Sam LaRocque had earlier played with Terre Haute in 1892. The Michigan-Wisconsin League permanently folded following the 1892 season.
In 1914, minor league baseball returned. The Marinette–Menominee Twins resumed play as members of the eight–team Class C level Wisconsin-Illinois League, replacing the Fond du Lac Molls franchise in league play. Marinette partnered with neighboring Menominee, Michigan for establishing the franchise. The Marinette-Menominee Twins joined the Appleton Papermakers, Green Bay Bays, Madison Senators, Oshkosh Indians, Racine Belles, Rockford Wolves and Wausau Lumberjacks in league play.
The Marinette–Menominee Twins finished the 1914 Wisconsin-Illinois League season with an overall record of 61–59 to place 5th in the final standings. Managed by John Wickenhoefer and Jack Sheehan, Marinette–Menominee finished 15.0 games behind the 1st place Oshkosh Indians in the final Wisconsin-Illinois League standings. The Wisconsin-Illinois League permanently folded after completing the 1914 season.
Marinette, Wisconsin and Menominee, Michigan have not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
The Marinette-based minor league teams were noted to have played home games at the Fairgrounds Driving Park. It was noted the ballpark had a capacity of 1,400, with a grandstand was built for racing. The location was at Broadway & Park Streets, which are today 13th Street & 18th Street, Marinette, Wisconsin. The site today is home to an Emerson electric plant.
Timeline
Year-by-Year Record
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Hank O'Day (1914)
Notable alumni
Charlie Abbey (1892)
Charlie Bartson (1892)
Grant Briggs (1891)
Harry Burrell (1892)
Joe Cantillon (1892, MGR)
Jim Donahue (1892, MGR)
George Flynn (1892)
Bill Hoffer (1892)
Tom Letcher (1891)
Harry Mace (1892)
Bill McClellan (1892)
Gus McGinnis (1891)
Mart McQuaid (1892)
Mox McQuery (1892)
Mike Morrison (1892, MGR)
Tom Morrissey (1892)
George Nicol (1891)
Harley Payne (1891-1892)
John Reccius (1892)
Nick Reeder (1891)
Josh Reilly (1892)
Jack Sheehan (1914, MGR)
Earl Smith (1914)
Ben Stephens (1892)
Bill Van Dyke (1892)
Joe Walsh (1892)
Jack Wentz (1891)
See also
Marinette Badgers players
Marinette (minor league baseball) players
Marinette-Menominee Twins players
Menominee (minor league baseball) players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Marinette County, Wisconsin | [
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Oleg Yuryevich Leonov (born 10 September 1970) is a Russian activist and politician. He has been member of the State Duma for Moscow's Central constituency since the 2021 legislative election.
In 2021, Leonov ran for parliament as an independent, however was endorsed by Sergey Sobyanin. In October 2021, Leonov joined the New People parliamentary faction.
Electoral History
|-
! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes
! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Oleg Leonov
|align=left|Independent
|57,505
|26.28%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Sergey Mitrokhin
|align=left|Yabloko
|47,815
|21.85%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Nina Ostanina
|align=left|Communist Party
|22,146
|10.12%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Maksim Shevchenko
|align=left|Russian Party of Freedom and Justice
|13,961
|6.38%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Andrey Shirokov
|align=left|Party of Pensioners
|13,935
|6.37%
|-
|style="background-color: "|
|align=left|Tatyana Vinnitskaya
|align=left|New People
|13,787
|6.30%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Magomet Yandiev
|align=left|A Just Russia — For Truth
|12,979
|5.93%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Dmitry Koshlakov-Krestovsky
|align=left|Liberal Democratic Party
|11,533
|5.28%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Dmitry Zakharov
|align=left|Communists of Russia
|7,411
|3.39%
|-
|style="background: ;"|
|align=left|Ketevan Kharaidze
|align=left|Green Alternative
|5,745
|2.63%
|-
|style="background-color: " |
|align=left|Yakov Yakubovich
|align=left|Party of Growth
|4,219
|1.93%
|-
|style="background: ;"|
|align=left|Anatoly Yushin
|align=left|Civic Platform
|2,307
|1.05%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total
| 218,839
| 100%
|-
| colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"|
|- style="font-weight:bold"
| colspan="4" |Source:
|
|}
References
Living people
1970 births
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
21st-century Russian politicians
Politicians from Moscow | [
101,
25841,
9805,
2854,
16277,
6506,
4492,
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2184,
2244,
3359,
1007,
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2845,
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1012,
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2266,
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2110,
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1,
1,
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1,
1,
1,
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1,
1,
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1... |
The 2022 NRL pre-season will be played between 12 February and 28 February 2022, before a 10-day lead up until the beginning of the 2022 NRL season.
Background
The 2022 NRL pre-season will feature nineteen matches across three weekends, including the 2022 All Stars match and the annual Charity Shield match between the South Sydney Rabbitohs and St George Illawarra Dragons. The 2022 season also saw the cancellation of the World Club Challenge between reigning NRL premiers Penrith Panthers and 2021 Super League winners St Helens due to complications with the COVID-19 pandemic.
The pre-season also saw the first ever rugby league match to be played in the western Victorian city of Ballarat when Melbourne Storm played the Newcastle Knights at Mars Stadium in front of 5,127 people. The Charity Shield match also drew the highest attendance for the fixture since 2017, and aside from the All Stars match, was the largest attended match of the pre-season with 9,257 fans.
The match between the New Zealand Warriors and the Gold Coast Titans was cancelled after being initially postponed and rescheduled from Moreton Daily Stadium to Cbus Super Stadium due to the 2022 South East Queensland flood.
Fixtures
Week One
Week Two
Week Three
a The match was initially scheduled to be played on 26 February at Moreton Daily Stadium, but was rescheduled due to the 2022 South East Queensland flood.
See also
2022 NRL season
2022 NRL season results
References
2022 NRL season | [
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Oleg Leonov may refer to:
Oleg Leonov (footballer)
Oleg Leonov (politician) | [
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Brian Frederick Windley (born 1936) is a British geologist. He is Emeritus Professor of Geology at the University of Leicester.
Educated at the University of Liverpool and University of Exeter, he began his career with the Geological Survey of Greenland in 1963. Among his awards are the Bigsby Medal (1977) and the Murchison Medal (1985). According to Google Scholar he has a h-index of 104.
References
Living people
1936 births
British geologists
Academics of the University of Leicester
Alumni of the University of Liverpool
Alumni of the University of Exeter | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Centralia, Washington in four seasons between 1903 and 1912. Centralia teams played as members of the Class D level Southwest Washington League in 1903 and 1904 and the Washington State League in 1911 and 1912.
History
Minor league baseball began in Centralia, Washington in 1903. The Centralia Midgets were charter members of the four–team Class D level Southwest Washington League. The Aberdeen Pippins, Hoquiam Perfect Gentlemen and Olympia Senators joined Centralia as charter members in league play.
Beginning play on May 10, 1903, the Centralia Midgets placed 2nd in the Southwest Washington League in their first season of play. In the league structure, Southwest Washington League teams played games six times per week, but only the weekend games were counted for the league standings. Centralia ended the season with a record of 7–11, playing under managers Paul Ruff and George Dysart. The Midgets finished 4.0 games behind Aberdeen and Hoquiam who tied for 1st place with 11–7 records, with Aberdeen awarded the championship when Hoquiam refused to participate in a playoff game. Ira Harmon of Centralia led the Southwest Washington League with both a batting average of .341 and 2 home runs.
Continuing Southwest Washington League play in 1904, Centralia finished in 3rd place in the four–team league. The league continued the practice of only counting weekend games in the standings, while playing six times per week overall. Ending the season with a record of 6–12, Centralia played under managers Jack Bell and Bill Auerette. The Midgets finished 8.0 games behind the 1st place Hoquiam Perfect Gentlemen (14–4) in the final standings. The Centralia Midgets folded after the 1904 season, replaced by the Montesano Farmers in 1905 league play.
In 1911, minor league baseball resumed in Centralia. The Centralia Pets became members of the four–team Class D level Washington State League. The Chehalis Proteges, Raymond Venetians and South Bend River Rats joined Centralia in 1911 league play.
The 1911 Centralia Pets won the Washington State League championship. The Pets placed 1st in the final standings with a record of 38–17, playing under managers W.R. Patton and Guy Muck. Centralia finished 2.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Chehalis Proteges (36–20) in the final standings, followed by the Raymond Venetians (25–29) and South Bend River Rats (11–44). Pitcher Ray Callahan, who split the season with Centralia and Chehalis led the Washington State League with 13 wins and 131 strikeouts.
In 1912, the Centralia "Railroaders" played their final minor league season, as the Washington State League folded during the season. The Aberdeen Black Cats folded from the league on July 10, 1912, causing the entire league to fold on July 14, 1912. When the season ended on July 14, 1912, the Centralia Railroaders were in 2nd place with a 19–17 record. Playing under managers W.R. Patton and George Dysart, the Railroaders finished 3.5 games behind the 1st place Chehalis Farmers in the final standings. The Washington State League permanently folded following the 1912 season.
The Centralia use of the "Railroaders" moniker ties to local industry and history. Opening in 1912, the Centralia Union Station was constructed by the Northern Pacific Railway. Continuing today as an Amtrak stop, passenger rail service began in Centralia, Washington in 1880.
Centralia, Washington has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
The Centralia minor league teams were noted to have played minor league home games at Riverside Park. The ballpark was located on Lowe Street off of Harrison Avenue, Centralia, Washington. The site today is home to Rotary Riverside Park, which is still in use as a public park.
Timeline
Year-by-year records
Notable alumni
Ed Bruyette (1903)
Ray Callahan (1911)
Jack Roche (1911)
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Baseball Reference
Centralia, Washington | [
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The 2021–22 season is the 94th season in the existence of FC Sochaux-Montbéliard and the club's 10th consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Sochaux are participating in this season's edition of the Coupe de France.
Players
First-team squad
Out on loan
Transfers
In
Out
Pre-season and friendlies
Competitions
Overall record
Ligue 2
League table
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
The league fixtures were announced on 25 June 2021.
Coupe de France
References
FC Sochaux-Montbéliard seasons
Sochaux | [
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Svalbard Minute by Minute () is a 221-hour-long 2020 Norwegian slow television broadcast that aired on NRK2 between 31 January at 18:00 to 9 February at 23:59 (CET). The broadcast shows the nine-day voyage around Spitsbergen, the only permanently-inhabited island of Svalbard, which commemorated the 100-year anniversary of the Svalbard Treaty, a treaty signed on 9 February 1920 which gave Norway sovereignty over Svalbard. Lasting a total of 13,319 minutes, it is NRK's longest slow television broadcast as of February 2022.
Production
Director Thomas Hellum conceived the idea for Svalbard Minute by Minute in 2011 after completing Hurtigruten Minute by Minute, a slow television broadcast which followed the 134-hour long voyage of from Bergen to Kirkenes. The footage for the broadcast was shot by an NRK crew of 25 people earlier in August 2019 in order for better lighting conditions during midnight sun and because the voyage was too far north to broadcast live. In total, seventeen cameras were used, including camera drones.
Broadcast and content
The entire 221-hour long voyage of the MS Spitsbergen around Spitsbergen, Svalbard was broadcast without interruption on NRK2 between 31 January at 18:00 to 9 February at 23:59 (CET), and was also made directly available for streaming on NRK TV. Alternatively, one-hour highlights from each day of the voyage were broadcast on NRK1 between 1–9 February. In the broadcasts, hosts Kari Toft and Helge Lyngmoe observe the ongoings of the ship, and conduct interviews with passengers and crew members. They were assisted by archaeologist and Svalbard historian Per Kyrre Reymert and former Svalbardposten editor Arne O. Holm.
Voyage
MS Spitsbergen'''s voyage:
1 February, day one: Departure from Longyearbyen to Lloyds Hotel in Möllerfjorden
2 February, day two: Lloyds Hotel to Smeerenburg
3 February, day three: Smeerenburg to Bock Fjord
4 February, day four: Bock Fjord to Murchinson Fjord
5 February, day five: Murchinson Fjord to Hinlopen Strait
6 February, day six: Hinlopen Strait to Boltodden
7 February, day seven: Boltodden to
8 February, day eight: Burger Bay to Recherche Fjord
9 February, day nine: Recherche Fjord to Nordenskiöldbreen, arrival in Longyearbyen
Viewership and reception Svalbard Minute by Minute received 2.3 million viewers during its broadcast. John Einar Lockert, manager of Svalbard Adventures, attributed the broadcast to a 25 percent increase in tourist bookings to visit Svalbard. In September 2020, the Norwegian Polar Institute named a headland in Minute Island after the broadcast.
References
External links
(in Norwegian)Svalbard Minute by Minute'' at NRK TV (in Norwegian)
2020 television specials
NRK original programming
Culture of Svalbard
Slow television | [
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Collar (commonly stylised as COLLAR) is a Hong Kong Cantopop girl group formed from Hong Kong broadcaster ViuTV's reality talent show in 2021. The group consists of eight members: Sumling Li, Garie Shum, Natalie So, Winka Chan, Ivy So, Day Hui, Marife Yau and Candy Wong. They debuted on 12 January 2022, with the first single "Call My Name!".
History
2021-22: Formation
In July 2018, ViuTV's reality talent competition started scouting for potential artists, and after three seasons, three boy bands, namely Mirror, and were formed, and some contestants debuted as solo singers. Nonetheless, since the first season of show had started, there was no any girl group which was formed. Hence, ViuTV created King Maker Season 4 as a platform to scout for a brand new girl group in June 2021.
On 25 December 2021, ViuTV announced the winner, first runner-up and second runner-up of Season 4, Marife Yau, Garie Shum, and Day Hui, who were secured the spots of upcoming members of the group. On 12 January 2022, 8 contestants from King Maker Season 4 were announced from the Top 20 of the season, formed the group through a press conference named "Hold Your Breath" which held in Harbour City, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong. In the press conference, the name of the group "Collar", along with five other members, Sumling Li, Natalie So, Winka Chan, Ivy So and Candy Wong, were announced in the lineup.
The music video of Collar's debut "Call My Name!" was released a day after the formation of the group. On 24 January 2022, Pocari Sweat, a Japanese sports drink brand, appointed Collar as endorsers of the brand's 40th anniversary in Harbour City, marking the group's first commercial endorsement.
Members
Discography
Single
References
External links
Hong Kong girl groups
Cantopop musical groups
Musical groups established in 2022
2022 establishments in Hong Kong | [
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Catalena Productions was a Canadian television production company headquartered in Vancouver, British Columbia. It produced several notable television programs in the late 1970s and early 1980s before being forced into receivership in 1981.
History
Catalena's first known production was a TV show featuring Stan Kann, a vacuum cleaner enthusiast and frequent guest on The Tonight Show, 13 episodes of which were taped at the Burnaby studios of BCTV. Another 19 episodes were taped in Edmonton at CITV, which would later sue the production company, claiming its contract entitled the station to a portion of gross proceeds earned from syndication.
In March 1980, Catalena announced it had secured a deal with Monty Hall and Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall Productions to produce 200 episodes of a revival of Let's Make a Deal in Vancouver for syndication to Canadian and U.S. stations. The program was filmed beginning later that year at the large Panorama Studios in West Vancouver. Two other major productions by Catalena at Panorama were also in the offing: Pitfall, a game show with an original format that began taping in October 1980, and a new syndicated variety show, Tom Jones, featuring Welsh singer Tom Jones which got underway in March 1981.
Financial problems, however, quickly engulfed Catalena Productions in the late summer of 1981. In early August, EPI Limited, which was distributing the Tom Jones show, sued Catalena after half of the episodes of the program had been completed. It charged Catalena with breach of contract for not paying certain agreed-to production fees and failing to hand over master tapes of the 12 completed shows. Production costs had reached $3.5 million, and EPI had charged Catalena with "financial irresponsibility" that imperiled its ability to continue producing the remainder of the series. Ian MacLennan, the president of Catalena, claimed that the EPI suit represented a "smear campaign" against a "strong and promising company". However, the company production of further shows of Let's Make a Deal had been delayed because there was sufficient inventory to satisfy the stations, and Catalena did not want to produce episodes until they were needed.
It turned out that EPI's forecast of financial doom for Catalena was correct. In mid-August, Hatos and Hall petitioned the Supreme Court of British Columbia for the appointment of a receiver to manage Catalena's financial affairs, claiming they were owed $210,000. On August 31, a Supreme Court judge found in their favor and placed the firm into bankruptcy. Creditors would find that there had been transfers between several related companies that confused the status of the firm's financial assets and that production costs for Tom Jones had exceeded budgeted expenses by $1 million.
The Tom Jones show survived the bankruptcy and lawsuit when a new production company, Clancy Grass Productions, took over the contract and hired 40 to 50 former Catalena employees to tape the 12 remaining programs. Game show contestants, however, were not so lucky. Because most game shows do not award prizes until the episode airs, and prizing is the responsibility of the producers, many contestants had won prizes on Let's Make a Deal and Pitfall that were no longer paid for. In the case of the latter show, which had not yet premiered, production staff—among them host Alex Trebek—were not paid. Television stations that had contracted to carry the show, including Vancouver's CKVU-TV, faced some difficulty acquiring tapes. Contestants on Let's Make a Deal were informed by Los Angeles–based promoter Global Promotions that they would not receive their promised prizes; Catalena owed Global $80,000 to $90,000, out of a total of $3 million in liabilities. Another large creditor was the Canadian government itself, owed $500,000 to $600,000. Because Catalena also owed moving and storage companies, some prizes were stuck in warehouses in Bellingham, Washington, with freight, storage, and customs duties owing. Despite Catalena's bankruptcy, stations such as the Global Television Network in Ontario continued to air Pitfall for years, irking contestants that were depicted winning prizes they never received.
Catalena's collapse left one notable Canadian creditor—Trebek—vowing never to do work in Vancouver again, though he relented in March 1982 when two old friends of his asked him to voice commercials for Greater Vancouver's Chrysler dealers. Trebek would note it was the only time he went unpaid as a game show host; he had the bounced check from Catalena for his $49,000 salary framed and hung it up at his home.
References
1981 disestablishments in British Columbia
1977 establishments in British Columbia
Canadian companies disestablished in 1981
Canadian companies established in 1977
Companies based in Vancouver
Defunct companies of British Columbia
Defunct film and television production companies of Canada | [
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Jagarico is a family of salty snack products made primarily from processed fried potatoes. Introduced in 1995 by Calbee, Jagarico could be described as rod-shaped potato chips. According to Barabara Zec, they "have a similar appearance to French fries."
Product description
This product is sold in packages of various sizes ranging from . The standard size of this product is in length and roughly in diameter. Since 2012, "long" size products have also been marketed. Moreover, thinner versions with a diameters of about began to hit store shelves in 2022. These pre-packaged potato sticks are available in many flavors throughout Japan and in at least ten other countries. To boost sales, Calbee regularly introduces new flavors while taking those items with sluggish sales out of production. For example, a "Salt and Sesame Oil" incarnation of this product was launched in 2016. At roughly the same time their "Jurassic Salt" and "Cheese Curry" flavors were discontinued due to tepid sales.
Moreover, in 2020 a shorter garlic-flavored version of this product that targets older consumers hit the market.
According to a 2018 report, about 14.5% of Calbee's total 2017 Q1 sales were derived from Jagarico products. During the third financial quarter of 2021 Jagarico sales in Japan amounted to about 34.5 billion yen, and overseas sales are an increasingly important revenue source. According to a 2017 survey by Keio Group, Jagarico was ranked as the fourth most popular snack in the Tokyo area. Unfortunately, the sample size for that survey was not specified.
Similar products
Although the ingredients of Jagarico are similar to many mass-marketed potato chips, their shape resembles a traditional Japanese candied sweet potato snack known as kempi. According to a 1999 US Department of Agriculture report, this product is classified as a fabricated potato snack. However, it resembles other shoestring potato snacks such as Koikeya's “Stick Karamucho,” Morinaga's "Potelong," and Seijō Ishii's "Miraku Nori." Jagarico is also related to another Calbee product known as Jagabee. Whereas Jagabee are somewhat thick and made from unhusked whole potatoes, Jagarico are usually thinner and made from skinned potatoes. According to Onishi, Calbee tailors its products to specific audiences and Jagarico was product designed primarily for teenage women, whereas Jagabee targets older consumers.
The success of many Jagarico products has spawned a number of derivative snacks. For example, around 1998 Calbee began marketing a sweet potato version of Jagarico known as "Satsumariko." Moreover, a corn version of this product known as "Tomorico" has been sold nationwide since 2018. That same year, a soybean incarnation of Jagarico known as "Edamarico" hit store shelves in Japan. Furthermore, a thicker processed potato product known as "Poteriko" was launched in 2021.
References
External links
Japanese cuisine
Japanese snack food
Potato dishes
Snack foods
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Elia Nuqul is a Palestinian businessperson. He is the founder of the Nuqul Group, a business conglomerate with 31 companies, including Fine Hygienic Holding.
Nuqul grew up in Ramla with an ambition of being an engineer. His father was a greengrocer and his mother sold embroidery from their home. He began his studies at the American University of Beirut before his family was expelled from the country. Nugul is a Christian-Palestinian and his family was forced to leave during the creation of Isreal in 1948.
In 1952, Nuqul founded the Nuqul Group under the name Nuqul Brothers. It started off by trading and importing food and consumer goods. Nuqul included "Brothers" in the name with expectations that it would eventually become a family business. In the late 1950s, the company started producing hygienic paper products. In 1958, Nuqul founded Fine, a tissue and paper product manufacturer, and is considered the first Arab to bring such industry into that region. By 2009, the Nuqul Group included 31 companies and over 5,500 employees.
The Elia Nuqul Foundation was formed in 2008. The Foundation provides education to people in underprivileged areas. The idea for the Foundation was from Nuqul's time in Ramla when he was unable to complete his education due to financial conditions and his refugee status.
References
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Palestinian Christians
Palestinian businesspeople | [
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Founders Online is a research website providing free access to a digitized collection of 185,000 documents representing the papers of six of the most influential figures in the founding of the United States. Among the documents available through the website's searchable database are the papers of John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and George Washington. The database also includes correspondence between these Founders and hundreds of other figures. The website is a cooperative venture between the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC), the grant-making arm of the National Archives, and The University of Virginia Press.
Collected papers of Founding Fathers
The Founders Online website, launched on June 13, 2013, enables students, researchers, scholars, and the general public to read what the Founders wrote and debated in the years leading up to and following the nation's formation. The subjects they discussed between themselves and others ranged from public policies and democratic principles to slavery and the Constitution. The works available also provide insight into the Founders' friendships and personal lives.
The website's collection is the result of a 50-year effort by scholars to locate, transcribe, annotate, and digitize 18th and 19th century documents held by archives throughout the U.S. and world-wide. From these works, hundreds of individual volumes have been published that can also be accessed.
The collection also includes the letterpress editions of the Founders' original papers, which were drawn from the following sources:
John Adams ― Massachusetts Historical Society and Harvard University Press
Benjamin Franklin ― Yale University Press
Alexander Hamilton ― Columbia University Press
Thomas Jefferson ― Princeton University Press
James Madison and George Washington ― University of Virginia Press
Besides the complete works of these individuals, Founders Online includes the selected papers of John Jay, first Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Eventually, the website's collection is expected to exceed 200,000 documents. The website is based at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.
Funding
The website's editorial work is made possible through federal funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional major funding is provided by a wide range of foundations, corporations, and private individuals. Also sponsoring the Founder Online's editorial projects are The University of Virginia, Princeton University, Massachusetts Historical Society, Columbia University. Yale University, American Philosophical Society, University of Chicago, and Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello.
See also
Founding Fathers of the United States
The Washington Papers
The Papers of Thomas Jefferson
Adams Papers Editorial Project
The Papers of James Madison
The Selected Papers of John Jay
References
External links
Founders Online
National Archives
YouTube: Founders Online
United States documents
Political leaders of the American Revolution
History websites of the United States
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Thora Rae (born 15 October 1999) is a field hockey player from Canada.
Personal life
Thora Rae was born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia. She is a student at the University of British Columbia.
Career
Under–21
Thora Rae debuted for the Canada U–21 team in 2019 during a four–nations tournament in Dublin.
In 2021, Rae appeared in the team again at the Pan American Junior Championship in Santiago. At the tournament, Rae won a gold medal with the team, scoring once and securing qualification to the FIH Junior World Cup.
Senior national team
Rae made her senior international debut in 2016, during a test series against New Zealand in Hamilton.
In 2022 Rae was named to the national squad for the first time. In January, she represented the team at the Pan American Cup in Santiago, where she won a bronze medal.
International goals
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Canadian female field hockey players
Female field hockey forwards
Field hockey people from British Columbia | [
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Rodney Troy Bixler (born September 1968) is an American serial killer and rapist who strangled three women in Kentucky in 2000. He is also suspected of drowning a 13-year-old girl.
Previous crimes
In 1999, Bixler was acquitted of the rape and sodomy of a 17-year-old girl. The same year, he was convicted of six counts of misusing an ATM card and sentenced to a year in jail. Bixler served about six months in jail for those crimes.
Murders, trial, and imprisonment
On February 4, 2000, Bixler strangled 67-year-old Thelma Cornett in her apartment in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky.
Bixler was suspected of but never charged with drowning 13-year-old Stephanie Ann Claunch on July 25, 2000, in the Kentucky River.
On August 5, 2000, Bixler raped a Lexington woman, tried to strangle her to death, and set fire to her bedroom.
On October 7, 2000, Bixler strangled Heather Wright, a 27-year-old sex worker. Her body was discovered in a stream leading into the Kentucky River.
On October 22, 2000, Bixler strangled 67-year-old Daisy Whitaker in her bathtub. He then stole her car.
Bixler was arrested on November 1, 2000. He was charged with murder for Whitaker's death, as well as one count of second degree rape and two counts of third degree rape for having sex with teenage girls.
In 2003, Bixler pleaded guilty to the rape charges and received a 5-year sentence. Later that year, he was convicted of murder and theft for Whitaker's death. The case against Bixler was circumstantial and he maintained his innocence. The jury recommended a 25-year sentence for murder and a 5-year sentence for theft. The judge sentenced Bixler to 29 years in prison, to be served consecutively with his rape sentences for a total of 35 years.
In 2005, Bixler pleaded guilty to second degree arson in the non-fatal assault and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. In exchange, charges of attempted murder and rape were dismissed.
In 2008, Bixler entered an Alford plea for two counts of murder in the deaths of Cornett and Wright. He received two consecutive 20-year sentences, to be served concurrently with his other sentences.
Bixler is serving his sentence at Northpoint Training Center. He will become eligible for parole on January 29, 2024. If Bixler is not granted parole, he will be released from prison on September 21, 2039, provided he maintains good behavior. If not, he will be released from prison on March 3, 2045.
See also
List of serial killers in the United States
References
1968 births
Living people
21st-century American criminals
American male criminals
Male serial killers
American serial killers
American rapists
American people convicted of murder
People convicted of murder by Kentucky
American people convicted of rape
American prisoners and detainees
Prisoners and detainees of Kentucky
Violence against women in the United States
Criminals from Kentucky
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David Burgess is an American former politician who served on the Georgia Public Service Commission from 1999 to 2007. He was the first Black member of the commission since its establishment in 1879.
Burgess graduated from Georgia Tech in 1981 with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Electrical Engineering, and worked as a public utilities engineer at the Public Service Commission. Rising through the ranks over the years, Burgess served as Director of Rates and Tariffs from 1988 until 1997, and from 1997 to 1999 as the Director of the commission's Telecommunications Unit. He was selected by Governor Roy Barnes in April 1999 to serve out the remaining term of Dave Baker, and subsequently won election to a full term in November 2000. He ascended to the role of chairman of the PSC in 2002. The last (and currently most recent, as of 2022) Democratic incumbent on the commission, he was defeated in his bid for a second full term in 2006 by Republican candidate Chuck Eaton.
References
Georgia (U.S. state) politicians
Georgia (U.S. state) Democrats
1959 births
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Giovanna Petrenga (born 6 July 1956) is an Italian Senator from Brothers of Italy.
References
Living people
1956 births
21st-century Italian women politicians
Forza Italia (2013) politicians
Brothers of Italy politicians
Deputies of Legislature XVI of Italy
Deputies of Legislature XVII of Italy
Senators of Legislature XVIII of Italy | [
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Germán Pedro Martínez (born 22 February 1975) is an Argentine politician who has been a National Deputy elected for the Frente de Todos in Santa Fe since 2019. A member of the Justicialist Party, Martínez worked as a legislative aide for Agustín Rossi and Guillermo Carmona from 2005 to his own election to the Chamber of Deputies.
Since 2022, he has been president of the Frente de Todos parliamentary bloc.
Early life
Martínez was born on 22 February 1975 in Rosario. He counts with a licenciatura degree on Political Science from the National University of Rosario, which he earned in 1999. Early in his career, from 1994 to 2003, he was an auxiliary teacher at Colegio Salesiano San José, a private Catholic school in Rosario, and later worked as a project manager at the Institución Salesiana Nuestra Señora del Rosario in Funes.
Political career
Early in his career, Martínez was active in a Christian youth organisation. In 2005, he became a legislative aide at the National Chamber of Deputies for Santa Fe deputy Agustín Rossi, of the Front for Victory. Martínez would form a longstanding association with Rossi, serving in his office until Rossi's hiatus from Congress in 2013. From 2015 to 2017, Martínez worked as an aide for Mendoza deputy Guillermo Carmona. He would later return to Rossi's office when the latter was once again elected to the lower house in 2017.
Martínez also briefly served as undersecretary of administrative coordination at the Ministry of Defense during Rossi's time as defense minister, in the presidency of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.
National Deputy
In the 2019 legislative election, Martínez ran for one of Santa Fe's seats in the Chamber of Deputies in his own right, as the fourth candidate in the Frente de Todos list. The Frente de Todos came second in the general election, with 42.26% of the vote, enough for Martínez to make it past the D'Hondt cut and be elected.
As a national deputy, Martínez formed part of the parliamentary commissions on Industry, National Defense, Freedom of Expression, Petitions and Powers, Budgets and Finances, Addiction Prevention, Education, and Tax Norm Auditing. He also served as first vice president of the National Defense Commission. He was a supporter of the legalisation of abortion in Argentina, voting in favour of the 2020 Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy Bill.
In February 2022, he was elected president of the Frente de Todos parliamentary bloc following the resignation of Máximo Kirchner from the position due to disagreements regarding the 2022 deal between Argentina and the International Monetary Fund.
Personal life
Martínez is married to Carla María Morasso and has two children.
References
External links
Profile on the official website of the Chamber of Deputies
Living people
1975 births
People from Rosario, Santa Fe
Members of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies elected in Santa Fe
Justicialist Party politicians
National University of Rosario alumni
21st-century Argentine politicians | [
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Vyas Deo Prasad is an Indian politician, former Minister of state in the Government of Bihar from April 2008 to November 2010. He represented Siwan in the Bihar Legislative Assembly thrice in a row winning 2005, 2010, 2015 elections. In 2020 Bihar Legislative Assembly election, he was denied a ticket to contest from Siwan in favour of Om Prakash Yadav who lost the election to Awadh Bihari Choudhary.
References
Bharatiya Janata Party politicians from Bihar
Living people
State cabinet ministers of Bihar
Bihar MLAs 2005–2010
Bihar MLAs 2010–2015
Bihar MLAs 2015–2020 | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Natchez, Mississippi in various seasons between 1893 and 1953. The Natchez teams played as members of the Mississippi State League (1893–1894), Cotton States League (1902–1905), Evangeline League (1940–1942, 1946–1947) and Cotton States League (1948–1953)
Natchez was a minor league affiliate of the New York Giants in 1942.
History
Minor league baseball began play in Natchez in 1893. The Natchez team played as a member of the Mississippi State League in 1893 and 1894.
The Natchez Indians played as members of the Class D level Cotton States League from 1902 to 1905. The Indians were founding members of the Cotton States League in 1902, along with the Baton Rouge Cajuns, Greenville Cotton Pickers and Vicksburg Hill Climbers. The Natchez Indians were Cotton States League Champions in 1902. Natchez finished 3rd in 1903 with a 59–59 record and were 6th in 1904, finishing with a 42–74 record. The Indians were 18–27 on June 26, 1905, when the franchise moved to Mobile, Alabama and became the Mobile Sea Gulls.
After a 25–year span between teams, the Natchez Pilgrims began play in the 1940 Class D level Evangeline League when the Houma Buccaneers moved to Natchez on June 27, 1940. The Pilgrims finished in 7th place in both 1940 and 1941.
In 1942, Natchez became an affiliate of the New York Giants and became the Natchez Giants. The Evangeline League suspended play on May 30, 1942, season, with the Giants in 1st place with a 29–10 record. The League resumed in 1946, with the Natchez Giants finishing 2nd in 1946 and being eliminated in the playoffs. The Giants finished 6th in 1947.
In 1948, Natchez joined the Class C level Cotton States League as the Natchez Indians. The Indians played in the league from 1948 to 1953, capturing the 1949 and 1951 Cotton States League championships and losing in the league finals in 1950 and 1952. Natchez folded after a 50–75, 7th-place finish in the 1953 season. Natchez has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballparks
Early Natchez teams were noted to have played at Athletic Park in Natchez, Mississippi.
Beginning in 1940, Natchez minor league teams were referenced to have played at Liberty Park. The ballpark had a capacity 1,400 in 1941 and 2,700 in 1949. Still in use today as a public park, Liberty Park is located at 301 Liberty Road, Natchez, Mississippi.
Notable alumni
Billy Crowell (1893)
Hersh Freeman (1948)
Tom Gettinger (1902–1905)
Jackie Hayes (1893)
Ben Koehler (1904)
Harry Perkowski (1942)
Joe Rullo (1948–1949, MGR)
See also
Natchez Giants playersNatchez Indians playersNatchez Pilgrims players
References
Natchez, Mississippi
Adams County, Mississippi | [
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Events in the year 2022 in Guinea-Bissau.
Incumbents
President: Umaro Sissoco Embaló
Prime Minister: Nuno Gomes Nabiam
Events
Ongoing — COVID-19 pandemic in Guinea-Bissau
1 February 2022 : A coup d'état to oust Embaló was attempted on 1 February 2022. He said that "many" members of the security forces had been killed in a "failed attack against democracy."
Deaths
1 February 2022 :
References
2020s in Guinea-Bissau
Years of the 21st century in Guinea-Bissau
Guinea-Bissau
Guinea-Bissau | [
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Nicholas John Kusznir is a British geophysicist. He is Emeritus Professor of Geophysics at the University of Liverpool.
Kusznir completed his BSc in Physics at Durham University in 1972; earning a PhD from the same institution in 1976. He has been awarded both the Bigsby Medal (1987) and Lyell Medal (2019) of the Geological Society of London.
His h-index, per Google Scholar, is 56.
References
Living people
British geophysicists
Academics of the University of Liverpool
Alumni of Hatfield College, Durham | [
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A retaliatory arrest or retaliatory prosecution is an arrest or prosecution undertaken in retaliation for a person's exercise of their civil rights.
United States
In Hartman v. Moore in 2006, the United States Supreme Court ruled that for a prosecution to be found retaliatory, it must have been brought without probable cause.
In the 2018 case of Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, Riviera Beach, Florida argued that the logic of Hartman extended to retaliatory arrest. The Supreme Court issued a narrow ruling that plaintiff Fane Lozman was able to bring the claim despite there having been probable cause for his arrest. A year later, they answered the broader question, holding in Nieves v. Bartlett that probable cause defeats a claim of retaliatory arrest unless the plaintiff can show that others are typically not been arrested for similar conduct.
References
See also
Contempt of cop
Arbitrary arrest and detention
42 U.S.C. § 1983, governing claims against state actors for denial of constitutional rights
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents, governing claims against federal actors
Political repression
Abuse of the legal system
Law enforcement terminology
Criminal law | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Brenham, Texas in three seasons between 1905 and 1915. The Brenham teams played as members of the South Texas League in 1905 and Middle Texas League in 1914 and 1915.
History
Minor league baseball began in Brenham, Texas in 1905. The Brenham Cotton Pickers played briefly as members of the Class C level South Texas League. The Beaumont Oilers, with a 40–68 record, moved to Brenham on August 21, 1905. The team had a 1–6 record playing exclusively in Brenham, before becoming a road team. The Beaumont/Branham team completed the 1905 the season schedule playing their final home games in numerous locations including Austin, Texas and San Antonio, Texas and being called the "Orphans." The Beaumont/Brenham team finished with an overall record of 45–81, placing 8th and last in the South Texas League. The team was managed by Harry Longley and Brooks Gordon.
Minor league baseball returned in 1914 as the Brenham Brewers became charter members of the Class D level Middle Texas League. The Middle Texas League began play as a six–team league, with the franchises based in Bartlett, Texas (Bartlett Bearcats), Belton, Texas (Belton Braves), Georgetown, Texas (Georgetown Collegians), Lampasas, Texas (Lampasas Resorters) and Temple, Texas (Temple Tigers) joining Brenham in league play.
Art R. Bailey was the owner of the Brenham franchise in 1914 and Will Morriss served as secretary. Bailey owned a local cut glass company advertising as a jeweler and optician.
The Brenham use of the "Brewers" moniker corresponds to local industry in Brenham, with Brenham being been home to the G.F. Giesecke and Brothers Brewery of Brenham during the era.
The Brenham Brewers began play in the Middle Texas League on May 8, 1914, playing under manager Ike Pendleton. The Middle Texas League played a spit–season schedule, with champions during each half. Brenham placed 3rd overall in the league regular season standings, finishing 5.5 games behind the 1st place Temple Tigers. The final overall standings were led the Temple Tigers (54–27) followed by the Georgetown Collegians (50–30), Brenham Brewers (50–34), Belton Braves (37–47), Lampasas Resorters (35–51) and Bartlett Bearcats (22–59).
In 1915, Brenham hosted two Middle Texas League teams. Both teams folded, along with the Middle Texas League before the completion of the 1915 season. On June 7 1915, the Brenham Brewers folded. At the time they folded, the Brewers had a 12–31 record under managers Arthur Wicks and John Tuller. However, Brenham gained another team the next day. On May 1, 1915, the Austin Reps, with a 2–5 record, had moved to become the Taylor Producers due to flooding at the ballpark in Austin. On June 8, 1915, the day after the Brewers folded, team then moved from Taylor (15–23) to Brenham to replace the Brewers. Some references have the first 1915 Brenham team playing under the "Huskies" moniker instead of the "Brewers."
Beginning on June 9, 1915, the Brenham Kaisers continued play under managers Jack Snipes and Billy Disch until the Middle Texas League permanently folded on June 19, 1915. The Middle Texas league final standings were led by the Belton Braves (40–19), who finished 8.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Temple Governors (32–27), followed by the Bartlett Bearcats (29–26) and Austin Representatives/Taylor Producers/Brenham Kaisers (21–36). The Schulenburg Giants were 23–18 and the Brenham Brewers 12–31 when they both folded on June 7, 1915. The Belton Braves won both half–seasons of the league and no playoffs were held as the league folded.
Brenham, Texas has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
A local newspaper in July 1914 referred to the Brenham home ballpark as League Park.
Timeline
Year–by–year record
Notable alumni
Billy Disch (1915, MGR)
Newt Hunter (1905)
Dutch Jordan (1915)
See also
Brenham Brewers players
Brenham Cotton Pickers players
Brenham Kaisers players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Brenham, Texas
Washington County, Texas | [
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Llámame may refer to:
"Llámame", a song by Víctor Balaguer that was selected to represent Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 1962
"Llámame", the Spanish-language version of "Call Me" by Blondie (1980)
"Llámame", a song by Raymix | [
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Nidadavolu Malathi is a reputable Telugu writer from Andhra Pradesh, India. She is a short story writer, essayist, literary critic, and translator. Her daughter Sarayu Rao is a well-known Hollywood actress.
Early life and education
Nidadavolu Malathi hails from Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India. She was born to Sri Nidadavolu Jagannatha Rao and Seshamma on June 26, 1937. Her father worked as Math teacher in Theosophical Society High school, Adyar, Madras. Both her parents cherished progressive views, which are reflected in their children's upbringing. Malathi has Masters's degrees in English Language and Literature from Andhra University and Sri Venkateswara University; and master's degree in Library Science from University of Delhi. She worked as Assistant Librarian, and Librarian in Sri Venkateswara University from 1964 to 1973. She moved to America in November 1973. She also taught Telugu as Second Language in University of Wisconsin, Madison, during 1978–2006.
Literary activity
Malathi started writing stories in the early 1950s in Telugu, and has published in several prominent magazines of the times. After arriving in the United States in 1973, she started writing in English as well.
She has a website, thulika.net wherein she publishes English translations of Telugu stories.
thulika.net, founded in June 2001, features 120 translations and critical/analytical essays by Malathi, a few by other translators. Malathi has published translations of her own stories, My Little Friend and Other Stories in e-book format.
Malathi publishes her original stories and articles in Telugu on her blog. ( )
In response to a question why her stories are not appearing in magazines in India, she said it was basically a communication problem. After moving to the U.S., she found herself alienated from the literary circles in India for want of regular communication channels. As a result, we do not find her stories in Indian journals. Nevertheless, she remains active on her Telugu blog, website, and other Internet avenues.
Malathi created the site, http://thulika.net in June 2001 with the specific goal of introducing Telugu traditions and culture to non-Telugu readers through eminent Telugu fiction and informative articles. Her passion for disseminating Telugu cultural values and traditions, and commitment to putting into practice what she believes in are noteworthy. She finds it gratifying that university professors and scholars in the U.S., Britain, Canada and France have welcomed these articles. Some of her articles have been reprinted, and some referenced; that gave her additional motivation and impetus to continue her work. Thulika site is dedicated to introducing exclusively Telugu writers and Telugu stories to non-Telugu-speaking audience around the world, and she remains committed to that end. Malathi selects only stories that depict a wide variety of views, perceptions, lifestyles that are peculiar to Telugu people, traditions, and culture.
As of January 2022, the site has featured 198 articles. 137 Telugu stories in translation (120 translated by Malathi.).
53 Analytical/informative articles. (48 written by Malathi.).Some of the articles by Malathi such as "What is a Good Story?", "Dynamics of Transcultural Translation", "Native Element in Telugu Stories," and informative articles such as "Atukuri Molla", "Kanuparti Varalakshmamma", "Bhandaru Acchamamba", "Nidudavolu Venkata Rao" have been well-received, and being used as reference sources by research scholars around the world. Thulika.net is a one-person operation; receives no money and offers no remuneration for published articles.
Honors and awards
1968 and 1969. Nidadavolu Malathi was honored at Andhra Pradesh Women Writers Conferences organized by Andhra Pradesh Sahitya Akademi.
1970. Her short story, "thrushna", received special prize in Ugadi short story competition conducted by Andhra Jyothi Weekly, and published on 10 April 1970. It has been translated into Hindi by Yelamanchili Lakshmibai, and published in Andhra Pradesh Magazine in April–May 1972 issue.
1971. "Chiruchakram" [The Small Wheel] received first prize in Ugadi [Telugu New Year] Short Story Competition, and published in Andhra Jyothi weekly magazine, April 2, 1972. For English translation.
Also, the story has been translated into Kannada by Nirupama, and published in Sudha magazine, June 13, 1971.
Literary works
IN TELUGU
In e-Book format: Novels
Chatakapakshulu
Maarpu
Anthologies of short stories:
kathaamalathi. v.1
kathaamalathi. v.2
kathaamalathi. v.3
kathaamalathi. v.4
kathaamalathi. v.5
inte sangatulu. v.6.
Anthologies of critical/informative articles:
vyasamalathi. v.1
vyasamalathi. v.2
vyasamalathi. v.3
vyasamalathi. v.4.
Anthologies of miscellaneous short short fiction and articles:
ennemma kathalu. v.1
ennemma kathalu. v. 2
Books in print in English: Her translations have been published in 3 volumes:
Spectrum of My People (Jaico), (republished under the title, Short Stories From Andhra Pradesh). 2006 and 2009.
Front Porch (Sahitya Academi). 2009.
Penscape, An Anthology of Telugu Short Stories (published by Lekhini, Hyderabad). 2011.
Beyond the Shores of the River Existentialism. Translation of Astitvanaadam aavali teeraana by Munipalle Raju. Delhi: Sahitya Academi. (In Press).
Books in print in Telugu
Nijaanikii feminijaanikii madhya
kathala sankalanam. BSR Foundation, 2006. (out of print)
- kathala attayyagaru, (anthology of 22 short stories in Telugu). Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India:Visalandhra Publishing House, 2010. Outside India, distributed by avkf.org.
Gallery
External links
Malathi Nidadavolu: Native Element in Telugu Stories
రాగం...భూపాలం
అమెరికా జీవితం వల్ల తేడాలు తెలిశాయి : నిడదవోలు మాలతి ముఖాముఖి
1937 births
Living people
American women writers of Indian descent
Telugu women writers
Writers from Andhra Pradesh
Andhra University alumni
Sri Venkateswara University alumni
Delhi University alumni
University of Wisconsin–Madison faculty | [
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Bearpaw Mountain is a mountain summit located in Whatcom County of Washington state. It is situated less than four miles south of the Canada–United States border, on land managed by Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest. The nearest higher neighbor is Church Mountain, to the southwest, and Mount Baker rises to the south. Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains to the Nooksack River via Canyon Creek. Topographic relief is significant as the north aspect rises 3,100 feet (945 m) above Canyon Creek in approximately 1.5 mile.
Climate
Bearpaw Mountain is located in the marine west coast climate zone of western North America. Most weather fronts originate in the Pacific Ocean, and travel northeast toward the Cascade Mountains. As fronts approach the North Cascades, they are forced upward by the peaks of the Cascade Range, causing them to drop their moisture in the form of rain or snowfall onto the Cascades (Orographic lift). As a result, the west side of the North Cascades experiences high precipitation, especially during the winter months in the form of snowfall. Because of maritime influence, snow tends to be wet and heavy, resulting in high avalanche danger. Due to its temperate climate and proximity to the Pacific Ocean, areas west of the Cascade Crest very rarely experience temperatures below or above . During winter months, weather is usually cloudy, but due to high pressure systems over the Pacific Ocean that intensify during summer months, there is often little or no cloud cover during the summer.
Geology
The North Cascades features some of the most rugged topography in the Cascade Range with craggy peaks, ridges, and deep glacial valleys. Geological events occurring many years ago created the diverse topography and drastic elevation changes over the Cascade Range leading to various climate differences.
The history of the formation of the Cascade Mountains dates back millions of years ago to the late Eocene Epoch. With the North American Plate overriding the Pacific Plate, episodes of volcanic igneous activity persisted. In addition, small fragments of the oceanic and continental lithosphere called terranes created the North Cascades about 50 million years ago.
During the Pleistocene period dating back over two million years ago, glaciation advancing and retreating repeatedly scoured and shaped the landscape. The U-shaped cross section of the river valleys are a result of recent glaciation. Uplift and faulting in combination with glaciation have been the dominant processes which have created the tall peaks and deep valleys of the North Cascades area.
See also
Geography of the North Cascades
Geology of the Pacific Northwest
References
External links
Bearpaw Mountain: weather forecast
Mountains of Washington (state)
Mountains of Whatcom County, Washington
North Cascades
Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest
Cascade Range
North American 1000 m summits | [
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Faisul Islam Farouqui was a Bangladeshi academic and former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Rajshahi. He is a former member of the University Grants Commission.
Career
Farouqui served as the vice-chancellor of the University of Rajshahi from 13 November 2001 to 5 June 2005. Farouqui was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the university by Bangladesh Nationalist Party government and replaced M. Sayeedur Rahman Khan, who was elected by the senate panel of the university. Since Farouqui no other Vice-Chancellors of the university has been elected.
In 2003, he oversaw the celebration of the 50th anniversary of University of Rajshahi. The residence of Farouqui was surrounded by employees of the university who protested the appoinment of 88 employees on an ad hoc basis on 3 June 2005. Hen then cancelled their appointments following protests. Farouqui was replaced by Md. Altaf Hossain on 5 June 2005 as Vice Chancellor of the University of Rajshahi. He is the dean of the faculty of Life and Earth Sciences.
On 13 August 2007, M Momtazul Islam, Secretary of the Ministry of Education, asked Farouqui to resign from University Grants Commission.
References
University of Rajshahi faculty
Vice-Chancellors of the University of Rajshahi | [
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Steve Crosby (born 1950) is an American former professional football coach and player.
Steve Crosby may also refer to:
Steve Crosby (music), British record producer, songwriter and music manager
See also
Steve Crosbie (born 1993), Irish former rugby union player
Stephen Crosby (1808–1869), American politician | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Galveston, Texas in various seasons between 1888 and 1955. The Galveston White Caps played as members of the Gulf Coast League from 1950 to 1953 and Big State League from 1954 to 1955. Earlier Galveston teams played ender various monikers in the Texas League between 1888 and 1937.
History
Early Galveston teams called the Galveston Sand Crabs evolved from the 1888 Galveston Giants of the Texas League. The Sand Crabs continued play in the Texas League from 1889 to 1890, 1892, 1897–1899 and 1907–1911.
The Galveston Pirates (1912–1917, 1919–1921), Galveston Sand Crabs (1922–1924) and Galveston Buccaneers (1931–1937) played as members of the Texas League.
The Galveston Buccaneers first began play in 1931, when the Waco Cubs relocated to Galveston. Galveston owner Shearn Moody had purchased the Waco franchise, moved the team to Galveston and constructed Moody Stadium. The Buccaneers won the Texas League championship in 1934. The franchise moved to become the Shreveport Sports after the 1937 season when Shearn Moody died and the franchise was sold.
The Galveston White Caps were founding members of the Class B level Gulf Coast League in 1950 before joining the Big State League in 1954, before disbanding in 1955.
The Gulf Coast League folded after the season 1953 season, with members Galveston White Caps, Harlingen Capitals, Laredo Apaches, Brownsville Charros, Port Arthur Seahawks, Corpus Christi Aces, Lake Charles Lakers and Texas City Texans. Galveston won the league's final regular season title with a record of 94–48.
In the Gulf Coast League, Galveston finished 80–68 in 1950, 71–83 in 1951, 80–74 in 1952 and 94–48 in 1953.
In 1954, the Galveston White Caps joined the Big State League. Galveston played alongside the Austin Pioneers, Corpus Christi Clippers, Del Rio Indians, Harlingen Capitals, Temple Eagles, Tyler Tigers, Port Arthur Sea Hawks and Waco Pirates as fellow league members. The White Caps franchise folded on June 12, 1955, with a record of 28–30.
Joining the Big State League, the White Caps finished 73–73 in 1954 and were 28–30 when the franchise folded on June 12, 1955.
Galveston, Texas has not hosted another minor league team.
Today, the Galveston "White Caps" moniker is used by the athletic teams at Galveston College.
The ballparks
Early Galveston minor league teams reportedly played minor league games at Beach Park (1888–1915) and Pirate Field / Gulfview Park (1915–1924).
Beach Park was located at the corner of Avenue Q and & 23rd Street, Galveston, Texas. The 500 capacity stadium was located across the street from the Beach Hotel. In 1895 the bleachers collapsed during a game.
Gulfview Park / Pirate Field was located at 2802 Avenue R, Galveston, Texas. The ballpark had a capacity of 4,000. It had dimensions of 260 RF and was called Pirate Field when hosting the Pirates. The ballpark was damaged by a tropical storm on August 15, 1915, and the park was unusable for the remainder of the 1915 season.
Beginning in 1931, Galveston minor league teams were noted to have played home games at Moody Stadium. Moody Stadium was one of the first minor league stadiums equipped with lights. Moody Stadium was located ad 5108 Avenue G Galveston, Texas. Moody Stadium had a capacity of 8,000 in 1937 and dimensions of (left, center, right): 338–460–324.
Year–by–year records
Notable alumni
Jodie Beeler (1955, MGR)
Beau Bell (1931–1932) MLB All-Star
Harry Brecheen (1935–1936) 2x MLB All-Star; St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame
Max Butcher (1935)
Jiggs Donahue (1911, MGR)
Vallie Eaves (1954)
Stan Goletz (1952–1953)
Julio Gonzalez (1951)
Harry Gumbert (1951, MGR)
Harvey Hendrick (1922)
Ira Hutchinson (1933–1934)
Hank Izquierdo (1951–1953)
Rene Monteagudo (1951)
Wally Moses (1933–1934) 2x MLB All-Star; Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame
Del Pratt (1931–1932, MGR)
Chase Riddle (1954, MGR)
Hank Severeid (1937)
Tully Sparks (1897)
Harry Steinfeldt (1896)
Jake Stenzel (1890)
Monty Stratton (1934) MLB All-Star; Movie: The Stratton Story
Jeff Tesreau (1908) MLB ERA Title
Gus Weyhing (1910)
Barney White (1951–1952), (1953, MGR)
See also
Galveston White Caps players
Media
The Galveston Buccaneers were the subject of a 2015 book, "The Galveston Buccaneers" by Kris Rutherford, Arcadia Publishing.
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Sports in Galveston, Texas | [
101,
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Emil Lindholm (born 19 July 1996) is a Finnish rally driver. He is the son of former World Rally Championship driver Sebastian Lindholm. He is also the reigning champion of the Finnish Rally Championship.
Rally results
WRC results
* Season still in progress.
References
External links
Emil Lindholm's e-wrc profile
1996 births
Living people
Finnish rally drivers
Sportspeople from Helsinki
World Rally Championship drivers | [
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Te Voy a Conquistar may refer to:
"Te Voy a Conquistar", a song by Intocable also included on their 2003 compilation album La Historia
"Te Voy a Conquistar", a 2008 song by Los Favoritos from Tu Favorito
"Te Voy a Conquistar", a song by Ricky Martin from his 1991 album of the same name
Te Voy a Conquistar, a 2022 album and song by Raymix | [
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Tēvita Tonga Mohenoa Puloka is a Tongan academic and religious leader. From 2018 to 2021 he served as Governor of Haʻapai.
Puloka served as a director of the Free Wesleyan Church of Tonga. In 2013 when eight ministers were caught misusing church funds he pushed for accountability and for ministers to be insulated from financial matters. In 2014 he opposed a strike by the Tongan Public Service Association as it would threaten the economy.
In November 2017 he was appointed to the Tonga Tradition Committee by Tupou VI. He later released a book in 2017 on his upbringing.
In June 2018 he was appointed Governor of Ha’apai. As Governor he was responsible for disaster management for Cyclone Tino. He was replaced as Governor by Viliami Hingano in January 2021.
References
External links
Living people
Governors of Haʻapai
Tongan academics
Tongan Christian clergy | [
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Fábio Lima may refer to:
Fábio Lima (footballer, born 1981), Brazilian football centre-back
Fábio Lima (futsal player) (born 1988), Portuguese futsal player
Fábio Lima (footballer, born 1993), Emirati football forward | [
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Mylapore Sundaram Anantharaman (26 August 1924 – 19 February 2018) was an Indian Carnatic and Hindustani violinist. He was an exponent of Parur style of violin playing. He received several awards including Kalaimamani Award and Sangeet Natak Akademi Award.
Biography
M. S. Anantharaman was born on 26 August 1924, in a musical family in Paravur, Aluva in present-day Ernakulam district of Kerala. His father Parur Sundaram Iyer was a violinist in the royal palace of Travancore. Iyer, migrated to Chennai from Kerala in 1932. Anantharaman learned the violin at the age of six from his father Sundaram Iyer. His father, who introduced Violin in Hindusthani music, trained Anantharaman and his brother M. S. Gopalakrishnan, both Carnatic and Hindustani music. His elder sister Parur Sitalakshmi was also a violinist. He made his debut at the age of seven. He and his sister played violin duets at the Ramanathaswamy Temple, Subramaniya Swamy Temple, Tiruchendur and Kanyakumari Temple.
Anantharaman designed his own style with his brother. The brothers were popular in Parur Bani (mix of Hidustani and Carnatic styles). He was a regular participant at concerts in Chennai as part of the Markazi festival. Later, when M. S. Gopalakrishnan performed his own violin concerts, Anantharaman became accustomed to accompanying musicians on the violin. Anantharaman became a violinist along with Carnatic musicians including M. S. Subbulakshmi and Hindustani musicians including Omkarnath Thakur.
He has served as a Professor of violin in the Tamil Nadu Government Music College in Chennai from 1962 to 1983. Later, he taught violin in Pittsburgh, United states also.
His sons M. S. Sundareswaran and M. A. Krishnaswamy were also Carnatic violinists. His daughter M. A. Bhagirathi is a Carnatic vocalist.
He died on 19 February 2018, at his home at Sri Apparswamy Koil Street, Mylapore, Chennai, Tamil Nadu.
Awards and honors
Sangeet Natak Akademi Award 1998
Kalaimamani award of the Tamil Nadu Eyal Isai Nataka Manram
T.T.K award of the Music Academy 1996
Sangeetha Kala Acharya of the Music Academy
He was the Asthana Vidwan (Head Scholar) of the Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham
References
1924 births
2018 deaths
Carnatic violinists
Hindustani violinists
Recipients of the Kalaimamani Award
Recipients of the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award
Musicians from Chennai
Indian violinists
Carnatic instrumentalists
Indian male classical musicians
20th-century violinists
20th-century Indian musicians | [
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Richmond Nii Lamptey (born 18 March 1997) is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Ghana Premier League club Asante Kotoko. He has capped once for the Ghana national team.
Club career
WAFA
Lamptey joined West African Football Academy (WAFA) at the age of twelve. He progressed through the age groups playing for the U-13, U-17 till he was promoted to the senior team in 2015. He played three seasons with the senior team in the Ghana Premier League and was part of the squad that placed second in the 2017 season, the club's highest ever position in the history of the league. He played an important role that season, by playing 26 league matches, scoring one goal and providing five assists. His performance over the season drew in interest from several clubs. He left the club after his contract expired ending a nine-year stint with the Sogakope-based team.
Inter Allies
On 25 January 2018, International Allies announced that they had signed Lamptey as a free agent on three-year contract. On 3 February 2019, Lamptey signed for Lebanese Premier League side Salam Zgharta on a loan deal till the end of the 2018–19 season. He returned to the Inter Allies and was appointed as the club captain for the 2019–20 season. In the 2020–21 season, he played 30 matches, scored 3 goals, provided two assists and won four man of the match awards. He made headlines within the season with his 40-yard thunderbolt strike against Hearts of Oak in November 2020. That strike led Inter Allies to their first victory of the season.
Asante Kotoko
In September 2021, Lamptey signed for Asante Kotoko on a three-year deal, making him the first signing of newly appointed coach Prosper Narteh Ogum.
International career
Lamptey represented Ghana in the youth levels, including for the Ghana U17 in 2013 before being promoted to the Ghana U20. In 2017, he was a member of the Ghana squad that won the WAFU Cup of Nations.
Honours
Ghana
WAFU Cup of Nations: 2017
References
External links
Living people
1997 births
Sportspeople from Accra
Ghanaian footballers
Association football midfielders
West African Football Academy players
International Allies F.C. players
Salam Zgharta FC players
Asante Kotoko SC players
Ghana Premier League players
Lebanese Premier League players
Ghana international footballers
Ghana youth international footballers
Ghanaian expatriate footballers
Ghanaian expatriate sportspeople in Lebanon
Expatriate footballers in Lebanon | [
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Gabriel Lima may refer to:
Gabriel Lima (footballer, born 1978), Brazilian football striker
Gabriel Lima (futsal player) (born 1987), Italian futsal player
Gabriel Lima (footballer, born 1996), Brazilian football forward | [
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Isaac Bardavid (13 February 1931 – 1 February 2022) was a Brazilian actor of Jewish-Turkish origin.
Bardavid was considered one of the great names in Brazilian dubbing, having voiced characters such as Wolverine, Freddy Krueger, Tigger, and Skeletor. As an actor, he became known for playing the overseer Francisco in Escrava Isaura. Born in Brazil, he died on 1 February 2022, at the age of 90.
Select filmography
References
1931 births
2022 deaths
Brazilian male television actors
Brazilian male voice actors
People from Niterói
20th-century Brazilian male actors
21st-century Brazilian male actors | [
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State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) is an autonomous,statutory and Regulatory body constituted for ensuring generation and distribution of Electricity in States and Union Territories of India. State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) are formed as per Constitution of India in states and union territories of India by notification in official gazette in accordance with Electricity Regulatory Commissions Act, 1998. The commissions are vested with legislative and judicial powers to resolve conflicts between licence holders of production and distribution of electricity, or consumers and electricity distribution entities and with authority to draft regulations and sub ordinate regulations. The President and other members of State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) are appointed by State Government in consultation with the Chief Justice of state High Court.
History and objective
State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) is formed with the following objectives:
Acts as a regulator for distribution licensees during the purchase and procurement of electricity by them .
Facilitates during transmission of electricity between different states.
Facilitates issuing of licences to transmission and distribution licensees applicants and electricity traders within the state.
Fix the rates during wholesale, bulk or retail generation of electricity and its supply, transmission and wheeling within the state.
Resolve conflicts between the licensees and/or the generating companies.
Integrate state grid codes with the grid code designed by Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) .
Streamlining electricity tariff.
Transparency in designing subsidy related policies.
Promoting environmental policity in matters relating to electricity.
Any other matters connected or incidental with it.
Advisory Role
State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) follows below advisory role:
Designing schemes promoting electricity industry related investment.
Planinng initiatives in Electrical industry which promotes competition and improves efficiency and brings economy in activities.
Initiating restructuring and reorganisation in Electricity industry.
Guiding state government in any issues referred to it which are related to generation, transmission, distribution and trading of electricity in the state.
Powers
The commissions acts as substitutes to civil courts and are vested with legislative and judicial powers to resolve conflicts between licence holders of production and distribution of electricity, or consumers and electricity distribution entities and with authority to draft regulations and sub ordinate regulations. They can also issue orders for the recovery of amounts from power consuming entities which are due to electricity generating companies.
Composition
The Composition of State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India)
1. Chairperson
2. Two members.
Chairperson will be appointed by state Government in consultation with the Chief Justice of state High Court. The eligibility for Chairperson is that he should be serving or served as Judge in any High Court and other members should have good ability,integrity and standing.They should also be proficient experience and expertise knowledge in subjects of accountancy,law,commerce,economics,industry,administration and public affairs and problem solving ability in same.
The Chairperson and members of State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) are not permitted to hold any other office of profit or any position which is connected with any political party and are also barred from carrying on any business or continuing any profession in any field.
State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India)
List of State Electricity Regulatory Commission (India) is:
Related Articles
Central Electricity Regulatory Commission
References
External links
Official Website
Official Website
Regulatory agencies of India
Electric power in India
Energy regulatory authorities
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The Hoboken Mayoral Election of 2021 was an election to determine who will hold the office of Mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey in the upcoming term of 2022–2026. The election took place on November 2, 2022. Incumbent Mayor Ravinder Bhalla announced that he would seek reelection for a second term on June 3, 2021. Since there were no opponents, Bhalla ran unopposed for reelection for a second term.
Candidates
Incumbent Mayor Ravinder Bhalla, was the only person who declared his candidacy for the election. Despite this, Councilmembers Ruben Ramos Jr., Tiffanie Fisher, and Michael Russo as well as former Mayors Dawn Zimmer and David Roberts received write-in votes for mayor.
Results
References
Hoboken mayoral
Hoboken
Hoboken, New Jersey | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Harlingen, Texas in various seasons between 1931 and 2014. Harlingen teams played as members of the Rio Grande Valley League (1931), Texas Valley League (1938), Rio Grande Valley League (1950), Gulf Coast League (1951–1953), Big State League (1954–1955), Texas League (1960–1961), Gulf States League (1976) and Lone Star League (1977). The Rio Grande Valley WhiteWings played in various leagues between 1994 and 2014. The Harlingen minor league home ballpark was Harlingen Field.
Harlingen teams were a minor league affiliate of the Detroit Tigers in 1938 and San Francisco Giants in 1960 and 1961.
History
Minor league baseball began in Harlingen, Texas in 1931. The Harlingen Ladds played briefly as members of the 1931 Rio Grande Valley League and placed 3rd in their first season of play. On July 29, 1931, the Ladds had a record of 43–49, playing under manager Paul Trammel, when the Rio Grande Valley League folded.
Harlingen returned to minor league play in 1938, winning a championship. The Harlingen Hubs became members of the 1938 Texas Valley League and were a minor league affiliate of the Detroit Tigers. The Hubbs finished 2nd in the regular season in 1938, but swept through the playoffs undefeated to capture the Texas Valley League Championship, while playing under manager Jake Atz. The league folded after the 1938 season.
The Harlingen Capitals were members of the Class D Rio Grande Valley League (1950) and Class B Gulf Coast League (1951–1953). They were founding members of the Gulf Coast League, along with the Brownsville Charros, Corpus Christi Aces, Galveston White Caps, Lake Charles Lakers, Laredo Apaches, Port Arthur Seahawks and Texas City Texans. When the Gulf Coast League folded after the 1953 season Harlingen joined the Big State League (1954–1955).
The Rio Grande Valley Giants, played in the Class AA level Texas League (1960-1961) as an affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Gaylord Perry played for the Giants in 1960. The franchise moved to Victoria, Texas on June 10, 1961, to complete the season. In 1976, the Rio Grande Valley White Wings played in the Gulf States League and the Harlingen Suns (1977) played in the Lone Star League, both leagues folded after one season. Later Rio Grande Valley White Wings teams played in independent professional leagues through 2015.
The ballpark
Beginning in 1950, Harlingen minor league teams were noted to have played home games at Harlingen Field. Opening as Lon C. Hill Field, the ballpark was also called Giants Field. Harlingen Field is still in use today and most recently was home to the Independent professional Rio Grande Valley WhiteWings. The ballpark address is North O Street & Fair Park Boulevard, Harlingen, Texas.
Year–by–year record
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Gaylord Perry (1960) Inducted, 1991
Notable alumni
Jake Atz (1938, MGR)
Bobby Bolin (1960)
Earl Caldwell (1951-1952)
Ford Garrison (1955)
Sam Harshaney (1950-1951)
Ron Herbel (1960)
Chuck Hiller (1960)
Manny Mota (1960) MLB All-Star
John Orsino (1960)
Dee Phillips (1938)
Jose Tartabull (1961)
Ted Uhlaender (1976, MGR)
See also
Harlingen Capitals playersHarlingen Hubs players
References
Harlingen, Texas | [
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Taksaris of Sikkim also known as Taksari Newars were a group of traders and their families engaged in minting of coins in the Kingdom of Sikkim. There were six families - mostly Newars - miniting coins for the erstwhile Himalayan kingdom. Later, Chogyal of Sikkim gave these families large land estates as Thikadars, a system of leesee landlords with judicial and administrative power over their respective estates.
History
In 1867, Newar trader Lachhimidas Pradhan was the first Nepalese to be given territories in East and South Sikkim by Khangsa Dewan and Phudong Lama under British influence by issuing a “Sanad”(ordinance). Lachhimidas and his brother Chandrabir Pradhan divided the areas into number of estates to be distributed within the members of the family. During this period another Newar family led by Chandrabir Maskey settled in Sadam, South Sikkim. In the same year an agreement was reached between the two families where Chandrabir Maskey was given the Pendam, Temi, Regu, Pakyong and Chotta Pathing estates. Lachhimidas Pradhan and his family took control of the estate bordering Majitar to Kaleej khola and Barmick in South Sikkim. His brother Chandrabir Pradhan(Kasaju) Chandrabir (Kasaju} was given Rhenock, Mamring, Pache Khani, and Taja along with a joint supervision of Dilding and parts of Pendam. “Ilakhas” or estates of Sadam, Pachekhani, Dikling and parts of Pendam were put under joint supervision of both the families.
Families
Families of six traders - Lachhimidas Pradhan, Kancha Chandbir Pradhan, Chandbir Pradhan Maskey of Pakyong, Jitman Singh Pradhan, Prasad Singh Chettri of Tarku Estate and Bharaddoj Gurung of Khani Goan were addressed as “Taksaris” who were given land estates on lease to mint coins.
Legacy
They are credited with bringing coinage system to Sikkim and contributing to economic and agricultural growth of the Himalayan state. The first cart road connecting Teesta with Gangtok was built by the Taksaris. Bazaars of Rangpo, Singtam, Rhenock and Rongli were established due to the efforts of the Taksaris of Sikkim. In the judicial history of Sikkim, some of the earliest courts established in the former kingdom was the “Adda” courts of the Kazis and Thikadars. A Taksari family's residence is known as a Kothi accompanied with a Kuchcheri(court) which had jurisdiction over their land estate. There are many well preserved Kothis and Kuchcheris across Sikkim under the possession of the descendants of the Taksaris. Some have also converted their traditional residencies into heritage hotels. Many members of the Taksari families have held influential position in political, business and social life of Sikkim.
References
Kingdom of Sikkim
History of Sikkim
Indian landlords | [
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Una y Otra Vez is an album by Sergent Garcia.
Una y Otra Vez may also refer to:
Una y Otra Vez, a 2010 Colombian film
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Marlango and Guille Galván that serves as the theme song for ANA. all in, 2021
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Antonio Orozco, 2005
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Ednita Nazario from Apasionada, 2005
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by El Tri from Hecho en México, 2005
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Jesse & Joy from Electricidad, 2009
"Una y Otra Vez", the working title for "Una Na" by Lali Espósito, 2017
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Magento, 2001
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by María León written for the telenovela Guerra de ídolos, 2017
Una y Otra Vez, an album by Ray Reyes, 1986
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Rombai, 2017
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Santiago Cruz and Morat, 2019
"Una y Otra Vez", a song by Yolandita Monge from Mala, 2008 | [
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Agnes Lam (born 7 March 1972) is a Macanese poet, educator, journalist and politician. As a member of the Civic Watch party, she was elected to Macau's legislature in their 2009 Legislative Assembly election, and was the only member of the party represented there. She is the Assistant Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Macau, and currently heads their Center for Communication. She has published on the history of print media in China. She writes several columns in Macau newspapers, and has written and published several volumes of poetry. Her writing has won several awards, in China and Macau.
Early life
Lam was born on 7 March 1972 in Macau. Her parents had moved from mainland China to Macau and her father worked in construction and food service before they were able to buy farmland in Areia Preta. Lam was one of nine children and was able to attend college on the condition that she help fund her siblings' education afterwards.
Career
Journalism
Lam earned a degree in journalism from the University of Macau in 1991, and worked with Teledifusão de Macau thereafter, becoming a full-time television reporter in 1994. She covered local events, such as the opening of Macau Airport and visits to Macau by foreign leaders. She hosted a weekly television program, "Witnessing the Handover" which ran until 1999.
Education
Following her work in journalism, Lam completed a master's degree and Ph.D. from University of Beijing, studying the development of Chinese and Portuguese print media in Macau. In 1997, she joined the faculty of the University of Macau's Department of Communication, where she taught journalism. She was appointed the Assistant Dean of the University of Macau's Faculty of Social Sciences. Later, she helped establish the university's Department of Communication, where she teaches, and heads their Center for Communication.
Politics
Lam joined the Macau Civic Power party, later becoming the president of the party, and campaigned unsuccessfully for a seat in Macau's legislature in 1999 and 2003. She was elected to the legislature on her third campaign in 2017, and remained in office until 2021, when she ran an unsuccessful re-election campaign.
Writing
Lam has written ten books. Her most notable work, published in 2015, is a history of the Macanese press, titled The Beginning of the Modern Chinese Press History: Macau Press History 1557- 1840. She has also published four volumes of poetry: A Pond in the Sky: Selected and New Poems (Association of Stories in Macao, 2013), Water Wood Pure Splendour (Asia 2000, 2001), Woman to Woman and Other Poems (Asia 2000, 1997), and Poppies by the Motorway (Chinese University Press, 2018). She is the vice president of Macau PEN.
Awards and honors
1999 - Champion of Macau Literature Prize (Poetry Session) for “This City I Come From.”
2008 - Honorary Fellow in writing, University of Iowa
2009 - Commendation, Home Affairs Bureau, Hong Kong Government
2019 - Macau Humanities and Social Sciences Monograph Category for The Beginning of the Modern Chinese Press History: Macau Press History 1557- 1840
2021 - Ministry of Education, China - Eighth Award for Outstanding Scientific Research in Higher Education (Humanities and Social Sciences), Macau for The Beginning of the Modern Chinese Press History: Macau Press History 1557- 1840.
Bibliography
2017 - Poppies by the Motorway (Hong Kong [China] : Chinese University Press, Baltimore, Maryland)
2014 - Becoming poets : the Asian English experience (Bern : Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften)
2001 - Water wood pure splendour (Hong Kong)
1997 - Woman to woman and other poems (Hong Kong)
The Beginning of the Modern Chinese Press History: Macao Press History 1557-1840
References
1972 births
Living people
Macau women in politics
Macau writers
University of Macau alumni
University of Macau faculty | [
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Joephy Chan Wing-yan (; born in 1990) is a Federation of Trade Unions politician in Hong Kong, who is currently a member of the Legislative Council, representing New Territories South West. She is a former member of the Sham Shui Po District Council for Lai Kok from 2016 to 2019.
Biography
Chan's father is Chan Chi-kwong, president of the Hong Kong Customs Officers Association and former vice chairman of the Federation of Trade Unions (FTU). She went to the United Kingdom to study since middle school, and graduated from the University of Hong Kong and the University of London. She holds a Bachelor of Economics and Finance from the HKU and a Bachelor of Laws from the University of London. Later, she joined FTU as a community officer in Sham Shui Po.
During the 2015 Hong Kong local elections, Chan represented the Federation of Trade Unions in the Lai Kok constituency seat of Sham Shui Po District Council and competed with Federick Fung, then a member of the Legislative Council of the ADPL. In the end, she won with 2,531 votes, while former ADPL member Wong Chung-kei got 215 votes at the same time.
However, on 2019 Hong Kong local elections, she was defeated by Li Kwing of the ADPL, losing her bid for re-election.
After losing the district council election, she opened her YouTube channel to comment on current affairs and became an internet celebrity; she also runs a YouTube channel with another unsuccessful district councillor candidate, Navis Ha Wing-ka.
In the 2021 Hong Kong legislative election, she represented the Federation of Trade Unions in the newly created New Territories South West constituency. Chan won 62,690 votes and became the youngest member of the 7th Legislative Council of Hong Kong.
Controversies
Fake news on COVID-19
On April 2020, Chan posted a video on her YouTube channel titled "A new discovery by British and German scientists debunks the conspiracy of the United Kingdom and the United States to claim compensation from China. The source is the United States and Australia? The first case appeared in September last year? Both the United Kingdom and the United States have a guilty conscience?" The content quoted the new coronavirus study by the University of Cambridge research team pointed to the origin of the virus as the United States or Australia. As of 28 April, the video had more than 380,000 views. An investigation by the Hong Kong news agency, FactWire, found that the video was taken out of context and misinterpreted the research results.
Dr. Peter Forster, an expert who led the research team, responded to the FactWire inquiry and stated that the purpose of the research is not to find the source of the virus at all, but to analyze how the virus mutates over time and spreads among humans. He also said that data showed that the patients in the early stage of the virus outbreak were generally from East Asians, which strongly indicated that the virus spread among them in the early stage of the outbreak.
Pro-police comments
On September 2020, Chan and another pro-establishment figure, Navis Ha, commented on a pregnant woman who was pushed down by the police during a demonstration on the first anniversary of the Prince Edward station attack. She described the pregnant woman as a "criminal woman" and questioned her "after being interviewed by the media."
On 29 September, Hong Kong Police commissioner, Chris Tang, took the initiative to mention during the Yau Tsim Mong District Council meeting that on 31 August and 6 September, during the police operations at the Mong Kok demonstration site, a pregnant woman was pushed down on the day. Tang said that the demonstration scene was very chaotic. Some people did shout "pregnant women", but not everyone present could hear it.
References
External links
1990 births
Living people
Alumni of the University of Hong Kong
District councillors of Sham Shui Po District
Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong politicians
Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions
Members of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
HK LegCo Members 2020–2024
Members of the Election Committee of Hong Kong, 2021–2026
Hong Kong pro-Beijing politicians | [
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Marcelo Lima may refer to:
Marcelo Lopes (footballer, born 1975), Brazilian football defender
Marcelo Lopes (footballer, born 1994), Portuguese football winger
Marcelo Lopes de Souza, Brazilian professor of socio-spatial development and political ecology | [
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Héctor René "Tito" Matos Otero (June 15, 1968 – January 18, 2022) was a Puerto Rican percussionist. He played the requinto drum, a key instrument in plena music. He was one of the founders of Viento de Agua. According to the Smithsonian Institution, he is considered “one of the best requinto players of his generation.”
References
1968 births
2022 deaths
21st-century Puerto Rican male musicians
Plena | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Bonham, Texas in various seasons between 1898 and 1922. Bonham teams played as members of the Independent level Southwestern League in 1898 and the Class D level Texas-Oklahoma League from 1911 to 1914 and 1921 to 1922. Bonham teams featured a different moniker each season.
Baseball Hall of Fame member Kid Nichols managed the 1914 Bonham Sliders.
History
Professional baseball began in Bonham in 1898. The Bonham team played as a member of the Independent level Southwestern League. Bonham finished with a 6–9 record as the league quickly folded in 1898. The Southwestern League played from April 21, 1898, to May 23, 1898.
In 1911, Bonham resumed minor league play. The Bonham Boosters became a member of the Class D level Texas-Oklahoma League. Bonham would continue playing as league members from 1911 to 1914 and 1921 to 1922, which covered all six seasons of play for the league.
The 1911 Bonham Boosters finished with a record of 54–60, to place 4th in the Texas–Oklahoma League, playing under manager Jimmie Humphries. The Boosters finished with the Altus Chiefs (31–44), Ardmore Blues (49–58), Cleburne Railroaders (61–50), Durant Educators (65–46), Gainesville Blue Ribbons, Lawton Medicine Men (17–31) and Wichita Falls Irish Lads (65–38) in the 1911 league standings.
Continuing play, the 1912 Bonham Tigers finished with a record of 53–35, placing 2nd overall in the Texas–Oklahoma League standings. The Tigers played under manager Roy Leslie. The Tigers threw two no–hitters in 1912. On April 30, 1912, Bonham pitcher Wingo Anderson threw a no–hitter in a 9–0 victory over McKinney. Then, on May 25, 1912, Bonham pitcher Reb Russell threw a second Tiger no–hitter, beating Durant 9–1. The 1912 Texas–Oklahoma League playoffs did not include Bonham.
The 1913 Bonham Blues placed 5th in the Texas–Oklahoma League final standings. With a 56–68 record, the Blues' manager was again Roy Leslie. On opening day, April 15, 1913, the Bonham Blues opened their new baseball park, playing against the Texarkana Tigers. Bonham won the opener 3–0. Before the game, fans gathered at the town square for a posed photo and a parade to the ballpark. The Bonham Daily Favorite newspaper reported on April 16, 1913, that "Practically every business house in the city closed during the game which began at 3:15 o'clock, and perhaps the largest crowd that ever attended a ball game in Bonham was present. The grandstand and bleachers were full, and the crowd overflowed into right field."
Bonham continued play as members of the Texas–Oklahoma League in 1914. On June 22, 1914, Bonham pitcher Fritz Redford threw a no–hitter in a 7–0 Bonham win over the Sherman Lions. Just a little over a week later, on June 30, 1914, the Bonham Sliders had a 47–58 record under managers Senter Reiney and Kid Nichols when the franchise disbanded. Nichols is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Texas–Oklahoma League League folded after the 1914 season.
The 1921 Bonham Favorites joined the reformed Texas-Oklahoma League. The Favorites finished with a record of 57–71, playing under Managers G. D. Pittman and Virgil Moss. Bonham finished 3rd in the league, joining the Ardmore Peps (87–40), Cleburne Generals (51–75), Graham Hijackers/Mineral Wells Resorters (49–79), Paris Snappers and Sherman Lions (48–78) in the 1921 league standings.
1922 was the final year for both the Texas–Oklahoma League and the Bonham franchise. The 1922 Bonham Bingers finished with a record of 39–53, placing 7th in the league. The Bingers' manager was Les Tullos. Bonham was dropped from the league on July 22, 1922, when the Cleburne franchise disbanded. The 1922 Texas–Oklahoma League season ended on August 6, 1922, with National Association permission, due to a railroad strike. The league did not reform in 1923 and permanently disbanded.
Bonham, Texas has not hosted another minor league team.
Ballparks
The home Bonhnam ballpark is not directly named in references. Catron Park and Simpson Park were noted to have been in use in the era. Both parks still exist today as public parks. Catron Park is located at the 400 block of East 3rd Street, Bonham Texas.
Bonham built a new ballpark for the 1913 season. The name of the 1913 new ballpark is not known.
Timeline
Year–by–year records
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Kid Nichols (1914, MGR) Inducted, 1949
Notable alumni
Ted Blankenship (1921–1922)
Buster Chatham (1922)
Jim Haislip (1911)
Jimmie Humphries (1911, MGR)
Roy Leslie (1912–1913, MGR)
George Milstead (1921–1922)
Reb Russell (1912)
See also
Bonham Bingers playersBonham Blues playersBonham Boosters playersBonham Favorites players
References
External links
Baseball reference Bullpen
Fannin County, Texas | [
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Ran Banda Tennekoon was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Yapahuwa representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.
He was elected to parliament from Yapahuwa in the March 1960 general election defeating U. B. Wanninayake. He lost is seat a few months later in the July 1960 general election U. B. Wanninayake.
References
Sri Lankan politicians
Members of the 4th Parliament of Ceylon
Sri Lanka Freedom Party politicians | [
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Chandrasena Munaweera (9 July 1926 - 19??) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Rattota representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.
He was elected to parliament from Rattota in the March 1960 general election and was re-elected in the July 1960 general election defeating V. T. Nanayakkara. He crossed over to the opposition with C. P. de Silva in December 1964. He lost is seat in the 1965 general election to S. B. Yalegama of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party when he contested from the Sri Lanka Freedom Socialist Party and was defeated by Yalegama in the 1970 general election, when he contested from the United National Party.
References
1926 births
Sri Lankan politicians
Members of the 4th Parliament of Ceylon
Members of the 5th Parliament of Ceylon
Sri Lanka Freedom Party politicians
United National Party politicians | [
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William Blume Levy (born 14 January 2001) is a Danish professional road cyclist, who currently rides for UCI ProTeam .
Major results
2018
2nd Overall Tour du Pays de Vaud
1st Young rider classification
1st Stage 2
3rd La Route des Géants
3rd Johan Museeuw Classic
4th Overall Sint-Martinusprijs Kontich
1st Stage 3a (ITT)
5th Junior Tour of Flanders
2019
1st Junior Tour of Flanders
National Junior Road Championships
3rd Road race
3rd Time trial
3rd Overall Tour du Pays de Vaud
2021
1st Gylne Gutuer
10th Overall Flanders Tomorrow Tour
2022
8th Grand Prix Alanya
References
External links
2001 births
Living people
Danish male cyclists
People from Horsens | [
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USS Hidatsa (ATF-102) was during the World War II. The ship was later sold to Colombia as ARC Rodrigo de Bastidas (RM-74). Her namesake is an Indian group of the Sioux Tribe of North Dakota, now living on the Fort Berthold Reservation.
Design and description
The ship is displaced at standard load and at deep load The ships measured long overall with a beam of . They had a draft of . The ships' complement consisted of 85 officers and ratings.
The ships had two General Motors 12-278A diesel engines, one shaft. The engines produced a total of and gave a maximum speed of . They carried a maximum of of fuel oil that gave them a range of at .
The Abnaki class was armed with a 3"/50 caliber gun anti-aircraft gun, two single-mount Oerlikon 20 mm cannon and two twin-gun mounts for Bofors 40 mm gun.
Construction and career
The ship was built at the Charleston Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. at Charleston, South Carolina. She was launched on 29 December 1943. The ship was commissioned on 25 April 1944, with Lt. Carroll F. Johnson in command. She was reclassified ATF-102 on 15 May 1944.
Service in the United States Navy
After shakedown in Chesapeake Bay, Hidatsa departed Norfolk on 3 June 1944 with two floating destroyer workshops in tow and reached Manus Island, Admiralties, via the Panama Canal, Bora bora, and Espiritu Santo on 4 September. On 20 September, Hidatsa towed two pontoon barges to Morotai to be used in docks assembled on that newly taken island. Next, she towed seven more barges to Mios Woendi. Then, as the long Pacific campaign moved steadily northward, the fleet tug departed Mios Woendi on 13 October with a gasoline barge, a crane barge, and a PT drydock in tow, for use in the invasion of the Philippine Islands. As Hidatsa reached Leyte Gulf, scene of the initial landings, on 25 October, she could observe gun flashes from the Battle of Surigao Straits, part of Japan's desperate attempt to deny America the Philippines. But for brief voyages to Manus and Hollandia, Hidatsa remained at Leyte on fire fighting, towing and salvage assignments until 3 January 1945. That day she sailed to participate in the initial landings at Lingayen Gulf, where she remained from 9 to 18 January during the vicious Japanese kamikaze attacks.
Hidatsa next participated in landings at Zambales and Grande Island, where she was active in salvage and towing work. On the morning of 17 February, while returning from the initial assault landings at Corregidor, the tug struck a mine in Mariveles Harbor killing 8 of her crew and injuring another 12. Towed to Subic Bay on 18 February, Hidatsa remained there for repairs and trials until she sailed 2 August 1945 for Manus Island, where she received the welcome news of Japan's surrender. Although the war was over, there was much work to be done, and the fleet tug remained in the Philippines for salvage operations until 7 April 1946.
Reaching San Pedro, California, via Eniwetok and Pearl Harbor, 13 June, Hidatsa engaged in training operations. She returned to the Pacific in 1947 for salvage and towing operations, primarily at Eniwetok and Kwajalein. Hidatsa departed Mare Island for Alaska on 28 August 1947 and spent most of the next 2 months operating in the northern waters. Operations along the California coast, with a February 1948 cruise to Pearl Harbor, occupied Hidatsa until she decommissioned and went into reserve at Long Beach, 5 May 1948.
Service in the Mexican Navy
In 1962, Hidatsa was transferred to the Maritime Commission, National Defense Reserve Fleet at Suisun Bay, California, where she would later be sold to Colombia on 1 March 1979, as ARC Rodrigo de Bastidas (RM-74).
She was put out of service in 1998.
Awards
The ship has a total of 2 battle stars throughout her career.
Navy Unit Commendation
China Service Medal (extended)
American Campaign Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal (2 battle stars)
World War II Victory Medal
Navy Occupation Service Medal (with Asia clasp)
Philippines Presidential Unit Citation
Philippine Liberation Medal (1 award)
References
External links
NavSource Online: USS Hidatsa (ATF-102)
Hull Number : ATF-102 DEPLOYMENTS - MAJOR EVENTS
USS Hidatsa (ATF 102) Crew List
Hidatsa
Ships built in Charleston, South Carolina
1943 ships
World War II auxiliary ships of the United States
Ships transferred from the United States Navy to the Colombian Navy | [
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Manamperi Mudiyanselage Samararatna Bandara Yalegama (16 October 1925 - 19??) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Rattota representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.
He was elected to parliament from Rattota in the 1965 general election defeating Chandrasena Munaweera and retained his seat in the 1970 general election, but lost it in the 1977 general election.
References
1925 births
Sri Lankan politicians
Members of the 6th Parliament of Ceylon
Members of the 7th Parliament of Ceylon
Sri Lanka Freedom Party politicians | [
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Ratnayake Mudiyanselage Punchi Banda Kaviratne (3 February 1936 - 19??) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was the Minister of Cultural Affairs and member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Rattota representing the United National Party.
He was elected to parliament from Rattota in the 1977 general election defeating S. B. Yalegama and retained his seat in the 1970 general election, but lost it in the 1977 general election and was re-elected in the 1989 general election. Sanjeeva Kaviratne was his son.
References
1936 births
Sri Lankan politicians
Members of the 8th Parliament of Sri Lanka
Members of the 9th Parliament of Sri Lanka
United National Party politicians | [
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Alfred Altherr (14 March 1843 in Grub, 18 January 1918 in Basel, entitled to reside in Speicher, honorary citizen of Basel) was a Swiss Protestant clergyman and writer from the canton of Appenzell Ausserrhoden.
Life
Alfred Altherr was the son of the baker Johannes Altherr and his wife Anna Barbara (née Niederer), hand embroiderer. He came from an impoverished family whose house was auctioned off in 1854 by order of the Poor Authorities. This led to the children being separated from the family and he was placed in an orphanage in Speicher; later his three sisters followed him. At the same time, Johann Heinrich Krüsi, who later became Thomas Alva Edison's assistant and with whom he had to do weaving work, was staying in the orphanage.
After the orphanage director changed, Alfred Altherr came to the canton school in Trogen in 1857 and took a preliminary course at the Swiss Federal Polytechnic in Zurich in 1862; He then studied theology at the University of Zurich.
He was ordained in Herisau in 1867 and was a pastor in Lichtensteig until 1871, then in Rorschach from 1871 to 1874 and in the Leonhardskirche in Basel from 1874 to 1911.
In 1878 he founded the Basler Ferienversorgung armer und erholungsbedürftiger Schulkinder (committee for holiday care for poor and needy school children) who were in need of relaxation. In 1917 he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Basel. Alfred Altherr was buried in the Wolfgottesacker Cemetery in Basel.
Family
Alfred Altherr married Henriette Pfenninger, daughter of Johann Heinrich Pfenninger, pastor in Laufen, in 1868. The names of their sons: Paul Altherr, Alfred Johann Altherr and Heinrich Altherr.
Spiritual Engagement
Alfred Altherr was Basel's first liberal pastor and he was one of the most important exponents of the church reform movement, which advocated a Christianity free from confession and dogma.
Literary Works
Alfred Altherr wrote various books and worked as a founder and editor of magazines; from 1870 to 1876 he was the first editor of the Religiösen Volksblatt (Popular Religious Newspaper) and together with Emanuel Linder he founded the Schweizerisches Protestantenblatt (Swiss Protestant Newspaper) in 1878, of which he was editor until his death; from 1906 Hans Baur was co-publisher and editor. In addition to theological works, biographies, travelogues and stories, his memoirs are particularly noteworthy. Their first volume appeared in Zurich in 1897 under the title Beckenfridli. Geschichte eines armen Knaben (Beckenfridli. The story of a poor boy.)
Trivia
In 1899, Alfred Altherr was the pastor to whom Emilie Kempin-Spyri applied in vain for a job as a maid. She was the first woman lawyer in Switzerland and was interned in the Friedmatt mental asylum in Basel.
Honours and Awards
Honorary citizen of the city of Basel
1917: Honorary doctorate from the University of Basel
Writings (Extract)
Antrittspredigt über 2. Mos. 3, 1–6: gehalten am 11. August 1867. Lichtensteig 1867.
Die Kirche des neuen Bundes: Predigt den 3. Mai 1874 in der St. Martinskirche zu Basel. Basel 1874.
Antrittspredigt gehalten in der St. Leonhardskirche zu Basel den 4. October 1874. Basel 1874.
Die Bedeutung der Bibel für das religiöse, sittliche und soziale Leben: Ein Vortrag. Vereinsbuchdruckerei, Basel 1880.
Theodor Hoffmann-Merian: ein Lebensbild nach seinen eigenen Aufzeichnungen. Schwabe, Basel 1889.
Die Biblische Lehre. J. Frehner, Basel 1890.
Theodor Parker in seinem Leben und Wirken dargestellt. St. Gallen 1894.
Beckenfriedli. Zürich 1897.
Alfred Bitzius, ein Vorbild freier Frömmigkeit: Vortrag. Frehner, Basel 1898.
Das fatale Almosen: eine Erzählung. Haller, Bern 1898.
Die Lehre vom Sohne Gottes für das Volk dargestellt. Schünemann, Bremen 1904.
Friedrich von Schiller in seiner Bedeutung für die Religion. Volksschriftenverlag des Schweizerischen Vereins für freies Christentum, Druck: G. Böhm, Basel 1905.
Die Kinder der Frau Schuhr: Eine Erzählung. Haller, Bern 1907.
mit Theodor Wiget: Unsere Erfahrung und unser Glaube. Heiden 1908.
Ein Abschiedswort von Pfarrer Alfred Altherr an seine Gemeinde und Freunde. Frick, Zürich 1911.
Vaterworte auf deine Lebensreise: Zum Andenken an die Konfirmation für Töchter. Beer, Zürich 1915.
Literature
Ernst H. Koller und Jakob Signer: Appenzellisches Wappen- und Geschlechterbuch. Stämpfli, Bern 1926, S. 7.
Klaus Otte: Alfred Altherr. In: Der Reformation verpflichtet. Gestalten und Gestalter in Stadt und Landschaft Basel aus fünf Jahrhunderten. Herausgegeben vom Kirchenrat der Evangelisch-reformierten Kirche Basel-Stadt. Merian, Basel 1979, S. 131–136.
Weblinks
References
This article is a translation of the German language article.
1918 deaths
1843 births
Swiss people
20th-century literature
19th-century literature
Swiss literature
German-language literature
Opinion journalists
Editors
20th-century Calvinist and Reformed theologians
19th-century Calvinist and Reformed theologians
20th-century Calvinist and Reformed ministers
19th-century Calvinist and Reformed ministers
People from Appenzell Ausserrhoden | [
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"Drowning" is a song by Dutch disc jockey and producer Armin van Buuren. It features vocals from English singer and songwriter Laura V. It was released on 25 February in the Netherlands by Armind as the fourth single from van Buuren's fourth studio album, Mirage. Swedish disc jockey and producer Avicii made a remix of this song which was more popular.
Review
According to Dylan Smith from webmedia EDM House Network, the Avicii remix of the song "was nothing short of magnificent, with Avicii putting his signature piano progressive house style onto the single and taking it to the next level".
Music video
A music video to accompany the track was released to Armada Music's YouTube channel on 30 March 2011. This video was released a second time for the Avicii remix on 8 April 2011. Both videos were directed by Jelle Posthuma.
Track listing
Netherlands - Digital download / 12" - Armind
"Drowning" (club mix) – 3:17
"Drowning" (Avicii remix) – 7:52
"Drowning" (Myon & Shane 54 classic mix) - 7:32
United States - Digital download / CD - Ultra
"Drowning" (radio edit) – 2:38
"Drowning" (club mix) – 6:59
"Drowning" (Avicii radio edit) – 3:24
"Drowning" (Avicii remix) – 7:52
"Drowning" (Myon & Shane 54 classic mix) - 7:32
Charts
References
2011 songs
2011 singles
Armin van Buuren songs
Songs written by Armin van Buuren
Songs written by Benno de Goeij
Songs written by Miriam Nervo
Songs written by Olivia Nervo
Armada Music singles | [
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The Pine Creek Baptist Church in Pinehurst, Idaho, also known as the Pinehurst Baptist Church, was designed by architects Tourtellotte & Hummel in "nostalgic log cabin revival" style, and was built in 1932. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
The church is built with full dove-tail joints at corners of its log walls.
It was listed on the National Register as part of a study of Tourtellotte and Hummel works.
It currently is the home of a nondenominational church, the Pinehurst Community Bible Church.
References
Baptist churches in Idaho
National Register of Historic Places in Shoshone County, Idaho
Buildings and structures completed in 1932
Log buildings and structures in Idaho | [
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George Athas is a biblical scholar, researcher and author. He is Director of Research at Moore Theological College at Newtown in Sydney, Australia. He has been on the faculty at Moore since 2006.
Athas studied a Bachelor of Arts (Hons) at the University of Sydney, and went on to complete his PhD also at the University of Sydney in 2000. His doctoral dissertation, "The Tel Dan Inscription: A Reappraisal and a New Interpretation) was subsequently published in the JSOTSupp series (volume 360). He also completed a Bachelor of Divinity at Moore Theological College (2002–2005).
Athas researches in prophetic, wisdom, and apocalyptic literature. He has written a Hebrew grammar (Elementary Biblical Hebrew), and commentaries on Deuteronomy, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Songs, as well as several journal articles. His list of publications can be found online.
References
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Enoch "Noch" Callaway III (July 12, 1924 – August 18, 2014) was an American psychiatrist and a pioneer in biological psychiatry.
Biography
Callaway was born on July 12, 1924, into an old southern family of doctors in La Grange, Georgia. He is a descendant of the family that founded the Callaway Plantation in Washington, Georgia and Callaway Gardens in Pine Mountain, Georgia. Members of his extended family also include Ely Callaway Jr., founder of Callaway Golf Company, textile manufacturer Fuller Earle Callaway, and former United States Secretary of the Army and Georgia Congressman Bo Callaway.
He graduated from Columbia University in 1944 and obtained his M.D. from Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1947. He completed his residency at Worcester State Hospital in Massachusetts and pursued advanced study at Johns Hopkins University.
In 1959, Callaway was appointed director of research of the Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute in San Francisco and continued in that capacity as professor until 1986, when he moved to San Francisco VA Medical Center and remained there until his retirement in 1994. Among the students he mentored was Monte Buchsbaum, professor at the University of California, San Diego and founder and editor-in-chief of Psychiatry Research. Callaway is known for his contributions to psychophysiology, cognition and psychopharmacology.
He was made a distinguished life fellow of the American Psychiatric Association in 1982. He also co-founded the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology.
After leaving UCSF, he co-founded Neurobiological Technologies, a biotech company that sought to develop drugs to treat strokes and brain cancer.
Callaway died on August 18, 2014, in his home in Tiburon, California.
References
1924 births
2014 deaths
People from LaGrange, Georgia
American psychiatrists
University of California, San Francisco faculty
Columbia College (New York) alumni
Columbia Business School alumni
20th-century American scientists
American company founders
Callaway family | [
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Jane South is a British American artist and educator known for large scale installations, mixed media constructions, and fabric wall pieces.
Early life and education
Born in Manchester, UK, South received a BFA in Theatre Design from Central School of Art in 1987 and an MFA in Painting and Sculpture from the University of North Carolina, Greensboro in 1997.
Career
South worked in experimental theater before moving to the United States in 1989. She began her academic career in 2001 with a two-year appointment at Williams College. South taught at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) from 2013 to 2017 and was appointed Chair of Fine Arts at Pratt Institute in 2017.
She is Chair of the Siena Art Institute Advisory Board, and in 2019 was elected to the National Academy of Design.
Works
South has described her work as being "influenced by the way I have seen my neighborhoods evolve (for better and worse) over the past few years. New York City in particular is de- and re-constructed so much that it exists in a constant state of undress, exposing its often dilapidated and/or shoddily/cheaply constructed layers--to me it's a reminder of the illusory and temporary nature of our sense of place". For over a decade, she constructed cut-paper architectures, playing with two-and three-dimensions to create large scale installations described as "sculptural follies" that "seem to simultaneously celebrate and mourn the constructed wonders of the world"
South's 2020 solo exhibition Switch Back was described by Jillian Steinhauer in The New York Times as "what you might call soft paintings" that "evoke homemade creations like patchwork quilts and curtains as much as the post-minimalism of Eva Hesse and Robert Morris, and even Claes Oldenburg’s replicas of ordinary objects". In more recent work "Her characteristic architectural forms and pseudo-industrial material are condensed. The past emphasis on three-dimensionality, accentuated by boxes and cages, are flattened into grids and swaths of subtle tones. Her signature paper and balsa wood constructs are replaced by tectonic assemblages of softer materials -canvas, tarp, packing foam, and thread."
South is a contributor to the book The Artist as Cultural Producer: Living and Sustaining a Creative Life (editor: Sharon Louden). She is the recipient of ai a 2021 Guggenheim Fellowship, Brown/RISD Mellon Foundation Fellowship (2015); Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors Grant (2009). In 2019 She was elected to the National Academy of Design.
Selected solo exhibitions
Switch Back, 2020, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY
Shifting Structures, 2019, Mills Gallery, Central College, Pella, IA
Raked, 2014, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY
Floor/Ceiling, 2013, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, CT
Shifting Structures: Stacks, 2012, Site-specific installation at the New York Public Library, NY
Box, 2010, Knoxville Museum of Art, TN
Jane South, 2012, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY
Deceptive Volume, 2008, Queens Museum, Bulova Center, NY Jane South
Infrastructures, 2007, Second Street Gallery, Charlottesville, VA traveled to: Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, NC
Jane South, 2006, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY Jane South and Savannah College of Art & Design, Lacoste Campus, France
Jane South, 2005, Susanne Vielmetter, LA Projects, CA
Jane South, 2004, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY
All Nine, 2003, Installation at Nassauischer Kunstverein, Wiesbaden, Germany
Working Drawing, 2003, Installation & Animation, MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA
Jane South, 2001, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, NY
Jane South, 1999, Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art, Roswell, NM
Awards and honors
1998 - Roswell Artist in Residence Program, Roswell, NM
2002 - Arts & Humanities Grant, Williams College Center for Technology
2003 - MacDowell Colony Residency, Peterborough, NH
2004 - Joan Mitchell Foundation Residency, SFAI (Santa Fe Art Institute)
2006 - Fellowship in Sculpture, NYFA (New York Foundation for the Arts)
2007 - The Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center Residency
2008 - Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant
2009 - The Brown Foundation Fellows Program, Dora Maar House
2010 - Camargo Foundation Fellowship, Cassis, France
2015 - RISD Mellon Teaching Fellowship, Brown University
2021 - Guggenheim Fellowship
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
British artists
Alumni of the Central School of Art and Design
University of North Carolina at Greensboro alumni
Pratt Institute faculty
British women artists | [
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Edward Daniel Roberts (born 20 February 1891) was a Welsh professional footballer who played as a half-back. He made appearances in the English Football League for Wrexham, appearing in their inaugural Football League fixture in 1921 against Hartlepools United.
References
1891 births
Date of death unknown
Welsh footballers
Association football defenders
English Football League players
Chirk AAA F.C. players
Cefn Druids A.F.C. players
Bristol City F.C. players
Wrexham A.F.C. players | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Hastings, Nebraska in various seasons between 1887 and 1959. The Hastings Giants played in the short-season Class D level Nebraska State League from 1956 to 1959. Earlier Hastings teams had played as members the Nebraska State League in 1892, Western League in 1887, the Nebraska State League from 1910 to 1915 and 1922 to 1923 and the Tri-State League in 1924.
Baseball Hall of Fame members Fred Clarke (1892) and Dazzy Vance (1914) played for Hastings teams.
The Hastings Giants were a minor league affiliate of the New York Giants from 1956 to 1957 and San Francisco Giants in 1958 and 1959.
History
Minor league baseball began with the Hastings Hustlers in the 1887 Western League. Hastings was a member of the Nebraska State League from 1910 to 1915 and 1922 to 1923, playing as the Reds, Cubs, Third Citys and Brickmakers. The Hastings Cubs joined the Tri-State League in 1924.
Hall of Famer Fred Clarke began his professional career with Hastings in 1892, hitting .302 with 14 stolen bases in 41 games.
The Hastings Third Citys won the 1912 Nebraska State League Championship, finishing 1st in the regular season at 67–44. The Kearney Buffaloes playoff win over Hastings was later reversed at the Nebraska State League 1913 spring meeting and Hastings was awarded the championship.
Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Dazzy Vance pitched for the Hastings Reds in 1914 with a 17–4 record.
The Hastings Giants were an affiliate of the New York Giants/San Francisco Giants, playing from 1956 to 1959. The Giants played their home games at Duncan Field.
The Nebraska State League permanently folded following the 1959 season. The 1959 league member Hastings Giants, Holdrege White Sox, Grand Island Athletics, Kearney Yankees, McCook Braves and North Platte Indians all permanently folded as well.
The ballpark
The Hastings Giants were noted to have played home minor league games at Duncan Field. Constructed in 1940 as a federal W.P.A. Project, the ballpark was considered one of the best in the Nebraska State League. Duncan Field is still in use today, having hosted multiple American Legion World Series. Duncan Field is located at 601 East South Street in Hastings, Nebraska.
Timeline
Year-by-year record
(from Hastings Giants - BR Bullpen)
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Fred Clarke (1892) Inducted, 1945
Dazzy Vance (1914) Inducted, 1955
Notable alumni
Jesus Alou (1959)
Bob Barton (1959)
Harry Cheek (1923)
Jake Gettman (1914)
Bill Hands (1959)
Lou Koupal (1923)
Bill Piercy (1914)
Leo Schrall (MGR, 1957–1959)
Jose Tartabull (1958)
Gene Thompson (MGR, 1956)
Jose Vidal (1958)
Johnny Weekly (1956)
References
Hastings, Nebraska | [
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Shri Phanishwar Nath Renu Engineering College formerly known as Government Engineering College, Araria is a government engineering college in Araria district of Bihar. It was established in the year 2019 under Department of Science and Technology, Bihar. It is affiliated with Aryabhatta Knowledge University and approved by All India Council for Technical Education.
Admission
Admission in the college for four years Bachelor of Technology course is made through UGEAC conducted by Bihar Combined Entrance Competitive Examination Board. To apply for UGEAC, appearing in JEE Main of that admission year is required along with other eligibility criteria.
Departments
The college has three branches in Bachelor of Technology course with an annual intake of following number of students.
References
External links
BCECE Board website
Aryabhatta Knowledge University website
DST, Bihar website
Engineering colleges in Bihar
Colleges affiliated to Aryabhatta Knowledge University
2019 establishments in Bihar
Educational institutions established in 2019 | [
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Yoo In-soo (, born March 25, 1998) is a South Korean actor. He is known for his roles in dramas such as Strong Girl Bong-soon (2017), Gangnam Beauty (2018), At a Distance, Spring Is Green (2021), and All of Us Are Dead (2022).
Filmography
Television series
Film
Awards and nominations
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
21st-century South Korean male actors
South Korean male television actors
South Korean male film actors | [
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Luboměř pod Strážnou is a municipality and village in Přerov District in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 100 inhabitants.
History
The first written mention of Luboměř pod Strážnou is from 1394.
After the World War II, the population was displaced and the municipality was incorporated into the newly established Libavá Military Training Area. The territory of the village was used to accommodate employees, which saved it from complete extinction. Luboměř pod Strážnou became again a separate municipality on 1 January 2016 by reduction of Libavá Military Training Area.
References
Villages in Přerov District | [
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Musa Muhammad Dambam (1958 – 31 August 2013) was a Karai-Karai Nigerian medical doctor who was the third Chief Medical Director of the Federal Medical Center Azare in Bauchi State, Nigeria from March 2012 to August 2013. He was assassinated on 31 August 2013 by unknown gunmen at Yamai village of Dambam Local Government in Bauchi State.
Education
Dambam began his primary education at Central Primary School, Misau in 1974, then moved to Dambam Primary School in 1975 and finally finished at Unguwar Borno Primary School, Bauchi, in 1980. He then went to Government Secondary School, Gamawa for his senior secondary school education from 1980 to 1985 and emerged as the best graduating student of the school. He therefore, gained admission into Bauchi College of Arts and Science (BACAS), Bauchi. In 1988, Dambam was at University of Maiduguri where he graduated with a major; Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) in 1994. He also received a master's degree in Public Health from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in 2007. In addition, he obtained a Diploma in Medical Sciences each from Royal College of Physicians in the Republic of Ireland, Imperial College, University of London and the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria.
Family
Dambam was born to a Muslim Karai-Karai family of Malam Muhammad Dambam in Yamai village under Dambam Local Government in Bauchi State. He was married with six children.
Career
Dambam saterted his career in medical practice and civil service with Houseman ship at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) in Maiduguri, Borno State from May 1994 to May 1995. Then to Medical Officer General Hospital Ogoja (NYSC) from June 1995 to June 1996, Registrar Department of Medicine in the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Maiduguri from January 1997 to May 1997. Registrar Department of Medicine State House Clinic from 1997 to June 1998, Physician to the First Lady Federal Republic of Nigeria from June 1998 to June 1999, Clinical attachment Gastroenterology Unit, Hammersmith Hospital London July 2000 – Oct, 2000 Senior Registrar University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital from January 2001 to May 2003, Senior Registrar State House Clinic from May, 2003 to November 2003, then Consultant Physician, State House Clinic from December 2003 to 2007 and chairman, Computerization Committee, State House Clinic from August 2004 to December 2005. In addition, he was the Co-coordinator ARV therapy Team, State House Clinic from January 2004 to June 2007. Also, Executive Secretary, HIV Monitoring Committee, State House Clinic from May, 2005 to June 2007, Head of Medicine Department State House Clinic from May 2004 to June 2007, Senior Special Assistant to His Excellency the governor of Bauchi State on Primary Health Care in June 2007, Director- General Bauchi State Primary Health Care Development Agency from August 2007 to March 2008, Acting Chief Medical Director Specialists Hospital Bauchi from November 2007 to June 2008, Executive Chairman Bauchi State Primary Health Care Development Agency from August 2008 to March 2011, medical director, Federal Medical Centre, Azare, Bauchi State from 2011 to August 2013.
Honors and awards
The Tennessee (USA) Ambassador of Goodwill
He won the Head of State's NYSC National Award for the Best Corper of the 1995–96 Service year
He won the Provost's award for the Best Pre-Clinical Student of the University of Maiduguri
He won the coveted African Meritorious Service Award for Good Conduct by African International Media Organization
He won the Time News 2008 Developmental Excellence Award
Publications
Male responsibility and maternal morbidity: a cross-sectional study in two Nigerian States.
Death
Dambam was assassinated on 31 August 2013 by unknown gunmen at his village of Yamai in Dambam Local Government, Bauchi State. He was buried on 1 September 2013 according to Islamic rites.
References
1958 births
2013 deaths
Nigerian Muslims
Nigerian Karai-Karai people
University of Maiduguri alumni
Ahmadu Bello University alumni
Alumni of the University of London
Burials in Bauchi State
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Norfolk, Nebraska in various seasons between 1914 and 1941. The Norfolk minor league teams played as members of the Class D level Nebraska State League in 1914 to 1915 and 1922 to 1923, the Tri-State League in 1924, the Nebraska State League from 1928– to 1938 and the Western League from 1939 to 1941.
The Norfolk Elks were a St. Louis Cardinals minor league affiliate in 1936. Norfolk played as an affiliate of the New York Yankees from 1937 to 1941 and adopted the Norfolk "Yankees" moniker in 1940.
History
Nebraska State League / Tri- State League 1914 to 1924
Minor league baseball began in Norfolk, Nebraska in 1914. The Norfolk Drummers became members of the eight–team Class D level Nebraska State League, replacing the Fremont Pathfinders franchise in league play.
At the home opener in 1914, it was noted Mayor Carl Verges threw the first pitch and Prof. Doering and the Battle Creek Band played. Before a reported crowd of 2,000, Norfolk lost to the York Prohibitionists by the score 3–1. At the local Y.M.C.A., bulletin boards were placed at the inside lobby and outside the building to report standings and scores. During away games, Norfolk fans would gather at the boards, waiting for the game score to be called in by phone and updated on the bulletin boards.
Fans yelling profanity in the presence of ladies at Norfolk home games were reprimanded by the police, who were present at games, including Police chief Jolly. A public apology, arrest or a $7.50 fine were all used to punish fans using profanity.
In a 1914 home game against the Beatrice Milkskimmers, it was reported police chief Jolly broke up a fight between Beatrice player Branon and umpire Dixon. According to the Norfolk paper, Branon attacked Dixon, Jolly intervened and arrested Branon. Branon was fined $7.50.
In their first season of play, the 1914 Norfolk Drummers placed 6th in the eight–team Nebraska State League final standings. The Drummers ended the season with a record of 52–60, playing under managers Warren Cummings and Babe Towne. With no playoffs held, Norfolk finished 14.0 games behind the Grand Island Islanders in the final standings. Pitcher Verne Hirsch of Norfolk led the Nebraska State League with 244 strikeouts.
The Norfolk Drummers continued play in 1914 and folded during the Nebraska State League season. On June 28, 1915, the Drummers folded with a 24–13 record, playing under returning manager Babe Towne. On July 18, 1914, the Nebraska State League folded.
After a seven-season hiatus, the 1922 Norfolk Elk Horns won the pennant. The Elk Horns formed as the six–team Class D level Nebraska State League reformed. In June, 1922, it was reported the team bought three new Ford automobiles for travel, saving $1,000 over train travel. Norfolk finished the season in 1st place, with a record of 70–48. The Elk Horns finished a mere 0.5 game ahead of the 2nd place Lincoln Links in the final standings. Ernie Adams and Runt Marr served as managers. Norfolk lost in the league Finals as the Fairbury Jeffersons defeated Norfolk 4 games to 3. Norfolk player Claude Mitchell led the Nebraska State League with 21 home runs and player/manager Runt Marr won the batting title with a .364 average on a league leading 167 hits. It was reported that admission to home playoff games was .55 cents and the team enjoyed large crowds for the games. The losers share for the playoff was estimated to be $24.00 per player. After the season, the town held a special dinner for the team at the Merchants Cafe. After the league ended, many of the players stay and barnstormed in the area. They were noted to have played against the town team in Snyder, Nebraska for $500.00.
The Norfolk Elk Horns were the runner–up in the 1923 Nebraska State League. With a final record of 68–66, the team placed 2nd, playing under the direction of manager Ed Reichle. Norfolk finished the season 2.5 games behind the Lincoln Links in the final standings of the six–team league. No playoffs were held.
In 1924, Norfolk briefly played as members of the six–team Class D level Tri-State League. On July 17, 1924, the league folded. Norfolk placed 3rd 31–30 3rd, playing under manager Nig Lane when the league disbanded. Norfolk finished 2.0 games behind the Beatrice Blues and Sioux Falls Canaries who were tied for 1st place with 35–30 records in the final standings.
Nebraska State League 1928 to 1938
The 1928 Norfolk Elks resumed minor league play as the eight–team class D level Nebraska State League reformed. Norfolk would continue play in the league through the 1938 season, as other league franchises relocated or folded during the period. The 1928 Elks ended the season with a record of 55–66, playing under manager Lefty Wilkus. The team placed 6th and ended the season 16.5 games behind the 1st place McCook Generalsin the final standings as no playoffs were held.
The Norfolk Elks placed 7th in the 1929 Nebraska State League. Playing under returning manager Lefty Wilkus, Norfolk ended the season with a record of 43–73, finishing 31.0 games behind the McCook Generals in the Nebraska State League final standings. John Smith of Norfolk hit 15 home runs to lead the league.
The Norfolk Elks continued play in the 1930 eight–team Nebraska State, placing 6th. Ending the season with a record of 56–65, playing under manager Hal Brokaw, the Elks finished 30.0 games behind the champion McCook Generals in the final standings.
The 1931 Norfolk Elks were managed by Joe McDermott. Norfolk ended the 1931 with a final record of 47–58 to place 5th in the six–team league. Playing under returning manager Joe McDermott, the Elks finished 18.0 games behind the Grand Island Islanders in the final standings of the Nebraska State League. Grand Island won the Finals over the North Platte Buffaloes. Sebastian Wagner of Norfolk hit 22 home runs to lead the Nebraska State League.
The 1932 Norfolk Elks won the Nebraska State League pennant. Playing again under manager Joe McDermott, Norfolk finished 1st in the regular season standings with a record of 75–35. The Elks finished 13.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Beatrice Blues in the six–team league. Norfolk lost in Finals, as the Beatrice Blues defeated Norfolk 4 games to 3. Norfolk pitcher Otto Davis, led the league with 24 wins, while teammate Luke Bucklin had a 1.89 ERA to lead the league. Norfolk player Walt Gannon had 150 total hits, most in the league.
The Norfolk Elks won their second consecutive pennant in the 1933 four–team Nebraska State League regular season. Led by Joe McDermott the Elks finished with a record of 60–45 to place 1st, just 0.5 game ahead of the 2nd place Beatrice Blues. Norfolk lost in Finals, as the Beatrice Blues won 5 games and the Norfolk Elks 4. Ray Bertram of Norfolk had 156 total hits to lead the Nebraska State League.
1934 Norfolk Elks placed 2nd in the four–team league, as Joe McDermott continued as manager. The Elks ended the season with a record of 60–49, finishing 8.5 games behind the Lincoln Links in the final standings of the Nebraska State League. Pitcher Jack Farmer of Norfolk won 19 games to lead the Nebraska State League, while teammate George Silvey had 143 overall hits, most in the league.
The Norfolk Elks won the 1935 Nebraska State League championship. Norfolk ended the season in 2nd place with a record of 58–49 Managed by Pat Patterson, Norfolk finished 11.5 games behind the 1st place Sioux Falls Canaries in the final standings of the four–team Class D league. In the finals Norfolk defeated Sioux Falls 4 games to 3 to become league champions. Norfolk's John Grilli had 116 RBI to lead the league and teammate Orie Arntzen had 184 strikeouts to led the Nebraska State League.
Norfolk Elks continued Nebraska State League play in 1936 and became a minor league affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals. With Joe McDermott returning as manager, the Elks finished with a record of 63–57 to place 3rd in the six–team league. The Elks finished 8.0 games behind the Sioux Falls Canaries in the final standings. Norfolk qualified for the playoffs and lost in the 1st round, as the Mitchell Kernels defeated Norfolk 3 games to 1. Bill A. James led the Nebraska State League with 29 home runs and fellow Norfolk player Dexter Savage paced the league with 128 RBI.
The 1937 Norfolk Elks became a New York Yankees minor league affiliate. Norfolk ended the season with a final record of 50–65, placing 4th in the six–team league and finisheing 31.0 games behind the 1st place Sioux Falls Canaries in the Nebraska State League final standings. Manager Doc Bennett began his four-season stint as the Norfolk manager.
In Norfolk's final season of Nebraska State League play, the 1938 Norfolk Elks were Nebraska State League champions. Norfolk ended the 1938 with a record of 67–49 to place 2nd, playing under returning manager Doc Bennett. In the regular season standings, Norfolk finished 2.5 games behind the Sioux City Cowboys in the final standings. In the Finals Norfolk defeated Sioux City 4 games to 2 to become league champions. The Nebraska State League folded following the 1938 season. When the league resumed play in 1956, Norfolk did not field a franchise in the league.
Western League 1939 to 1941
Continuing as a New York Yankees affiliate, the 1939 Norfolk Elks became members of the six–team Western League and won the league pennant. Playing again under manager Doc Bennett, the Elks ended the season with a record of 75–44 to place 1st in the regular season standings. Norfolk finished 8.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Sioux Falls Canaries. In the playoffs, Norfolk lost 1st round, as the Sioux City Soos defeated Norfolk 3 games to 2. William Morgan of Norfolk led the league with 17 home runs.
In 1940, the Western League reduced to four teams. The newly named "Norfolk Yankees" continued as an affiliate of the New York Yankees. The Yankees ended the 1940 in 1s place with a final regular season of 73–39. Norfolk finished 16.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Sioux Falls Canaries, managed again by Doc Bennett. In the Finals, Sioux Falls defeated Norfolk 4 games to 2.
In their final minor league season, Norfolk continued Western League play. The Norfolk Yankees' final season of play saw the franchise win their third consecutive pennant. Norfolk ended the 1941 in 1st place with a record of 64–44. The Yankees finished 2.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Cheyenne Indians, playing under manager Ray Powell. Frank Bocek led the league with 92 RBI. In the playoffs, Norfolk beat the Sioux City Cowboys 3 games to 2. The Pueblo Rollers won 3 games to Norfolk's 2 as the Yankees lost in Finals. The Western League did not play in the 1942 through 1946 seasons, with World War II interrupting play. When the 1947 Western League reformed, Norfolk did not field a franchise in the league.
Norfolk, Nebraska has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
For their duration, Norfolk minor league teams were noted to have played home minor league games at Athletic Park. In 1922, a new facility was built, with wooden grandstands covered behind home plate, bleachers down both lines and right field having a set of bleachers. The park was noted to have also been used for the Harvest Festival and local fairs. The ballpark was reportedly located at North 4th Street & Prospect Avenue, Norfolk Nebraska.
Timeline
Year-by-year records
Notable alumni
Orie Arntzen (1935)
Doc Bennett (1937–1940, MGR)
Jim Dyck (1941)
Marv Felderman (1936)
Oris Hockett (1931–1932)
Johnny Hopp (1936)
Hugh Luby (1931–1933)
Runt Marr (1922, MGR)
Max Marshall (1936)
Johnny Orr (1938)
Joe Orrell (1936)
Ray Powell (1941, MGR)
By Speece (1922)
Les Rock (1932)
Bill Starr (1932)
Babe Towne (1914–1915, MGR)
Bennie Warren (1934)
See also
Norfolk Drummers players
Norfolk Elks players
Norfolk Elk Horns players
Norfolk Yankees players
External links
Baseball Reference
Baseball Reference Bullpen
References
Norfolk, Nebraska | [
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The 2021–22 Road Safety World Series or Road Safety World Series Season 2 is an upcoming International T20 cricket League, it is the second season of Road Safety World Series. Ravi Gaikwad is the founder of the Road Safety World Series season 2. The event organized by the Road Safety World Series (RSWS) to raise awareness about road safety around the world. The 2021–22 edition of the series featuring the top legendary players from India, England, Sri Lanka, West Indies, South Africa, Australia, and Bangladesh. The series featured Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, as well as Jonty Rhodes, Carl Hooper, Thilakaratne Dilshan, Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh, Bret Lee, and others.
Background
The Road Safety World Series approved by the BCCI. RSWS Second season of the T20 tournament will be held in India and UAE on February 5, 2022. In 2020–21 Road Safety World Series winning the tournament team India led by Sachin Tendulkar and this series tournament was hosted in the Wankhede Stadium and DY Patil Stadium in Mumbai where the legend players are featured. Sachin Tendulkar,Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh (India Legends), Brian Lara (West Indies Legends), Tillakaratne Dilshan (Sri Lanka Legends), Brett Lee (Australia Legends), and Jonty Rhodes (South Africa Legends) were captains of their respective teams. In upcoming season of the tournament more than 160 international retired legend champions will participate.
Venues
RSWS tournaments will be played in India and it will starts in the last week of May, 2022 across four venues, Hyderabad, Vishakhapatnam, Lucknow and Indore, the final matches schedule will be played in June.
Format
The tournament will be played in a round-robin format and followed by the semi-finals and final.
Tie-break criteria
Number of wins.
Head to head results. If this is not applicable, positions decided by NRR.
If three or more teams are tied on points and the number of wins, positions decided by NRR.
References
Road safety campaigns
Twenty20 cricket matches
Indian cricket administrators | [
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USS Jicarilla (ATF-104) was during the World War II. The ship was later sold to Colombia as ARC Sebastián De Belalcázar (RM-73). Her namesake is a group of the Apache tribe found in the southwestern United States.
Design and description
The ship is displaced at standard load and at deep load The ships measured long overall with a beam of . They had a draft of . The ships' complement consisted of 85 officers and ratings.
The ships had two General Motors 12-278A diesel engines, one shaft. The engines produced a total of and gave a maximum speed of . They carried a maximum of of fuel oil that gave them a range of at .
The Abnaki class was armed with a 3"/50 caliber gun anti-aircraft gun, two single-mount Oerlikon 20 mm cannon and two twin-gun mounts for Bofors 40 mm gun.
Construction and career
The ship was built at the Charleston Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. at Charleston, South Carolina. She was laid down on 25 August 1943 and launched on 25 February 1944. The ship was commissioned on 26 June 1944, with Lt. Comdr. W. B. Coats in command. She was reclassified ATF-104 on 15 May 1944.
Service in the United States Navy
Following shakedown in Chesapeake Bay, Jicarilla departed New York towing barges 9 August 1944, bound fox San Francisco via the Panama Canal. She arrived 22 September, but sailed again seven days later towing ARD-21 to Pearl Harbor. The tug remained in Hawaiian waters until November doing salvage and towing work, including the difficult task of pulling SS Antigua off a reef from 14 to 21 October. Departing Pearl Harbor on 7 November, she towed barges of supplies to advance bases at Eniwetok and Ulithi, arriving the latter island on 3 December.
With the campaign to recapture the Philippines well underway, Jicarilla sailed on 10 December as part of the refueling group for Task Force 38, the fast carrier group then supporting the Philippines operation. Refueling began early on 17 December but had to be broken off as weather worsened. Anxious to top off his destroyers and support the Mindoro operation. Admiral Halsey continued attempts to refuel until the next morning, when Jicarilla and the rest of the fueling group turned south. The fleet tug rode out the typhoon and returned to Ulithi oni 22 December, but the great storm sank three gallant destroyers, two of them from Jicarilla's group. Undaunted, the fast carrier force resumed its punishing attacks on the Philippines.
Jicarilla arrived at Leyte on 7 January to support the next amphibious operation at Lingayen Gulf. She sailed on 9 January with a convoy of LCI's and LST's; despite numerous air attacks by the Japanese, she arrived at Mangarin Bay 2 days later. The tug remained there until 22 January performing salvage and firefighting duties on the many damaged and beached landing craft. She arrived Ulithi on 27 January. After towing voyages between Ulithi and the Marianas, Jicarilla sailed from Ulithi on 9 April pulling a much-needed floating drydock to Okinawa.
The veteran tug arrived at Kerama Retto, repair base for the Okinawa operation, 16 April, and remained there to perform salvage work on ships damaged in the desperate kamikaze attacks. She sailed on 20 April with Idaho, arrived at Guam on 25 April, and from there returned to Ulithi on 30 April. After towing work at the advance base, she sailed for Leyte on 19 May and arrived Okinawa again on 13 June. As the struggle for the island continued, she worked directly off the Hagushi beaches, towing landing craft and performing salvage work. Thus, she contributed importantly to the eventual victory by helping to keep the massive fleet afloat and operating.
Jicarilla remained at Okinawa until departing for Wakayama, Japan, 21 September. Four days later she arrived, and performed towing duties in connection with the occupation operations until returning to Okinawa on 14 October. After a voyage to Guam, the ship steamed to Iwo Jima on 4 December to salvage the ARL-32. In the months that followed, she was engaged in towing and salvage in the Marshalls and Carolines, arriving Pearl Harbor on 24 April 1946.
Jicarilla spent the summer of 1946 in the Marshall Islands in support of Operation Crossroads, the history-making atomic test series in the Pacific. Returning to the United States on 14 September, she performed towing duties on the West Coast and at the Canal Zone until 23 January 1947, when she sailed again for the Far East from Bremerton, Washington. The ship operated out of Pearl Harbor until May, sailing on the 14th to Guam. Jicarilla arrived Tsingtao, China, 17 June for towing and salvage work in connection with the American Marines ashore. In the months that followed, she continued to steam between American Pacific bases and China. After a month at Pearl Harbor, she returned to Long Beach on 18 February 1948. On 26 July, Jicarilla towed the former battleship Nevada out to sea to be sunk as a target.
The ocean tug conducted operations on the Pacific coast and out of Pearl Harbor until arriving Yokosuka on 25 January 1949. She again supported the American effort to bring peace and security to China and the Far East, before returning to Long Beach on 19 August 1949. After additional towing on the West Coast, she decommissioned at San Diego on 14 June 1950 and entered the Pacific Reserve Fleet.
Service in the Mexican Navy
In August 1962, Jicarilla was transferred to the Maritime Commission, National Defense Reserve Fleet at Suisun Bay, California, where she would later be sold to Colombia on 1 March 1979, as ARC Sebastián De Belalcázar (RM-73).
In 1979, she provided aid to the population during the Tumaco earthquake.
In 1981, she became the only Colombian Navy ship to see action after sinking the M-19 arms smuggling ship Karina, in which gun fire fights broke out.
She was put out of service and later towed out to be sunk as an artificial reef off Punta Huina, Bahía Solana, to be sunk as an artificial reef on 2 September 2004.
Awards
The ship has a total of 2 battle stars throughout her career.
China Service Medal (extended)
American Campaign Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal (2 battle stars)
World War II Victory Medal
Navy Occupation Service Medal (with Asia clasp)
Philippine Liberation Medal
References
External links
NavSource Online: USS Jicarilla (ATF-104)
Hull Number : ATF-104 DEPLOYMENTS - MAJOR EVENTS
USS Jicarilla (ATF 104) Crew List
Jicarilla
Ships built in Charleston, South Carolina
1944 ships
World War II auxiliary ships of the United States
Ships transferred from the United States Navy to the Colombian Navy
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Patricia Harrison is a British former tennis player. A native of Manchester, Harrison was active in the 1950s.
Harrison claimed the 1953 All England Plate and was a regular Lancashire county champion. In 1954 she became engaged to James Hugh Brown, a company director and county tennis player. Competing under her married name, she made the round of 16 at the 1956 Wimbledon Championships, which was her best performance at the tournament.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
British female tennis players
English female tennis players
Tennis people from Lancashire
Sportspeople from Manchester | [
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Margaret Paice (born 1920) is an Australian children's writer, commercial artist and book illustrator.
Early life and education
Margaret Dawn Cantle was born in Brisbane, Australia on 1 September 1920, daughter of Violet (née Burman) and Sydney Cantle. Paice was raised in rural Queensland and was educated locally and through correspondence schooling, before attending Moreton Bay High School.
Career
She had several poems published in The Central Queensland Herald in 1937. In 1942 she married Hubert Whitfield Paice. He died in 1955 and Paice moved to Sydney, where she studied at the National Art School and the Royal Art Society, gaining employment as a commercial artist.
She wrote and illustrated her first book, Mirram, in 1955. It was commended in the picture book category of the 1955 Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year awards. She provided illustrations for her own and other books published by Angus & Robertson, including three books by Ann E. Wells.
Colour in the Creek was a ten-episode television series adapted from Paice's novel of the same name and Shadow of Wings. It was shown on TCN 9.
In 1960 she married Wilfred Harriss, who died in 1975. She has lived in the Blue Mountains since 1969.
In 1978 she was interviewed by Hazel de Berg for the National Library of Australia's oral history collection. Her papers, including letters and original artwork, are held by the State Library of New South Wales.
Selected works
Author and illustrator
Fiction
Trilogy: Colour in the creek
Nonfiction
Illustrator
References
External links
Photograph of Margaret Paice, taken by Hazel de Berg for the National Library of Australia on 1 March 1978
1920 births
Possibly living people
Australian children's writers
20th-century Australian women writers
Australian women illustrators | [
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On 2 November 1994 a lightning strike ignited three diesel and aircraft fuel tanks belonging to the Egyptian Army strategic reserve near Dronka, Asyut Governorate. The flaming oil leaked from the tanks and was carried by floodwater into the village. More than 200 houses were destroyed and 469 people killed.
Strike
On 2 November 1994, Asyut Governorate and other parts of Egypt were hit by a five-hour thunderstorm. A lightning strike hit a point of elevation at near Dronka, which was near a complex of eight oil tanks maintained by the Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation as a strategic reserve for the Egyptian Army. The tanks were spaced around apart and three of them caught fire. Around of oil leaked from the tanks; there was no bund wall or any secondary confinement in place to contain the oil, which mixed with floodwaters that were being held back by a nearby railway line. The line collapsed, and the water and flaming oil washed into Dronka, a village of 10,000 people.
Effects
Contemporary news reports suggested death tolls between 200 to over 500, possibly due to distinctions between those killed by flooding and those by fire. An Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population report noted that 469 bodies were recovered from the village and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) considers this figure to be the death toll. A further 63 people were killed in Assiut and other areas from the effects of the storm. More than 200 houses in Dronka were destroyed and 20,000 residents of the village and surrounding area fled to Assiut. One of the tanks remained ablaze into the night as firefighters decided it was best to let it burn out; there were fears it could ignite some of the surviving five oil tanks. The governor of Assiut declared a state of emergency due to the storm and lightning strike.
The WMO attributes the death toll of 469 to the lightning strike and notes the disaster is the highest mortality event as a result of a lightning strike on record (dating back to 1873). The highest death toll directly caused by a single lightning strike is 21 people killed while sheltering in a hut in Zimbabwe in 1975.
References
1994 disasters in Africa
1994 in Egypt
1994 fires
1994 floods
1994 meteorology
Asyut Governorate
Fires in Egypt
Lightning
November 1994 events in Africa | [
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Tito Stagno (4 January 1930 – 1 February 2022) was an Italian journalist, television writer and presenter.
Life and career
Born in Cagliari, Sardinia, Stagno started his career as a sports commentator in Radio Cagliari and as a reporter in Radiosera. In 1954 he was employed at RAI, making his official debut one year later with the program Viaggio in Sardegna. Starting from 1956 he specialized as a play-by-play commentator, covering sport, political and space events. He is best known in his home country as the commentator of the 1969 moon landing.
Stagno was also a television writer of documentaries and sport programs. He was the head of the RAI sport department between 1976 and 1979, and between 1976 and 1995 he was head writer of the long-running Sunday sport program , which he also hosted for a number of seasons. He named the asteroid 110702 Titostagno. He died on 1 February 2022, at the age of 92.
References
External links
1930 births
2022 deaths
Grand Officers of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic
Italian journalists
Italian sports commentators
Italian television presenters
People from Cagliari | [
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Edmond Alfred Guggenheim (January 19, 1888 – March 16, 1972) was an American copper industry businessman and philanthropist. He was a member of the Guggenheim family.
Biography
Guggenheim was born on January 19, 1888, in Switzerland to Murry Guggenheim and Leonie Bernheim. His father was the third son of mining magnate Meyer Guggenheim and his mother was descended from a prominent Alsatian Jewish family. He received his B.A. from Columbia University in 1908 and a Ph.B. from Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University in 1911.
Guggenheim joined the family business in 1916 and headed its mining explorations and was its vice president in charge of South American operations. In 1961, Guggenheim retired as director of the Kennecott Copper Corporation and the Braden Copper Company.
In 1919, he was also named Special Deputy Police Commissioner of New York City in charge of The Bronx and severed on several commissions in the New York City Police Department. He was also a president of the Murry and Leonle Guggenheim Foundation from 1939 until his death.
Personal life
Guggenheim died on March 13, 1972, in a Phoenix, Arizona hospital at age 84.
Legacy
He is the namesake of Guggenheim Camp, a summer camp organized by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ogdensburg, which is held annually on the Lower Saranac Lake property he owned from 1917 until 1963, when he donated it to the diocese. He donated the family's Long Island estate, Murry Guggenheim House, to Monmouth University in 1960. He also donated the land on whuch the Trudeau Institute in Saranac Lake, New York, is built.
References
1888 births
1972 deaths
Guggenheim family
Columbia College (New York) alumni
Yale University 1910s alumni
American philanthropists
American mining businesspeople | [
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Enio "Pegleg" Mora (1949–11 September 1996) was an Italian-born Canadian gangster.
Mora was born in Sora, Lazio, but grew up in the south of France. In 1968, he moved to Canada, where he immediately became involved in organized crime. Mora was involved in running illegal gambling houses, home repair scams, loansharking and money laundering. More legal activities the sale of insurance; work as a building contractor; owning a drywalling firm; and operating a restaurant. Initially, Mora worked for the Toronto gangster Rocco Zito. Mora was described by one author as having "a cocky, flamboyant personality". By 1975 Mora was selling heroin, and in November of that year become involved in an offer to sell heroin to undercover policemen. On 11 August 1976, Mora was arrested by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police on charges of conspiracy to sell heroin. Mora did not think much of the charges and several times told the policeman Carl MacLeod that all of the charges would be dismissed by January 1978.
In 1979, Mora was the victim of a murder attempt when much of his lower left leg was torn off by a blast from a shotgun when he was lounging in an illegal gambling house on Harbord Street in Toronto. As a result, Mora was fitted with an artificial leg that caused him to walk with a limp. The prime suspect in the shooting of Mora, Anthony Carnevale, was killed in January 1980 when he was shot dead in the basement apartment that he lived in with his parents. The police regarded Mora as the prime suspect in Carnevale's murder, but he was never charged. The weapon used to kill Carnavale was a shotgun, the same weapon that had cost Mora his leg. On 24 September 1980, Mora made a plea bargain with the Crown under which he pledged guilty to the heroin charges and served two years in prison.
By the early 1980s, Mora had transferred his loyalty from Zito over to Paul Volpe. Mora was also a prime suspect in Volpe's murder as he was one of the last people to see him alive, and the police suspect that Mora at very least helped to lure Volpe into an ambush. After Volpe's murder in 1983, Mora visited Millhaven Penitentiary on 5 February 1984 to meet the imprisoned gangster Antonio "Tony" Musitano of the Musitano family. However, Mora instead joined the Papalia family. In December 1985, a crew of Papalia family Mafiosi led by Carmen Barillaro were charged with extortion from the illegal gambling houses in Toronto's Greektown in the Pape-Danforth area. Mora was one of those charged as part of Barillaro's crew Mora was known for his practice of dousing those behind in their debts to Johnny Papalia with gasoline and threatening to burn them alive if they refused to pay up promptly. Together with Barillaro, Mora was one of Papalia's principle lieutenants, in charge of the Papalia family's operations in the Toronto area while Barillaro ran the operations in the Niagara Peninsula. Barillaro was considered as the more important of the two owing to the proximity of the Niagara peninsula to the American border and hence placing him in charge of drug-smuggling. Following Mora's convictions on weapons and drugs charges, the government of Canada attempted to deport him to Italy, but Mora's lawyers successfully argued in court that it would be cruel to separate Mora from his wife and three daughters, leading the judge to rule that Mora be allowed to stay in Canada.
In 1995, Mora took out a loan of $7.2 million from Vito Rizzuto, the boss of Montreal's Rizzuto family. In turn, Mora handed over most of the loan to Papalia and Barillaro who used some of it to open nightclubs and restaurants while the rest just vanished. Neither Papalia nor Barillaro were interested in repaying the loan as the police recorded Barillaro saying on his phone "They can't touch us". The Canadian journalists André Cédilot and André Noël wrote that this was a "major mistake" as Rizzuto decided to wipe out the Papalia family's leaders.
In 1995, the police tapped Mora's phone, and heard him talk about a wedding reception he was planning to attend at the Sutton Place Hotel in Toronto. He mentioned in one of his calls that the father of the bride was Alfonso Caruana, who was wanted in Italy for money laundering. Caruana had disappeared and Mora's reference to him was the first indication as to he had gone after fleeing Italy.
On 11 September 1996, Mora was shot four times in the head and his corpse was left in the trunk of his Cadillac automobile, on Teston Road in rural Vaughan. Detective Sergeant Ron Sandelli of the Toronto police told the media: "It [Mora's murder] sure wasn't a surprise. He had his hand into so many things". The police established via forensic testing that Mora was murdered on a farm in Vaughan, where he often visited before his body was placed inside of his Cadillac. Mora's corpse was found with his pants and underwear pulled down, an indication that he likely had committed a sexual offense, as within the Mafia subculture removing a murder victim's pants and underwear indicates that the victim had sex with someone whom they were not supposed to. Within the Mafia subculture, for a Mafiosi to have sex with the wife of another Mafiosi is punishable by death. In practice, the enforcement of such rules largely depend upon the seniority of a Mafiosi. Within the Mafia, actions that offended the "honor" of another Mafiosi can be ordered without the approval of a more senior boss.
Giacinto Arcuri was arrested and charged with Mora's murder, but was acquitted for lack of evidence. A shirt with Acruri's DNA and Mora's blood had been found near where Mora's body had been discovered. Acruri was unable to explain to the police how his shirt came to be covered with Mora's blood, saying "I have fifty shirts". At his trial in the fall of 2002, Acruri testified he had been an investor in land speculation alongside Mora; the restaurateur Nicola Galifi; and "a Chinese person". Acruri was the last person known to see Mora alive, saying he was going to show Mora a treadmill on the day of the murder. However, the Crown's case was circumstantial and the Crown Attorney, Peter Westgate, was unable to give a motive for the murder. Moreover, Acruri was a frail-looking senior citizen with one eye whom the jury was unable to believe had killed Mora, removed his pants and underwear and then placed his 260-pound corpse into the trunk of a car.
The journalists Peter Edwards and Antoni Nicaso wrote that with the murders of Mora, Papalia and Barillaro within the space of less than a year "created more space" for the Rizzuto family, which was now able to dominate Ontario.
Books and articles
References
1949 births
1996 deaths
People from Sora, Lazio
Canadian drug traffickers
Canadian gangsters of Italian descent
Canadian people of Italian descent
Murdered Canadian gangsters
Murdered Mafiosi
Canadian people convicted of drug offences
People murdered by Canadian organized crime
Organized crime in Hamilton, Ontario
Deaths by firearm in Ontario
1996 murders in North America
People murdered in Ontario
Murder in Canada
1990s murders in Canada | [
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