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The 2022 Alabama House of Representatives elections will be held on November 8, 2022, with the primary election held on May 24, 2022, as part of the biennial United States elections. All 105 of Alabama's state representatives were up for reelection. In Alabama, members of both the House of Representatives and the Senate serve four year terms, running in years corresponding with presidential midterm elections. Background Retirements Republicans Democrats Incumbents defeated In primary elections Republicans Democrats Predictions Results † - Incumbent not seeking re-election Closest races Seats where the margin of victory was under 10%: Detailed results Overview District 1 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Phillip Pettus has represented Alabama House of Representatives 1st District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. Maurice McCaney is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 2 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Lynn Greer has represented Alabama 2nd State House of Representatives District since November 2010. He announced not seeking for reelection. Jason Black, Kimberly Butler, Ben Harrison and Terrance Irelan are running as Republican candidates so there are a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 3 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Andrew Sorrell has represented Alabama House of Representatives 3rd District since November 2018. He is retiring to run for state auditor. Fred Joly and Kerry Underwood are running as Republican candidates so there are a Republican primary election. Susan Bentley and Wesley Thompson are running as Democratic candidates so there are a Democratic primary election. District 4 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Parker Moore has represented Alabama House of Representatives 4th District since May 2018. He is running for reelection. Sheila Banister and Terrance Irelan are running as Republican candidates so there are a Republican primary election. No other candidates running. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 5 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Danny Crawford has represented Alabama House of Representatives 5th District since 2016. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 6 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Andy Whitt has represented Alabama House of Representatives 6th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. Andy Whitt is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 7 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Proncey Robertson has represented Alabama House of Representatives 7th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Ernie Yarbrough is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Mose Jones Jr. is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Mose Jones Jr. is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 8 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Terri Collins has represented Alabama House of Representatives 8th District since November 2010. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 4th term. District 9 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Scott Stadthagen has represented Alabama House of Representatives 9th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 10 5th term incumbent Republican Representative Mike Ball has represented Alabama House of Representatives 10th District since November 2002. He is retiring. Retired colonel .David Cole and Anson Knowles are running as Republican candidates so there are a Republican primary election. Marilyn Lands is only Democratic candidate, so Democratic primary was canceled. Marilyn Lands is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 11 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Randall Shedd has represented Alabama House of Representatives 11th District since 2013. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 4th term. District 12 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Corey Harbison has represented Alabama House of Representatives 12th District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. Mose Jones Jr. is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. District 13 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Connie Rowe has represented Alabama House of Representatives 13th District since November 2014. He resigned in January 2022. Greg Barnes, Keith Davis, Matt Dozier, Charlie Waits and Matt Woods running as a Republican candidate so there are a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 14 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Tim Wadsworth has represented Alabama House of Representatives 14th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Cory Franks and Tom Fredricks are running as a Republican candidate, so that there have three candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 15 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Allen Farley has represented Alabama House of Representatives 15th District since November 2010. He announced no seeking for reelection. Leigh Hulsey and Brad Tompkins are running as a Republican candidate, so that there have three candidate that need a Republican primary election. Richard Rouco is only Democratic candidate, so Democratic primary was canceled. Richard Rouco is running as a Democratic candidate in general election. District 16 2rd term incumbent Republican Representative Kyle South has represented Alabama House of Representatives 16th District since 2015. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 3nd term. District 17 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Tracy Estes has represented Alabama House of Representatives 17th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 18 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Jamie Kiel has represented Alabama House of Representatives 18th District since November 2018. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 19 8th term incumbent Democratic Representative Laura Hall has represented Alabama House of Representatives 19th District since 1993. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 9th term. District 20 9th term incumbent Republican Representative Howard Sanderfordhas represented Alabama House of Representatives 20th District since 1989. He announced no seeking for reelection. James Brown, James Lomax, Angela McClure and Frances Taylor are running as a Republican candidate, so that there have four candidates that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 21 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Rex Reynolds has represented Alabama House of Representatives 21st District since March 2018. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 22 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Ritchie Whorton has represented Alabama House of Representatives 22nd District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 23 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Tommy Hanes has represented Alabama House of Representatives 23rd District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. Mike Kirkland is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 24 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Nathaniel Ledbetter has represented Alabama House of Representatives 24th District since November 2014. He also represented as Majority leader sine 2017. He is running for reelection. Don Stout is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 25 4th term incumbent Republican Representative Mac McCutcheon has represented Alabama House of Representatives 25th District since November 2006. He announced not seeking for reelection. Buck Clemons and Phillip Rigsby are running as Republican candidates so there are a Republican primary election. Mallory Hagan is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Mallory Hagan is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 26 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Kerry Rich has represented Alabama House of Representatives 26th District since November 2010. He is retiring. Brock Colvin, Annette Holcomb and Todd Mitchem are running as Republican candidates so there are a Republican primary election. Ben Alford is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Ben Alford is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 27 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Wes Kitchens has represented Alabama House of Representatives 27th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Herb Neu is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election.]] is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Herb Neu is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 28 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Gil Isbell has represented Alabama House of Representatives 28th District since November 2018.He is running for reelection. Mack Butler is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 29 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Becky Nordgren has represented Alabama House of Representatives 29th District since November 2010. She resigned to be come Etowah County's revenue commissioner. Since she left office thus seat has no member service. Mark Gidley, Jamie Grant and Steve Reagan are running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 30 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Craig Lipscomb has represented Alabama House of Representatives 30th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 31 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Mike Holmes has represented Alabama House of Representatives 31st District since January 2014. He announced no seeking for reelection. R.T. Barksdale, Chadwick Smith and Troy Stubbs are running as a Republican candidate, so that there have three candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 32 8th term incumbent Democratic Representative Barbara Boyd has represented Alabama House of Representatives 32nd District since January 1994. He is running for reelection. He is the only Democratic candidate in the elections, so the Democratic primary is canceled. He is running as a Democratic candidate in general election. Evan Jackson is running as only Republican candidate, so that Republican primary was canceled. Evan Jackson is running as a Republican candidate in the general election. District 33 10th term incumbent Republican Representative Ronald Johnson has represented Alabama House of Representatives 33rd District since January 1984.He died in office in July 2020. He was replaced by Ben Robbins on 2021. Robbins is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Fred Crum is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Fred Crum is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 34 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative David Standridge has represented Alabama House of Representatives 34th District since 2012. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 4th term. District 35 7th term incumbent Republican Representative Steve Hurst has represented Alabama House of Representatives 35th District since January 1998. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 8th term. District 36 6th term incumbent Republican Representative Randy Wood has represented Alabama House of Representatives 36th District since February 2002. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 7th term. District 37 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Bob Fincher has represented Alabama House of Representatives 37th District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 38 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Debbie Wood has represented Alabama House of Representatives 38th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection Micah Messer is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 39 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Ginny Shaver has represented Alabama House of Representatives 39th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Brent Rhodes is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 40 4th term incumbent Republican Representative K. L. Brown has represented Alabama House of Representatives 40th District since February 2010. He announced no seeking for reelection. Gayla Blanton, Julie Borrelli, Katie Exum, Bill Lester, Bill McAdams, Chad Robertson and Jakob Williamson running as a Republican candidate so there are a Republican primary election. Pam Howard is the only Democratic candidate, so Democratic primary was canceled. Pam Howard is running as a Democratic candidate in general election. District 41 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Corley Ellis has represented Alabama House of Representatives 41st District since 2016. He is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Chris Nelson is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Chris Nelson is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 42 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Jimmy Martin has represented Alabama House of Representatives 42nd District since November 2014. He died on 2019. He succeeded by Ivan Smith on 2019. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 43 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Arnold Mooney has represented Alabama House of Representatives 43rd District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Prince Cleveland is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Prince Cleveland is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 44 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Danny Garrett has represented Alabama House of Representatives 44th District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 45 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Dickie Drake has represented Alabama House of Representatives 45th District since 2011. He is running for reelection. Susan DuBose is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 46 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative David Faulkner has represented Alabama House of Representatives 46th District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 47 1st term incumbent Republican Representative David Wheeler has represented Alabama House of Representatives 47th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Christian Coleman and Jim Toomey are running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have three candidate that need a Democratic primary election. District 48 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Jim Carns has represented Alabama House of Representatives 48th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. William Wentowski is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 49 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative April Weaver has represented Alabama House of Representatives 49th District since November 2014. She resigned on 2020. She succeeded by Russell Bedsole on 2021. He is running for reelection. Michael Hart is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 50 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Jim Hill has represented the Alabama House of Representatives 50th District since November 2014. He is seeking reelection. All other campaigns were canceled by his opponents making him the only candidate up for election, so he was reelected for his 4th term. District 51 4th term incumbent Republican Representative Allen Treadaway has represented Alabama House of Representatives 51st District since November 2006. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 5th term. District 52 10th term incumbent Democratic Representative John Rogers has represented Alabama House of Representatives 52nd District since November 1982. He is running for reelection. Latanya Millhouse is running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Republican primary and general election were canceled by the Democrat candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 53 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Anthony Daniels has represented Alabama House of Representatives 53rd District since 2014. He also represented as Minority Leader sine 2017. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3nd term. District 54 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Neil Rafferty has represented Alabama House of Representatives 54th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Brit Blalock and Edward Maddox are running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Republican primary and general election were canceled by the Democrat candidate was the only candidate in general election. ) District 55 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Rod Scott has represented Alabama House of Representatives 55th District since before February 13, 2006. He is running for reelection. Travis Hendrix, Phyllis Oden-Jones, Fred Plump and Antwon Womack are running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Republican primary and general election were canceled by the Democrat candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 56 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Louise Alexander has represented Alabama House of Representatives 56th District since November 2014. He announced no seeking for reelection. Tereshia Huffman, Cleo King, Jesse Matthews and Ontario Tillman are running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Republican primary and general election were canceled by the Democrat candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 57 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Merika Coleman has represented Alabama House of Representatives 57th District since November 2002. He is retiring to run Alabama Senator. Delor Baumann is running as the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Kevin Dunn, Patrick Sellers and Charles Winston III are running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have three candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Danny Wilson is running as the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Libertarian primary is canceled. He is running as a Libertarian candidate in general election. District 58 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Rolanda Hollis has represented Alabama House of Representatives 58th District since 2017. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3nd term. District 59 6th term incumbent Democratic Representative Mary Moore has represented Alabama House of Representatives 59th District since before February 13, 2002. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 7th term. District 60 3rd term incumbent Democratic Representative Juandalynn Givan has represented Alabama House of Representatives 60th District since November 2010. He is running for reelection. Nina Taylor is running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Republican primary and general election were canceled by the Democrat candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 61 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Rodney Sullivan has represented Alabama House of Representatives 61st District since November 2018. He announced that he would not seek for reelection. Retired Northport police captain Ron Bolton is seeking the Republican nomination. Ron Bolton and Kimberly Madison are running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 62 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Rich Wingo has represented Alabama House of Representatives District 62 since 2014. He is retiring. Bill Lamb is running for election. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Brenda Cephus is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Brenda Cephus is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 63 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Bill Poole has represented Alabama House of Representatives 63rd District since November 2010. He resigned July 2020. He succeeded by Cynthia Almond on 2021. He is running for reelection. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Samuel Adams is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Samuel Adams is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 64 4th term incumbent Republican Representative Harry Shiverhas represented Alabama House of Representatives 64th District since 2007. He announced not seeking for reelection. Angelo Jacob Fermo and Donna Givens are running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 65 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Brett Easterbrook has represented Alabama House of Representatives 65th District since November 2018.He is running for reelection Elaine Beech,l and Dee Ann Campbell are running as Republican candidates, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Marcus Caster is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Marcus Caster is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 66 4th term incumbent Republican Representative Alan Baker has represented Alabama House of Representatives 66th District since November 2006. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 5th term. District 67 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Prince Chestnut has represented Alabama House of Representatives 67th District since 2007. He is running for reelection. Larine Irby Pettway is running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Jarmal Jabbar Sanders is running as the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. District 68 8th term incumbent Democratic Representative Thomas Jackson has represented Alabama House of Representatives 68th District since February 1994. He is running for reelection He is the only Democratic candidate in the general election, so the Democratic primary is canceled. He is running as a Democratic candidate in general election. Fred Kelley is running as only Republican candidate, so that Republican primary was canceled. Fred Kelley is running as a Republican candidate in the general election. District 69 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Kelvin Lawrence has represented Alabama House of Representatives 69th District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. He is the only Democratic candidate in the general election, so the Democratic primary is canceled. He is running as a Democratic candidate in general election. Karla Knight Maddox is running as only Republican candidate, so that Republican primary was canceled. Fred Kelley is running as a Republican candidate in the general election. District 70 4th term incumbent Democratic Representative Christopher J. England has represented Alabama House of Representatives 70th District since November 2006. He is running for reelection. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 5th term. District 71 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Artis J. McCampbell has represented Alabama House of Representatives 71st District since February 2006. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 6th term. District 72 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Ralph Anthony Howard has represented Alabama House of Representatives 72nd District since 2005. He is running for reelection. Curtis Travis is running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Republican primary and general election were canceled by the Democrat candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 73 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Matt Fridy has represented Alabama House of Representatives 73rd District since November 2014. Fridy resigned December 2020. He succeeded by Kenneth Paschal on 2021.Paschal is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 74 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Dimitri Polizos has represented Alabama House of Representatives 74th District since 2013. Fridy resigned 2019. He succeeded by Charlotte Meadows on 2019.Meadows is running. He is the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. Malcolm Calhoun and Phillip Ensler are running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. District 75 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Reed Ingram has represented Alabama House of Representatives 75th District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 76 3rd term incumbent Democratic Representative Thad McClammy has represented Alabama House of Representatives 76th District since 2013. Fridy died 2019. He succeeded by Patrice McClammy on 2021.McClammy is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 4th term. District 77 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Tashina Morris has represented Alabama House of Representatives 77th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 78 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Kirk Hatcher has represented Alabama House of Representatives 78th District since November 2018. Hatcher resigned 2021. He succeeded by Kenyatté Hassell on 2021.Hassell is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 79 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Joe Lovvorn has represented Alabama House of Representatives 79th District since 2016. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 80 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Chris Blackshear has represented Alabama House of Representatives 80th District since 2016. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 81 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Ed Oliver has represented Alabama House of Representatives 81st District since 2016. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 82 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Pebblin Warren has represented Alabama House of Representatives 82nd District since 2005. He is running for reelection. Terrence Kareem Johnson is running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Lennora Pierro is running as the only Republican candidate in the elections, so the Republican primary is canceled. He is running as a Republican candidate in general election. District 83 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Jeremy Gray has represented Alabama House of Representatives 83rd District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 84 3rd term incumbent Democratic Representative Berry Forte has represented Alabama House of Representatives 84th District since November 2010. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 4th term. District 85 3rd term incumbent Democratic Representative Dexter Grimsley has represented Alabama House of Representatives 85th District since November 2010. He is the only Democratic candidate in the general election, so the Democratic primary is canceled. He is running as a Democratic candidate in general election. Payne Henderson is running as only Republican candidate, so that Republican primary was canceled. Fred Kelley is running as a Republican candidate in the general election. District 86 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Paul Lee has represented Alabama House of Representatives 86th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 4th term. District 87 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Jeff Sorrells has represented Alabama House of Representatives 87th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Eric Johnson is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 88 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Will Dismukes has represented Alabama House of Representatives 88th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Jerry Starnes is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 89 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Wes Allen has represented Alabama House of Representatives 89th District since November 2018. He announced not seeking for reelection. Marcus Paramore is running for election. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections, he was reelected for his 1st term. District 90 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Chris Sells has represented Alabama House of Representatives 90th District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 91 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Rhett Marques has represented Alabama House of Representatives 91st District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Les Hogan is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 92 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Michael Jones has represented Alabama House of Representatives 92nd District since November 2018. He is retiring to run Alabama Sente. Matthew Hammett and Greg White is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Steve Hubbard is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Steve Hubbard is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 93 8th term incumbent Republican Representative Steve Clouse has represented Alabama House of Representatives 93rd District since February 1994. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 9th term. District 94 4th term incumbent Republican Representative Joe Faust has represented Alabama House of Representatives 94th District since 2004. He is running for reelection. Jennifer Fidler is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. District 95 11th term incumbent Republican Representative Steve McMillan has represented Alabama House of Representatives 95th District since 1980. He announced not seeking for election. Frances Holk-Jones, Michael Ludvigsen Jr. and Reginald Pulliam are running as Republican candidates, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Steve Hubbard is running as only Democratic candidate, so that Democratic primary was canceled. Steve Hubbard is running as a Democratic candidate in the general election. District 96 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Matt Simpson has represented Alabama House of Representatives 96th District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. Danielle Duggar is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 97 3nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Adline Clarke has represented Alabama House of Representatives 97th District since November 2010. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 4th term. District 98 3nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Napoleon Bracy Jr. has represented Alabama House of Representatives 98th District since November 2010. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 4th term. District 99 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Sam Jones. has represented Alabama House of Representatives 99th District since November 2010. He is running for reelection. Levi Wright Jr. is running as a Democratic candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Democratic primary election. Republican primary and general election were canceled by the Democrat candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 100 11th term incumbent Republican Representative Victor Gaston has represented Alabama House of Representatives 100th District since February 1982. He announced not seeking for reelection. Pete Kupfer, Joe Piggott and Mark Shirey is running as a Republican candidate, so that there have two candidate that need a Republican primary election. Democratic primary and general election were canceled by the Republican candidate was the only candidate in general election. District 101 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Chris Pringle has represented Alabama House of Representatives 101st District since November 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 102 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Shane Stringer has represented Alabama House of Representatives 102nd District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 3rd term. District 103 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Barbara Drummond has represented Alabama House of Representatives 102nd District since November 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 2nd term. District 104 3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Margie Wilcox has represented Alabama House of Representatives 104th District since February 2014. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 4th term. District 105 1st term incumbent Republican Representative Chip Brown has represented Alabama House of Representatives 105th District since N 2018. He is running for reelection. All the elections were canceled by he is the only candidate for elections,so he was reelected for his 2nd term. References External links House of Representatives 2022 Alabama House of Representatives 2022 Alabama elections Alabama House of Representatives elections
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The 2022 Connecticut State Senate election will be held on November 8, 2022, as part of the biennial 2022 United States elections. Connecticut voters will elect senators in all of the 36 State Senate districts. State senators serve two-year terms in the Connecticut State Senate, with all 36 of the seats up for election each cycle. The Primary Elections are scheduled to be held in August 2022. Predictions Overview Detailed results District 1 13th term incumbent Democratic Senator John Fonfara has represented Connecticut's 1st State Senate District since 1997. District 2 3rd term Democratic Incumbent Douglas McCroy has represented the 2nd District since 2017. District 3 2nd term Democratic Incumbent Saud Anwar has represented the 3rd District since 2019. District 4 6th term Incumbent Democrat Steve Cassano has represented the 4th District since 2011. District 5 2nd term Democratic Incumbent Derek Slap has represented the 5th District since 2019. District 6 1st term Democratic Incumbent Rick Lopes has represented the 6th District since 2021. District 7 15th term Republican Incumbent John A. Kissel has represented the 7th District since 1993. District 8 7th term Republican Incumbent Kevin Witkos has represented the 8th District since 2009. District 9 2nd term Democratic Incumbent Matt Lesser has represented the 9th District since 2019. District 10 3nd term Democratic Incumbent Gary Winfield has represented the 10th District since 2017. District 11 15th term Democratic Incumbent and President pro tempore Martin Looney has represented the 11th District since 1993. District 12 2nd term Democratic Incumbent Christine Cohen has represented the 12th District since 2019. District 13 2nd term Democratic Incumbent Mary Abrams has represented the 13th District since 2019. District 14 2nd term Democratic Incumbent James Maroney has represented the 14th District since 2019. District 15 11th term Democratic Incumbent Joan V. Hartley has represented the 15th District since 2001. District 16 2nd term Republican Incumbent Rob Sampson has represented the 16th District since 2019. District 17 1st term Democratic Incumbent Jorge Cabrera has represented the 17th District since 2021. District 18 3nd term Incumbent Republican Heather Somers has represented the 18th District since 2017. District 19 5th term Democratic Incumbent Cathy Osten has represented the 19th District since 2013. District 20 4th term Republican Incumbent Paul Formica has represented the 20th District since 2015. District 21 6th term Republican Incumbent Kevin C. Kelly has represented the 21st District since 2011. District 22 4th term Democratic Incumbent Marilyn Moore has represented the 22nd District since 2015. District 23 Incumbent Democrat Dennis Bradley has represented the 23rd District since 2019. District 24 2nd term Democratic Incumbent Julie Kushner has represented the 24th District since 2019. District 25 9th term Democratic Incumbent Senate Majority leader Bob Duff has represented the 25th District since 2005. District 26 2nd term Incumbent Democratic senator Will Haskell has represented the 26th District since 2019. District 27 6th term Incumbent Democratic senator Carlo Leone has represented the 27th District since 2011. District 28 4th term Incumbent Republican Tony Hwang has represented the 28th District since 2015. District 29 4th term Democratic Incumbent Mae Flexer has represented the 29th District since 2015. District 30 4th term Republican Incumbent Craig Miner has represented the 30th District since 2015. District 31 4th term Republican Incumbent Henri Martin has represented the 31st District since 2015. District 32 3nd term Incumbent Republican Eric Berthel has represented the 32nd District since 2017. District 33 2nd term Incumbent Democrat Norman Needleman has represented the 33rd District since 2019. District 34 1st term Republican Incumbent Paul Cicarella has represented the 33rd District since 2021. District 35 2nd term Republican Incumbent Dan Champagne has represented the 35th District since 2019. District 36 lst term Republican Incumbent Ryan Fazio has represented the 36th District since 2021. See also 2022 United States House of Representatives elections in Connecticut References External links State Senate 2022 Connecticut State Senate
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Bill Bamberger Jr. (birth 1956) is an American documentary photographer, photojournalist, and author who captures social and cultural issues in America and around the world. Bamberger has been called a "master documentarian" and is know for "taking an intimate approach to his subject matter." His work has been featured in several books and in solo exhibits at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History, the North Carolina Museum of Art, and the National Building Museum. He is a lecturing fellow at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University. Background Bamberger is a Philadelphia native and grew up in Long Island, New York and in Yardley, Pennsylvania. He was a Morehead Scholar at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, graduating in 1979 with a degree in American Studies. His main interest in college was originally writing, but he discovered photography and took several classes. Bamberger says, "I chose to be a photographer because this was, for me, the most effective way of telling stories." After college, he remained in North Carolina and worked as a photojournalist with a local newspaper. Bamberger says, "In those days, I did film and printing, and I found every bit of it engaging." His photographs have been in many publications, including Apeture, Doubletake, Duke Magazine, Fortune, Harper's Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Time, Vogue, and The Washington Post Magazine. He has been interviewed on various television shows, including CBS Sunday Morning, C-SPAN2's About Books, and North Carolina People on PBS, as well as on All Things Considered on NPR. Bamberger taught in the Folklore Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and is currently a lecturing fellow at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University. Photographs & Exhibitions As a documentary photographer, Bamberger feels it is important to get consent from his subjects. He says, "With portraits, I try to capture a central element of who we are as an individual. When I’m preparing to do a portrait, I think of the expression that defines that person. With the landscape work, I pay close attention to lighting and exposure." His work has been compared to that of German photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher—a mid-twentieth-century duo who often photographed industrial relics. Bamberger's photographs have been displayed in museums and galleries both big and small. This is intentional as he likes to open his exhibits in his subjects' hometown. For example, his show Closings opened in an old department store where his subjects lived in Mebane, North Carolina before moving to the Smithsonian. He's had solo exhibits at the National Building Museum, the Nasher Museum of Art, the National Museum of American History-Smithsonian Institution, the North Carolina Museum of Art, and Yale University Art Gallery. His work is also on display in U.S. Embassies. Durham County Photographs Bamberger's first major project documented a cross-section of people living in Durham County, North Carolina from 1979 to 1982. This project received funding from the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University. The result was a book and an exhibit shown at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, Duke University's Brown Gallery in the Bryan Center, the Reece Museum at East Tennessee State University, and the Morris Gallery of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Closing: The Life and Death of an American Factory After more than 100 years of operation, a furniture factory in Mebane, North Carolina, closed down in 1993. Bamberger's photographic series documents the final days of work for the 203 men and women who crafted fine furniture at The White Furniture Co. He spent five months on-site in the factory and used 350 rolls of film to capture black and white and color photographs "of everyone and everything"—spending five years total on the project which included following the workers after the factory closed. One reviewer says Bamberger "offers an unusual glimpse into the lives for working-class Americans." Another reviewer notes the artistic quality, saying, "The gentle natural light of the factory interior captures workers, products, and machinery in an elegiac yet unsentimental memorial. This is documentary work of a high order, a corrective to triumphalist cybercratic boosterism, and above all a reminder of the ambiguities and ironies of family values." Closing was part of an oral history and documentary photography project funded by a North Carolina Humanities Council grant and coordinated by the Southern Oral History Project and the Mebane Arts Council. The exhibit opened at the former Jones Department Store in downtown Mebane, and was also shown at the North Carolina Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History, and the Yale University Art Gallery. A related book was also published. A House is a Home / Stories from Home In 1994, the Lyndhurst Foundation in Chattanooga, Tennessee asked Bamberger to document "in human terms the impact of home ownership on the lives of families" in three neighborhoods where the Chattanooga Neighborhood Enterprise had built or renovated houses for lower-income people. For the project, he lived and worked with his subjects. After seeing that resulting photographs, the University of North Carolina sponsored, "This House is Home: An Initiative to Advance Affordable Home Ownership in America," involving college students and a national conference. This expanded Bamberger's work into Eastern North Carolina. He also spent six months in San Antonio, Texas where he lived in a Mexican-American neighborhood that included houses built by Habitat for Humanity. In 2002, Bamberger had the idea for "A House is a Home," a photo-gallery inside a house that could travel across the country. Fabricated for $125,000 with the design help of Gregg Snyder of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, the mobile art gallery's "purpose is to foster a better understanding of the affordable home-ownership issue." The gallery traveled from 2002-2003, going from San Antonio, Texas to Oregon to North Dakota, and ending in Chapel Hill. In 2004, a larger exhibit, Stories from Home, was displayed at the National Building Museum. Chrysanthe Broikos, curator at the museum says, "The images are very moving, especially when you see them large scale. It's like you're having a one-to-one conversation with the people. You see the expressions on their faces, the pride and peace, and you see a side of home ownership you might not think of." Boys Will Be Men In the mid-1980s, Bamberger spent a year at Deerfield Academy, a private boarding school in Deerfield, Massachusetts, teaching and documenting students. His goal was to document "the life and coming of age for teenagers" through both photography and interviews. He decided to focus on teenage boys as a way to explore coming of age, male identity, and toxic masculinity. Through a 1999 National Endowment of the Arts' program, "Artists and Community: America Creates for the Millennium," Bamberger was able to revisit Boys Will Be Men. For the second part of this project, Bamberger chose a public school, Flint Central High School in Flint, Michigan. He spent six months interviewing and photographing students, while living a block from the school. At first, the students were reluctant to participant because they were afraid of another Roger and Me, the documentary film by Michael Moore that negatively portrayed their, and his, hometown. However, Bamberger was given a room at the school for the duration of his residency. He furnished the room comfortably and displayed recent photographs, creating a popular hangout for the students. He also kept equipment worth $20,000 in the room and rarely locked the door. The resulting audio and photography exhibit opened in January 2002 at the Flint Institute of Arts and at Albion College in 2003. One reviewer noted, "The effect is a compelling audio-visual mosaic of disadvantaged youth at an emotional crossroads." Principal of the Flint Central, Jim Beaublem, said "The positive spinoff from this exhibit is to break apart stereotypes about an inner-city school." Boys Will Be Men, was one of the best attended exhibits in the history of the Flint Institute of Arts. In 2004, Bamberger described this project as ongoing in both rural and urban settings. In 2019, Bamberger attempted to reconnect with the Flint students he photographed nineteen years earlier. One Rwanda: Portraits of Contemporary Life Bamberger spend three months in Rwanda for the 20th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide. As he took color photos of the daily lives of people, Bamberger wrote, "I stopped thinking about the Rwandese people primarily as Hutus or Tutsis and as perpetrators or survivors. Instead, my photographs explore how the people of Rwanda are finding their way while faced with contemporary issues like healthcare, education, and housing." A related exhibit opened in 2014 at the John Hope Franklin Center Gallery at Duke University. He also took photographs that ended up in his Hoops exhibit. Hoops Taking 15 years to complete, the Hoops project includes more than 22,000 photographs of basketball hoops taken in 38 states in the U.S. and 9 countries around the globe. The first photo of the series was taken in Nags Head, North Carolina. Bamberger says, “I started to look, and everywhere I went, I would find them." The resulting exhibit of 75 large-format color photographs, was displayed at the National Building Museum in 2019. A smaller version of the exhibit was held in U.S. Embassies and the Nasher Museum of Art. One reviewer noted, "By cutting out the players, Bamberger removes the idea of a moment frozen in time, to instead tell the broader story of place and environment, captured in vivid color." Bamberger says, "Each of these courts speaks to issues like wealth disparity and the design sensibility of the community—how the community creates a court, with what materials, in what setting and what surrounds the court. It’s a project about sport, but also in a much larger sense about society: the similarities and differences between one community and another." A book about this project is forthcoming. Awards Bamberger won the Mayflower Prize in Nonfiction for his book Closing: The Life and Death of an American Factory, produced with Cathy N. Davidson. Closing was also nominated for the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award. He was one of 56 American artists selected to participate in "Artists and Communities: America Creates for the Millennium," the National Endowment for the Arts millennium project. Publications Boys Will Be Men: Photographs by Bill Bamberger at the Flint Institute of Arts May 17–July 21, 2002. Flint Institute of Arts (2002). ISBN 978-0939896226 Closing: The Life and Death of an American Factory (The Lyndhurst Series on the South). By Cathy N. Davidson and Bill Bamberger. W. W. Norton & Company (1998) ISBN 0393045684 Durham County Photographs. The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art. (1982) Hoop. Forthcoming from George F. Thompson Publishing. Stories of Home and the Mobile Gallery: Photography, Architecture, Community. By Bill Bamberger and Gary Snyder. College of Architecture, University of North Carolina at Charlotte (2003) ISBN 978-0974584003 Personal Bamberger lives in Durham, North Carolina with his wife Alice Boyle. His photographs are sold through Anne Taylor Fine Arts. References External Links www.BillBamberger.com Closing: An American Factory, C-SPAN Bamberger's Artist Tour of "One Rwanda: Portraits of Contemporary Life" 1950s births Living people 20th-century American photographers American photojournalists Photographers from Philadelphia University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill alumni Documentary photographers Photographers from North Carolina Duke University faculty University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill faculty People from Durham, North Carolina
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Ryan Pivirotto (born May 14, 1995) is an American short track speed skater. He represented the United States at the 2022 Winter Olympics. Career Pivirotto won a bronze medal at the 2020 Four Continents Short Track Speed Skating Championships in the 5000 metre relay. Pivirotto was named to the roster for the United States at the 2018 Winter Olympics, however, he did not compete in any events. He represented the United States at the 2022 Winter Olympics. References 1995 births Living people American male short track speed skaters Short track speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics Sportspeople from Ann Arbor, Michigan Olympic short track speed skaters of the United States
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Allocca is a surname of Italian origin. Notable people with this surname include: Antonio Allocca (1937 – 2013), Italian actor Lucio Allocca (born 1943), Italian actor Italian-language surnames
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Setacera breviventris is a species of shore flies in the family Ephydridae. Distribution Angola, Kenya, Nigeria, Australia, Guam, Solomon Islands, Bangladesh. References Ephydridae Insects described in 1860 Diptera of Africa Diptera of Asia Diptera of Australasia Taxa named by Hermann Loew
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How Nadya Went to Get Vodka () is a 2020 Russian comedy film directed by Vladimir Mirzoyev. It was theatrically released in Russia on October 29, 2020. Plot The film tells about two sisters who dream of finding a man and enter into competition until they find out that this man lives in a loveless marriage, as a result of which they decide to unite and return him to normal life. Cast References External links 2020 films Russian-language films Russian films 2020 comedy films
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Serhiy Serhiyovych Rusyan (; born 5 August 1999) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a right midfielder for Ukrainian club Ahrobiznes Volochysk. References External links 1999 births Living people Sportspeople from Makiivka Ukrainian footballers Association football midfielders FC Arsenal Kyiv players FC Olimpik Donetsk players FC Oleksandriya players FC Dinaz Vyshhorod players SC Chaika Petropavlivska Borshchahivka players FC Ahrobiznes Volochysk players Ukrainian Premier League players Ukrainian Second League players
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Won Ton: A Cat Tale Told in Haiku is a 2011 Children's picture book by Lee Wardlaw and illustrated by Eugene Yelchin. Told in senryu, it is about a shelter cat that is adopted by a family. Reception A review in Kirkus Reviews of Won Ton wrote "Wardlaw's terse, traditional verse captures catness from every angle, while Yelchin's graphite and gouache illustrations telegraph cat-itude with every stretch and sinuous slink", and Publishers Weekly called it "A surprisingly powerful story in verse." Won Ton has also been reviewed by Booklist, BookPage, Horn Book Guides, School Library Journal, and Library Media Connection. It is a 2012 NCTE/CLA Notable Children's Book in the English Language Arts, won the 2012 Lee Bennett Hopkins Award for Poetry, and won the 2013 Beehive Poetry Book Award. References External links Library holdings of Won Ton Get You Paws on a Great Book - Author's booksite 2011 children's books American picture books Books about cats Children's poetry books 2011 poetry books Haiku
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Gerald M. Pomper is an American political scientist and specialist in American elections and politics. Pomper is the Board of Governors Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the Eagleton Institute of Politics of Rutgers University. Biography Pomper was born in The Bronx in 1935 to Jewish immigrants from Poland. He grew up in Manhattan and graduated from Stuyvesant High School. He received his B.A. from Columbia University in 1955 on a Ford Foundation scholarship, majoring in political science and serving as managing editor of Columbia Daily Spectator. He then received his Ph.D. from Princeton University. He began his academic career at the City College of New York, before moving to Rutgers University and served as the founding chair of the political science department ofLivingston College. He was a Fulbright scholar in 1971–72, teaching at Tel Aviv University. Pomper has been described as a leading authority in the field of election studies and was called the "Dean of American Political Science" by political historian Allan Lichtman. References Living people 1935 births People from the Bronx Columbia College (New York) alumni Princeton University alumni City College of New York faculty Rutgers University faculty American political scientists Stuyvesant High School alumni
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Events in 1920 in animation. Films released 4 January - Farmer Al Falfa Goes A-Hunting (United States) 16 January - The Great Cheese Robbery (United States) 25 January - A Frolic with Felix (United States) 30 January - Love's Labor Lost (United States) 8 February - The Debut of Thomas Cat (United States) 22 February - Felix the Big Game Hunter (United States) 3 March - The Best Mouse Loses (United States) 7 March - Wrecking a Romeo (United States) 14 March - The Bone of Contention (United States) 11 April - Felix the Food Controller (United States) 18 April - Felix the Pinch Hitter (United States) 16 May - Foxy Felix (United States) 4 June - Kats Is Kats (United States) 6 June - A Hungry Hoodoo (United States) 12 June - Cheating the Piper (United States) 13 June - The Great Cheese Robbery (United States) 3 July - The Chinese Honeymoon (United States) 18 July - Felix and the Feed Bag (United States) 22 August - Nifty Nurse (United States) 26 September - Frolics at the Circus view (United States) 24 October - My Hero (United States) 25 October - A Family Affair (United States) 21 November - Felix the Landlord (United States) 26 December - Felix's Fish Story (United States) Births January January 1: Osvaldo Cavandoli, Italian animator and comics artist (La Linea), (d. 2007). January 6: Henry Corden, American voice actor (voice of Fred Flintstone), (d. 2005). January 20: DeForest Kelley, American actor (voice of Dr. Leonard McCoy in Star Trek: The Animated Series, Viking 1 in The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars), (d. 1999). February February 14: Albert Barillé, Polish-French animator, screenwriter and animated film producer (Procidis, Once Upon a Time...), (d. 2009). March March 3: James Doohan, Canadian actor (voiced Scotty in Star Trek: The Animated Series) (d. 2005). Ronald Searle, British illustrator, cartoonist and comics artist (animated The Happiest Days of Your Life, Energetically Yours, Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines, Monte Carlo or Bust!, and Dick Deadeye, or Duty Done), (d. 2011). March 14: Hank Ketcham, American comics artist and animator (Walt Disney Company, Walter Lantz), (d. 2001). March 22: Ross Martin American actor (voice of Andy Stevenson in The Man from Button Willow, Dr. Paul Williams in Sealab 2020, Agent 000 in The Robonic Stooges), (d. 1981). April April 2: Jack Stokes, British animator and film director (worked on Yellow Submarine and Roobarb), (d. 2013). April 14: Sheldon Moldoff, American comics artist and animator (Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse), (d. 2012). May May 22: Millie Goldsholl, American animated film director and producer (Up Is Down), (d. 2012). May 26: Peggy Lee, American singer and voice actress (voice of Darling, Si and Am and Peg in Lady and the Tramp), (d. 2002). June June 5: Harold Whitaker, British animator and comics artist (worked on Animal Farm), (d. 2013). Jack Manning, American comics artist and animator (Walt Disney Company, Hanna-Barbera), (d. 1986). June 13: Joseph Bau, Polish-Israeli artist, philosopher, comedian, poet and animator, (d. 2002). Rex Everhart, American actor (voice of Maurice in Beauty and the Beast), (d. 2000). June 19: Johnny Douglas, English composer (Marvel Productions), (d. 2003). June 22: Paul Frees, American actor and screenwriter (voice of Boris Badenov in Rocky and Bullwinkle, Inspector Fenwick in Dudley Do-Right, Ludwig von Drake in Disney anthology television series, Muscles in Jerry's Cousin, voice of John Lennon and George Harrison in The Beatles, Burgermeister Meisterburger and Grimsley in Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town), (d. 1986). June 29: Ray Harryhausen, American animator and special effects creator (Mighty Joe Young, The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, Jason and the Argonauts, Clash of the Titans), (d. 2013). July July 20: Dick N. Lucas, American animator (Walt Disney Company), (d. 1997). Keith Andes, American actor (voice of Birdman in Birdman and the Galaxy Trio), (d. 2005). August August 2: Bill Scott, American voice actor (voice of Bullwinkle J. Moose, Mister Peabody, Dudley Do-Right, Super Chicken, and George of the Jungle, voice of Moosel in The Wuzzles, Gruffi Tummi, Sir Tuxford, and Toadwart in Gummi Bears), (d. 1985) from a heart attack. August 11: Mike Douglas, American singer, TV host and actor (singing voice of Prince Charming in Cinderella), (d. 2006). August 18: Lev Milchin, Russian animated film director and illustrator (The Tale of Tsar Saltan), (d. 1987). September September 5: Alex Anderson, American cartoonist (co-creator of Rocky and Bullwinkle, Dudley Do-Right, Crusader Rabbit), (d. 2010). September 20: Jay Ward, American animator and producer (Crusader Rabbit, Rocky and Bullwinkle, Dudley Do-Right, Mr. Peabody and Sherman, Hoppity Hooper, George of the Jungle, Tom Slick, Super Chicken), (d. 1989). September 23: Mickey Rooney, American actor (voice of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit in the mid-1930s, Santa Claus in the Rankin/Bass Productions Christmas specials, adult Tod in The Fox and the Hound, Mr. Cherrywood in The Care Bears Movie, Flip in Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland, played himself in The Simpsons episode "Radioactive Man" and the short producer in the American Dad! episode A Star is Reborn), (d. 2014). September 27: Tô Hoài, Vietnamese writer, playwright, screenwriter, journalist and animator, (d. 2014). William Conrad, American actor (voice of the Narrator in Rocky and Bullwinkle), (d. 1994). October October 13: Albert Hague, German-American songwriter and composer (How the Grinch Stole Christmas), (d. 2001). November November 17: George Dunning, Canadian animator and film director (The Beatles, Yellow Submarine), (d. 1979). November 25: Ricardo Montalban, Mexican actor (voice of Armando Gutierrez in Freakazoid!, Senor Senor Sr. in Kim Possible), (d. 2009). December December 30: René Jodoin, Canadian animation director and producer (founder of the French-language animation studio of the National Film Board of Canada), (d. 2015). December 31: Rex Allen, American actor (voice of the title character and Narrator in The Saga of Windwagon Smith, the Narrator in Charlotte's Web), (d. 1999). Specific date unknown Balthasar Lippisch, German illustrator, caricaturist, animator and comics artist (worked on the TV series Pip & Zip), (d. 1995). References External links Animated works of the year, listed in the IMDb
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Phi III or Phi 3 is a residential locality in south-western Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. Bordered by Phi I and Phi II to the north and Chi III and Chi IV to the west, it is known to be one of the real estate hotspots of Greater Noida, alongside Omega II, Omega I, Phi I, Phi II, Phi IV, Chi I, Chi II, Chi III, Chi IV and Chi V. It is named after the Greek letter Phi. References Geography of Uttar Pradesh Meerut division geography stubs
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Givi Toidze (, 18 December 1932 – 10 February 2022) was a Georgian artist and painter, Honored Artist of the Georgian SSR (1967), People's Artist of the Georgian SSR (1988), Honorary Citizen of Tbilisi (1999), and Secretary of the Artists' Union of Georgia. Life and career In 1960, Givi graduated from the Tbilisi State Academy of Arts and then was a professor at the same academy for many years. He participated in exhibitions since 1961. Notable among his works are "Winter", "Fishermen", "Khevsureti", "Mtatusheti", "Old Tbilisi" and "Narikala". His works are preserved in museums such as Tretyakov Gallery (Russia), Museum of the Peoples of the East (Russia), and Peter Ludwig Gallery (Germany). His paintings have been collected by George W. Bush, Jacques Chirac, and other notables. Toidze died on 10 February 2022, at the age of 89. Awards 1981 — Shota Rustaveli Prize 1967 — Honored Artist of the Georgian SSR References External links Givi Toidze Международная художественная выставка педагогов-художников «Древняя Иверия» Biographical Dictionary of Georgia Givi Toidze’s Anniversary Retrospective Exhibition 1932 births 2022 deaths Artists from Tbilisi 20th-century painters from Georgia (country)
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On the Moon () is a 2020 Russian thriller film directed by Egor Konchalovsky. It was theatrically released in Russia on February 27, 2020. Plot The film tells about the son of an influential man who, during a night race, accidentally hits a pedestrian, as a result of which his father sends him to the northern regions. Cast References External links 2020 films Russian-language films Russian films 2020 thriller films
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More Than This is an Australian streaming television drama series on Paramount+. It is set to begin on 4 March 2022. The series was written by teen actor Olivia Deeble and co-created with Luka Gracie. Both actors also star in this series. Premise The series explores the unique challenges facing Australian teenagers as they come of age: social, family and school pressures, bullying, body image, relationships and sexuality. Cast Olivia Deeble Bert Labonte Luka Gracie Kamil Ellis Ellmir Asipi Josh Heuston Oisin O’Leary Celine Ajobong Tharanya Tharan Selena Brincat References External links 2022 Australian television series debuts 2020s Australian comedy television series English-language television shows Paramount+ original programming Television series by ITV Studios
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Ronen Eldan (; born 1980) is an Israeli mathmetician and theoretical physicist. Eldan is a senior researcher at the Weizmann Institute of Science. He is among the recipients of the 2022 Blavatnik Award for Young Scientists. Biography Early life Ronen Eldan was born in Israel in 1980 to Rachel and Yoram Eldan. Eldan spent a majority of his childhood growing up in Ramat Aviv. Education In 2005, Eldan received his B.A. degree in Maths from the Open University of Israel. In 2006, he persued an additional discipline in physics from Tel Aviv University. In 2013, Eldan received his Ph.D. from Tel Aviv University and later worked as a post-doctorate researcher at the University of Washington. Career In 2015, Eldan joined the Weizmann Institute's Department of Mathematics. In 2018, Eldan was awarded the Erdős Prize in Mathematics. Works Sébastien Bubeck, Ronen Eldan: “Multi-scale exploration of convex functions and bandit convex optimization”, 2015; arXiv:1507.06580. Sébastien Bubeck, Ronen Eldan, Yin Tat Lee: “Kernel-based methods for bandit convex optimization”, 2016; arXiv:1607.03084. Ronen Eldan, Bo'az Klartag: “Approximately gaussian marginals and the hyperplane conjecture”, 2010; arXiv:1001.0875. Jian Ding, Ronen Eldan, Alex Zhai: “On multiple peaks and moderate deviations for supremum of Gaussian field”, 2013; arXiv:1311.5592. Ronen Eldan: “Gaussian-width gradient complexity, reverse log-Sobolev inequalities and nonlinear large deviations”, 2016; arXiv:1612.04346. Ronen Eldan, Dan Mikulincer, Alex Zhai: “The CLT in high dimensions: quantitative bounds via martingale embedding”, 2018; arXiv:1806.09087. Ronen Eldan: “Taming correlations through entropy-efficient measure decompositions with applications to mean-field approximation”, 2018; arXiv:1811.11530. Ronen Eldan, Renan Gross: “Concentration on the Boolean hypercube via pathwise stochastic analysis”, 2019; arXiv:1909.12067. Awards Haim Nessyahu Prize for Mathematics (2013) Erdos Prize in Mathematics (2018) Blavatnik Award for Young Scientists (2022) References External links 1980 births Living people Tel Aviv University alumni University of Washington alumni Weizmann Institute of Science faculty Israeli scientists Jewish scientists Israeli mathematicians
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Sun Long (born 28 August 2000) is a Chinese short track speed skater. He competed in the 2019 World Junior Short Track Speed Skating Championships, wining a gold and silver medal. At the 2019 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships, Sun won a silver medal. He then competed at the 2020 World Junior Short Track Speed Skating Championships, wining a gold and bronze medal. Sun is competing at the 2022 Winter Olympics. References 2000 births Living people Chinese male short track speed skaters Olympic short track speed skaters of China Sportspeople from Jilin Short track speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics
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The New Administrative Capital Stadium is a stadium in Egypt's New Administrative Capital under construction since 2019. With an expected capacity of nearly 93,000 people, it will be the largest stadium in Egypt and the second largest in Africa, and is expected to replace the Cairo International Stadium as the new national stadium. It will be part of a larger sports complex that has been under construction since 2015. It will have a training ground, two indoor halls, an Olympic swimming pool, and other buildings, and is being built with an eye toward the country's possible bids for the Olympic Games or a World Cup. History Construction of the stadium began in 2019 as part of a large olympic sports complex. Orascom Construction will be the main contractor. Completion is expected in 2022. Design The stadium is built on an elliptical ground plan. The roof is stylistically based on the headdress of Nefertiti, the ancient Egyptian queen. The Stadium will have a running track. References Stadiums in Egypt
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Vadym Dmytrovych Hranchar (; born 7 March 1998) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for Ukrainian club Real Pharma Odesa. References External links 1998 births Living people Ukrainian footballers Ukraine youth international footballers Association football midfielders FC Chornomorets Odesa players FC Oleksandriya players FC Balkany Zorya players FC Real Pharma Odesa players Ukrainian Premier League players Ukrainian First League players Ukrainian Second League players
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The 1996–97 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland in the 1996–1997 college basketball season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The team was led by head coach Gary Williams and played their home games at the Cole Field House. The team finished 21–11, 9–7 in ACC play and lost in the semifinals of the ACC Tournament to . They received an at-large bid as the number 5 seed in the Southeast region of the 1997 NCAA Tournament, where they lost to College of Charleston in the opening round. Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=11 style=| Regular season |- !colspan=11 style=| ACC Tournament |- !colspan=11 style=| 1999 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament Rankings References Maryland Terrapins men's basketball seasons Maryland Maryland Maryland Maryland
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The 2005 European Cadet Judo Championships is an edition of the European Cadet Judo Championships, organised by the International Judo Federation. It was held in Salzburg, Austria from 18 to 19 June 2005. Medal summary Medal table Men's events Women's events Source Results References External links European Cadet Judo Championships European Championships, U18 Judo Judo competitions in Austria Judo Judo, European Championships U18
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Deadly Illusions () is a 2020 Russian thriller directed by Oleg Asadulin. It was theatrically released in Russia on November 19, 2020. Plot The film tells about the famous illusionists, the Romanov brothers, who decide to prepare a grandiose show and end their joint performances. But at the beginning of this show, something went wrong. Cast References External links 2020 films Russian-language films Russian films
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The former Rossonian Hotel is a historic building in the Five Points section of Denver, Colorado. It opened in 1912 as the Baxter Hotel. It was home to a jazz lounge where many prominent musicians performed. They were able to stay at the hotel which catered to African Americans during the era of segregation. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It has had various owners and redevelopment plans have been launched but as of 2021 none had been successfully completed. The building has been empty since 1998. Chauncy Billups was a partner in one redevelopment proposal. In 1929 Albert Henderson Wade Ross (A.H.W. Ross) (1884–1939) became the hotel's owner and it was renamed The Rossonian. Ross also owned the Denver White Elephants semi-professional baseball team. Architecture The building is on a wedge of property and is triangular. It was designed by architect George Louis Bettcher (1862-1952) for cigar businessman Robert Y. Baxter. Bettcher was born in Jersey City, New Jersey and moved to Denver in 1895 where he lived for the rest of his life. He designed residences in the Denver Country Club area and the Turnverein Building. The Rossonian's main entrance is on Welton Street. A Beaux-Arts architecture style building, it was constructed in 1907. See also National Register of Historic Places listings in downtown Denver Charles Burrell (musician), who played in the house band References Five Points, Denver Hotel buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Colorado National Register of Historic Places in Denver Buildings and structures in Denver Beaux-Arts architecture in Colorado 1907 establishments in Colorado
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Tyrique Bartlett (born 14 April 1999) is a South African professional footballer who plays as a forward for Cape Town Spurs. Club career In June 2017, Bartlett joined Newcastle United on a three-year deal after a successful trial. In June 2019, he was released by Newcastle United. In February 2020, he joined National First Division side Cape Umoya United on a free transfer. On 28 February 2020, he made his professional league debut as a substitute in a 2–0 loss to Marumo Gallants. In December 2021, he joined Cape Town Spurs. International career In August 2017, Bartlett was called up to the South Africa U20 squad for the first time. Personal life Bartlett was born in Switzerland. He is the son of former South Africa international footballer Shaun Bartlett. References External links 1999 births Living people South African soccer players Association football forwards Newcastle United F.C. players Cape Umoya United F.C. players Cape Town Spurs F.C. players National First Division players Expatriate footballers in England South African expatriate sportspeople in England South African expatriate soccer players
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Dan "Danne" Stråhed (born 12 June 1956) is a Swedish singer, who was the lead singer of Wizex for thirteen years. In 1981, he started the band ("Angel children"), who released one music album and was the pre-show act for Queen during their Scandinavian tour. He participated in Melodifestivalen 2022 with the song "Hallabaloo". Discography Singles References External links 1956 births Living people Melodifestivalen contestants
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Theodor "Theoz" Haraldsson, (born 17 July 2005) is a Swedish singer and actor. He started his career by postlng videos to Musical.ly in 2016 with the name Theoz. In 2020, he had a leading role in the movie ”Rymdresan” opposite Robert Gustafsson. In 2021, he performed his music at Lotta på Liseberg, which is broadcast on TV4. Theoz participated in Melodifestivalen 2022 with the song "Som du vill". Discography Singles References External links 2005 births Living people Melodifestivalen contestants
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The Three () is a 2020 Russian drama film directed by Anna Melikian. It was theatrically released in Russia on December 3, 2020. Plot The film is about a married TV show host who receives an award and meets a new love, causing him to suffer and doom those he loves to suffering. Cast References External links 2020 films 2020 drama films Russian-language films Russian films
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Anna Cornelia Jakobsdotter Samuelsson (born 9 March 1992), best known as Cornelia Jakobs, is a Swedish singer and songwriter. The daughter of The Poodles' singer Jakob Samuel, she started her career as member of the girl group Love Generation, who participated in Melodifestivalen 2011 and 2012. Love Generation's 2011 entry "Dance Alone" peaked at place 26 on . In 2022, Jakobs went solo and participated in Melodifestivalen 2022, with the song "Hold Me Closer" which qualified for the final. She also auditioned for Idol 2008, and received some press after being mocked by the judges. In 2020, Jakobs composed and performed the song "Weight of the World" which became the soundtrack for the HBO Nordic series . Discography Singles References External links 1992 births Living people Melodifestivalen contestants
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Prolixodens is a genus of very small sea snails, marine gastropod molluscs in the family Cerithiopsidae. Species Prolixodens alba Cecalupo & Perugia, 2017 Prolixodens amethysta Cecalupo & Perugia, 2013 Prolixodens apexcostata (Rolán, Espinosa & Fernández-Garcés, 2007) Prolixodens ara (Dall & Bartsch, 1911) Prolixodens benthica B. A. Marshall, 1978 Prolixodens captiosa Cecalupo & Perugia, 2012 Prolixodens crassa B. A. Marshall, 1978 Prolixodens dannevigi (Hedley, 1911) Prolixodens giampii Cecalupo & Perugia, 2021 Prolixodens infracolor (Laseron, 1951) Prolixodens inopinata (Cecalupo & Perugia, 2012) Prolixodens leogattellii Cecalupo & Perugia, 2021 Prolixodens lutea (Cecalupo & Perugia, 2012) Prolixodens martinoi Cecalupo & Perugia, 2021 Prolixodens memorabilis Cecalupo & Perugia, 2012 Prolixodens montrouzieri Cecalupo & Perugia, 2017 Prolixodens nicolayae Jay & Drivas, 2002 Prolixodens obesa Cecalupo & Perugia, 2017 Prolixodens obscura (Cecalupo & Perugia, 2012) Prolixodens oleagina Cecalupo & Perugia, 2017 Prolixodens proxima Cecalupo & Perugia, 2014 Prolixodens scudellarii Cecalupo & Perugia, 2013 Prolixodens sknips Jay & Drivas, 2002 Prolixodens splendens Cecalupo & Perugia, 2012 Prolixodens vannozzii Cecalupo & Perugia, 2021 Prolixodens vianelloi Cecalupo & Perugia, 2013 Prolixodens whaaporum Cecalupo & Perugia, 2017 References Spencer, H.G., Marshall, B.A. & Willan, R.C. (2009). Checklist of New Zealand living Mollusca. Pp 196-219. in: Gordon, D.P. (ed.) New Zealand inventory of biodiversity. Volume one. Kingdom Animalia: Radiata, Lophotrochozoa, Deuterostomia. Canterbury University Press, Christchurch. External links Marshall, B. A. (1978). Cerithiopsidae of New Zealand, and a provisional classification of the family. New Zealand Journal of Zoology. 5(1): 47-120 Cerithiopsidae Gastropod genera
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A small number of municipalities in Serbia held local elections in 2014. These were not part of the country's regular cycle of local elections but instead took place in certain jurisdictions where either the local government had fallen or the last local elections for four-year terms had taken place in 2010. All local elections in 2014 were held under proportional representation. Mayors were not directly elected but were instead chosen by elected members of the local assemblies. Parties were required to cross a five per cent electoral threshold to win representation in the local assembles in 2014, although this requirement was waived for parties representing national minority communities. Results Belgrade 2014 Belgrade City Assembly election Vojvodina No municipality in Vojvodina held local elections in 2014. Šumadija and Western Serbia Kolubara District Mionica Moravica District Lučani An election was held in Lučani on 28 December 2014, with repeat voting in the village of Dučalovići on 5 January 2015. The Serbian government had previously established a provisional authority led by Slobodan Jolović on 23 October 2014, replacing the administration of outgoing Social Democratic Party mayor Mladomir Sretenović. Jolović was replaced later in the year by Miloś Velanac. Velanac in turn resigned in January 2015 and was very briefly replaced by Milivoje Dolović. Vesna Stambolić of the Progressive Party was chosen as mayor in February 2015. Šumadija District Aranđelovac References Local elections in Serbia Loc
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WD  1054–226, also known as LP 849-31, is a relatively cool magnitude 16 white dwarf star with a hydrogen atmosphere, in the small southern constellation of Crater, located approximately 117 light years away from the Sun. Periodic dimmings in its light have been interpreted by University College London as clumps of matter orbiting the star. The researchers have hypothesised that the clumps are being influenced by a moon-sized object, possibly an exoplanet orbiting it in its habitable zone every 25 hours, which, if confirmed, would be the first time that such an observation has occurred around a white dwarf. References External links White dwarfs Crater (constellation)
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Nune may refer to: People Nune Hairapetian (born 1951), Armenian musician Nune Popović (born 1974), Serbian activist Nune Siravyan (born 1973), Armenian artist Nune Tumanyan (born 1963), Armenian artist Nune Yesayan, Armenian singer Other Nune (crater), on Mars
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Fort Nassau (officially: Fort Oranje Nassau) is a fort located in Willemstad, Curaçao. It is located on a high hill overlooking the city of Willemstad and its harbour. It was constructed in 1767 as Fort Republiek. In 1807, Curaçao was captured by the British, and the fort was renamed Fort George. In 1816, Curaçao was returned to Netherlands, and the fort received its current name. It lost its military function, but was used as a control tower for the Queen Emma Bridge. Since 1959, it is in use as a restaurant. History In 1796, Johann Lauffer, commander of the Military Committee, and later governor of Curaçao, ordered the construction of Fort Republiek to protect Curaçao from attacks by the British Navy. The name republiek refers to the Batavian Republic. Seru Sablica was located on top of a hill overlooking the city of Willemstad and its harbour, and was deemed to best location to construct a fort, however the ground was part of plantation Knip. The fort was expensive at ƒ60,000, and the population was reluctant to supply the slaves for its construction. In late 1797, the fort was finished. The fort consists of a rectangular battery within a ring wall. In August 1800, French troops from Guadeloupe made a failed attempt to take the fort, and fled from the island on 22 September after an American warship arrived. In 1804, the British Navy commanded by Charles Brisbane tried to take Curaçao, however they came under attack from the fort, and had to retreat. Brisbane returned on the dawn of 1 January 1807 while the Dutch troops were sleeping or recovering from New Year's Eve, and managed to take the island. The fort was renamed Fort George. In March 1815, it was decided by the Treaty of Paris to return of Curaçao to the Netherlands. The British left on 28 January 1816, and the fort was renamed Fort Oranje Nassau, however it was commonly referred to as Fort Nassau. In 1825, the fort lost its military purpose. It was used as a control tower for the Queen Emma Bridge. Since 1959, it is in use as a restaurant. References Nassau Buildings and structures in Willemstad Buildings and structures completed in 1797
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Jean Hesnault (or Hénaut, Dehénault, d'Hénault, de Hénault), 1611–1682, was a French poet, libertine in morals and thought, friend of Molière and Chapelle. In addition to his original production, he translated Latin poems with a materialist tendency (beginning of De natura rerum by Lucretius, chorus of the second act of the Troade by Seneca... ). Editions Œuvres diverses..., Paris, 1670. Dialogues ou Entretiens..., Rouen, 1709. (Same content as the previous edition.) Pieces published in various collections. Œuvres, ed. by Fr. Lachèvre, Paris, Champion, 1922. Some poems of Hénault can be found in Alain Niderst, La poésie à l'âge baroque, Paris, Laffont, coll. Bouquins, 2005, pp. 767–774. Studies René Pintard, Le libertinage érudit dans la première moitié du XVIIe siècle, Paris, 1943, 2 volumes. (Repr. Slatkine, 1995, 2000, 2003.) René Pintard : « Un ami mal connu de Molière : Jean de Hénault », Revue d'histoire littéraire de la France, septembere-October 1972, p. 954-975. Alain Niderst : « Jean Hénault (suite) », Revue d'histoire littéraire de la France, septembre-|octobre 1978, p. 707-721. 17th-century French writers 1611 births 1682 deaths
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The Waterfront (Jèrriais: Quartchi du Hâvre, French: Quartier du Havre) is a district of St Helier in the island of Jersey. It is built on reclaimed land to the west of the Albert Pier and to the south of the Esplanade, however the definition is ambiguous and can be extended to cover older parts of the town History On 24 April 1979, a States Committee was formed to investigate alternatives for reclamation because La Collette was due to be filled six years ahead of schedule. In September that year, they reported on a new scheme of roughly 160 vergées (29 hectares). However, it was considered that this would not be ready in time and would outstrip the supply of filling material in the island. Alternatively, it was proposed a smaller area of around 20 vergées to increase the working space on the Albert Pier. In June 1980, the States voted to approve the reclamation of 58.5 vergées (10.5 hectares) of land to the west of Albert Pier. In April 1981, the a proposition was lodged au Greffe proposing an expansion of this land reclamation to 78.7 vergées (14.1 hectares) because the larger scheme was less costly per vergée, extended the life of the site for tipping and allowed more flexibility in the design of future open space. The filling of land began in May 1985, initially confined to the part closest to the Albert Pier to enable the construction of the new Elizabeth ferry harbour. During the reclamation, concerns were raised about the disposal of incinerator ash by States Members. The (2008) Council of Ministers noted that "[the method of disposal] in the late 1980s and early 1990s would not be acceptable today [in 2008]". In 1989, a proposition was lodged au Greffe to approve a four-storey car park building (with three floors below ground) and a new postal headquarters and magistrates court. This also proposed to replace the large at-grade roundabout previously approved with the grade-separated junction and underpass present on Route de la Libération today. In 2008, the Radisson SAS building won the Carbuncle Cup, an annual architectural prize for the worst designed building in the British Isles. Future In 2021–22, the Jersey Development Company prepared plans to regenerate the Waterfront site, involving the removal of the Waterfront centre and the construction of 1,000 homes, alongside parks, a swimming pool and cinema. The JDC's plans involve the demolition of La Frégate Café, affectionately known as the "upside-down boat café". La Frégate was an early work by Will Alsop, who won the Stirling Prize for his architecture. Heritage campaigning group The Twentieth Century Society applied to the States to have the café listed, despite the building being too modern to be regularly listed. Alsop's former colleague Marcos Rosello notes "local support in Jersey" for the "much-loved building", hoping the building could be relocated rather than removed entirely. Sports In 2021 and in previous years, the Waterfront played host to the international Super League triathlon, alongside courses in cities such as London and Munich. References Saint Helier Jersey
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Nuni may refer to: People Geula Nuni (1942–2014), Israeli actress and singer Nuni Omot (born 1994), South Sudanese basketball player Siddhartha Nuni (fl. 2012–2022), Indian film director Zintkala Nuni (1890–1920), Lakota Sioux woman Other Nuni language Ain Nuni, a village in Iraq See also Nuny, Poland
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Tia Chan (born 10 September 2002), also known by the Chinese name Chen Tiya (), is a Canadian ice hockey goaltender and member of the Chinese national ice hockey team, currently playing in the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL) with the KRS Vanke Rays. Chan represented China in the women's ice hockey tournament at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. Playing career Chan began playing ice hockey at age four, following her two brothers, James and Ryan, onto the ice. She settled into goaltending after her brothers regularly asked her to man the goal so they could practice shooting. She got her start playing on boys' minor ice hockey teams in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area before moving to women's teams as a teen. Her junior career was played with the Burlington Junior Barracudas in the Provincial Women's Hockey League (PWHL). NCAA Chan joined the UConn Huskies women's ice hockey program in the Hockey East (WHEA) conference of the NCAA Division I as an incoming freshman for the 2020–21 season. As a rookie, she started ten games and posted an excellent 1.49 goals against average (GAA) and .947 save percentage (SV%) on the season. Her stellar play was recognized with selection to the Hockey East All-Rookie Team. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs Sources: International References External links Living people 2002 births Sportspeople from Hamilton, Ontario Ice hockey people from Ontario Canadian women's ice hockey goaltenders Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays players UConn Huskies women's ice hockey players Ice hockey players at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic ice hockey players of China Canadian sportspeople of Chinese descent Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in China Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in Russia Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in the United States
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Hotel Belgrade () is a 2020 Russian-Serbian romantic comedy film directed by Konstantin Statsky, a sequel to the television series Hotel Eleon and Grand. It stars Miloš Biković and Diana Pozharskaya. It was theatrically released in Russia on March 5, 2020. Plot The film tells about a cheerful owner of a five-star hotel in Belgrade, who must marry his daughter in order to pay off his debts. And suddenly he meets Dasha, his Russian love. Cast Miloš Biković as Pavel "Pasha" Arkadijevic (Serbian: Paul), owner of the Belgrade Hotel in Serbia, Vedrana's ex-fiance as Daria "Dasha" Kanaeva is a Russian athlete and travel blogger in Serbia, Pyotr Romanov ex-wife Boris Dergachev as Ivan, Pasha's friend Aleksandra Kuzenkina as Yulia Makarovna Komissarova (Serbian: Julija), Dasha's best friend Egor Koreshkov as Pyotr Romanov flew to Mars, Dasha's ex-husband Ljubomir Bandović as Dusan, a crime boss Jelisaveta Orašanin as Vedrana, Dusan's daughter Miodrag Radonjić as Srecko Srđan Todorović as Milos, Pasha's grandfather Production In October 2018, it became known about the creation of a feature film based on the sitcoms Hotel Eleon and Grand - Hotel Belgrade, the shooting of which started on September 5, 2019. Principal photography took place in Belgrade, as well as other Serbian towns and villages in Serbia, and Moscow, Russia. The film shows Serbian sights and landscapes in detail. Release The film premiered in Russian cinemas on March 5, 2020, by Central Partnership. References External links 2020 films Russian-language films Serbian-language films Russian films Serbian films 2020 romantic comedy films Russian romantic comedy films Films based on television series
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Isabel Reigota (died 1697) was a Portuguese trader, who was born in Japan, and lived in Macau in the 17th century. She took over her husband's business after being widowed, and played a notable role in establishing Macau's trade in sandalwood, as well as in funding religious missions by Jesuits in Japan and Macau. She was involved in a notable dispute with several Jesuit leaders over a sandalwood transaction in the 1650s, which was ultimately resolved in her favor. About Reigota was born either in Nagasaki, Japan, or in Macau. Her father was Diego Fernandes Reigoto, a Portuguese trader, and her mother, Maria, was Japanese. She lived in Japan, and probably spoke Japanese, as well as being fluent in Portuguese. Her father married her to a Portuguese trader based in Macau, named Francisco Rombo de Carvalho, and they left Japan for Macau following religious persecution. Together, they supported Jesuit missions in South-east and East Asia, donating money to fund missions to China, Vietnam, and Cambodia, and Reigota herself funded a Jesuit residence in China. In 1640, Reigota's husband died, and she took over his business. According to Portuguese custom in Macau, as a widow she was confined to her home, where she raised, in addition to her son, two nieces of a Jesuit priest that she had rescued from poverty, and a nephew, whom she supported through education in the seminary before he joined the Society of Jesus. Following the death of her husband, Reigota became a significant trader in sandalwood, helping to establish the sandalwood trade between Timor and Macau. In 1651, Reigota became involved in a notable dispute with the Jesuit Manuel de Figueiredo, who was at that time the prosecutor of the vice-province of China, over an transaction concerning import of sandalwood, when the agent she had appointed to act as her intermediary suddenly died, leaving her unable to fulfill her obligations to the buyer, and being accused by Figueiredo of dishonesty in turn. Records of correspondence between Reigota and Jesuit officials show that the conflict was ultimately resolved several years later in her favor. This 'sandalwood conflict' was widely known during her lifetime, and was discussed in several documentary sources. She died on 21 January 1697 and was buried in St. Paul's Church in Macau. She had one son, Manuel, who lived in Macau. References 1697 deaths Year of birth unknown Macanese people Macau Jesuits Macau Christians 17th-century Portuguese women 17th-century Portuguese Jesuits
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This is a list of transgender film and television directors. Their works may include live action, animated, documentary, and short films; television series and movies, web series, and videos. Transgender directors Trans men Skyler Cooper Rhys Ernst Sam Feder StormMiguel Florez Yance Ford Jake Graf Silas Howard Sir Lex Kennedy Seven King Emmett Lundberg AJ Mattioli Elliot Page Campbell X Trans women Zackary Drucker Sydney Freeland Ro Haber ND Johnson Selene Kapsaski Nava Mau Janet Mock Kimberly Reed Isabel Sandoval Tourmaline Wu Tsang Rain Valdez Lana Wachowski Lilly Wachowski References LGBT film directors Lists of film directors Lists of transgender and transsexual people
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The following is a list of notable people from Watertown, New York. Eric Anzalone, singer, actor, author, member of the Village People Samuel Beardsley, New York State Attorney General (1836–1839) and U.S. congressman Antonio Blakeney, current professional basketball player Albert Bouchard, drummer for and co-founding member of popular rock band Blue Öyster Cult Joe Bouchard, bassist for and co-founding member Blue Öyster Cult; brother of Albert Bouchard John Calhoun, founding publisher of the Chicago Democrat Rocco Canale, NFL player for Philadelphia Eagles (1944–1949) Emma Kerr-Carpenter, member of the Montana House of Representatives Reginald Case, artist Allen Welsh Dulles, director of the Central Intelligence Agency John Foster Dulles, U.S. Secretary of State Frederick Exley, author of A Fan's Notes, 1968, and other works Leonard J. Farwell, businessman and Wisconsin governor Moses W. Field, U.S. congressman, one of the founders of the Independent Greenback Party Paul Finkelman, Chancellor of Gratz College, author, historian Roswell P. Flower, U.S. congressman and governor of New York (1892–1895) John Gary, singer Oscar S. Gifford, lawyer and South Dakota politician Eric Greif, lawyer and heavy metal music figure Richard Grieco, actor, model, singer, former college football player Robert Guinan, painter Vic Hanson, athlete, enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame (1960) and the College Football Hall of Fame (1973) Fred Harvey Harrington, educator and president of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, born in Watertown. Serranus Clinton Hastings, U.S. congressman and founder of the Hastings College of the Law at the University of California Charles B. Hoard, businessman and member of the United States House of Representatives Mary-Margaret Humes, actress Orville Hungerford, U.S. congressman, banker, and railroad president Robert Lansing, U.S. Secretary of State Donald Lutz, baseball player for Cincinnati Reds Dick May, NASCAR Sprint Cup driver Tim McCreadie, NASCAR Xfinity and ARCA series driver, and multiple national Late Model Dirt Series Champion. John M. McHugh, US Secretary of the Army Viggo Mortensen, actor and author, star of The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, A History of Violence, and The Road Mark Neveldine, actor, writer, producer, director (Crank, Crank: High Voltage, Gamer, Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance & The Vatican Tapes) Denis O'Brien, New York State Attorney General (1883–1887) Natalie Oliveros, wine expert, vineyard owner, model and adult actress known as Savanna Samson, raised in Watertown. Kyle Puccia, Billboard-charting singer/songwriter Matt Puccia, NASCAR Sprint Cup series crew chief Maggie Rizer, supermodel and AIDS activist Gary M. Rose, former United States Army officer, Vietnam War veteran, and recipient of the Medal of Honor Virgil Ross, animator, born in Watertown Elwyn E. Royce, Wisconsin State Assemblyman Charles H. Sawyer, governor of New Hampshire Mary Gay Scanlon, congresswomen from PA 5 Arthur Shawcross, serial killer Electa Nobles Lincoln Walton (1824–1908), educator, lecturer, writer, and suffragist Frank Winfield Woolworth, founder of F. W. Woolworth Company/Five and Dime stores, worked at a store in Watertown at his start Charles W. Yost, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Zina D. H. Young, leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and social activist References Watertown (city), New York
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The Belyanka (; ) is a river in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia, a right tributary of the Lena. It has a length of — counting the Munni at its head— and a drainage basin area of . There are no settlements in the basin of the river. The nearest village is Batamay, located to the east of its mouth in the Lena. Course The Belyanka originates in the Munni Range at the confluence of rivers Munni from the west and Tagyndzha from the east in the southwestern area of the Verkhoyansk Range. The Munni flows from the slopes of the Tagindzhin Range and its valley is bound by the eastern end of the Muosuchan Range. In the upper section of its course the Belyanka river cuts across the mountainous terrain of the Sorkin Range heading roughly southwards in a narrow valley. Soon it leaves the mountainous area and flows southwards flowing slowly and dividing into branches across the Central Yakutian Lowland in a wide floodplain. Close to its last stretch there are lakes and marshes. Finally the Belyanka meets the right bank of the Lena from its mouth, a little upstream from Sangar and downstream of the mouth of the Batamay and the confluence of the Aldan. The river freezes between mid October and the end of May. Fauna The waters of the Belyanka are very clear. Lenok, taimen, grayling and whitefish are among the fish species found in the river. See also List of rivers of Russia References External links Рыбалка на Белянке. Ленок на мышь Fishing & Tourism in Yakutia Rivers of the Sakha Republic Verkhoyansk Range Central Yakutian Lowland
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Sagar Dhakal (born 14 December 2001) is a Nepalese cricketer who plays for the Nepal national team. In February 2022, he was named in Nepal's Twenty20 International (T20I) squad for the 2021–22 Oman Quadrangular Series. Dhakal made his T20I debut on 11 February 2022, for Nepal against Oman. References External links 2001 births Living people Nepalese cricketers Nepal Twenty20 International cricketers Place of birth missing (living people)
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Bibek Kumar Yadav (born 7 October 2003) is a Nepalese cricketer who plays for the Nepal national team. In February 2022, he was named in Nepal's Twenty20 International (T20I) squad for the 2021–22 Oman Quadrangular Series. Yadav made his T20I debut on 11 February 2022, for Nepal against Oman. References External links Nepalese cricketers People from Saptari District Nepal Twenty20 International cricketers People from Madhesh Province Living people 2003 births
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Shivajee Yadav () is a Nepalese politician and a member of People's Progressive Party. He is the current senior vice president of the party. In the 2013 Constituent Assembly election he was elected to the constituent assembly from proportional list of the party. References People's Progressive Party (Nepal) politicians People from Mahottari District Living people Year of birth missing (living people)
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Names |} References Global Force Wrestling championships
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Burbage Rocks is a gritstone escarpment in South Yorkshire, overlooking the village of Hathersage in the Peak District. The highest point along the escarpment is above sea level, whilst Burbage Moor rises above to . Burbage Rocks is a southern extension of Stanage Edge. Burbage Brook runs from the northern end of the Burbage Rocks, past the southern end, through Padley Gorge and into the RIver Derwent. The gritstone edge of Burbage Rocks is a popular rock climbing location. The Burbage Rocks North area is close to a car park and has 481 graded routes including many short, easy routes. The quieter Burbage South Edge area has 289 graded routes with much more challenging, long buttress climbs. Burbage South Quarries has a further 108 graded routes. The following routes on Burbage South Edge were climbed in the 1998 rock-climbing film Hard Grit: Samson (E8 7b) climbed by Jerry Moffatt Braille Trail (E7 6c) climbed by Dave Jones Parthian Shot (E9 7a) climbed by Seb Grieve Below Burbage Rocks (on Hathersage Moor to the west) are the hill Higger Tor and Carl Wark, the rocky platform of an Iron Age hillfort, which is a scheduled monument. Sheffield Country Walk is a long trail which runs along the public footpath below the edge. Following the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000, the area of Burbage Rocks and surrounding moorland were designated as "Open Access" land for the public. References Hills and edges of South Yorkshire
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Luka Connor (born 24 September 1996) is a New Zealand rugby union player. In 2019, she made her debut for the Black Ferns off the bench against Canada in San Diego on 28 June. She plays for the Bay of Plenty Volcanix in the Farah Palmer Cup and club rugby for Rangataua. Biography Connor is from the Te Whakatōhea, Te Whānau-ā-Apanui and Ngāti Porou iwi. She was attending Ōpōtiki College when she made her debut for the Bay of Plenty Volcanix in 2014. She suffered a serious knee injury in 2017 and missed the entire provincial season of 2018. She was one of 29 players who were offered a Black Ferns contract in 2019. Later that year Connor played in the second test match against Australia. She featured for the New Zealand Development XV at the 2019 Oceania Rugby Women's Championship in Fiji. In 2020 she appeared for the Black Ferns in two matches against the New Zealand Barbarians. In 2021 Connor was named in the Chiefs squad for their historic match against the Blues at Eden Park in April. Later that year she was again named in the Chiefs for the inaugural season of Super Rugby Aupiki. References External links Black Ferns Profile 1996 births Living people New Zealand female rugby union players
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James Kephart (April 22, 1842 - April 27, 1932) was an American recipient of the Medal of Honor who earned the medal in action during the American Civil War. Biography Kephart was born in Venango County, Pennsylvania on April 22, 1842. He served as a private in Company C of the 13th U.S. Infantry of the Union Army during the American Civil War. He earned his medal in action at the Battle of Vicksburg, Mississippi on May 19, 1863. Kephart's medal was issued on May 13, 1899. Kephart lived in Webster City, Iowa after the war where he served on the City Board of Education. He died in Gooding, Idaho on April 27, 1932, and is now buried there in Elmwood Cemetery. Medal of Honor Citation For extraordinary heroism on 19 May 1863, in action at Vicksburg, Mississippi. Private Kephart voluntarily and at the risk of his life, under a severe fire of the enemy, aided and assisted to the rear an officer who had been severely wounded and left on the field. References Recipients of the Medal of Honor People from Venango County, Pennsylvania 1842 births 1932 deaths
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Positive is an album by the American band the Grassy Knoll, released in 1996. The band promoted the album by touring with 16volt. Production Recorded in San Antonio and San Francisco, the album was produced by Bob Green and Jaime Lagueruela. In assembling the band, frontman Green was more concerned with finding musicians who could follow conceptual, not technical, direction. Green would have the musicians record their parts, and would then edit, manipulate, and remix the tracks with Lagueruela; Green also played keyboards, guitar, and bass. Critical reception The Orlando Sentinel wrote that "like the best ambient music, it works both in the background and as the object of intense attention ... But even in the background, the Grassy Knoll is not exactly quiet and soothing." Guitar Player stated: "Replete with hypnotic grooves and outer-fringe guitar loops, Positive ... abounds with compelling sonic tapestries." The Chicago Tribune determined that the band "swaddles hip-hop rhythms in a Technicolor dreamcoat of cool jazz, metal ax riffs, ambient sound and tape mangling." The Los Angeles Times thought that "titles like 'Black Helicopters', 'Roswell Crash' and 'Fall of the American Empire' seem to be all of one mood, with only the occasional trumpet solo emerging from the hypnotic beats." The Times Colonist noted that "Milesian trumpet floats like a spooky echo above Zeppelin-inspired guitar and a textural framework that marries Public Enemy's apocalyptic noise to Tricky's spaced-out, transcendent grooves." The Oregonian praised the "well-crafted album full of samples and darkly ethereal funk-rock overtones." AllMusic wrote: "Time and changes in sampling/hip-hop aesthetics rendered the Grassy Knoll's work less cutting-edge and more representative of a phase but, for all that, Positive succeeds as an enjoyable if slightly stiff exploration of jazz-meets-breakbeat culture." Track listing References 1996 albums Antilles Records albums
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Samuel Muanda Mpaka Pungi (born 12 March 2001), is an Angolan footballer who plays for Paju Citizen FC as a centre back. Youth career Samuel started playing football in 2007 at Pyeongtaek United. He began his career as a professional football player at Chungdam Middle school in the same city. Since his high school year, he went to Jinju high school football team, which is a youth team of Gyeongnam FC. However, he later returned to Pyeongtaek and joined Chungdam high school football team. Club career Samuel joined Pohang Steelers of K League 1 on 4 December 2020. However, he was not able to play for the official matches as his naturalisation process kept being delayed. For the 2022 season, he left Pohang Steelers and joined Paju Citizen FC of K3 League. Personal life Samuel immigrated from Angola to South Korea with his family in 2007 as a refugee. He took naturalisation test in 2021, but the result announcement has been delayed due to COVID-19 pandemic. References External links 2001 births Living people People from Luanda Angolan footballers Association football defenders K League 1 players K3 League players Pohang Steelers players Angolan expatriate footballers Expatriate footballers in South Korea
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Paul Brandoli is an Australian songwriter from Sydney. He has top-lined and vocally produced 7 ARIA #1 Club hits, co-written and vocally produced 4 ARIA top 40 singles, and a national Spanish #1 single. Brandoli has collaborated with artists such as Zeds Dead, Timmy Trumpet, Set Mo, Woodes, Moti, Colour Castle and Kill The Buzz. He has also worked with labels including Defected UK, TMRW, Vicious Recordings, Central Station, Sony Music (AUS), One Love, Spinnin Deep (Netherlands), Armada (Netherlands) and Deadbeats (Canada). He was a co-writer on the Set Mo song "I Belong Here" featuring Woodes, which was certified Gold in Australia. Brandoli was previously in the bands Tune in Tokyo (band) and Culture Shock. He was a nominee finalist to join the Aprca Amcos board. Discography Composer Holland Park, Liam Allan – "Crime" Moti (DJ) – "Lion (In My Head)" Timmy Trumpet, Qulinez – "Satellites" Josh Butler, Boswell – "Be Somebody" Luke Bond, Duna Lua – "Habitat" Nicky Romero, Timmy Trumpet – "Falling" Set Mo, Woodes – "I Belong Here" Zeds Dead, NGHTMRE, GG Magree – "Frontlines" GG Magree – "Bodies" Latroit, Stooki Sound, Lliam Taylor – "Echoes" Kronic – "Fire in the Sky" Two Can – "Got Habits" SLVR – "Lockdown" GG Magree – "One by One" Tune In Tokyo – "Ray of Love" Soraya – "Dreamer" Zeds Dead – "Northern Lights" Kate Ceberano – "Love Is Alive" Culture Shock – "My Enemy"(The Original Mix) Culture Shock – "Satisfy The Groove"(Original Mix) Jackson Mendoza – "Venus Or Mars" Husky Feat. Braze – "Only One Way" Kill The Buzz Feat. Katt Niall – "Galaxies" Courtney Act – "To Russia With Love" Lo'99 Feat. Doolie – "Stay High" Homeless John – "Disappear" Glover – "Hold On" Glover – "Faces" Colour Castle – "Love Addict" Reece Low, Joel Fletcher – "City Lights" Chardy – "Tomorrow" Rob & Jack – "Shadows" Who Killed Mickey – "Throne" References Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Australian songwriters
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The Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia in Singapore () is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of Indonesia to Singapore. The embassy is located at 7 Chatsworth Road and is currently headed by Ambassador Suryo Pratomo which was sworn in on 14 September 2020. History Indonesia established diplomatic relations with Singapore in 1950 when Singapore was still a British crown colony. Its first consulate general was Mohamad Razif which took office from 1950 to 1954. Diplomatic relations with independent Republic of Singapore was established in September 1967, one month after both countries became founding members of ASEAN and Abdul Rahman Ramly became the country's first ambassador to Singapore. Location The embassy is located at Chatsworth Road in Tanglin, an area close to Orchard Road and known for its residence of embassies. The compound sits on a 10.506 square meters piece of land which houses the four-storeyed office building, the official residences of the Ambassador and the Deputy Ambassador, as well as a housing complex for the diplomatic staff of the Embassy. In addition, the grounds also include sports facilities (a tennis court and a swimming pool) and a mosque. Besides visa and consular services, the embassy serves as a meeting point for Indonesians living throughout the island, where the embassy regularly organizes open house sessions during Idul Fitri. Every year on 17 August, the embassy holds a celebration for Independence Day, starting with a flag-raising ceremony performed by Paskibra troop from Sekolah Indonesia Singapura. References See also Indonesia–Singapore relations List of diplomatic missions in Indonesia Indonesia Singapore Indonesia–Singapore relations
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Joseph Sangval Surasarang (25 August 1935 – 10 February 2022) was a Thai Roman Catholic prelate. Surasarang was born in Thailand and was ordained to the priesthood in 1962. He served as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Chiang Mai, Thailand, from 1987 until his resignation in 2009. He died on 10 February 2022, at the age of 84. References 1935 births 2022 deaths 20th-century Roman Catholic bishops in Thailand 21st-century Roman Catholic bishops in Thailand
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A Thursday is a 2022 Indian Hindi-language thriller film written and directed by Behzad Khambata. The film is jointly produced by Ronnie Screwvala, Premnath Rajagopalan under the banners RSVP Movies and Blue Monkey Films. It stars Yami Gautam, Atul Kulkarni, Neha Dhupia, Dimple Kapadia and Karanvir Sharma. The film premiered on 17 February 2022 on Disney+ Hotstar. Plot Naina Jaiswal is a teacher at the Little Tots Play School in Colaba who has just returned from a three-week leave she took for an unknown reason. The school is located in the front portion of the property owned by her fiance Rohit Mirchandani, who lives there. The parents come to drop off their kids, and Naina requests one of the parents to send a cake, as she remembered that it was their daughter Niharika’s birthday the next day. She asks if their driver could deliver the cake to the school. Everybody leaves the premises, and Naina engages the children into a cartoon film, later drawing up the curtains, latching up all doors, and loading up a pistol. She then calls the Colaba police station and informs them that she has taken 16 children hostage. The story proceeds with twists and turns. Cast Yami Gautam as Naina Jaiswal Atul Kulkarni as Javed Khan Neha Dhupia as ACP Catherine "Cathy" Alvarez Dimple Kapadia as Prime Minister Maya Rajguru Karanvir Sharma as Rohit Mirchandani, Naina's fiance Maya Sarao as Shalini Guha, Naina's student Yash's mother Kalyanee Mulay as Savitri, Naina's maid Boloram Das as Charan Kumar, Naina's rapist and Niharika's family driver Shubhangi Latkar as Kusum Jaiswal, Naina's mother Adi Irani as Police Commissioner Divjyot Kaur as Renuka Dubey Production The principal photography began on 12 March 2021. and wrapped up in July 2021. Reception Cyril of India Today gave the film a rating of 4/5 and wrote "Yami Gautam's A Thursday is the kind of thriller that has been missing from Indian screens for a while". Renuka Vyavahare of The Times Of India gave the film a rating of 3/5 and wrote "Despite a rather predictable backstory, A Thursday redeems itself with its powerful emotional arc and social commentary in the latter half. It touches upon a relevant issue that will resonate with women across the globe". Pradeep Menon of Firstpost gave the film a rating of 2.75/5 and wrote "A Thursday strives to be urgent, relevant and cool, but succeeds only partially, because it stops to make a point far too often". Shubham Kulkarni of Koimoi gave the film a rating of 2.5/5 and wrote "A Thursday is a Yami Gautam show and she does bring her A-game on. But the set up ditches her a bit". Shubhra Gupta of Indian Express gave the film a rating of 1.5/5 and wrote "The chief problem with Yami Gautam film is that we do not take any of this seriously, whether it is Naina brandishing a gun, or snarling and cooing at her hostages. Soundtrack The soundtrack to A Thursday featured twenty one instrumental compositions used in the film score curated and composed by Rooshin Dalal and Kaizad Gherda. References External links Indian thriller drama films Indian action thriller films 2022 films 2020s Hindi-language films 2020 thriller drama films Indian films
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The 2012 NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament was the 31st annual tournament hosted by the NCAA to determine the national champion of Division III women's collegiate basketball in the United States. Illinois Wesleyan defeated George Fox in the championship game, 57–48, to claim the Titans' first Division III national title. The championship rounds were hosted by Hope College at the DeVos Fieldhouse in Holland, Michigan. Bracket Final Four All-tournament team Olivia Lett, Illinois Wesleyan Hannah Munger, George Fox Keisha Gordon, George Fox Caroline Stedman, Amherst Maggie Weiers, St. Thomas (MN) See also 2012 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament 2012 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament 2012 NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament 2012 NAIA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament 2012 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament References NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament 2012 in sports in Michigan
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The 2012 Shepherd Rams football team represented Shepherd University during the 2012 NCAA Division II football season as a member of the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WVIAC). They were led by head coach Monte Cater, in his 26th season at Shepherd, and finished the season 83. With a conference mark of 71, they were named WVIAC champions and advanced to the Division II Playoffs, losing in the first round against IUP. The Rams played their home games at Ram Stadium in Shepherdstown, West Virginia. This was the final year for the WVIAC, as most of the teams in the conference withdrew to form the Mountain East Conference for the 2013 season. Regular season The 2012 regular season for the Rams consisted of eight games against WVIAC opponents, and one game each against American International and Shippensburg. Shepherd finished the regular season 82, and advanced to the NCAA Division II playoffs. Playoffs Shepherd lost in the first round of the payoffs, 1727, against IUP. Schedule References Shepherd Shepherd Rams football seasons Shepherd Rams football
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The von Linné family and Linneaus family, was the family of the renowned botanist, zoologist, taxonomist, physician and formalizer of the binomial nomenclature, Carl Linnaeus, and a Swedish noble family (No. 2044), ennobled on April 20, 1757, by the Swedish King Adolf Frederick, introduced at the House of Nobility in 1776. The von Linné family is predominantly famous for its contributions in the fields of science. The von Linné family descends from generations of priests and peasants in the historical province of Småland. The noble family's coat of arms prominently features a twinflower, one of Linnaeus's favourite plants. Family tree Nils Linnaeus (1674–1748) ∞ Christina Brodersonia (1688–1733) Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778) ∞ Sara Elisabeth Moraea (1716–1806) Carl Linnaeus the Younger (1741–1783) Elisabeth Christina von Linné (1743–1782) Sara Christina von Linné (1751–1835) References Carl Linnaeus Swedish noble families Scientific families
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Edgar Medina (born 1977) is a Portuguese showrunner, producer and scriptwriter. He is the founder of Arquipélago Filmes. Biography Medina was born in Porto in 1977, to Edgar Correia and Maria Helena Guimarães de Medina. He is the brother of Fernando Medina. He has a Master in Arts in filmmaking from the London Film School with the support of Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Scholarship, and graduated in physics from Lisbon University. He is one of the founding partners of Inner Harbour Films, a production company in Macau, where he worked on several documentaries and national and international feature films as a screenwriter, director and producer. He has produced content for several cultural organizations and museums, as well as advertising and institutional films. In April 2015 he founded Arquipélago Filmes, dedicated to the production of independent cinema and a high-quality audiovisual. Work Producer, screenwriter and co-author with Rui Cardoso Martins of the drama series Natural Law, directed by João Nuno Pinto, currently being released on RTP1. Currently working as producer, screenwriter and co-author on “Dogpack”, a spinoff of the drama series South, an international co-production that has the support of ICA, to be produced in 2022. Co-author, screenwriter and producer of the 9 episode drama series South, that premiered in the Berlinale Drama Series Days 2019 and was released in the Portuguese public service broadcasting RTP1 in September 2019. Awards: Portuguese Film Academy Sophia award for Best Fictional Series 2019 and Portuguese Society of Authors award for Best Fictional Program 2019. Co-writer of the feature film Letters from War (2016) directed by Ivo M. Ferreira-Main competition at Berlinale-Berlin International Film Festival, Hong Kong International Film Festival, Sydney Film Festival, among others. Awards: Portuguese Film Academy Sophia award 2017– Best Adapted Script. Caminhos do Cinema Português; Award – Best Adapted Script and Aquila Prize for - Best Script. Co-producer and co-writer of the feature film “Hotel Império”, directed by Ivo M. Ferreira, exhibited at Pingyaou International Film Festival (2018), São Paulo International Film Festival (2018), IFFA Macau (2018). Producer of the documentary “Mio Pang Fei” (2014), directed by Pedro Cardeira –DOCLISBOA National Competition (2014); competition at the fifth China Academy Awards of Documentary Film. Director of the documentary “A construção de um símbolo” (2014). References 1977 births Living people Portuguese film producers Portuguese television producers 21st-century screenwriters University of Lisbon alumni
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The Old Burying Ground is the oldest documented cemetery in Watertown, Massachusetts. Located at the junction of Arlington and Mount Auburn Streets in eastern Watertown, its oldest documented grave site dates to 1665, and it remained in active use into the 20th century. It was the town's first formal cemetery, and remained its only one until 1754, when the Common Street Cemetery was established. The cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2022. Description and history Watertown's Old Burying Ground occupies of relatively flat terrain at the southeast corner of Arlington and Mount Auburn Streets. It is a roughly trapezoidal parcel, with fieldstone walls on the street-facing edges, surmounted by metal picket fencing. The cemetery is grassy, with a scattering of trees in the interior and near the perimeters. There is no formal circulation pattern within the walls; foot access is via a gate on Arlington Street. There are estimated to be more than 300 burials. When Watertown was founded by English colonists in 1630, its first town center was located near Gerry's Landing on the Charles River. This town center included a small burying ground, which does not appear to have survived. The town center eventually migrated to the junction of Arlington and Mount Auburn Streets, with the meeting house north of Mount Auburn Street and the burying ground to the south. About 1750 the town center moved again, to its present location at Watertown Square, at which time the Common Street Cemetery was established. The Old Burying Ground continued in active use into the 20th century. Prominent markers include a memorial to Joseph Coolidge, a militia soldier who died in the 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord and ancestor of President Calvin Coolidge. See also National Register of Historic Places listings in Middlesex County, Massachusetts References Cemeteries on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts Cemeteries in Middlesex County, Massachusetts Buildings and structures in Watertown, Massachusetts National Register of Historic Places in Middlesex County, Massachusetts
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T Senka Ao (born 6 June 1945) is a journalist from the Indian state of Nagaland. Senka Ao is best known for his work as the Editor-in-Chief of the "Ao Milen", the first newspaper in Nagaland established in 1933 and the first newspaper ever to be published in the local Ao language. During the period of his edittorship, Senka Ao created the "Alokba" character famous for his witty commentary on social and current issues. Senka Ao has contributed several articles to various publications and has authored nine books in the Ao language. Two of his books Kongro Lijen (The Abode of the Maidens) and Kishi Tezulen (Off the Doorway) are in the process of translation into English. Senka Ao's books have been included in the syllabus of the Ao language in ICSE and ISC Board New Delhi, and up to class 10 under Nagaland Board of School Education. He is an examiner of Arrangtet Examination which is the highest Ao language degree. Senka Ao has played key roles in the efforts to bring peace and harmony between warring groups during many crises and feuds. He has served as a member of the Peace Committee constituted to solve the issues involving Aos and Sumis in 1981 and also as a member of Peace Committee 1985 during the confrontation between Assam and Nagaland at Merapani. He was actively involved in the formation of the Joint People Forum with representatives from both Nagaland and Assam in collaboration with the District Administration for the resolution of the contentious issues between Nagaland and Assam. In recognition of his many social activities, he was elected as a member of the Mokokchung Town Committee and as a member of the All India Radio Campaign Committee in Mokokchung in 1972. Early life Senka Ao was born in Mokokchung Town in Nagaland on June 6, 1945. He completed matriculation from Government High School, Mokokchung and graduated in 1969 from St Anthony's College, Shillong, then under Gauhati University. He had been a very active participant in public life since his student's days holding several positions in various students' organisations. He was the Joint Secretary in the Voluntary Adult Education Campaign in Mokokchung District (1975-1979) and was the founder of the Model Night School at Mokokchung in 1972. Recognitions Recipient of Nagaland Governor's Award in Literature in the year 2016. In the year 2022, Govt of India conferred the Padma Shri award, the third highest award in the Padma series of awards, on T Senka Ao for his distinguished service in the field of literature and education. The award is in recognition of his service as a "Tribal Ao Author, Teacher and Journalist - preserving Nagaland's Ao language through his writings over decades". External links References Writers from Nagaland People from Mokokchung district Indian journalists 1945 births Living people
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Lorenzo L. Shaw (November 8, 1828 – 1907), commonly known as L. L. Shaw, was an American businessman who was active in North Yarmouth, Massachusetts (today's Yarmouth, Maine), in the 19th century. He was the co-founder of Freeman, Shaw & Co., a cotton mill, and of Pumgustuck Water Company. Career After moving to Maine from his native New Hampshire, Shaw was a selectman in Lewiston, Maine. He resigned in 1865, two years after the town's incorporation. In the late 18th century, Shaw and other "dignified citizens", like Doctor Bates and Barnabas Freeman, often assembled for an evening's chat at Englishman James Parsons' grocery store, after picking up their mail at the post office next door. This was to the east of the former Goff's hardware store at 90 Main Street. In 1871, Freeman joined forces with Shaw to start up a cotton mill, where today's Sparhawk Mill now stands, under the name Freeman, Shaw & Co. After Freeman retired in 1888, Shaw ran the mill on his own until his death in 1907, during which time the mill's tower was completed. On June 25, 1878, a diagram of a warping machine patent filed by Shaw appeared in the Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office. Shaw lived in a carriage house at the eastern corner of Yarmouth's Main and Bridge Streets. It burned down in 1967, replaced by today's structure at 121 Main Street. He was a co-founder of the Pumgustuck Water Company (today's Yarmouth Water District) in 1887, along with Charles H. Weston, John H. Humphrey, Joseph Y. Hodsdon, E. Dudley Freeman and George W. Hammond. (Pumgustuck means falls at mouth of river.) Shaw died in 1907, aged 78 or 79. He is interred in Yarmouth's Riverside Cemetery, along with several other notable former citizens of the town. References 1828 births 1907 deaths 19th-century American businesspeople 20th-century American businesspeople People from Holderness, New Hampshire People from North Yarmouth, Maine People from Yarmouth, Maine Burials in Maine
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The Institut National des Sciences Appliquées de Euro-Méditerranée or INSA Euro-Méditerranée is an engineering school in Morocco. This school is one of the public engineering institutes that make up the INSA's network and also part of Euromed University of Fez. Academics INSA Euro-Méditerranée is one of several engineering schools within the Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA) network under the supervision of the Ministry of the Economy and Finance (France) (. Although INSA engineering schools are selective and can be more expensive than public universities in France, these institutes typically have much smaller class sizes and student bodies, and many of their programs are taught in English. Degrees from INSA are awarded by the Ministry of National Education (France) (). INSA Campuses France INSA Lyon INSA Rennes INSA Rouen INSA Strasbourg INSA Toulouse INSA Centre Val de Loire INSA Hauts-de-France Morocco INSA Euro-Méditerranée References Educational institutions established in 2014
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Larry Logan Warner (April 12, 1945 – February 1, 2022) was an American lawyer and politician. Warner was born in Washington, D.C. He graduated from University of Texas and was admitted to the Texas bar. He lived in Harlingen, Texas with his wife and family. Warner served in the Texas House of Representatives from 1987 to 1991 and was a Democrat. He died on February 1, 2022, at the age of 76. References 1945 births 2022 deaths Politicians from Washington, D.C. People from Harlingen, Texas University of Texas alumni Texas lawyers Texas Democrats Members of the Texas House of Representatives
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The 2021–22 P. League+ season is the 2nd season of the P. League+ (PLG). The P. League+ added two new teams, New Taipei Kings and Kaohsiung Steelers, extended the number of teams to 6. The regular season began on December 12, 2021, and is scheduled to end on May 15, 2022. Transactions Retirement On March 15, 2021, Tien Lei announced his retirement from professional basketball. On July 8, 2021, LaDontae Henton joined Providence Friars as a special assistant to the head coach, ending his playing career. On September 23, 2021, Lai Kuo-Wei joined New Taipei CTBC DEA as assistant coach, ending his playing career. Coaching changes Off-season On June 7, 2021, the New Taipei Kings hired Ryan Marchand as their new head coach. On June 11, 2021, the Kaohsiung Steelers hired DeMarcus Berry as their new head coach. On July 12, 2021, the Taoyuan Pilots hired Cheng Chih-Lung as their new head coach. On September 28, 2021, Taoyuan Pilots intermin head coach Yang I-Feng was assigned to assistant coach and player development director. Preseason The preseason began on November 6, 2021, and ended on November 21. Regular season The regular season began on December 12, 2021, and will end on May 15, 2022. Postponed games Three Taoyuan Pilots home games (against the New Taipei Kings on February 11, against the Hsinchu JKO Lioneers on February 19, and against the Formosa Taishin Dreamers on February 20) was postponed due to a COVID outbreak in Taoyuan City. The February 26 game between the Formosa Taishin Dreamers and the Hsinchu JKO Lioneers was postponed due to the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification. Two New Taipei Kings home games (against the Kaohsiung Steelers on February 27, and against the Hsinchu JKO Lioneers on February 28) was postponed due to the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification. Two Taipei Fubon Braves games (against the Taoyuan Pilots on February 27, and against the Formosa Taishin Dreamers on February 28) was postponed due to the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup qualification. Playoffs Statistics Individual statistic leaders Individual game highs Team statistic leaders Awards Yearly Awards Players of the Week Preseason Regular Season Players of the Month Arenas The Kaohsiung Steelers announced on May 25, 2021, that they would play their home games at Fengshan Arena. The New Taipei Kings announced on September 4, that they would play their home games at Xinzhuang Gymnasium, and would share the same arena with New Taipei CTBC DEA of T1 League. Due to the renovation of Changhua County Stadium, the Formosa Taishin Dreamers announced on July 7, 2021, that they would play their home games at Intercontinental Basketball Stadium in Taichung City this season. The Taoyuan pilots scheduled two of their home games at National Taiwan Sport University Multipurpose Gymnasium. Media The games will be aired on television via FTV One and MOMOTV, and will be broadcast online on YouTube Official Channel, 4gTV, and Yahoo! Sports. References External links Current basketball seasons Basketball events postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic
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Cornelius Jessie Coleman (July 5, 1928- February 20, 1973), also called "Tenoo", was an American R&B drummer best known for playing with Fats Domino's band and on many of his hit records. Tenoo Coleman was born in New Orleans. He was raised uptown on Rocheblave Street, in a rough neighborhood known as "The Blade". Career Coleman first sat in with Fats Domino at the Mac Hansbury Lounge on Galvez Street, and joined his band in early 1951. He came aboard about the same time as guitarist Walter "Papoose" Nelson and sax man Wendell Duconge. He filled the chair previously held by Victor Leonard, Robert Stevens, Dave Oxley, Frank Parker, Willie Barbarin, John Cook, and Earl Palmer. After a successful string of hits on the charts only one song, "Rockin' Chair," hit the charts in 1951, in the final week in December. Fats continued touring with his new band. Domino's producer Dave Bartholomew had a brief falling out with Imperial Records owner Lew Chudd over money, so Fats went to work with producer Al Young, a local record store owner. He and his road band, including Coleman, went into the studio in January 1952. Released from that session was "Goin' Home" backed with "Reelin' and Rockin'". The A-side of the disc went to #1 on the R&B chart, and became the first R&B record to appear in the Pop chart, at #30. Domino's band, on the road and in the studio beginning in 1952, was comprised of Fats on piano and vocals, Buddy Hagans and Wendell Duconge on sax, Walter "Papoose" Nelson on guitar, Billy Diamond on bass, and Cornelius "Tenoo" Coleman on drums. Years later Domino remembered this band as his "best ever." He especially valued the hard-driving Coleman. "Tenoo was left-handed and could really keep a beat," Fats recalled, "I used to have him set up his drums right next to the piano because the drummer is where I get my drive from." Tenoo Coleman was Fats Domino's drummer for fifteen years, touring and playing on the majority of his Imperial Records recordings. From 1950 through 1962 Fats Domino sold sixty million records. During this time he established himself as "the cornerstone" of rock 'n' roll, according to Dave Bartholomew. Touring was a fact of life for the Fats Domino band. In 1957, for example, Domino and his band traveled 13,000 miles across the country working 355 shows, many of them sold out. He was the biggest rock 'n' roll act in the United States, but still Fats and his musicians suffered from segregation. Black musicians on the road often couldn't stay at white hotels, eat at white restaurants, were sometimes banned from using restrooms at gas stations, and forced to used "For Colored Only" facilities. In an incident in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana in 1962, sax man Herb Hardesty was beset by a group of angry white men outside a club who mistook his light-skinned black girlfriend for white. Domino's band took cover inside the club as police quelled the altercation. Tenoo Coleman, upset by the encounter, warned Hardesty, "Man, don't you ever do that to us again! Don't ever! Man, all of us could have been dead!" On September 2, 1956, Coleman appeared with the Fats Domino band in its network television debut on The Steve Allen Show. Two months later on November 18 Fats performed with the band on The Ed Sullivan Show. Sullivan showed Fats at the piano and kept the band off-camera. Early the next year on February 2, 1957, Fats performed with his band on The Perry Como Show. Como, like Sullivan, declined to show the band, keeping the cameras only on Domino. Como had the band back on May 25, this time showing Domino fronting his band. In 1957 Fats performed twice, once solo and once with his band, on the recently launched nationwide American Bandstand. These and other TV appearances kept the Fats Domino band in high profile. Coleman appeared with Fats and his band in the feature film "Shake Rattle And Rock"! in 1956. Director Joe Lauro's 2015 Fats Domino documentary "The Big Beat", highlights concert footage of Fats' band with drummer Coleman from the French National Archives . January 1961 saw the Domino band, with Coleman on drums, on a tour of Jamaica, playing at the Jamaica Music Festival in Montego Bay, followed by 10 dates in Kingston. Jamaicans could pick up radio signals from New Orleans and Miami. Fats' records were being played regularly on Jamaican sound systems in the 1950s, and his accentuation of the offbeat is one of the roots of ska. His song "Be My Guest" was particularly influential in Jamaica. Musicians began copying that style in their songs, with the beat eventually beginning to bounce in its own Jamaican way. Bob Marley said reggae had its roots in Domino's music. From February 1957 until the early 1960s Charles "Hungry" Williams was the most in-demand drummer recording in New Orleans. But for Domino's recordings, Fats and Dave Bartholomew preferred Tenoo Coleman. "Tenoo was one hell of a drummer," said Bartholomew, "one of the best drummers in the world..." Coleman recorded for some of Dave Bartholomew's solo releases, and also for Smiley Lewis, Pee Wee Crayton, T-Bone Walker, Billy Tate, Roy Brown, and Roosevelt Sykes. He was highlighted on Herb Hardesty's "The Domino Effect: Wing & Federal Recordings 1958-1961" from Ace Records UK in the song "Rhumba Rockin' With Coleman". The album by Hardesty leading Fats Domino's band was recorded in 1958, but unissued until 2012. Style and Influence Charles "Hungry" Williams first studied drums during the time he spent in New Orleans' Municipal Boys Home. His musical education continued when he studied Fats Domino's drummer Cornelius "Tenoo" Coleman. Williams recalled, "Fats used to play at Bogen's Patio on Claiborne and Forstall, plus he was playing at another joint called the Hot Spot a block away. I got hooked up with Fats and I started valeting for Fats. Because all I'd do is go there and sit there and look at Cornelius Coleman, Tenoo was what we called him. I'd sit and watch him, because I idolized the dude. He was fast, man, fast." Williams continued, "And every time I got a chance, I'd set up Tenoo's drums like an hour before the gig, and I would sit on his drums and practice before the gig started." Coleman, left-handed like Williams, also taught Walter "Popee" Lastie. Walter "Popee" Lastie recalled, "Every month they would have a children’s hour at the Hot Spot. That’s where Fats Domino used to play; and Cornelius Coleman would stand behind me with his hands on my shoulders. He was left-handed and he’d cross his hands and play beats on me, and if I played it wrong, he would slap me! So I had to learn that way." Walter "Popee" Lastie, would later play with Fats Domino, Professor Longhair, and Dr. John. John "Jab'o" Starks was an R&B drummer from Mobile, Alabama. As a young man he was mentored on the drums by Cornelius "Tenoo" Coleman. "A lot of those New Orleans drummers would come through, and I got a lot of stuff from those guys", Starks said. "Tenoo [Coleman] was...as funky as any of them... I learned some of that funk by listening to Tenoo." Starks went on to play with Bobby "Blue" Bland and James Brown, among others. Though New Orleans produced traditional drummers like Baby Dodds and Paul Barbarin, the city was also responsible for the R&B percussion practiced by such players as Cornelius “Tenoo” Coleman Charles and Charles "Hungry" Williams, two important drummers on the New Orleans scene. Author Charles Suhor saw Coleman take on Ed Blackwell in a battle of the drummers at an American Jazz Quintet show in the mid- 1950s. He said Blackwell, "swung lightly through complex polyrhythmic lines, a brilliant colorist and phrase maker with swift wit embedded in daringly sculpted solos. Coleman was the slasher, juxtaposing thickly accented snare and tom rhythms with familiar Afro-Cuban beats of the day all of it bristling with pre-funk energy that contrasted with Blackwell’s Max Roach/ Shelly Manne-style of improvisation." Suhor remembered the crowd responding more vigorously to Coleman, though his own tastes favored Blackwell. In August 1966 Fats Domino and his band played the Village Gate in New York City with Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers. Blakey admired and befriended Tenoo. When Domino's band was on tour, other musicians stood in the wings to watch Coleman play. Drummers such as Elvin Jones came by to watch Tenoo play. "Everybody paid attention to Tenoo," said Bill Doggett. "He had that funny kind of rhythm that later became the style, that double stuff on the bass drum. The way he played his snare was, in what we call the vernacular now, a real funky beat." Author Rick Coleman stated, "A funky beat meant a drummer who improvised extra beats, not just for show, but to force people to dancer even harder, creating more positive sweat. New Orleans was the home of funky rhythms, dating back to Congo Square and Second Line parades, but notably played by drummers like Tenoo, his pupil Charles "Hungry" Williams, Joseph "Smokey" Johnson, and Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste of The Meters." Later Years In the early 1970s Coleman played in Clarence "Frogman" Henry's band at the 500 Club on Bourbon Street, along with Domino band alumni sax man Clarence Ford and bass player Lawrence Guyton. In early 1973, after a show with Dave Bartholomew's band at the Fountainbleau Hotel, Tenoo suffered a stroke and died at age 44. References External links "Rhumba Rockin' With Coleman" from The Domino Effect: Wing & Federal Recordings 1958-1961 https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=rhumba+rockin%27+with+coleman 1928 births 1973 deaths Drummers American rhythm and blues drummers Rhythm and blues musicians from New Orleans 20th-century American drummers 20th-century African-American musicians
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Al Majalla Al Jadida (The New Magazine) was an Arabic language socialist and avant-garde cultural and literary magazine which existed between 1929 and 1944 with a two-year interruption. Being an early avant-garde magazine in the Arab world it is one of two magazines started by Salama Moussa. The other one was Al Mustaqbal which was launched in 1914. History and profile Al Majalla Al Jadida was established by Salama Moussa in Cairo in 1929. The magazine was closed down in 1931, but its publication was restarted in 1933. In 1942 Moussa's ownership of the title ended, and his friends began to assume its publication to save it from the censorship. However, the magazine ceased publication in 1944 when it was banned by the Egyptian authorities due to its leftist political stance. Al Majalla Al Jadida was published on a monthly basis. The magazine was consisted of 30 pages which were printed on a A5-sized paper. It acted as a platform to reproduce and transmit the Western cultural elements in the Egyptian society. It adopted the rational secular thinking and socialism in developing a future projection for Egypt. The readers of the magazine were presented the Fabian socialism, Marxism, Darwinism, psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud, modernist literature and abstract painting in detail. Al Majalla Al Jadida featured scientific discussions, philosophical and avant-garde literary and artistic writings. Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfuz published his work for the first time in the magazine. As of 1930 Husayn Fawzi was one of the contributors who published articles on the discussions about Westernization, East and West, Egyptianism and Arabism. Al Tatawwur which was published for a short time in 1940 was modelled on Al Majalla Al Jadida. References 1929 establishments in Egypt 1944 disestablishments in Egypt Arabic-language magazines Avant-garde magazines Defunct literary magazines published in Egypt Magazines established in 1929 Magazines disestablished in 1944 Magazines published in Cairo Monthly magazines published in Egypt Socialist magazines Censorship in Egypt
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Phi IV or Phi 4 is a residential locality in south-western Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. Bordered by Phi III to the north and Chi III and Chi IV to the west, it is known to be one of the real estate hotspots of Greater Noida, alongside Omega II, Omega I, Phi I, Phi II, Phi III, Chi I, Chi II, Chi III, Chi IV and Chi V. It is named after the Greek letter Phi. References Geography of Uttar Pradesh Meerut division geography stubs
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The Enigma Cipher Center (Polish: Centrum Szyfrów Enigma) is an interactive multimedia exhibition in Poznan dedicated to the Enigma cipher machine and the three Polish cryptologists -- Marian Rejewski, Henryk Zygalski and Jerzy Rozycki—who played a key role in its early cryptanalysis. It is located in the former Collegium Historicum building. The Enigma Cipher Center is a brand of the Poznan Heritage Center. Description The center is a joint venture of the city of Poznań and Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. The idea to create such a place, originally referred to as The Enigma Museum, was introduced by radio journalist Szymon Mazur. The construction of the center was implemented as part of the "Preservation, protection, promotion and development of natural and cultural heritage of the Wielkopolska Regional Operational Program between 2014—2020, in cooperation with the Adam Mickiewicz University. The facility was open on September 2021. The general manager is Piotr Bojarski. History The current location of the center was originally occupied by the building of the military headquarters of the 5th Army Corps of the German Empire (Königliche Intendantur des V Armeekorps) built between 1843—1847. After World War I the headquarters of the Wielkopolska 14th Infantry Division was placed there. Part of the rooms were used by the Poznan branch of the Cipher Bureau of the general staff of the Polish army, where the three leading early cryptanalysts of the Enigma -- Marian Rejewski, Henryk Zygalski and Jerzy Różycki -- worked. Following the outbreak of World War II the building was used by the German Army. The building was severely damaged, and in 1948, the decision was made not to rebuild it but to construct a new building to house the headquarters of the Polish United Workers' Party's authorities, which were located here until 1990. Subsequently, the building was handed over to the Adam Mickiewicz University to accommodate the Department of History, which existed there till 2015 until its relocation to the Morasko campus. Projects In addition to the permanent exposition of the Enigma Cipher Center, the institution is conducting a project called “Residences at CSE”. The aim of the project is to support various creative initiatives commemorating the participation of Polish cryptologists in breaking the code of the Enigma  cipher machine. As part of the project, Patryk Pilasiewicz (pl. Patryk Piłasiewicz), a contrabassist, conductor and composer runs an open interdisciplinary workshop called CSE Open Lab. Artistic shows are being organized directly at the Center`s permanent exposition space. Students from the Ignacy Paderewski Music Academy as well as students  from the IT and telecommunications department of the Poznan Polytechnic School participated in the first edition of the project. On November 10, 2021, as part of the “Subtractive Synthesis. Sound Architecture” (pl. Synteza subtraktywna. Architektura dźwięku) project, first workshops took place, followed by November 24th workshops called “Listening Sessions. Presentations of the elements of the SubRosa" (pl. «Odsłuchy. Prezentacje elementów projektu SubRosa») project. On December 1st and 8th , 2021 rehearsals for the Subrosa scattered  concert took place at the Media Library and permanent exposition space. On December 16, 2021, the scattered “Sub Rosa” concert took place at the permanent exposition area, organized on the occasion of the 89th anniversary of breaking of the Enigma code by Polish cryptologists. Students of Ignacy Paderewski Music Academy as well as Adam Mickiewicz University chamber choir directed by professor Krzysztof Szydzisz participated in the concert. The viewers had the opportunity to take part in the concert by walking through the exposition and meeting the musicians who in various parts of the exposition were performing the pieces inspired by the history of the three Poznan mathematicians and The Enigma Cipher Center. The title of the concert “Sub Rosa” is taken from Latin : “under the rose” which refers to the rose as the ancient symbol of mystery. Photo References External links Open The Enigma Cipher Center Sounds of Ciphers - a musical spectacle for the opening of The Enigma Cipher Center Museums in Poznań Enigma machine
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This is a list of all notable events in the West African nation of Benin in the year 2022. Incumbents President - Patrice Talon Vice President - Mariam Chabi Talata February February 8 - Armed terrorists attack W National Park in the North of Benin. Of the eight people killed, five were park rangers, one was their French instructor, another a soldier, and the last an official. Ten people were injured. February 10 - Another African Parks official is killed after their vehicle hits a bomb planted by terrorists. References 2022 in Benin Benin 2022
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Jiří Linha (15 November 1930 – 10 February 2022) was a Czech conductor, composer, vocalist and chorus master, the head of vocal-instrumental band Linha Singers. Life and career Born in Prague, Czechoslovakia, on 15 November 1930, Linha began his musical education at the age of six by playing the violin. Soon he joined the Prague Philharmonic Children's Choir as a soprano and, toward the end of World War II, as a baritone to the Czech Choir conducted by Jan Kűhn. Both ensembles regularly cooperated with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra and Prague Symphony Orchestra. He studied at the Faculty of Education of Charles University, from where he left in 1953 as a music teacher for secondary school. In 1961 he left for the Artistic Ensemble of the Ministry of the Interior (USMV). In 1964, he founded the band Linha Singers. Linha died in his sleep on 10 February 2022, at the age of 91. References External links Czech music dictionary of persons and institutions Profil Jiřího Linhy 1930 births 2022 deaths 20th-century conductors (music) 21st-century conductors (music) Czech conductors (music) Male conductors (music) Musicians from Prague
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SS Green Harbour was a built in 1974, operated by the Military Sealift Command during Gulf War. Construction and commissioning Green Harbour was laid down and launched in 1974 at Avondale Shipyard, New Orleans, Louisiana. Put into service later that same year by the Maritime Administration for operation by Central Gulf Lines. In 1991, the ship was chartered by the Military Sealift Command (MSC) and commissioned into the Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron 2, Diego Garcia, as Green Harbour (T-AK-2064). She took part in the Operation Desert Shield. She was returned to the Central Gulf Lines after the contact with MSC was finished in 2001. The ship was sold for scrap in 2002. References Type C9-class ship 1974 ships Gulf War ships of the United States Ships built in New Orleans
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Pia Tapsell (born 2 August 1998) is a New Zealand rugby union player. She made her debut for New Zealand against Canada at the 2019 Women's Rugby Super Series on 28 June at San Diego. Biography Tapsell is from the Ngāti Whakauae and Te Arawa iwi. She started in all of the Black Ferns six test matches of 2019. She later appeared for the New Zealand Development XV in Fiji for the Oceania Rugby Women's Championship. Tapsell played for the Possibles in a Black Ferns trial match in 2020 and then featured for the Black Ferns against the New Zealand Barbarians. Tapsell previously played for North Harbour, she began playing for Bay of Plenty at the 2020 Farah Palmer Cup. In 2021 she was named in the Chiefs squad for their historic clash with the Blues. It was the first-ever women's Super Rugby match to be played in New Zealand. Later that year she signed a contract with the Chiefs for the inaugural season of Super Rugby Aupiki. References External links Black Ferns Profile 1998 births Living people New Zealand female rugby union players
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Kenneth Howard Brown (March 9, 1936 – February 5, 2022) was an American playwright and novelist. His play, The Brig, won three Obie Awards. It was adapted into film by Jonas Mekas. Background Brown was born in New York City, New York in Brooklyn, and served in the United States Marine Corps. Brown went to Columbia University and was a bartender; He died on February 5, 2022, at the age of 85 in New York City in a hospice in the Queens from cancer.<ref>Daily Expert News (DEN).''' Nick Erickson, February 7, 2002, 'Kenneth H. Brown, playwright best known for 'The Brig' dies aged 85'</ref> PlaysThe BrigNightlightBooksThe NarrowsHitler’s Analysts'' References External links 1936 births 2022 deaths 20th-century American dramatists and playwrights American male novelists Military personnel from New York City United States Marines Columbia University alumni Writers from Brooklyn American bartenders Deaths from cancer in New York (state)
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This article details the Catalans Dragons rugby league football club's 2011 season. This is their 6th season in the Super League. Table Milestones Round 1: Damien Blanch, Ben Farrar, Scott Dureau, Lopini Paea, Ian Henderson and Steve Menzies made their debuts for the Dragons. Round 1: Damien Blanch scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 2: Éloi Pélissier made his debut for the Dragons. Round 2: Scott Dureau kicked his 1st goal for the Dragons. Round 3: David Ferriol made his 100th appearance for the Dragons. Round 3: Daryl Millard and Jason Baitieri made their debuts for the Dragons. Round 3: Steve Menzies scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 3: Scott Dureau kicked his 1st drop goal for the Dragons. Round 4: Scott Dureau scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 6: Clint Greenshields scored his 2nd hat-trick for the Dragons. Round 6: Ben Farrar scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 8: Daryl Millard scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 9: Cyril Stacul made his 50th appearance for the Dragons. Round 10: Ian Henderson scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 11: Jean-Philippe Baile made his 50th appearance for the Dragons. Round 11: Jason Baitieri scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 11: Éloi Pélissier scored his 1st try for the Dragons. Round 11: Scott Dureau reached 100 points for the Dragons. Round 12: Mathias Pala made his debut for the Dragons. Round 13: Jamal Fakir made his 100th appearance for the Dragons. Round 15: Grégory Mounis made his 150th appearance for the Dragons. Round 15: Sébastien Raguin made his 100th appearance for the Dragons. Round 21: Thibaut Ancely made his debut for the Dragons. Round 21: Sébastien Raguin scored his 25th try and reached 100 points for the Dragons. Round 22: Rémy Marginet made his debut for the Dragons. Round 22: Rémy Marginet kicked his 1st goal for the Dragons. Fixtures and results 2011 Super League Super League Play-Offs Player appearances Super League only = Injured = Suspended Challenge Cup Player appearances Challenge Cup games only = Injured = Suspended Squad statistics Appearances and Points include (Super League, Challenge Cup and Play-offs) as of 15 July 2011. Transfers In Out References 2011 in rugby league by club 2011 in English rugby league Catalans Dragons seasons
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The 53rd Dan Kolov & Nikola Petrov Tournament, was a sport wrestling event held in Sofia, Bulgaria between 24 and 26 April 2015. This international tournament includes competition in both men's and women's freestyle wrestling and men's Greco-Roman wrestling. This tournament is held in honor of Dan Kolov who was the first European freestyle wrestling champion from Bulgaria and European and World Champion Nikola Petroff. Event videos The event was air freely on the Bulgarian Wrestling Federation Live YouTube channel. Medal table Medal overview Men's freestyle Greco-Roman Women's freestyle Participating nations 299 competitors from 28 nations participated. (1) (11) (11) (9) (1) (66) (1) (14) (1) (22) (1) (5) (9) (5) (15) (3) (2) (2) (5) (7) (24) (3) (6) (3) (16) (23) (14) United World Wrestling (9) References Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament Dan Kolov and Nikola Petrov Tournament
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Frank Bradford (October 21, 1941 – February 2, 2022) was an American lawyer and politician. Bradford was born in Sumter, South Carolina, and graduated from Sumter High School. He received his bachelor's degree in business administration management from University of South Carolina in 1965 and his law degree from University of South Carolina School of Law in 1968. He was admitted to the South Carolina and Georgia bars. Bradford practiced law in and lived in Smyrna, Georgia. He served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 1997 to 1999 and was a Republican. He died on February 2, 2022, at the age of 80, in Smyrna, Georgia. References 1941 births 2022 deaths People from Sumter, South Carolina People from Smyrna, Georgia University of South Carolina alumni University of South Carolina School of Law alumni Georgia (U.S. state) lawyers South Carolina lawyers Members of the Georgia House of Representatives Georgia (U.S. state) Republicans
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Qurayba bint Abi Quhafa () was a daughter of Abu Quhafa and his second wife Hind bint Nuqayd. Qurayba was a sister of Abu Bakr, and also the wife of the general Qays ibn Sa'd ibn Ubada al-Khazraji. She bore no children to the latter. Biography In January 630, Qurayba's father Abu Quhafa heard that the army of the Muslims were on the way to Mecca. He asked his young daughter Qurayba to lead him to Mount Abu Qubays, and there he asked her what she could see. She told him, "A mass of black." He said they were the cavalry. His daughter added that she could see a man running up and down in front of them, and he said that this was the army adjutant. Then his daughter announced that "the black mass had spread." Abu Quhafa told her that the cavalry had been released so they must go home quickly. However, they met the army before they could reach their house, and a mounted warrior tore off his daughter's silver necklace. Qurayba became frightened, though Abu Quhafa calmed her down saying that her brother Atiq (Abu Bakr) is the most preferred companion of Muhammad. Abu Bakr then saw Qurayba, and learned about her stolen necklace. Abu Bakr asked for the necklace to be returned, but the stealer remained quiet and didn't give the necklace. Abu Bakr then said 'O my little sister, consider that your necklace is with God, for indeed there is little trustworthiness with the people'. References Bibliography Abu Bakr family 7th-century Arabs 7th-century women
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Adolfo Díaz-Ambrona Bardají (1 October 1942 – 27 July 2012) was a Spanish lawyer and politician. A member of the State Lawyers Corps, he founded the Extremadura branch of the People's Alliance (PA), which merged into the People's Party (PP) in 1989. He led his party in the Assembly of Extremadura from 1983 to 1991. Early life Díaz-Ambrona was born into a political family in Badajoz. His father, Adolfo Díaz-Ambrona Moreno, was the Minister of Agriculture from 1965 to 1969 in the government of Francisco Franco, while his maternal grandfather Luis Bardají was also a state lawyer, and briefly Minister of Education in 1935 during the Second Spanish Republic. His brother Juan was president of the Provincial Deputation of Badajoz. Career Díaz-Ambrona founded the branch of the People's Alliance (AP) in Extremadura. In the first regional election in 1983, the People's Coalition of AP, the People's Democratic Party (PDP) and Liberal Party (PL) came second, with Juan Carlos Rodríguez Ibarra of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) becoming the first president. He also served in the Senate, representing the Assembly of Extremadura, from 1986 to 1987. In March 1987, Díaz-Ambrona tabled a motion of no confidence in Ibarra. A cited reason was alleged irregularities in the awarding of contracts for a motorway between Trujillo and Guadalupe. The motion failed with 16 votes for (all from his parliamentary group), 36 against and 12 abstentions. In the June election, he was again runner-up to Ibarra. Later life and death After the end of his second term in 1991, Díaz-Ambrona returned to the legal profession. He and his wife Marisol García Cancho had six children. He died of a pulmonary disease on 27 July 2012, aged 69. The following day, he was buried in the family mausoleum in Badajoz's San Juan cemetery, in a ceremony attended by local and regional politicians. References 1942 births 2012 deaths People from Badajoz Members of the State Lawyers Corps People's Alliance (Spain) politicians People's Party (Spain) politicians Members of the 1st Assembly of Extremadura Members of the 2nd Assembly of Extremadura
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Adolfo Díaz-Ambrona may refer to: Adolfo Díaz-Ambrona Moreno (1908–1971), Spanish politician, Minister of Agriculture Adolfo Díaz-Ambrona Bardají (1942–2012), Spanish politician, son of above, member of Assembly of Extremadura
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Irwin Young (May 30, 1927 – January 20, 2022) was an American businessman. He was the chief executive of DuArt Film Laboratories, a film processing laboratory, for over 50 years. He helped Spike Lee, Michael Moore, and Frederick Wiseman in their early careers. In 2000, Young received the Gordon E. Sawyer Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. References 1927 births 2022 deaths American businesspeople
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The 1981–82 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University as a member of the Mid-American Conference in the college basketball season of 1981–82. The team was coached by Danny Nee in his second season at Ohio. They played their home games at Convocation Center. The Bobcats finished with a record of 13–14 and sixth in the MAC regular season with a conference record of 8–8. Schedule |- !colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| regular season |- !colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;" | MAC Tournament Source: References Ohio Bobcats men's basketball seasons Ohio Ohio Bobcats men's basketball Ohio Bobcats men's basketball
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Cladiella variabilis is a species of coral. It has been recorded in the Gulf of Suez. References Alcyoniidae
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Alpheus Thomas Mason (September 18, 1899October 31, 1989) was an American legal scholar and biographer. He wrote several biographies of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, including Louis Brandeis, Harlan F. Stone, and William Howard Taft. Alpheus Thomas Mason was born on September 18, 1899, in Snow Hill, Maryland. He graduated from Dickinson College with an AB in 1920 and a AM and PhD from Princeton University in 1921 and 1923, respectively. At Princeton, he grew close with Edward Samuel Corwin, who "became [his] mentor and also his benefactor and friend". Mason was on the Duke University faculty for two years after receiving his PhD. In 1925, he came back to Princeton where he remained until his retirement in 1968. At Princeton, he held the McCormick chair and was named the McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence when he retired. He continued teaching at other colleges and universities until 1980. He died on October 31, 1989, at his home in Princeton, New Jersey. Publications Organized Labor and the Law (1925) Brandeis: Lawyer and Judge in the Modern State (1933) Bureaucracy Convicts Itself: The Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy of 1910 (1941) The Brandeis Way (1938) Brandeis: A Free Man's Life (1946) Security through Freedom: American Political Thought and Practice (1955) Harlan Fiske Stone: Pillar of the Law (1956) The Supreme Court from Taft to Warren (1958) In Quest of Freedom: American Political Thought and Practice (1959) The Supreme Court: Palladium of Freedom (1962) The States Rights Debate: Antifederalism and the Constitution (1964) William Howard Taft: Chief Justice (1964) Citations Works cited Further reading 1899 births 1989 deaths 20th-century American academics 20th-century American biographers 20th-century American male writers Dickinson College alumni People from Princeton, New Jersey People from Snow Hill, Maryland Princeton University alumni Princeton University faculty
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Francisco Fluxá Ginart (15 November 1933 − 10 February 2016) was a Chilean football leader who served as president of Unión Española and the Chilean Football Association, then called Asociación Central del Fútbol (ACF). His period in the ACF is regarded for the qualification of Chile to the 1974 FIFA World Cup and for the political problems amid the 1973 coup d'état led by general Augusto Pinochet. Similarly, according to the journalist Daniel Matamala, Fluxá was a fierce supporter of president Eduardo Frei Montalva (1964−1970) and his party, the Christian Democracy. References Further reading External links Profile at Geni 1933 births 2016 deaths Chilean people Chilean people of Catalan descent Unión Española chairmen and investors Presidents of the ANFP
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Nelly Junior Joseph (born November 20, 2001) is a Nigerian college basketball player for the Iona Gaels of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC). Early life Junior Joseph grew up in Benin City, Nigeria and was friends with future NBA player Charles Bassey. At the age of 13, a local coach noticed his height and suggested he play basketball. Junior Joseph initially declined, as he wanted to focus on soccer, but was able to dunk after two weeks of practice. He attended high school for a year in Japan. Former NBA player Olumide Oyedeji informed NBA Academy Africa director Roland Houston about Junior Joseph, and he joined the academy after impressing Houston at a tryout. Junior Joseph played at the academy for two years and occasionally competed against NBA players such as Gorgui Dieng. Junior Joseph initially committed to playing college basketball for Wichita State, but received a late offer from Iona coach Rick Pitino, and he switched his commitment to the Gaels. College career Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, embassies in Africa were closed, and Junior Joseph was unable to secure a visa to the United States. He was eventually able to reach Iona on October 29, 2020, shortly before the season started. Junior Joseph averaged 11.1 points and 7.5 rebounds per game as a freshman. He was named MAAC Freshman of the Week four times, and earned MAAC Freshman of the Year honors at the conclusion of the regular season. On November 13, 2021, Junior Joseph scored a career-high 28 points in a 90–87 overtime win against Harvard. Career statistics College |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2020–21 | style="text-align:left;"| Iona | 18 || 16 || 27.7 || .596 || .000 || .638 || 7.5 || 1.3 || .6 || 1.6 || 11.1 References External links Iona Gaels bio 2001 births Living people Iona Gaels men's basketball players Nigerian men's basketball players Nigerian expatriate basketball people in the United States Power forwards (basketball) Sportspeople from Lagos
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Nat Butler was a Scottish snooker player. He competed in the first World Snooker Championship in 1927 and again in 1930. In 1927 he was defeated 3–8 to Tom Carpenter in the opening round. In 1930, he defeated Tom Newman 13–11 to reach the semi-finals, where he was defeated by Tom Dennis 11–13. References Scottish snooker players
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Jeļena Ostapenko defeated Veronika Kudermetova in the final, 6–0, 6–4 to win the women's singles tennis title at the 2022 Dubai Tennis Championships, saving a match point in the quarterfinals against Petra Kvitová, in the process. Garbiñe Muguruza was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Kudermetova. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half Qualifying Seeds Qualifiers Lucky losers Qualifying draw First qualifier Second qualifier Third qualifier Fourth qualifier Fifth qualifier Sixth qualifier References External links Main draw Qualifying draw 2022 WTA Tour 2022 Dubai Tennis Championships
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Corona is a live album by Cecil Taylor recorded during the "Total Music Meeting" at the "Podewil", the headquarters of the Kulturprojekte Berlin non-profit organisation, on November 1, 1996, one day before the recording of the Taylor album Almeda, and two days before the recording of The Light of Corona. It was released in 2018 in digital format by the FMP label as part of their Archive Edition, and was reissued in 2021 in CD format by Corbett vs. Dempsey. The album consists of three tracks. Track one begins with a Taylor poetry recitation, accompanied by vocalizations by the members of the ensemble that would join him on Almeda and The Light of Corona. Track two is a long duet featuring Taylor and drummer Sunny Murray, with whom Taylor last recorded on the 1981 album It Is in the Brewing Luminous. The vocalizing musicians return for track three, and Taylor completes his poetry recitation. Ensemble member Chris Jonas recalled being surprised by Murray's appearance, as on the previous day, Taylor announced: "Sunny Murray's coming in, and he'll be playing with us tomorrow night, and we'll see what happens thereafter... We have to wait and see what moon Sunny is in." Reception In a review for The New York City Jazz Record, Pierre Crépon wrote: "A Murray cliché is that he was the first musician who figured how to stop playing time. A different kind of time is at play here, corresponding to the storied relationship of two very singular individuals... The concert was among the last times the pair played together. Does Corona sum something up? Is this music that can lend itself to final assessments? No, but it is another link in a long and solid chain, another occasion to examine, uncluttered and anew, what two truly towering artists had to offer." Writing for JazzWord, Ken Waxman described the opening of the duo section: "the focus is on building a duo intersection of timbral motifs, fragments and dynamics. Hard drum-top rattles and rumbles plus triangle and cymbal clanks begin to solidify the drummer's interaction while crossed hand key pushes and rolling pulses figure into the piano introduction. Within a few minutes the exposition moves from andante to allegrissimo as Taylor's sweeps extend into glissandi and dips into the piano's nether regions, connecting with Murray's metal clanging and snare clapping. With metronomic and staccato dynamics, the pianist interpolates passing tones as he works through the theme steeple-chasing up and down the scale, with timbres doubled by the drummer's paradiddles and pops." In an article for Burning Ambulance, Phil Freeman remarked: "The pristine sound and quality instruments on Corona... allow the music to blossom fully, and it's breathtaking. Murray's snare and toms crack like thunder, while Taylor's piano playing is like raindrops striking the surface of a stormy ocean, the flow of notes never-ending and the momentum seemingly unstoppable." Track listing "Sector 1" – 5:46 "Sector 2" – 48:00 "Sector 3" – 7:03 Personnel Cecil Taylor - piano, voice Sunny Murray - drums Dominic Duval - voice Tristan Honsinger - voice Jeff Hoyer - voice Chris Jonas - voice Jackson Krall - voice Elliot Levin - voice Chris Matthay - voice Harri Sjöström - voice References Cecil Taylor live albums 2018 live albums
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The 2013 NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament was the 32nd annual tournament hosted by the NCAA to determine the national champion of Division III women's collegiate basketball in the United States. DePauw defeated Wisconsin–Whitewater in the championship game, 69–51, to claim the Tigers' second Division III national title and first since 2007. The championship rounds were hosted by Hope College at the DeVos Fieldhouse in Holland, Michigan. Bracket Final Four All-tournament team Ellie Pearson, DePauw Kate Walker, DePauw Cortney Kumerow, Wisconsin–Whitewater Marcia Voigt, Amherst Danny Rainer, Williams See also 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament 2013 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament 2013 NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament 2013 NAIA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament 2013 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament References NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament 2013 in sports in Michigan
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Asmawi Bakiri (born 10 September 1974) is a former Malaysian defender. He formerly played with Selangor FA, Sabah FA, Perak FA, Selangor MPPJ and Shahzan Muda FC. On 4 August 2001, he played in 2001 Sultan of Selangor Cup. He also the former member of Malaysia national team. Honours Selangor Malaysia Cup: 1996, 1997, 2002 Malaysia Charity Shield: 1996, 1997, 2002 Malaysia FA Cup: 1997 References Living people Malaysian footballers Perak F.C. players Selangor FA players 1974 births Association football defenders
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Proscutum is a genus of sea snails, the true limpets, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Patellidae. Species † Proscutum compressum (Deshayes, 1861) † Proscutum deretranum Lozouet, 1999 References External links Fischer, P. (1880-1887). Manuel de conchyliologie et de paléontologie conchyliologique, ou histoire naturelle des mollusques vivants et fossiles suivi d'un Appendice sur les Brachiopodes par D. P. Oehlert. Avec 23 planches contenant 600 figures dessinées par S. P. Woodward.. Paris: F. Savy. Published in 11 parts (fascicules), xxiv + 1369 pp., 23 pls MacClintock C. (1963). Reclassification of gastropod Proscutum Fischer based on muscle scars and shell structure. Journal of Paleontology. 37(1): 141-156. Patellidae Gastropod genera
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Terrace v. Thompson, 263 U.S. 197 (1923), decided by U.S. Supreme Court on November 12, 1923, was a case challenging Washington Alien Land Law that is preventing aliens purchasing, using, or leasing the land. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the decision of state that Due Process and Equal Protection clause of Fourteenth Amendment and the treaty between the United States and Japan are not conflicted. Background Treaty of Commerce and Navigation of 1911 In 1911, the United States make an agreement with Japan, guaranteeing the rights of Japanese in U.S. as an extension of the Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907 and lessening anti-Japanese sentiment. Alien Land Law In 1913, California as a first state started implementing Alien Land Law. In the rise of anti-Asian sentiment, it used “aliens ineligible to citizenship” instead of addressing Japanese directly. Few years later, similar law was enacted in Washington that banning land ownership “by aliens other than those who in good faith have declared their intention to become citizens of the United States.” It implied those aliens are not eligible for citizenship, they never could declare to be naturalized “in good faith.” Case Terrace was a citizen of both the United States and Washington State. He was a farmer and wanted to lease his land to Nakatsuaka for five years, who was born in Japan and Japanese descent. The Attorney General was claiming Alien Land Law and trying to prosecute the enforcement criminally which even could lead to a confiscation of the land and imprisonment. The appellants argued that the enforcement of Alien Land Law was a transgression of due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment and the treaty of Commerce and Navigation of 1911. They claimed it is contradictory to the Fourteenth Amendment because of discrimination on aliens who are ineligible for citizenship and stripping their right to have an occupation as a farmer. Also they made a distinction between ownership and leasing. Decision First of all, the U.S. Supreme Court didn’t admit the violation of due process and equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Acknowledging state’s power of discretion, they differentiate the right of leasing land and the right of getting occupation saying the “quality and allegiance of those who own, occupy, and use the farm lands within its borders are matters of highest importance and affect the safety and power of the state itself.” Also addressing the Alien Land Law of Washington, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the statute that aliens who are not eligible for citizenship, or didn’t declare the intention to be naturalized “in good faith,” don’t have a right to own or lease the land, which implies there is no breach on due process and equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. When it comes to claim of conflict with the Treaty between the United States and Japan, the Supreme Court claimed the right to "carry on trade" or "to own or lease and occupy houses, manufactories, warehouses and shops," or "to lease land for residential and commercial purposes," or "to do anything incident to or necessary for trade" don't imply the right to own or lease the land for “agricultural purposes.” See also Alien land laws References United States Supreme Court cases
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The Wedding (), also known as The Wedding Day and The Wedding Day 2, is a 2021 Polish dark comedy film directed by Wojciech Smarzowski. Cast Source for the cast Robert Więckiewicz as Rysiek Wilk Agata Kulesza as Ela Wilk Michalina Łabacz as Kasia Wilk Przemysław Przestrzelski as Janek Sczuczyński Agata Turkot as Lea Arkadiusz Jakubik as Wodzirej / Wardoń Andrzej Chyra as Bogdan / Głowacki Maria Sobocińska as Inka Henryk Gołębiewski as Banaś / Furman Ryszard Ronczewski as Antoni Wilk Mateusz Więcławek as the young Antoni Wilk Robert Wabich as Zajdel Sebastian Stegmann as Hermann Schmidt Production The Wedding is a follow up to Smarzowski's 2004 film by the same name. Filming took place in Poland and Latvia between July and December 2020. Release The Wedding was released on 8 October 2021. It performed well on its opening weekend, selling 139,536 tickets and per Film New Europe had the "best opening for a local production in 2021." Reception Screen Anarchy reviewed the film, writing "For the recurring didacticism and programmatic disruption of nationalistic self-image, The Wedding Day is an uncomfortable history revision delivered in a masterful and provocative high-wire act of genre, commercial and arthouse filmmaking of intense social relevance." References External links The Wedding at Film Polski (link in Polish) Polish films Polish black comedy films Films about weddings 2021 black comedy films 2020s Polish-language films
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The 2022 WrestleMania Backlash is the upcoming 17th Backlash professional wrestling live event produced by WWE. It will be held for wrestlers from the promotion's Raw and SmackDown brand divisions. The event will air on pay-per-view (PPV) worldwide and will be available to stream through Peacock in the United States and the WWE Network internationally. It is scheduled to take place on May 8, 2022, at the Dunkin' Donuts Center in Providence, Rhode Island. It will be the second Backlash held under this name after the previous year's event, thus officially renaming the event series as WrestleMania Backlash. The concept of the event will be based around the backlash from WrestleMania 38. Production Background Backlash is a pay-per-view (PPV) and Peacock/WWE Network event that was established by WWE in 1999. It was held annually from 1999 to 2009. Backlash was discontinued after 2009 but reinstated in 2016 and has been held every year since, except in 2019. The original concept of the event was based around the backlash from WWE's flagship event, WrestleMania. The events from 2016 to 2018 and in 2020 did not carry this theme; however, the 2021 event returned to this original concept and was aptly named "WrestleMania Backlash". The 2022 event was also confirmed to be held under this name, thus renaming the event series to WrestleMania Backlash. It will be the 17th event in the Backlash chronology and will feature the backlash from WrestleMania 38. It is scheduled to take place on May 8, 2022, at the Dunkin' Donuts Center in Providence, Rhode Island and will feature wrestlers from the Raw and SmackDown brands. Storylines The event will include matches that result from scripted storylines, where wrestlers portray heroes, villains, or less distinguishable characters in scripted events that build tension and culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches. Results are predetermined by WWE's writers on the Raw and SmackDown brands, while storylines are produced on WWE's weekly television shows, Monday Night Raw and Friday Night SmackDown. References External links 2022 WWE Network events 2022 WWE pay-per-view events 2022 2022 in Rhode Island Events in Providence, Rhode Island Professional wrestling in Providence, Rhode Island May 2022 events in the United States Scheduled professional wrestling shows
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Jakub Gurecký (8 October 2005 – 7 February 2022) was a Czech junior motorcycle racer. His home team was Brno circuit junior racing. Life and racing career Gurecký was born in Zlín, where he also studied at the local grammar school. He rode motorcycles from the age of 4. He started his racing career in 2015 in the ranks of the Minibike Academy of the Masaryk Circuit in Brno and later he competed for the Brno Circuit Junior Racing Team and won the Northern Talent Cup (with a KTM motorcycle). He was the seventh Czech competitor to qualify for the prestigious international Red Bull Rookies Cup doing so for the 2022 edition, however, he died before being able to compete. During indoor training in Slovakia on 7 February 2022, Gurecký crashed into a solid obstacle and died of his injuries, at the age of 16. References 2005 births 2022 deaths Czech motorcycle racers Sportspeople from Zlín Sport deaths in Slovakia Motorcycle racers killed while racing
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Singphan Wildlife Sanctuary is situated in Mon district, Nagaland, India. It was declared as an elephant reserve by the Nagaland government on 16th August 2018 and is also known as ‘Singphan Elephant Reserve. It is the 30th elephant reserve in the country. Location Singphan Wildlife Sanctuary covers an area of 23.57 sq. km. or 5825 acres. Located in the Northwestern part of Nagaland, Singphan Wildlife Sanctuary shares a border with Abhaypur Reserve Forest which is located in Assam. Flora & fauna The wildlife sanctuary has various varieties of both plant and animal life. Trees rich in timber and medicinal value grow here. Wild lilies, Maples, White Orchids, Blue Vanda etc are a few varieties of flora found here along with herbs, edible plants and shrubs. To name a few animals such as elephants, tigers, tragopan, mountain goats, spotted leopards, hornbills, etc, are found here. References Wildlife sanctuaries in Nagaland Mon district Elephant reserves of India Year of establishment missing
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Anatoliy Sergeevich Malykhin (Russian: Анатолий Сергеевич Малыхин; born January 11, 1988) is a Russian mixed martial artist currently signed to ONE Championship, where he competes in the Heavyweight division. He is the current interim ONE Heavyweight World Champion. Malykhin has competed for Fight Nights Global. Malykhin is currently training at the Tiger Muay Thai gym in Phuket, Thailand. Malykhin also holds a notable win over Iranian World Wrestling gold medalist and MMA star Amir Aliakbari Mixed martial arts career ONE Championship Anatoliy Malykhin made his ONE debut against former ONE Light Heavyweight title challenger Alexandre Machado at ONE Championship: Fists of Fury 2 on March 5, 2021. He won the fight by first-round technical knockout via ground and pound from the crucifix position. Malykhin then faced former Greco-Roman wrestling world champion Amir Aliakbari at ONE Championship: Revolution on September 24, 2021. He defeated Aliakbari by first-round knockout. His win over Aliakbari would earn a shot at Arjan Bhullar for the ONE Heavyweight World Championship. After failed contract negotiations between Bhullar and ONE Championship, it was announced that Malykhin and Kirill Grishenko would face each other for an interim title at ONE Championship: Only the Brave. Malykhin faced Kirill Grishenko for the interim ONE Heavyweight Championship at ONE Championship: Bad Blood on February 11, 2022. He won the bout after knocking Grishenko unconscious in the second round. His performance earned him two "ONE Warrior Bonuses" totaling $100,000. Championships and accomplishments ONE Championship Interim ONE Heavyweight World Championship (One time) $100,000 Performance of the Night (One time) Mixed martial arts record |- | Win | align=center| 11–0 | Kirill Grishenko | KO (punch) |ONE Championship: Bad Blood | | align=center| 2 | align=center| 3:42 | Kallang, Singapore | Won the ONE Interim Heavyweight Championship |- | Win | align=center| 10–0 | Amir Aliakbari | KO (punches) |ONE Championship: Revolution | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 2:57 | Kallang, Singapore | |- | Win | align=center| 9–0 | Alexandre Machado | TKO (submission to punches) |ONE Championship: Fists Of Fury 2 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 3:28 | Kallang, Singapore | |- | Win | align=center| 8–0 | Lucas Alsina | TKO (punches) | GTC 07 - Golden Team Championship 7 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 3:34 | Moscow, Russian | |- | Win | align=center| 7–0 | Alexei Kudin | TKO (punches) | Fight Nights Global 93 | | align=center| 2 | align=center| 3:32 | Moscow, Russia | |- | Win | align=center| 6–0 | Jake Heun | Submission (keylock) | ASC 1 - Absolute Siberian Championship 1 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 1:45 | Kemerovo, Russia | |- | Win | align=center| 5–0 | Baba Agaev | Submission (kimura) | Fight Nights Global 91 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 1:23 | Moscow, Russia | |- | Win | align=center| 4–0 | Michał Wlazło | Submission (choke) | GTC 03 - Golden Team Championship 3 | | align=center| N/A | align=center| N/A | Lyubertsy, Russia | |- | Win | align=center| 3–0 | Reza Torabi | TKO (punches) | GTC 01 - Golden Team Championship 1 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| N/A | Moscow, Russia | |- | Win | align=center| 2–0 | Murad Kalimetov | KO/TKO | Battle On The Volga Border | | align=center| N/A | align=center| N/A | Balakovo, Russia | |- | Win | align=center| 1–0 | Ilya Gunenko | TKO (punches) | SK Pro - Grand Prix MMA Quarterfinals | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 2:21 | Tomsk, Russia | |- See also List of current ONE fighters List of male mixed martial artists List of undefeated mixed martial artists References External links Anatoly Malykhin at ONE Championship 1988 births Living people Russian male mixed martial artists Mixed martial artists utilizing wrestling Mixed martial artists utilizing boxing Heavyweight mixed martial artists
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This is a list of notable alumni of the University of San Francisco School of Law. Academia Ifeoma Ajunwa (2007), writer and professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law Edward Imwinkelried (1969), Evidence Scholar and Professor at UC Davis School of Law Thomas Nazario (1975), noted professor, lawyer, and scholar of human rights and international children's rights Arts, Entertainment, and Journalism Cupcake Brown (2001), author and lawyer, wrote A Piece of Cake: A Memoir Emily Compagno (2006), attorney, TV host, former National Football League cheerleader, Fox News Channel contributor John Corcoran, speechwriter for the Governor of California and White House staffer Jeff Gottesfeld (1981), novelist and television writer Kimberly Guilfoyle (1994), former assistant San Francisco district attorney and television personality Gini Graham Scott (1990), author Dick Spotswood (1973), journalist and politician Athletics Tatiana Lysenko (2005), Ukrainian gold medalist at the 1992 Summer Olympics and world champion gymnast Marcus McElhenney (2014), lawyer and bronze medalist at the 2008 Summer Olympics Juliet Starrett (2003), two-time whitewater rafting world champion and CEO of CrossFit San Francisco Andy Wolfe, lawyer and noted college basketball player Business Byington Ford (did not graduate), noted real estate developer Hekani Jakhalu, businesswoman and social entrepreneur Lloyd Levitin (1961), businessman and professor Marjorie Scardino (1975), CEO of Pearson PLC, and the first woman to head a top 100 firm on the London Stock Exchange Government and Politics Members of Congress John Burton (1960), long-serving politician, member of the United States House of Representatives (1974-1983), California State Assembly (1965-1974; 1988–1996); California State Senate (1996-2004); and Chair of the California Democratic Party (1973-1974; 2009–2017) John F. Shelley (1932), member of the United States House of Representatives (1949-1964), Mayor of San Francisco (1964-1968), and member of the California State Senate (1939-1947) Members of State Legislatures Randy Iwase (1974), member of the Hawaii Senate (1990-2000) Susan C. Lee (1982), member of the Maryland House of Delegates (2002-2015) and Maryland Senate (2015–present) Sylvia Luke (1995), member of the Hawaii House of Representatives (1999–present) J. Eugene McAteer, member of the California Senate (1959-1967) Bill Monning (1976), member of the California State Assembly (2008-2012) and California State Senate (2012-2020) Arthur Ohnimus (1921), Chief Clerk of the California State Assembly (1923-1937; 1941–1967) Frank S. Petersen (1951), member of the California Senate (1963-1967) and Judge on the Del Norte County Superior Court (1966-1988) State and Territorial Executive Offices Ron Knecht (1995), Nevada State Controller (2015-2019) and member of the Nevada Assembly (2002-2004) Thomas C. Lynch (1929), 25th Attorney General of California (1964-1971) and District Attorney of San Francisco (1951-1964) Leo T. McCarthy (1958), Lieutenant Governor of California (1983-1995); member and Speaker of the California State Assembly (1969-1982); member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (1964-1968) Faoa Aitofele Sunia (1975), Lieutenant Governor of American Samoa (2003-2013) Bill Schuette (1979), Michigan Attorney General (2011-2019), member of the United States House of Representatives (1985-1991), and Justice of the Michigan Court of Appeals (2003-2009) Municipal and Local Offices Angela Alioto (1983), civil rights attorney and member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (1989-1997) Matthew R. Beauchamp (1984), District Attorney of Colusa County, California (2016–present) David Brady (1976), District Attorney of Trinity County, California (2020–present) Michael Hennessey (1973), long-serving Sheriff of the City and County of San Francisco (1980–2012) John C. Houlihan, Mayor of Oakland (1961-1966) Suzy Loftus (2005), interim District Attorney of San Francisco (2019-2020) William J. Quinn (1925), Chief of the San Francisco Police Department (1929-1940) Jill Ravitch (1987), District Attorney of Sonoma County, California (2011–present) Anne Marie Schubert (1989), District Attorney of Sacramento County, California (2015–present) Katy Tang (2017), member and President of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (2013-2019) Joseph E. Tinney (1933), member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (1961-1966) and San Francisco City Assessor (1966-1979) Brendon Woods (1996), Public Defender of Alameda County, California (2012–present) Judicial and Legal Figures National Supreme Court Justices Daniel Foley (1974), Justice of the Supreme Court of Palau (2013-present) and Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals (2000-2016) Federal Judges Saundra Brown Armstrong (1977), Justice of the U.S. District Court, Northern District of California (1991–present) Ellen Carroll (1980), Judge on the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California (1998-2012) Peter M. Elliott (1953), Judge on the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California (1971-1989) Roger D. Foley (1946), long-serving and noted Chief Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Nevada (1962-1996) and Attorney General of Nevada (1959-1962) George Bernard Harris (1926), Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California (1946-1983) and San Francisco Municipal Court (1941-1946) Maria-Elena James (1978), Magistrate Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California (1994-2018) Mark N. Olds (1945), Justice of the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii William Thomas Sweigert (1923), Justice of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California (1959-1983) and the San Francisco County Superior Court (1949-1959) Kandis Westmore (1997), Magistrate Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California (2012–present) Frederick J. Woelflen (1946), Chief Magistrate and Justice of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California (1978-1992) Owen E. Woodruff Jr. (1952), Chief Magistrate and Justice of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California (1981-1984) State Supreme Court Justices Ming Chin (1967), Justice of the Supreme Court of California (1996-2020) Martin Jenkins (1980), Justice of the Supreme Court of California (2020–present), California Courts of Appeal (2008-2019), and United States District Court for the Northern District of California (1997-2008) Buell A. Nesbett (1940), the first Chief Justice of the Alaska Supreme Court (1959-1970) Raymond L. Sullivan (1930), Justice of the Supreme Court of California (1966-1977) and California Courts of Appeal (1961-1966) Mary Jane Theis (1974), Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois (2010–present) State Appellate Court Justices Herbert L. Ashby (1958), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1972-1992) John E. Benson (1955), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1986-1994) and San Francisco County Superior Court (1974-1986) Preston Devine (1927), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1966-1974) Robert L. Dossee (1960), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1979-1998) and San Francisco County Superior Court (1972-1979) Norman H. Elkington (1927), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1959-1988) Carl Evans (1950), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal and Fresno County Superior Court Daniel M. Hanlon (1964), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1992-2000) and San Francisco County Superior Court (1978-1992) Barbara J.R. Jones (1974), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1996-2020) and San Francisco County Superior Court (1992-1996) Robert F. Kane (1952), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1971-1979), San Mateo County Superior Court (1969-1971), and the United States Ambassador to Ireland (1984-1985) Donald B. King (1958), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1982-1996) William R. McGuiness (1972), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (2002–present) and Alameda County Superior Court (1986-1997) John B. Molinari (1933), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1962-1977) and on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1950s) Joanne Parrilli (1974), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (1995-2007) and on the Alameda County Superior Court (1988-1995) Maria P. Rivera (1974), Justice of the California Courts of Appeal (2002-2018) and Contra Costa County Superior Court (1996-2002) Allison M. Rouse (1948), Justice of California Courts of Appeal (1971-1988) and San Francisco County Superior Court (1967-1971) State Trial Court Judges Stephen P. Acquisto (1994), Judge on the Sacramento County Superior Court (2014-present) Arthur J. Anderson (1935), Judge on the Lassen County Superior Court (1973-1979) Byron Arnold (1930), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1955-1971) Lorenzo Arredondo (1972), Judge on Lake County Circuit Court (1986-2010) Joseph G. Babich (1951), Judge on the Sacramento County Superior Court (1964-1984) Lindi L. Baker (1984), Judge on the Josephine County Circuit Court (2005-present) David Ballati (1975), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1995-2009) James D. Barbolino (1969), Judge on the Placer County Superior Court (1984-2004) Martha Beckwith (1976), Judge on the Alaskan District Court for Anchorage (1984-1992) James G. Bertoli (1985), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (2000–present) John J. Bible (1959), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1978-1993) John J. Boskovich (1953), Judge on the Sacramento County Superior Court (1970s-1980s) Nathaniel Bradley (1947), Judge on the Tulare County Superior Court (1971-1988) J. Michael Brown (1964), Judge on the Humboldt County Superior Court (1982-2018) Jackie Brown (1977), Judge on the Orange County Superior Court (2008-present) Neal Cabrinha (1967), Judge on the Santa Clara County Superior Court (1998-2013) Walter F. Calcagno (1948), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1969-1985) Roland Candee (1978), Judge on the Sacramento County Superior Court (1992-2012) Michael Candela (1987), Judge on the Butte County Superior Court (2010-present) Robert E. Carey (1948), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1971-1989) C. Harold Caulfield (1916), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1956-1971) James G. Changaris (1951), Judge on the Sutter County Superior Court (1982-1988) Robert D. Chapman (1951), Judge on the Santa Clara County Superior Court (1980-1990s) Leeland J. Cole-Chu (1978), Judge on the New London County Superior Court (2012-present) Marie Bertillion Collins (1958), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (1970-1995) Steve Counelis (1988), Judge on the Riverside County Superior Court (1992-present) Frank J. Creede Jr. (1950), Judge on the Fresno County Superior Court (1973-1998) Melvin I. Cronin (1921), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1944-1977) Ray Cunningham (1973), Judge on the Santa Clara County Superior Court (1984-2008) Thomas J. Dandurand (1960), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1971-1994) John Davidson (1981), Judge on the San Diego County Superior Court (1994-2010) Michael Robert Deems (1985), Judge on the Butte County Superior Court (2012-present) Louis B. Dematteis (1933), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1953-1973) N. Edward Denton (1952), Judge on the Mono County Superior Court (1985-1998) Joseph Desmond (1960), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1998-2002) and San Francisco Municipal Court (1983-1998) Ralph V. De Voto (1932), Judge on the Lake County Superior Court (1969-1983) Ursula Jones Dickson (1998), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (2013-present) Carly Dolan (1998), Judge on the Mendocino County Superior Court (2017–present) Sean Dowling (1974), Judge on the Nevada County Superior Court (2005-2015) Stephen Drew (1972), Judge on the Tulare County Superior Court (1990-2010) Robert J. Drewes (1948), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1966-1980) Terrance R. Duncan (1966), Judge on the Monterey County Superior Court (1995-2011) Lynn Duryee (1979), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (1993-2014) Kristine Eagle (1989), Judge on the San Joaquin County Superior Court (2016-present) Rochelle C. East (1996), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (2013–present) Arthur Eissinger (1951), Judge on the Sacramento County Superior Court (1966-1987) Wayne Ellison (1975), Judge on the Fresno County Superior Court (1995-2015) John A. Ertola (1954), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1970-1991) and member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors Lyle R. Edson (1948), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1969-1983) Coleman Fannin (1959), Judge on the Contra Costa County Superior Court (1972-1988) Robert Fairwell (1951), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (1967-2007) Thomas E. Feeney (1944), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1966-1967) Lee Felice (1974), Judge on the Kern County Superior Court (1990s-2012) William F. Ferroggiaro Jr. (1962), Judge on the Humboldt County Superior Court (1983-1997) Richard P. Figone (1961), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1981-1996) Jeffrey R. Finigan (1993), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (2015-present) Ralph Flageollet (1950), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1979-2000) Eric Fleming (1995), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (2018–present) Paul Flynn (1968), Judge on the Los Angeles County Superior Court (1989-2006) Robert Foiles (1984), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (2006-present) Bryan Foster (1974), Judge on the San Bernardino County Superior Court (2003-present) Frank C. Francis (1962), Judge on the Nevada County Superior Court (1977-1997) Jose S. Franco (1998), Judge on the Santa Clara County Superior Court (2015-present) Gail Fraties (1966), Judge on the Bethel County Superior Court (1986-1989) Donald Fretz (1951), Judge on the Merced County Superior Court (1963-1990) John J. Gallagher (1965), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (1976-1997) David A. Garcia (1970), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1990-2003) and Municipal Court (1983-1990) Richard C. Garner (1957), Judge on the San Bernardino Superior Court (1971-1990s) Patrick D. Gilroy (1960), Judge on the Fifth Circuit Court of Oregon (1974-2005) Raymond J. Giordano (1970), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (1981-2006) Joseph M. Golden (1916), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1956-1971) Larry J. Goodman (1974), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (1984-2017) Patricia A. Gray (1984), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (1994-2000) Michael R. Griffin (1968), Judge on the Carson County District Court (1979-2007) Paul Haakenson (1993), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (2006–present) Susan L. Hahn (1982), Judge on the Yakima County Superior Court (1990-2017) Harold Haley (1928), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (1965-1970) and victim of the Marin County Civic Center attacks (1970) Barry Hammer (1962), Judge on the San Luis Obispo Superior Court (1985-2006) Richard James Henderson (1974), Judge on the Mendocino County Superior Court (2000-2016) Christopher M. Honigsberg (2005), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (2018–present) Peggy Hora (1978), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (1984-2005) Margaret Johnson (1978), Judge on the Santa Clara County Superior Court (2000-2018) Alesia F. Jones (1991), Judge on the Solano County Superior Court (2008–present) Joseph Karesh (1933), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1960-1978) William F. Lanam (1959), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1972-1990) Leland J. Lazarus (1929), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1965-1974) Kenneth L. Lewis (1946), Judge on the Kitsap County District Court Frank J. Mackin (1928), Judge on the Los Angeles County Superior Court (1961-1971) Runston Maino (1968), Judge on the San Diego County Superior Court (1987-present) Lawrence W. Marvin (1953), Judge on the Sacramento County Superior Court (1985-1990s) Jordan L. Matinelli (1921), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (1949-1961) Leonard H. McBride (1953), Judge on the Orange County Superior Court (1979-2002) Thomas F. McBride (1940), Judge on the Contra Costa County Superior Court (1965-1981) Brigid McCann (1991), Judge on the San Bernardino Superior Court (2008-present) Charles J. McGolderick (1929), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (1951-1968) E. Warren McGuire (1950), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (1968-1988) Winton McKibben (1952), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (1976-1995) Barbara Miller (1978), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (1996-2009) Heather D. Morse (1981), Judge on the Santa Cruz County Superior Court (1989-2017) Hugh F. Mullin Jr. (1932), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1934-1949) Stephen Murphy (1981), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (2017–present) Gary Nadler (1979), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (2002–present) Clifford L. Nakea (1971), Judge on the Fifth Circuit Court of Hawaii (1978-2004) Karlene Navarro (2007), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (2021–present) Diane Northway (1969), Judge on the Santa Clara County Superior Court (1990-2013) Timothy W. O'Brien (1949), Judge on the Mendocino County Superior Court (1971-1985) William A. O'Brien (1926), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1963-1970) Agnes O'Brien Smith (1941), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1970-1978) Raymond J. O'Connor (1931), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1964-1969) Edward O'Day Jr. (1936), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1960-1972) Robert O'Neill (1965), Judge on the San Diego County Superior Court (1978-2000s) Frank J. Passalacqua (1962), Judge on the Sonoma County Superior Court (1964-2001) Claude D. Perasso (1953), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1971-2006) Rosemary Pfeiffer (1976), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1991-2011) Gary M. Picetti (1972), Judge on the Alameda County Superior Court (2015-present) Daniel A. Quinlan (1948), Judge on the Nez Perce County District Court (1970-1973) Dawna Reeves (1995), Judge on the Stanislaus County Superior Court (2008-present) Robert L. Schouweiler (1965), Judge of the Second District Court of Nevada (1981-1991) William Edmund Scott (1923), Judge on the San Mateo County Superior Court (1946-1971) Frank W. Shaw (1953), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1971-1980s) LeRoy A. Simmons (1967), Judge on the San Bernardino County Superior Court (1994-2004) Andrew E. Sweet (1992), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (2009–present) G. Dave Teja (1958), Judge on the Sutter County Superior Court (1978-1990s) Gary W. Thomas (1961), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (1986-1998) William F. Traverso (1918), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1945-1965) Ksenia Tsenin (1973), Judge of the San Francisco County Superior Court (1998-2017) Charles R. Tunley (1964), Judge on the Alaskan Superior Court for Nome (1980-1995) Herman A. Van Der Zee (1922), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1947-1972) W. Lee Vavuris (1944), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1971-1982) Luis M. Villareal (1975), Judge on the Solano County Superior Court (1997-2005) and Municipal Court (1982-1997) Dorothy von Beroldingen (1954), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1977-1999) and member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (1966-1977) Marcia J. Waldorf (1975), Judge on the First Circuit Court of Hawaii (1985-2007) Raymond D. Williamson (1963), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (1985-1998) Mary E. Wiss (1981), Judge on the San Francisco County Superior Court (2001–present) Beverly Wood (1983), Judge on the Marin County Superior Court (2013-2021) Douglas R. Woodworth (1952), Judge on the San Diego County Superior Court (1972-1988) and San Diego Municipal Court (1968-1972) Local Judges Charles E. Aguilar (1960), Judge on the Stanislaus County Municipal Court (1977-1998) Jeffrey S. Allen (1973), Judge on the Alameda County Municipal Court (1985-1990s) John M. Allen (1969), Judge on the Alameda County Municipal Court (1984-1990s) Clifford B. Bachand (1951), Judge on the Alameda County Municipal Court (1976-1980s) George T. Choppelas (1961), Judge on the San Francisco Municipal Court (1982-1990s) Frank J. Comaich (1930), Judge on the San Mateo County Municipal Court (1960-1973) Thomas F. Curtin (1954), Judge on the Contra Costa County Municipal Court (1971-1990s) Dan B. Eymann (1947), Judge on the Fresno County Municipal Court (1954-1977) John J. Fahey (1931), Judge on the San Mateo County Municipal Court (1940-1949) Richard D. Gravelle (1954), Judge on the San Mateo County Municipal Court (1984-1986) Leighton Hatch (1954), Judge on the Sacramento County Municipal Court (1972-1989) and Director of the California Department of Consumer Affairs (1969-1972) Kiernan R. Hyland (1950), Judge on the Sonoma County Municipal Court (1972-1981) James E. Jones Jr. (1950), Judge on the Sonoma County Municipal Court (1972-1981) William J. Mallen (1961), Judge on the San Francisco Municipal Court (1982-1992) George E. Maloney (1931), Judge on the San Francisco Municipal Court (1961-1976) George E. McDonald (1949), Judge on the Alameda County Municipal Court (1966-1985) John J. McMahon (1925), Judge on the San Francisco Municipal Court Steven D. McMorris (1969), Judge on the Douglas County Court of Justice (1984-?) J. Dominique Olcomendy (1959), Judge on the San Francisco Municipal Court (1974-1995) Roy G. Pucci (1948), Judge on the Alameda County Municipal Court (1966-1970s) Raymond H. Simmons (1955), Judge on the Monterey County Municipal Court (1971-1998) Eric R. Uldall (1970), Judge on the Solano County Municipal Court (1984-1990s) James C. Walsh Jr. (1946), Judge on the Alameda County Municipal Court (1977-1980s) James S. White (1966), Judge on the Alameda County Municipal Court (1979-1990s) Russell Zaches (1936), Judge on the Monterey County Municipal Court Ernest C. Zunino (1963), Judge on the Marin County Municipal Court (1985-1990s) Judges of Other Courts Theodore Bofinger (1950), Federal Administrative Law Judge (1963-1985) Thomas Patrick Brady (1948), Federal Administrative Law Judge (1967-1993) Judith A. Epstein (1977), Judge on the State Bar Court of California Tamia Gordon (1997), Administrative Law Judge of the Social Security Administration (2014-2018) and United States Department of Health and Human Services (2018-2020) Other Legal Figures Tom Asimou (1998), noted lawyer specializing in missing persons cases Thomas Anthony Durkin (1973), criminal defense and civil rights attorney Vincent Hallinan (1918), noted lawyer and the Progressive Party in the 1952 United States presidential election Frederick J. Kenney (1991), Judge Advocate General of the United States Coast Guard (2011-2014) Jay Leiderman (1999), criminal defense lawyer noted for work with cases involving computer hacking Mark Massara (1987), Director of the Sierra Club Coastal Programs and environmental lawyer Kevin V. Ryan (1984), United States Attorney for the Northern District of California (2002-2007) Patricia A. Shiu (1982), Director of the Federal Contract Compliance (2009-2016) and employment attorney Joe Alioto Veronese (2000), civil rights attorney and civil servant Chan Chung Wing (1918), immigration and civil rights attorney; and the first Chinese American lawyer in California Further reading Abrahamson, Eric. The University of San Francisco School of Law, A History, 1912-1978. The University of San Francisco, 1987. Ziajka, Alan. Legacy and Promise: 150 Years of Jesuit Education at the University of San Francisco. The University of San Francisco, 2005. Ziajka, Alan. The University of San Francisco School of Law Century. The University of San Francisco, 2012. Ziajka, Alan. USF Firsts, Facts, Honors, and Achievements 1855-2017. The University of San Francisco, 2017. References University of San Francisco School of Law
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Jo Deseure is a Belgian stage and film actress. After developing an interest in acting, Deseure enrolled at the Institut Supérieur des Arts in Brussels and graduated from there in 1984. She later began working in theatre and became a regular performer at the Compagnie des Bosons in Ixelles. She made her film debut in Toto the Hero (1991), a drama film directed by Jaco Van Dormael. Since then, Deseure has appeared in My Angel (2004), Sister Smile (2009), Sans laisser de traces (2010), and Madly in Life (2020). The latter film earned her a Magritte Award for Best Actress. Selected filmography References External links Living people Belgian film actresses Belgian stage actresses Actresses from Brussels 20th-century Belgian actresses 21st-century Belgian actresses Magritte Award winners Year of birth missing (living people)
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