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73169140
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%81%C3%B3d%C5%BA%20metropolitan%20area
|
Łódź metropolitan area
|
The Łódź metropolitan area (known in Polish as: Łódźki Obszar Metropolitalny is the metropolitan area of Łódź. The metropolitan area covers ten counties in the Łódź Voivodeship, with an area of 2,496 km2.
The largest cities or towns within the metropolitan area are Łódź, Pabianice, Zgierz and Aleksandrów Łódzki.
Economy
In 2021 Łódź's gross metropolitan product was €16.8 billion. This puts Łódź in 150th place among cities in European Union.
See also
Metropolitan areas in Poland
References
Metropolitan areas of Poland
|
73169149
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ba%C5%9Far%20%C3%96nal
|
Başar Önal
|
Başar Önal (born 8 May 2004) is a football player who plays as a winger for De Graafschap in the Eerste Divisie. Born in the Netherlands, he is a youth international for Turkiye.
Professional career
Önal began playing football with the youth sides of DZC '68 at the age of 5, before being scouted with De Graafschap at 8 years old.
He worked his way up their youth categories, eventually promoting straight to their senior team in 2022. He made his senior and professional debut with De Graafschap as a late substitute in a 3–1 Eerste Divisie loss to MVV Maastricht on 18 March 2022. On 15 April 2022, he signed his first professional contract with De Graafschap for 3 seasons.
International career
Önal is a youth international for Turkey, having played up to the Turkey U19s.
Personal life
Önal was born in the Netherlands to Turkish parents. He is a childhood fan of the Turkish club Fenerbahçe.
Playing style
Önal began playing football as a left-back, before moving to left winger as a U17. He is a fast attacker who is good at handling the ball and getting past opponents. He likes having the ball at his feet, and attacking from the flanks or as a false striker.
References
External links
2004 births
Living people
People from Doetinchem
Turkish footballers
Turkey youth international footballers
Dutch footballers
Dutch people of Turkish descent
De Graafschap players
Eerste Divisie players
Association football wingers
|
73169157
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embassy%20of%20Peru%2C%20Tokyo
|
Embassy of Peru, Tokyo
|
The embassy of Peru in Japan () represents the permanent diplomatic mission of the South American country in Japan, in addition to two consulates general in Nagoya and Tokyo.
The current Peruvian ambassador to Japan is Roberto Seminario.
History
Both countries established relations in 1873, and 790 Japanese immigrants arrived to Peru 20 years later in 1899. Today, Peru has the second largest Japanese population in Latin America after Brazil.
During the early 20th century, Peru had consulates in Tokyo, Kobe and Osaka. These were closed after Peru severed relations with Japan in January 1942 due to the Attack on Pearl Harbor during World War II. Relations were reestablished after the treaty of San Francisco, and legations between both countries were reopened between 1952 and 1955, being followed in 1956 by an exchange of embassies.
See also
Embassy of Japan, Lima
References
Bibliography
Peru
Tokyo
Japan–Peru relations
|
73169171
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minha%20Biblioteca%20Cat%C3%B3lica
|
Minha Biblioteca Católica
|
Minha Biblioteca Católica (en: My Catholic Library) is a Brazilian publisher, aimed at the Catholic public.
Created in 2017 in Dois Irmãos, Rio Grande do Sul, it has printed more than three million copies, including spirituality classics, reissues of religious publications and unpublished works in the country. The company distributes the content through a subscription club.
History
The club emerged in December 2017, from the idea of three friends — among them producer Matheus Bazzo — who had a common interest: the search for quality Catholic books. With this, my Catholic Library was conceived, operating as a subscription club with monthly sending of works to the public. The first shipment was made in January 2018 and there was quickly a high demand. In the first month, subscriptions beat the stock, requiring the closure of the site for two days.
Since its inception, the company has counted 150,000 subscribers and has printed more than three million copies. Monthly, boxes are sent with a book related to the Catholic faith, support readings and other items. Today, the Library has 70 employees. The based is located in Porto Alegre, with the logistics service being operated in Dois Irmãos.
Among the published publications are Story of a Soul, by Teresa of Lisieux, Theology of the Body, by St. John Paul II, and Interior Castle, by Teresa d'Ávila. In 2019, the company produced the series Sons of Cister, about a group of Cistercian monks in the interior of Rio Grande do Sul. The production was the kickoff to the creation of Lumine TV, an on-demand video service aimed at Catholic audiences.
It is the largest religious signature club in Brazil.
External links
Official website
References
Subscription services
Brazilian books
Brazilian publishers (people)
Rio Grande do Sul
Catholic publishing companies
|
73169255
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thesium%20goetzeanum
|
Thesium goetzeanum
|
Thesium goetzeanum is a species of plant from Africa, where it grows between South Africa and Kenya.
History
Species in the genus Thesium are poorly understood. This was particularly the case for the Thesium goetzeanum complex, which was assessed in 2018. It contained a number of morphologically similar and variable species in southern Africa. The number of species in this complex was reduced from sixteen to nine.
Thesium goetzeanum was found to have the highest number of synonyms. Five species were determined to be a synonym. These are T. coriarium A.W.Hill, T. deceptum N.E.Br, T. macrogyne A.W.Hill, T. nigrum A.W.Hill, and T. orientale A.W.Hill.
Description
Plants start off herbacoues with virgate growth form (erect, rod-like stems) and become increasingly woody and often decumbent (branches grow along the ground but turn up towards the ends) with age. It has a rhizomatous rootstock. The leaves are linear or lance shaped and often have roughly hairy margins. Flowers are present between August and February. They are long and borne in racemose cymes. The bracts are mostly fused to the stalk. There is no fruit stipe.
Similar species
Thesium goetzeanum is commonly confused with Thesium resedoides as both have similar growth forms. Thesium goetzeanum, however, has sparser branches with parallel stem (grow at about 45° in T. resedoides), vegetative shoots that grow past the inflorescences, and larger flowers.
Distribution and habitat
This species is found growing between South Africa and Kenya. It is found in Botswana, Burundi, Eswatini, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. While it prefers the grassland biome, it has also been recorded from rocky savanna areas. It grows at altitudes of .
Ecology
This species occurs in the highest density in areas that have recently burned.
Etymology
This species is named after Walter Goetze, a German naturalist, explorer and photographer who collected botanical and zoological specimens in Tanzania.
Conservation
As this species is abundant and widespread, it is classified as least concern.
References
Plants described in 1901
Flora of Botswana
Flora of Burundi
Flora of Swaziland
Flora of Kenya
Flora of Lesotho
Flora of Malawi
Flora of Mozambique
Flora of Rwanda
Flora of South Africa
Flora of Tanzania
Flora of Zambia
Flora of Zimbabwe
|
73169301
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manipuri%20Hindus
|
Manipuri Hindus
|
Manipuri Hindus or Hindu Manipuris may refer to:
Meitei Hindus, the predominant Hindu community of Manipur
Meitei Brahmins, Meitei speaking Brahmins of Manipur
any other Hindu people living in Manipur
|
73169306
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1947%E2%80%9348%20Lehigh%20Engineers%20men%27s%20ice%20hockey%20season
|
1947–48 Lehigh Engineers men's ice hockey season
|
The 1947–48 Lehigh Engineers men's ice hockey season was the 5th season of play for the program. The Engineers represented Lehigh University and were coached by Charles W. Simmons in his 5th season.
Season
When Lehigh opened their season, they had agreed to participate in a 3-game tournament in Clinton, New York. Unfortunately, as most of the team were new additions who had only 4 practices to get used to one another, the Engineers performed rather poorly. After getting stomped by the hosts 3–17, the squad was throttled by Middlebury 0–22, setting numerous program records on both sides. While the results of the final match with Union were comparatively much better, the Dutchmen were very weak competition.
As if to drive the point home about just how much ground the Engineers had to make up, a further game with Hamilton shortly thereafter ended 0–15. In fact, Lehigh would be shutout in five consecutive games, an NCAA record (since broken), and would not score again until their meeting with Georgetown on February 14. After a further pair of lopsided losses, the Engineers played probably their best game of the season when they took on the Harrison Maple Leafs. While their comeback ultimately fell short, it was the closest the team came to a victory all year and showed that the offense did have some fight in them.
Roster
Standings
Schedule and results
|-
!colspan=12 style=";" | Silver Anniversary Hamilton Tournament
|-
!colspan=12 style=";" | Regular Season
† Both Pennsylvania and Penn State fielded club teams at this time.
References
External links
Lehigh Mountain Hawks men's ice hockey seasons
Lehigh
Lehigh
Lehigh
|
73169355
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manipuri%20culture
|
Manipuri culture
|
Manipuri culture may refer to:
Meitei culture, the culture of Meitei people, the predominant ethnic group of Manipur
Overall multiethnic culture of Manipur
|
73169367
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle%20of%20Batala
|
Battle of Batala
|
The Battle of Batala took place in December 1764. Ahmad Shah Durrani and his force marched towards Batala after their defeat at Jiandala and as soon as they reached Batala, Sikhs opposed them and a battle took place where Durranis were defeated and Afghan commander Sarbuland Khan was wounded.
Background
Ahmad Shah Abdali marched his seventh campaign into India after hearing reports about the Sikh triumphs, with 18,000 Afghans and adding another 12,000 soldiers under the chief of Qalat, Nasir Khan Baluch. As Abdali and his forces got nearer to the town of Jandiala, the Sikhs opposed them and a battle took place resulting in the defeat of Afghans. Afghan commander Rahim Khan Bakhshi was killed in the battle. . After defeat Ahmad Shah Durrani marched towards Batala, reaching the town in 15 days of his travel from Lahore..
Battle
When Abdali and his forces reached Batala, the Sikhs opposed them and a battle took place resulting in the defeat of Afghans. Afghan commander Sarbuland Khan was wounded in the battle.
Aftermath
After back to back defeat Durrani marched towards Adinanagar..
References
Battles involving the Durrani Empire
Battles involving the Sikhs
|
73169376
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%20Patriot%20League%20women%27s%20basketball%20tournament
|
2023 Patriot League women's basketball tournament
|
The 2023 Patriot League women's basketball tournament was the conference postseason tournament for the Patriot League. The tournament was held March 4, 6, 9, and 12, 2023, at campus sites of the higher seeds. The winner receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.
Seeds
All ten teams in the conference standings qualify for the tournament. The teams are seeded by record in conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records.
The tiebreakers used by the Patriot League are: 1) head-to-head record of teams with identical record, 2) comparison of records against individual teams in the conference starting with the top-ranked team(s) and working down, 3) NCAA NET Rankings available on day following the conclusion of Patriot League regular-season play and 4) comparison of winning percentage versus out-of-league common opponents.
Schedule
Bracket
* denotes overtime period
References
2022–23 Patriot League women's basketball season
Patriot League women's basketball tournament
Patriot League men's basketball tournament
|
73169394
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C4%B0kizdere%20District
|
İkizdere District
|
İkizdere District is a district of the Rize Province of Turkey. Its seat is the town of İkizdere. Its area is 855 km2, and its population is 6,409 (2021).
Composition
There is one municipality in İkizdere District:
İkizdere
There are 29 villages in İkizdere District:
Ayvalık (Kapse)
Ballıköy (Anzer)
Başköy
Bayırköy (Kolyav)
Çamlıkköy
Çataltepe
Cevizlik (Plakorum)
Çiçekli
Çifteköprü
Demirkapı (Homeze)
Dereköy
Diktaş (İksenit)
Eskice (Haya)
Gölyayla (Kabahor)
Güneyce (Varda)
Gürdere (Etmone)
Güvenköy
Ihlamur
Ilıcaköy (Vane)
Kama
Meşeköy (Petran)
Ortaköy (Cimil)
Rüzgarlı (Mize)
Sivrikaya (Köhser)
Şimşirli (Gomes)
Tozköy (Mahura)
Tulumpınar
Yağcılar (Vilköy)
Yerelma (Cavatoz)
References
Districts of Rize Province
|
73169395
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immovable%20Cultural%20Heritage%20in%20the%20Prizren%20District
|
Immovable Cultural Heritage in the Prizren District
|
This list includes Immovable Cultural Heritage sites (listed by the ) in the Prizren District of Serbia – which only partly overlaps with the District of Prizren of Kosovo.
Cultural monuments
Exceptional importance
|}
Archaeological sites
Historic landmarks
Spatial cultural-historical units
See also
Immovable Cultural Heritage of Exceptional Importance (Serbia)
Immovable Cultural Heritage of Great Importance (Serbia)
Monuments of Kosovo
Notes
References
Cultural heritage of Serbia
Monuments and memorials in Serbia
Monuments and memorials in Kosovo
|
73169396
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%20Andrew%27s%20F.C.%20%28Glasgow%29
|
St Andrew's F.C. (Glasgow)
|
St Andrew's Football Club was a Scottish football club based in the city of Glasgow.
History
The club was formed in 1874. Its first recorded match was a 1–0 win over the Ramblers club at the latter's Queen's Park ground, thanks to a goal "taken in capital style" by Marshall, who dribbled past the Ramblers' half-backs and putting in a shot just under the tape.
St Andrew's had enough members to form two sides by 1875 as the second XI beat the Hamilton Academical F.C. second XI 1–0 in September that year.
The club's only entry to the Scottish Cup was in 1875–76. In the first round the club beat Telegraphists F.C. at home 3–0; St Andrew's held the Telegraphists off in the first half, playing into a heavy wind, but scored three times in the first 15 minutes of the second.
In the second round, the club lost 2–0 against Dumbreck F.C. at Ibroxhill, with a third Dumbreck goal not allowed as the umpires could not agree on an offside.
The last listed fixture for the club was at Lancefield F.C. in January 1876. For the 1876–77 season, at least three of the St Andrew's players are found playing for Alexandra Athletic.
Ground
In common with a number of other Glasgow clubs, the club used the Glasgow Green whenever hosting matches.
Notable players
Sam Ricketts, later a Rangers player and official, played for the side in 1874.
References
Defunct football clubs in Scotland
Association football clubs established in 1874
1874 establishments in Scotland
Association football clubs disestablished in 1876
1876 disestablishments in Scotland
Football in Glasgow
|
73169403
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javelina%20Jundred
|
Javelina Jundred
|
Javelina Jundred is a 100 mile (160 km) ultramarathon held at McDowell Mountain Regional Park in Fountain Hills, Arizona. Founded in 2002, it is one of the most popular ultramarathons in the United States, with over 800 participants as of 2023. The course also hosts shorter distances including a and a race.
Race course and description
Javelina Jundred is unique among top 100 mile races in that the course consists of loops that all begin and end at race headquarters. Hundred mile runners complete a total of five loops, while the 100k is three and the 31k is one loop. The course is relatively flat and fast for a trail ultramarathon, with of cumulative vertical gain for the hundred mile distance.
Though fall temperatures are relatively cool for the Sonoran Desert, the course is still completely without shade and daytime temperatures can reach up into the 90s. Heat is often one of the top reasons for runners to drop from the race, though at night temperatures drop rapidly.
Held in late October around Halloween weekend, the race has a unique culture with many runners wearing costumes, and unconventional awards such as best costume and best ass. Race organizers typically warn participants and crew that the race is "R rated". Despite the festive atmosphere, the race has recently attracted a competitive field of elite runners, due to the fast course and the fact that it is a qualifier for the Western States Endurance Run, with the top mens and women finishers earning a "Golden Ticket" automatic entry.
History
Founded by Geri Kilgraff in 2002, the inaurgural year of the race had 180 runners. By 2008, the race was organized by Jamil Coury of Aravaipa Running. By 2014, the race had around 700 runners and instituted a waitlist for entrants.
Course records
References
External links
Ultramarathons in the United States
Sports in Maricopa County, Arizona
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73169419
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beilschmiedia%20pergamentacea
|
Beilschmiedia pergamentacea
|
Beilschmiedia pergamentacea is a species of flowering plant in the family Lauraceae, native to southern China, Hainan, Vietnam, and Thailand. A tree reaching , it is often found growing on dry sandy soil, on sandstone, or alongside streams, in hilly or mountainous areas.
References
pergamentacea
Flora of South-Central China
Flora of Southeast China
Flora of Hainan
Flora of Thailand
Flora of Vietnam
Plants described in 1942
|
73169429
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Three%20Musketeers%3A%20D%27Artagnan
|
The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan
|
The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan () is an upcoming action adventure film and the first of a two-part epic saga directed by Martin Bourboulon, based on Alexandre Dumas' 1844 novel The Three Musketeers. The film stars François Civil, Vincent Cassel, Pio Marmaï, Romain Duris, and Eva Green. It will be released theatrically in France by Pathé on 5 April 2023. The sequel, The Three Musketeers: Milady, is set to be released on 13 December 2023. The two-part saga was co-produced by France, Germany and Spain on a $70 million budget and filmed back to back.
Cast
François Civil as D'Artagnan
Vincent Cassel as Athos
Pio Marmaï as Porthos
Romain Duris as Aramis
Eva Green as Milady de Winter
Lyna Khoudri as Constance Bonacieux
Louis Garrel as King Louis XIII
Vicky Krieps as Anne of Austria
Jacob Fortune-Lloyd as Duke of Buckingham
Alexis Michalik as Villeneuve de Radis
Patrick Mille as Henri de Talleyrand-Périgord
Ivan Franek as Ardanza
Ralph Amoussou as Hannibal
Production
The project was announced on 11 February 2021. Produced by Dimitri Rassam for France's Chapter 2, a Mediawan Company, and Pathé, it was co-produced by M6 Films, Germany's Constantin Film and Spain's DeAPlaneta. It was pre-bought by M6, OCS and Canal Plus. The budget for the two-part saga was $70 million. The screenplay for both films was written by Matthieu Delaporte and Alexandre De La Patellière. The score was composed by Guillaume Roussel. Pathé will release the film theatrically in France and handle the international sales. This new adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' 1844 novel The Three Musketeers will introduce a new character, Hannibal, based on the true story of Louis Anniaba, the first Black musketeer in French history.
Filming
The two films were shot back to back for 150 days on location in France, in landmarks such as the Louvre Palace, the Hôtel des Invalides, the Castles of Fontainebleau and Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Fort-la-Latte and Chantilly, as well as the citadel of Saint-Malo and the historic city center of Troyes. Filming began on 16 August 2021 and wrapped on 3 June 2022 at the Farcheville castle. 650 horses and 9,000 extras were used in the production.
Marketing
The first still from the film was unveiled on 2 September 2021. The first official trailer and posted were unveiled on 5 December 2022. The second trailer was released on 15 February 2023.
References
External links
French action adventure films
German action adventure films
Spanish action adventure films
2020s French films
2020s German films
2020s Spanish films
2020s French-language films
Films based on The Three Musketeers
Films set in the 1620s
Films set in France
Films set in Paris
Pathé films
M6 Films films
Constantin Film films
French-language German films
French-language Spanish films
Cultural depictions of Louis XIII
|
73169431
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Three%20Musketeers%3A%20Milady
|
The Three Musketeers: Milady
|
The Three Musketeers: Milady () is an upcoming action adventure film directed by Martin Bourboulon based on Alexandre Dumas' 1844 novel The Three Musketeers. It is a sequel to The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan and the second film of a two-part epic saga. The film stars François Civil, Vincent Cassel, Pio Marmaï, Romain Duris, and Eva Green. It will be released theatrically in France by Pathé on 13 December 2023. The two-part saga was co-produced by France, Germany and Spain on a $70 million budget and filmed back to back.
Cast
François Civil as D'Artagnan
Vincent Cassel as Athos
Pio Marmaï as Porthos
Romain Duris as Aramis
Eva Green as Milady de Winter
Lyna Khoudri as Constance Bonacieux
Louis Garrel as King Louis XIII
Vicky Krieps as Anne of Austria
Jacob Fortune-Lloyd as Duke of Buckingham
Alexis Michalik as Villeneuve de Radis
Patrick Mille as Henri de Talleyrand-Périgord
Ivan Franek as Ardanza
Ralph Amoussou as Hannibal
Production
The project was announced on 11 February 2021. Produced by Dimitri Rassam for France's Chapter 2, a Mediawan Company, and Pathé, it was co-produced by M6 Films, Germany's Constantin Film and Spain's DeAPlaneta. It was pre-bought by M6, OCS and Canal Plus. The budget for the two-part saga was $70 million. The screenplay for both films was written by Matthieu Delaporte and Alexandre De La Patellière. The score was composed by Guillaume Roussel. Pathé will release the film theatrically in France and handle the international sales. This new adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' 1844 novel The Three Musketeers will introduce a new character, Hannibal, based on the true story of Louis Anniaba, the first Black musketeer in French history.
Filming
The two films were shot back to back for 150 days on location in France, in landmarks such as the Louvre Palace, the Hôtel des Invalides, the Castles of Fontainebleau and Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Fort-la-Latte and Chantilly, as well as the citadel of Saint-Malo and the historic city center of Troyes. Filming began on 16 August 2021 and wrapped on 3 June 2022 at the Farcheville castle. 650 horses and 9,000 extras were used in the production.
References
External links
French action adventure films
German action adventure films
Spanish action adventure films
2020s French films
2020s German films
2020s Spanish films
2020s French-language films
Films based on The Three Musketeers
Films set in the 1620s
Films set in France
Films set in Paris
Pathé films
M6 Films films
Constantin Film films
French-language German films
French-language Spanish films
Cultural depictions of Louis XIII
|
73169442
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kizhakku%20Vaasal%20%28TV%20series%29
|
Kizhakku Vaasal (TV series)
|
Kizhakku Vaasal (கிழக்கு வாசல்) is an upcoming Indian Tamil-language television series produced by Raadhika Sarathkumar under the banner of Radaan Mediaworks. The principal characters of the series include Raadhika Sarathkumar, S. A. Chandrasekhar, Reshma Muralidharan and Ashwini Radhakrishna.
The concept of the show was originally based on Visu's 1986 film Samsaram Adhu Minsaram. It is scheduled for release on Star Vijay in the first half of 2023.
Synopsis
The show deal with the a mother struggling with her two daughters.
Cast
Raadhika Sarathkumar
S. A. Chandrasekhar
Reshma Muralidharan
Ashwini Radhakrishna
Production
Development
On January end 2023, Raadhika Sarathkumar confirmed through a press release that it would distribute new Tamil serial for Star Vijay, to be produced by Raadhika Sarathkumar under Radaan Mediaworks, and also debuts as a Television actor S. A. Chandrasekhar.
Casting
Raadhika Sarathkumar was cast in the female lead. Vijay's father and director S. A. Chandrasekhar plays an important role in the serial. On February end 2023, Reshma Muralidharan and Ashwini Radhakrishna confirmed as selected to play the Important role.
References
Star Vijay original programming
Tamil-language melodrama television series
2023 Tamil-language television series debuts
Tamil-language television shows
Television shows set in Tamil Nadu
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73169450
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sticker%20It
|
Sticker It
|
Sticker It is a company based in Bristol, England that produces custom-printed stickers and labels for businesses.
History
The company was started in 2007 when its sister brand, Kartdavid, was founded by two brothers; Michael and David Rubie-Todd. Sticke It was later launched officially in 2018 as the team worked with more businesses within and outside of motorsport industry.
References
British companies established in 2018
Manufacturing companies of the United Kingdom
Companies based in Bristol
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73169536
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20ports%20in%20Kenya
|
List of ports in Kenya
|
This list of Ports and harbours in Kenya details the ports, harbours around the coast of Kenya.
List of ports and harbours in Kenya
References
Ports
Kenya
|
73169550
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elser%20Pier
|
Elser Pier
|
Elser Pier was a historic pier located in downtown Miami, Florida, named after its founder, Matthew Elser, who was born July 2, 1866, in Buffalo, New York. Elser was an entrepreneur who built his wealth in the north before relocating to Miami in 1914. In 1916, Elser petitioned the Miami city council to construct a recreation pier at the intersection of Flagler (then known as Twelfth Street) and Biscayne Bay in downtown Miami. Elser hired the noted architect August Geiger to design the buildings that comprise the pier, and construction began in mid-1916.
References
Piers in Florida
Transportation buildings and structures in Miami
History of Miami
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73169565
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emre%20Top%C3%A7u
|
Emre Topçu
|
Emre Topçu (born 21 August 2005) is a football player who plays as a midfielder for Drogheda United in the Eerste Divisie. Born in Ireland, he is a youth international for Turkiye.
Professional career
Topçu is a youth product of St. Kevin's Boys and Belvedere, before moving to Drogheda United's youth sides in 2020. He made his senior and professional debut with Drogheda United as a late substitute in a 2–0 League of Ireland loss to Sligo Rovers on 3 September 2022. On 15 September 2022, he signed a professional contract with Drogheda United for 2 years.
International career
Topçu was born in Ireland to a Turkish father and Irish mother. He is a youth international for Turkey, having been called up to the Turkey U18s in November 2022.
References
External links
2004 births
Living people
Association footballers from County Meath
Turkish footballers
Turkey youth international footballers
Republic of Ireland association footballers
Turkish people of Irish descent
Irish people of Turkish descent
Drogheda United F.C. players
League of Ireland players
Association football midfielders
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73169570
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amferny%20Sinclair
|
Amferny Sinclair
|
Amferny Stward Arias Sinclair (born January 15, 2000) is an Costa Rican professional soccer player. He played college soccer for Syracuse University.
Playing career
Amferney Sinclair was born Ronald Arias Jimenez and Yolony Sinclair Clark in Alajuela, Costa Rica. He attended Escuela Bri-Bri and was a standout at Liga Deportiva Alajuelense for 11 years.
He has appeared for his home country at various youth levels, most notably at the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup and the 2018 CONCACAF U-20 Championship.
College
Sinclair chose to pursue college soccer at Syracuse University in 2019. At Syracuse, Sinclair appeared in 64 matches during his four years, starting every match of his senior year. As a senior in 2022, Sinclair was named a team captain. He helped clinch Syracuse's first ever national championship with a successful penalty kick in the 7–6 shootout against Indiana. He started 21 matches and played 1,890 minutes.
Semi-pro clubs
Sinclair played for Reading United AC and One Knoxville SC in 2022.
Real Salt Lake
On December 21, 2022, Sinclair was selected by the Real Salt Lake as the 45th overall pick in the 2023 MLS SuperDraft.
Honors
Syracuse University
Atlantic Division regular season: 2022
ACC men's soccer tournament: 2022
NCAA Division I men's soccer tournament: 2022
References
External links
Syrause bio
2000 births
Living people
Association football midfielders
Costa Rican expatriate footballers
Costa Rica youth international footballers
Costa Rica under-20 international footballers
One Knoxville SC players
Reading United A.C. players
Real Salt Lake draft picks
Syracuse Orange men's soccer players
|
73169577
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C4%B0yidere%20District
|
İyidere District
|
İyidere District is a district of the Rize Province of Turkey. Its seat is the town of İyidere. Its area is 28 km2, and its population is 8,609 (2021).
Composition
There is one municipality in İyidere District:
İyidere
There are 7 villages in İyidere District:
Büyükçiftlikköyü
Çiftlikköy
Denizgören
Kalecik
Köşklü
Taşhane
Yaylacılar
References
Districts of Rize Province
|
73169587
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%20Southland%20Conference%20women%27s%20basketball%20tournament
|
2023 Southland Conference women's basketball tournament
|
The 2023 Southland Conference women's basketball tournament is the postseason women's basketball championship for the Southland Conference. The tournament will take place March 6–9, 2023. The tournament winner received an automatic invitation to the 2023 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament.
Seeds
Teams were seeded by record within the conference, with a tie-breaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. All eight teams in the conference qualified for the tournament. The top two seeds received double byes into the semifinals in the merit-based format. The No. 3 and No. 4 seeds received single byes to the quarterfinals. Tiebreakers used are 1) Head-to-head results, 2) comparison of records against individual teams in the conference starting with the top-ranked team(s) and working down and 3) NCAA NET rankings available on the day following the conclusion of regular-season play.
Schedule
Bracket
* denotes number of overtime periods
References
2022–23 Southland Conference women's basketball season
Southland Conference
Southland Conference women's basketball tournament
|
73169589
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ko%20Ko%20Thett
|
Ko Ko Thett
|
Ko Ko Thett (; stylised as ko ko thett; born in 1972 in Rangoon) is a Burmese poet and writer based in Norwich, United Kingdom. He has written under the pen name Jet Ni. Ko Ko Thett has published poetry anthologies and translations in both Burmese and English. In 1995, Ko Ko Thett began studying engineering at the Yangon Technological University, where he began publishing samizdat poems. He was detained the following year for his involvement in the December 1996 student uprising. Upon his release in April 1997, he left the country. In 2012, he won the 2012 English PEN Writers in Translation Programme Award for Bones will Crow, an anthology of 15 contemporary Burmese poets.
Works
Bones Will Crow: 15 Contemporary Burmese Poets (2012)
The Burden of Being Burmese (2015)
Foo Foo Thett’s Page on an Internet Dating Site (2016)
ACCENT (2018)
Bamboophobia (2022)
References
External links
Burmese writers
Burmese male poets
20th-century Burmese poets
20th-century male writers
21st-century Burmese poets
21st-century male writers
1972 births
People from Yangon
Prisoners and detainees of Myanmar
Burmese emigrants to the United Kingdom
Living people
|
73169597
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erissel
|
Erissel
|
Erissel (; alt. Irsal) is a fishing village on the main island of Socotra, Yemen. Located in the Hidaybu District its approximate population is 400.
Erissel lies next to Ras Irissel or Rhiy di-Irīsal, the easternmost point of Socotra, where the Indian Ocean meets the Arabian Sea. On the narrow spur of the cape, the bedrock of the island outcrops as amphibolitic rocks.
The cape is a place where ships have been colliding with rocks for centuries.
References
Populated places in Socotra
Socotra Governorate
|
73169615
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary%20Adelaide%20Dickey
|
Mary Adelaide Dickey
|
Mary Adelaide Dickey (1882-1960) was an American vaudeville performer, who performed as Adelaide or La Petite Adelaide. She was best known in the 1910s and 1920s as half of 'Adelaide and Hughes', a husband-and-wife dance partnership with Johnny J. Hughes.
Life
Mary Adelaide Dickey was born in Cohoes, New York, in 1882, the oldest of three girls born to W. James and Josephine Dickey. She studied dance under C. H. Van Arnum in Troy, and by 1894 was toe dancing as La Petite Adelaide in New York City. In 1897 she made a movie, La Petite Adelaide, for American Mutoscope Company. Her speciality dance was a Doll Dance.
Around 1900 Adelaide married a fairground agent, William A. Lloyd. However, within a year Lloyd was arrested for stealing and pawning her clothes and jewelry, and the pair divorced. Adelaide performed for theater operators including B. F. Keith, Lee Shubert and Oscar Hammerstein. She appeared with James T. Power in The Blue Moon, and with Eddie Foy in The Orchid (1907). In 1908 she performed a toe dance on horseback at the New York Hippodrome. Only four foot five in height, she continued to be able to perform child roles.
Adelaide began dancing with Johnny J. Hughes, and toured Europe with him in 1911. Their act mixed genres: it was "operatic, ballet, and stage dancing, dashed through with the paprika of the Cakewalk and the Tango". On their return to the US, they appeared with Charlotte Greenwood in The Passing Show of 1912. The pair opened a dance studio in Brooklyn and married in 1913, touring together in an 8,000 mile honeymoon across the United States.
Adelaide and Hughes appeared together on Broadway in Monte Christo Jr. (1914) and Town Topics (1915). Together, the pair choreographed dances for vaudeville shows including Pierrot and Pierette (1914), The Dancing Divinities (1917), Classics of an Age (1917) and The Garden of the World (!917). They continued dancing together until Hughes's death in 1927. She retired from dancing and lived on until 1960.
References
1882 births
1960s deaths
Vaudeville performers
20th-century American dancers
|
73169619
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beilschmiedia%20lucidula
|
Beilschmiedia lucidula
|
Beilschmiedia lucidula is a widespread species of flowering plant in the family Lauraceae, native to the eastern Indian Subcontinent, Indochina, and most of Malesia. A tree reaching , it is often found growing on poor soils in seasonally wet areas.
References
lucidula
Flora of Nepal
Flora of East Himalaya
Flora of Assam (region)
Flora of Bangladesh
Flora of Indo-China
Flora of Malesia
Plants described in 1970
|
73169641
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20B%C3%A9nard%20Le%20Pontois
|
Charles Bénard Le Pontois
|
Charles Marie Eugène Pierre Bénard (4 February 1867 – 16 November 1931) was a French mariner, who engaged in Arctic exploration, oceanography, and archaeology.
Biography
Bénard was born in Redon, a town in Brittany. His father was the local stationmaster for the Compagnie d'Orléans. In 1873, his father was transferred to Bordeaux where Bénard graduated school. He entered the École navale at the age of 16 and completed his training in 1886. In the French Navy, he was at sea near Newfoundland, among other places. He quit the navy in 1891 with the rank of Enseigne de vaisseau. In the following, Bénard settled in Bordeaux, where he was on the boards of directors of several civilian shipping companies. In 1899, he co-founded the Société d'Océanographie du Golfe de Gascogne, through which he made friends with fellow oceanography and exploration enthusisast Albert I, Prince of Monaco.
In 1908, Bénard led an expedition named Mission Océanographique Arctique Française. The expedition's main goals were estimating the potential for fishing off the coast of Northern Norway, oceanographic studies of the Barents Sea, and geological investigations on Novaya Zemlya. The newly constructed sailing vessel Jacques Cartier served as the expedition ship. The voyage was under the patronage of Prince Albert, while Jules Charles-Roux chaired the expedition committee. Jacques Cartier set sail from Dunkirk on 12 April 1908 with 19 people aboard. The chief medical officer was named Candiotti, the captain Desmazières. During most of June, the ship stayed at Hammerfest where the local fishing could be studied. In the Barents Sea, oceanographic observations were made. On 7 July, Novaya Zemlya was reached when the ship anchored at Belushya Guba and the expedition made contact with the local Nenets population. On 24 July, the Russian geologist Vladimir Rusanov was dropped off by mail steamer to join the party. Several exploring trips were made across the archipelago. Candiotti and Rusanov led a successful crossing of the northern island, mapping for the first time. Bénard himself conducted surveying work around , and in the interior of the peninsula Gusinaya Zemlya. In late August, Jacques Cartier left Novaya Zemlya for Arkhangelsk where after some disagreement about continuing the expedition work next season, she was finally sold and the crew was repatriated.
In 1914, Bénard returned to Novaya Zemlya, where he hiked across the southern island alone, before crossing Gusinaya Zemlya by dogsled together with a Nenets companion.
At the start of the First World War, Bénard was mobilised and put in command of the squadron of minesweepers at Toulon. He was later promoted to the rank of Capitaine de frégate.
After the war, Bénard moved to Penmarc'h, where he devoted himself to archaeology. When marine officer and notable archaeologist Louis Eugène Le Pontois died in 1919, Bénard added "Le Pontois" to his name to honor his distant cousin. In 1922, he divorced his wife Suzanne, but remarried Gabrielle Philippson-Goldschmidt the following year. She was the daughter of a wealthy Belgian banker and herself divorced. The couple had two children together. With Théodore Monod and , Bénard Le Pontois performed excavations in the local area and founded the . In 1931, Gabrielle and Charles divorced. Shortly after returning from an expedition with Monod to the Sahara desert, Bénard Le Pontois learned that his ex-wife intended to take their two children and end her alimony payments to him. Unable to face this situation, he asphyxiated his children and himself.
Honours
Officier de la Légion d'honneur
Croix de guerre 1914-1918
Publications
Le Venezuela, études physiques, politiques, commerciales, minières et agricoles, 1897.
Histoire des Expositions de Bordeaux, Société Philomathique de Bordeaux, 1899.
La Conquête du Pôle, 1904.
Dans l'océan Glacial et la Nouvelle-Zemble (avril-septembre 1908), 1909.
Mission Arctique : Stations scientifiques, Cartographie - Météorologie, vol. 6, Bordeaux, Société d'Océanographie du Golfe de Gascogne, 1911.
Co-authored with P. Favret, G. Boisselier: Importance archéologique de la presqu'île de la Torche, Penmarc'h, Finistère, Quimper, Jaouen, 1919.
Un été chez les Samoyèdes, 1921.
Le Finistère préhistorique, Paris, Édition Nourry, 1929.
References
1867 births
1931 deaths
People from Redon, Ille-et-Vilaine
French explorers
Explorers of the Arctic
French navigators
French oceanographers
20th-century French archaeologists
École Navale alumni
Officiers of the Légion d'honneur
Murder–suicides in France
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73169660
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lassis%20Inn
|
Lassis Inn
|
Lassis Inn is a restaurant in Little Rock, Arkansas founded in 1905. It was a meeting place for local civil rights leaders in the 1950s and 60s. In 2017 it was one of three inaugural inductees into the Arkansas Food Hall of Fame and in 2020 was named an America's Classic by the James Beard Foundation.
History
The restaurant was founded by Joe and Molassis Watson around 1905. The couple started the business by selling sandwiches from their home. As the business grew, they added fried catfish and built a separate structure for the carryout business. In 1931 the Watsons moved the building and business to East 27th Street and in 196 moved again slightly due to freeway construction.
The restaurant was a meeting place for civil rights leaders in the 1950s and 60s, including Daisy Bates, while they were planning efforts such as the desegregation of Little Rock Central High School.
It is one of the oldest restaurants in Arkansas.
Menu
The restaurant specializes in catfish, including fried catfish and catfish steaks, "fish ribs" (made from local specialty buffalo fish) and hushpuppies.
Southern Living calls out the fish ribs, saying "it's actually a type of bony, white-fleshed, freshwater fish. The buffalo fish's larger bones are butchered with enough flesh on each side of the bone to resemble spareribs. The result is a crunchy, hot, and meaty rib". The buffalo fish is not a preferred fish due to its many small bones; the only part of the fish that is free of these is the rib.
Recognition
In 2017 it was among the three inaugural inductees into the Arkansas Food Hall of Fame, along with Rhoda's Famous Hot Tamales and Jones Bar-B-Q Diner. In 2020, it was named an America's Classic by the James Beard Foundation. Arkansas Online called the restaurant's catfish and buffalo "some of the state's best fried fish". Kelley Bass in Heaping Spoonful called it "a truly lengendary restaurant". Southern Living named the restaurant in 2022 to their compilation of the South's Best Soul Food.
Ownership
The restaurant was purchased by Elihue Washington Jr. and Maria Washington in 1989.
References
Further reading
</ref>
Black-owned restaurants in the United States
Restaurants in Arkansas
James Beard Foundation Award winners
1905 establishments in Arkansas
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73169670
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consulate%20General%20of%20Peru%2C%20Tokyo
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Consulate General of Peru, Tokyo
|
The Consulate General of Peru in Tokyo (, ) is one of two diplomatic representations of Peru in Tokyo, the other being the Peruvian embassy.
The current consul general is Anne Maeda Ikehata.
List of Consuls general
Edgar Eduardo Gómez-Sánchez Gutti (until 2002)
Carlos Alberto Yrigoyen Forno (2002–2003)
Héctor Francisco Matallana Martínez (2004–2007)
Edgar Eduardo Fernando Gómez-Sánchez Gutti (2007–2011)
Julio Arturo Cárdenas Velarde (2011–2014)
Jorge Arturo Jallo Sandoval (2014–2019)
Alexis Paul Aquino Albengrin (2019–2021)
Anne Maeda Ikehata (since 2021)
Overview
The consulate general's jurisdiction extends to the following prefectures:
See also
Embassy of Peru, Tokyo
Consulate General of Peru, Nagoya
References
Peru
Tokyo
Japan–Peru relations
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73169682
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%E2%80%9323%20ASFAR%20season
|
2022–23 ASFAR season
|
The 2022–23 season is ASFAR's 63th successive season in the Botola, and 64th season in existence. In addition to the domestic league, they are participating in this season's Throne Cup, and CAF Confederation Cup.
Background
After finishing 3rd in the 2021–22 Botola campaign, AS FAR secured a spot in the first round of the CAF Confederation Cup. However, in early August, Belgian manager Sven Vandenbroeck left the club to sign for Saudi Arabian club Abha Club. French manager Fernando Da Cruz replaced him one month later.
Season Squad
References
Football in Morocco
|
73169691
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard%20Bellec
|
Bernard Bellec
|
Bernard Bellec (8 May 1934 – 23 February 2023) was a French politician of the Socialist Party (PS).
Biography
Born in Hayange on 8 May 1934, Bellec began his professional career with the . He was president of from 1996 to 2009.
A member of the PS, Bellec became Deputy Mayor of Niort in 1971 before becoming Mayor in 1986 after the sudden death of his predecessor, . He was re-elected in 1995 despite a dispute with party leader Ségolène Royal. He was re-elected again in 2001 but resigned on 6 December 2002 following pressure from party activist Étienne Bonnin. From April 2001 to October 2002, he was President of the .
In 1993, Bellec was the PS nominee for the National Assembly in Deux-Sèvres's 1st constituency, but lost in the second round to .
Bernard Bellec died in Niort on 23 February 2023, at the age of 88.
Distinctions
Commander of the Legion of Honour (1998)
References
1934 births
2023 deaths
Mayors of places in Nouvelle-Aquitaine
Socialist Party (France) politicians
People from Hayange
Commandeurs of the Légion d'honneur
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73169693
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grothendieck%20trace%20theorem
|
Grothendieck trace theorem
|
In functional analysis, the Grothendieck trace theorem is an extension of Lidskii's theorem about the trace and the determinant of a certain class of nuclear operators on Banach spaces, the so-called -nuclear operators. The theorem was proven in 1966 by Alexander Grothendieck. Lidskii's theorem does not hold in general for Banach spaces.
The theorem should not be confused with the Grothendieck trace formula from algebraic geometry.
Grothendieck trace theorem
Given a Banach space with the approximation property and denote its dual as .
-nuclear operators
Let be a nuclear operator on , then is a -nuclear operator if it has a decomposition of the form
where and and
Grothendiecks trace theorem
Let denote the eigenvalues of counted with their algebraic multiplicities. If
then the following equalities hold:
and for the Fredholm determinant
See also
Literature
References
Functional analysis
Topological tensor products
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73169711
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%20Andrew%27s%20F.C.%20%28Kilmarnock%29
|
St Andrew's F.C. (Kilmarnock)
|
St Andrew's Football Club was an association football club from Kilmarnock, Ayrshire in Scotland.
History
The club was founded in 1873.
St Andrew's first entered the Scottish Cup in 1876–77, and was drawn at home to Ayr Eglinton in the first round. The game ended in a 1–1 draw.
The replay was played on 7 October at the neutral Robbsland Park (the ground of Ayr Thistle F.C.) and lasted only an hour, St Andrew's winning 1–0.
In the second round, the club was drawn to play at the Portland club, on the latter's ground at Nursery Park, on Holehouse Road. The home side won 2–0 in a "one-sided game".
The club played matches regularly until the end of the season, the final one advertised being against Rosevale of Strathbungo on 14 April 1877, but the club appears to have wound up before the start of the 1877–78 season, as it scratched from its first round Scottish Cup tie with Ayr Thistle, and did not enter the new Ayrshire Cup.
Colours
The club's colours were black and red hoops.
Ground
The club originally played at Holehouse Road. It moved to Grange Park in time for its Cup tie with Ayr Eglinton.
References
St Andrew's F.C. (Kilmarnock)
Sport in Kilmarnock
Association football clubs established in 1873
Association football clubs disestablished in 1877
1873 establishments in Scotland
1877 disestablishments in Scotland
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73169737
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian%20O%27Brien%20%28rugby%20union%29
|
Brian O'Brien (rugby union)
|
Brian Anthony Philip O'Brien (5 July 1939 – 28 February 2023) was an Irish rugby union player, selector, coach and team manager.
Career
In his youth, O'Brien played as a centre with Shannon. He was part of the club's first ever Munster Senior Cup success in 1960. O'Brien later became Shannon's first ever international when he was part of the Ireland squad for the 1968 Five Nations.
O'Brien spent nearly 15 years playing at senior level with Shannon, before going on to coach them to consecutive Munster Senior Cup titles in 1977 and 1978. He later served as a selector for Ireland and the British and Irish Lions during the latter's 1983 tour to New Zealand. O'Brien's other coaching roles included periods as manager of the Irish U21 team and the Shannon team that won four successive All-Ireland League titles. He also served as team manager of the Munster and Ireland teams.
Death
O'Brien died in Limerick on 28 February 2023, at the age of 83.
References
External link
Brian O'Brien profile at the ESPN website
1939 births
2023 deaths
Irish rugby union players
Shannon RFC players
Ireland international rugby union players
Rugby union players from County Limerick
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73169764
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%20Za%20Win
|
K Za Win
|
K Za Win () was a Burmese poet and former Buddhist monk, best known for his collection of long-form poems, My Reply to Ramon.
Early life and education
K Za Win was born Chanthar Swe () in 1982 in the town of Letpadaung, Sagaing Division, Burma to a peasant family. His family lost land to the Letpadaung Copper Mine, a Chinese-owned mine.
Career
He published his first poem at the age of 16, in a school magazine. K Za Win became an activist, involved in educational reform and land rights. He participated in student-led protests to reform Myanmar's educational system, in opposition to the Myanmar National Education Law 2014. On 10 March 2015, he was jailed at Tharrawaddy Prison for over a year. He was a member of the Monywa Poet's Union.
In the aftermath of the 2021 Myanmar coup d'état, he organised anti-coup demonstrations in Monywa. On 3 March, security forces killed him by gunfire, after firing at a crowd of protesters in Monywa. He became one of at least four prominent poets, alongside Myint Myint Zin, Khet Thi, and Sein Win, to be killed that month.
References
External links
Burmese male poets
21st-century Burmese poets
People from Sagaing Region
1982 births
2021 deaths
Deaths by firearm
Burmese Buddhist monks
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73169769
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%20Dan%20Kolov%20%26%20Nikola%20Petrov%20Tournament
|
2023 Dan Kolov & Nikola Petrov Tournament
|
The 60th Dan Kolov & Nikola Petrov Tournament, is a wrestling event held in Sofia, Bulgaria between 2 and 5 March 2023.
This international tournament included competition in both men's and women's freestyle wrestling and men's Greco-Roman wrestling. This tournament was 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 will air freely on the Bulgarian Wrestling Federation Live Youtube channel.
Competition schedule
All times are (UTC+2)
Medal overview
Men's freestyle
Men's Greco-Roman
Women's freestyle
Participating nations
388 wrestlers from 39 countries:
(6)
(7)
(7)
(2)
(11)
(61)
(1)
(2)
(1)
(4)
(1)
(9)
(4)
(14)
(12)
(6)
(5)
(15)
(3)
(47)
(13)
(4)
(6)
(1)
(2)
(6)
(7)
(2)
(7)
(17)
(1)
(17)
(3)
(11)
(5)
(3)
(25)
(10)
(31)
References
External links
UWW Official Website
Bulgarian Wrestling Federation
2023 in European sport
2023 in sport wrestling
March 2023 sports events in Europe
2023 in Bulgarian sport
International wrestling competitions hosted by Bulgaria
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73169779
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikita%20Mikado
|
Mikita Mikado
|
Mikita Mikado is an IT entrepreneur of Belarusian origin, creator of PandaDoc unicorn.
Business
Mikado was born in Minsk in 1986, he studied at the Belarusian State University of Informatics and Radioelectronics in 2001–2006. At the age of 19, Mikado went to the USA on a Work&Travel programme. Along with half-time jobs, he tried himself in web-design and software development.
In 2011, Mikado returned to Belarus. Together with his partner Sergey Barysiuk, he created Quote Roller, a document automation tool. By 2013, the start-up had grown into PandaDoc, an e-document platform that lets its customers create, share and sign official documents online. PandaDoc was growing quickly and soon had more than 3000 clients.
In 2013, Mikado returned to San Francisco and managed to raise $5 mln investments to PandaDoc from such prominent investors as Kima Ventures, Altair Capital, and Fabrice Grinda. As of 2015, 16 employees worked in the Minsk office and 14 worked in San Francisco.
In 2017, PandaDoc attracted $15m in investment from Rembrandt Ventures Partners, as well as Microsoft Ventures, HubSpot, EBRD and Altos Ventures.
In 2020, Mikado starred in Yury Dud's documentary on Russian-speaking startupers of Silicon Valley. Along with other heroes of the film, Mikado ‘woke up famous’ after the release. The role made him famous among young Russians and turned him into a role model to those who dreamt of a career in IT.
In 2021, PandaDoc raised a new financing round at a $1 billion valuation.
Social activity
Immediately after the violent crackdown on the Belarusian protests of 9–13 August, Mikado joined the ‘Protect Belarus’ initiative and offered legal, educational and financial assistance to those former policemen who left their jobs in protest. Dozens of them successfully moved to work in the IT sector. The authorities responded with a strike against Mikado's company: four employees of the Minsk office were jailed in trumped-up cases. Three of them were released in several months, while product manager Victor Kunshinov had spent more than 1 year in prison.
In 2022, Mikado invested into ‘Mesto’ start-up, a platform that helps IT workers, entrepreneurs, digital creators and companies relocate to Cyprus and Bali. ‘Mesto’ founded communities of those who have already relocated and offered them legal assistance, insurance, co-living accommodation, and helped with visas and bank accounts.
References
Living people
Businesspeople from Minsk
1986 births
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73169797
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth%20McGraw
|
Elizabeth McGraw
|
Elizabeth Ann McGraw is an American biologist who is a professor in entomology at Pennsylvania State University. She is the Director of the Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics and a Huck Scholar in Entomology. Her research investigates the bacterium Wolbachia as a strategy for biocontrol and to better understand the basis of its interactions with insects. She was elected a Fellow of the American Society for Microbiology.
Early life and education
McGraw was an undergraduate biology student at the University of Michigan. She moved to Pennsylvania State University where she studied the evolution of virulence genes in human pathogens and was awarded a PhD in 1998.
Research and career
After her PhD, she joined Yale University for her postdoctoral research, where she studied the Wolbachia insect system. She was particularly interested in being able to ask questions about the evolution of mutualism. She moved to the University of Queensland as a postdoctoral researcher.
McGraw was appointed to the faculty at the University of Queensland, then moved to Monash University as a Larkins Fellow in 2011, where she studied how bacteria affect host biology and how insects invest in response to a symbiont. She has extensively studied the endosymbiont Wolbachia. Wolbachia prevents harmful pathogens replicating inside mosquitos, which may offer hope for biocontrol against mosquito-borne diseases. Her research showed that when Wolbachia was inside mosquitoes it could prevent viruses from replicating. She showed that Dengue virus could not become resistant to Wolbachia, and that Dengue viruses grown with Wolbachia were less effective at infecting mosquito cells and were less able to replicate.
In 2017, McGraw joined Pennsylvania State University as a professor in entomology.
Awards and honors
McGraw was elected Fellow of the American Society for Microbiology in 2023.
Selected publications
A Wolbachia symbiont in Aedes aegypti limits infection with dengue, Chikungunya, and Plasmodium
Successful establishment of Wolbachia in Aedes populations to suppress dengue transmission
Phylogenomics of the reproductive parasite Wolbachia pipientis wMel: a streamlined genome overrun by mobile genetic elements
References
Living people
University of Michigan alumni
Pennsylvania State University alumni
Pennsylvania State University faculty
Fellows of the American Academy of Microbiology
American entomologists
21st-century American women scientists
Women entomologists
20th-century American women scientists
20th-century American zoologists
21st-century American zoologists
Year of birth missing (living people)
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73169807
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9chir%20Ben%20Slama
|
Béchir Ben Slama
|
Béchir Ben Slama (; 14 October 1931 – 26 February 2023) was a Tunisian writer and politician.
Biography
Born in Le Bardo on 14 October 1931, Ben Slama attended primary and secondary school at Sadiki College. He was admitted to the in 1956, where he studied the Arabic language and French literature. He then began teaching at the but quit in 1963 to pursue a political career.
Ben Slama was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in 1969, where he remained for three terms. He became a leader within the Socialist Destourian Party in 1980. On 2 January 1981, he was appointed Minister of Culture. During his mandate, he established the Tunisian Academy of Sciences, Letters, and Arts and the National Theatre of Tunisia. He left his position on 12 May 1986.
Béchir Ben Slama died on 26 February 2023, at the age of 91.
References
1931 births
2023 deaths
20th-century Tunisian politicians
Tunisian writers
Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Tunisia)
Government ministers of Tunisia
Culture ministers
Members of the Tunisian Academy of Sciences, Letters, and Arts
Neo Destour politicians
Socialist Destourian Party politicians
Alumni of Sadiki College
People from Tunis Governorate
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73169813
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preboreal%20oscillation
|
Preboreal oscillation
|
The preboreal oscillation (PBO) was a short cooling period within the preboreal stage of the Holocene epoch.
Definition
Based on evidence from pollen, early Holocene cooling periods have been discovered already from the 1960s on. Locally, they were referred to as ‘Friesland Oscillation’ (Denmark ), ‘Youngest Dryas’ (Germany ), ‘Rammelbeek Phase’ (Netherlands ), and ‘Piottino Oscillation’ (Switzerland ). The term "preboreal oscillation" was derived from attempts to synchronize these events .
Dating
The greenland ice cores record a distinct decline in stable oxygen isotope data dated to 11 650–11 270 ice layer a BP (11 700–11 320 b2k) with the coldest part between 11 470 and 11 350 ice layer a BP (11 520–11 400 b2k) labelled as the ‘11.4 ka event’ .
In lake sedimentary records, the exact timing and duration of the PBO remain uncertain because of dating uncertainties due to two early Holocene radiocarbon plateau and unclear proxy evidence. Two ash layers derived from volcanic eruptions are frequently used as time markers for the PBO: the Askja-S and Hässeldalen tephras shortly before and after the event. The ages of these layers were constrained to 11.228 ± 226 cal a BP and 11.380 ± 216 cal a BP, framing the cold event to a maximum duration of 152 +11/-8 years by varve counting.
References
[[Category:Quaternary]]
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73169818
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consulate%20General%20of%20Peru%2C%20Nagoya
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Consulate General of Peru, Nagoya
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The Consulate General of Peru in Nagoya (, ) is one of two diplomatic representations of Peru in Japan, the other two being the embassy and consulate in Tokyo. The office was established in 2008.
The current consul general is Luis Alfredo Espinoza Aguilar.
List of Consuls general
Eduardo Manuel Alfredo Llosa Larrabure (2008)
Luis Gilberto Mendívil Canales (2008–2010)
Carlos Alberto Ríos Segura (interim, 2010–2011)
Gustavo Adolfo Peña Chamot (2011–2017)
Antonio Pedro Miranda Sisniegas (2017–2022)
Julissa de Jesús Alegre (interim, 2022)
Luis Alfredo Espinoza Aguilar (since 2022)
Overview
The consulate general's jurisdiction extends to the following prefectures and regions:
See also
Embassy of Peru, Tokyo
Consulate General of Peru, Tokyo
References
Peru
Nagoya
Japan–Peru relations
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73169866
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amy%20Bernardy
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Amy Bernardy
|
Amy Allemand Bernardy (January 16, 1880 – October 1959) was an Italian journalist, folklorist, ethnographer, and writer.
Early life and education
Amy Bernardy was born in Florence, the daughter of an Irish-American diplomat and an Italian mother. She was educated at l'Istituto di Studi Superiore in Florence, graduating in 1901 with a thesis on the history of Turkish-Venetian relations. Her academic mentor was Pasquale Villari; he was president of the Dante Alighieri Society, and she was the society's vice president.
Career
Bernardy was a lecturer on Italian subjects at Smith College in Massachusetts from 1903 to 1910. While in America, she wrote for American and Italian newspapers and magazines. She was commissioned by the Italian government to report on the effects of emigration on Italian-born women and their children in North America, including a visit to Ellis Island, and studies of regional differences and of "Little Italy" neighborhoods in American and Canadian cities. She presented her findings at a conference on Italian ethnography in 1910. She also studied Italian expatriate communities in Turkey and in the West Indies. She returned to the United States from 1917 to 1920, to work at the Italian embassy in Washington, D.C., during World War I.
Bernardy spoke against women's suffrage and for protections for workers' families, on a lecture tour of the United States in 1910. She taught at the University of Florence in the 1930s, and toured in Canada as a speaker on Italian social issues and expatriates, especially on education, in 1934. On that tour, she defended the policies of Italy's fascist government, and dismissed criticisms against it as being based on 'fables'.
Publications
L'ultima guerra turco-veneziana (1902)
Venezia E Il Turco Nella Seconda Meta Del Secolo XVII (1902)
Zampogne e cornamuse nel secolo d'Elisabetta (1902)
America vissuta (1911)
Italia randagia attraverso gli Stati Uniti (1913)
L'Istria e la Dalmazia (1915)
La Via dell' Oriente (1916)
"The War Service of Italian Women" (1919)
"The Adriatic 'Irredenta'" (1919)
La questione adriatica vista d'oltre Atlantico (1917-1919) (1923)
Paese che vai; il mondo come l'ho visto io (1923, an autobiography)
Forme e colori di vita regionale italiana (1926)
Santa Caterina da Siena (1926)
Istria e Quarnaro (1927)
La vita e l'opera di Vittoria Colonna (1927)
Zara e i monumenti italiani della Dalmazia (1928)
Rinascita regionale (1930)
Passione italiana sotto cieli stranieri (1931)
Personal life
Bernardy died in 1959, in Rome.
References
1880 births
1959 deaths
Italian women writers
Italian journalists
Smith College faculty
People from Florence
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73169875
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20W.%20Nevin
|
David W. Nevin
|
David Williamson Nevin was an American politician from Easton, Pennsylvania, who served as the city's mayor and is considered to be "Easton’s greatest citizen".
Early life
Nevin was born on September 9, 1853, in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, to a farmer, Samuel Williamson Nevin and his wife Harriet Macomb Née Balch. He had an older brother, Joseph Pierce Nevin a physician, a younger sister Anna Mary Nevin and a younger brother George Balch Nevin, a composer. When he was 10 years old his father took him to Gettysburg where he heard the Gettysburg Address. His uncle, David Robert Bruce Nevin was a major in the Union Army and later an attorney from Philadelphia. Nevin went to study law at Lafayette College however, while he was studying he was nearly killed by Tuberculosis in 1872. This near death experience played a key role in the remainder of Nevin's life as he would be described as full of energy, boundless, and never took anything for granted.
Career
Early legal career
Following his belated graduation in 1875 Nevin worked for a city attorney for two years before passing the Northampton County bar and opening his own law firm in 1877. That year he would also run for Northampton County district attorney, but would lose the election.
Real estate development
In 1887, Nevin's "butter and egg man" a local farmer named John Mann, who delivered produce to Nevin every Friday afternoon, was asked if he would be willing to sell his farm to Nevin on behalf of his uncle from Philadelphia, D.R.B. Nevin. Mann agreed citing the rising taxes which where threatening to put him out of business. Shortly after the sale was closed the Lafayette Traction Company, of which David was a principle shareholder, built the first electric trolley line up College hill in 1888. This came despite resistance from the city's influential Republicans who sought to preserve the rural nature of the area. Shortly after Nevin constructed an inn on Mann's former property on the summit of Weygadt Mountain named the Paxinosa Inn at the price of $100,000 in 1889 (roughly $34,500,000 in 2023). The inn was named after Chief Paxinosa of the Shawnee Indians who was pivotal in the ratification of the 1757 Indian treaty. Shortly after in 1890 Nevin began developing the area around his inn into luxury villas and a neighborhood known as "Paxinosa Heights", the district is still intact today but is now known as "College Point". As part of the development and due to his stature as a devout Presbyterian he financed the construction of the College Hill Presbyterian Church and helped oversee its library. There he would develop a patent for a library record system. The Paxinosa Inn was never profitable and Nevin was forced to sell it at auction in 1896. Shortly thereafter it burned down in a fire. It was rebuilt in 1905 with fireproofed bricks, but would burn down a second time shortly after. It was never rebuilt. The cause of the inn's destruction is credited it to being 600 ft above the Delaware River preventing firefighters from having a steady stream of water due to poor infrastructure and pumps at the time. Nevin designed and donated two parks to the City of Easton. One of which, Nevin Park, hosted the city's original fountain from Easton's center square in 1899 after the erection of the soldier's monument that stands there today. The fountain would be melted down as part of a scrap metal drive for World War II. Despite his real estate business taking a turn for the worse, Nevin became the director of the Easton National Bank and to serve as the secretary and treasurer of the Easton Suspension Bridge Company.
Political career
Nevin never stopped showing an interest in local politics after his 1877 district attorney defeat. Ever since his encounter with Abraham Lincoln at the age of 10 he had been a lifelong progressive Lincolnite Republican.
He would hold a series of roles in the city government before being elected as a city councilor for the second and third ward. By 1888 he was the council president and he motioned for the creation of the Easton Industrial Association to help bring industrial jobs to the city. Nevin would be elected mayor in 1911 and take office in 1912 serving two terms until 1920. Nevin is best remembered for his tough on crime platform. Easton, at the time, was a resort town people from New York and other cities to go and commit vices they otherwise wouldn't be able to, the largest of which was prostitution. Nevin would make it his top priority to shut down the city's 27 brothels in a manner that wouldn't be embarrassing to the women working in them. During his time as mayor he also worked to expand the city's fire and police departments. Additionally, in 1913 the city abolished the "select and common councils" for a new city commission government. The old system had a large 36 member elected "common" council that would represent the 25,000 residents of the city, while the "select" council was appointed by the mayor. This system was heavily criticized due to having the unelected select council having almost all the power, and with there being too many members of the common council resulting in endless political infighting.
Legacy
Nevin park still bares the mayors namesake and in 2014 a $200,000 replica of the city's original iron fountain was restored to the park. Near the end of his second term, local historian William Jacob Heller wrote that Nevin had contributed to Easton's development "perhaps more than any living man." Nevin was married and had three sons, Samuel W. Nevin, D. Burrowes Nevin and John D. Nevin. His father was an Elder of the College Point Presbyterian church. Due to Nevin's long life he would often talk about his trip to Gettsyburg when he was 10 years old and lamented that: "I wish I had extended my hand, for if the president had taken one step toward me we could have shaken hands."
References
Mayors of Easton, Pennsylvania
Lafayette College alumni
1853 births
1945 deaths
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73169882
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max%20Morris%20%28unionist%29
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Max Morris (unionist)
|
Max Morris (1866 – June 6, 1909) was an American labor union leader and politician.
Born in Mobile, Alabama, Morris moved to Breckenridge, Colorado, in 1880. In 1884, he became a retail clerk, and he organized a union of clerks based in Cripple Creek, Colorado. In about 1890, he moved to Denver, where he founded the Denver Retail Clerks' Union, and he soon affiliated this to the new Retail Clerks' National Protective Association of America.
In 1896, Morris was elected as secretary-treasurer of the Retail Clerks, and from 1899, he also edited its journal, the Retail Clerks' National Advocate. That year, he was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives, representing the People's Party. He was elected again in 1901, this time representing the Democratic Party, serving until 1904.
Morris served as a vice-president of the American Federation of Labor from 1898. He died in 1909, still holding his trade union offices.
References
1866 births
1909 deaths
American trade union leaders
Members of the Colorado House of Representatives
People from Mobile, Alabama
People's Party (United States) politicians
Trade unionists from Alabama
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73169925
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Quito%20Metro%20stations
|
List of Quito Metro stations
|
This is a list of Quito Metro stations, excluding abandoned, projected, planned stations, and those under construction.
List of active stations
References
Quito
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73169943
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali%20Al-Baghli
|
Ali Al-Baghli
|
Ali Al-Baghli (; 1 January 1947 – 26 February 2023) was a Kuwaiti politician. An independent, he served as Minister of Oil from 1992 to 1996.
Al-Baghli died of a heart attack in Kuwait City, on 26 February 2023, at the age of 76.
References
1947 births
2023 deaths
20th-century politicians
Kuwait University alumni
Members of the National Assembly (Kuwait)
Oil ministers of Kuwait
People from Kuwait City
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73169989
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murunwa%20Makwarela
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Murunwa Makwarela
|
Murunwa Makwarela (born 1972) is a South African politician, genetic engineer, academic and businessman who is the Mayor of Tshwane, in office since 28 February 2023. A member of the Congress of the People, he serves as the party's lone councillor in the municipality. Prior to his election as mayor, he was the council speaker, serving as part of a multi-party coalition led by the Democratic Alliance and other parties.
Early life and education
Makwarela was born in 1972 in Cullinan outside Pretoria in the then-Transvaal Province of South Africa. He grew up in the village of Tshitereke in the Venda bantustan. Makwarela graduated from the University of Venda in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science in Botany and Zoology. He subsequently studied at the University of Natal's Durban campus from which he obtained an honours degree in Plant Biotechnology in 1995 followed by a Master of Science in Eucalyptus Genetic Engineering in 1997. He received his doctorate from University of the Witwatersrand in 2006. While completing his doctorate, he did his research at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Institute in Missouri in the United States.
Career
Makwarela started his career at the University of the Witwatersrand where he worked as a researcher cassava genetic engineering between 2000 and 2005. From 2005 to 2007, he was the first Divisional Head: Gene Banks at the Agricultural Research Council. Makwarela then found employment at the City of Tshwane as the strategic executive director of the municipality's Agriculture and Environmental Management Department between 2007 and 2012. He then proceeded to work for the TAHAL Group as the chief executive officer of the company's South African branch, TAHAL South Africa between 2012 and 2014.
Makwarela also served as a non-executive director and as board chairperson of the Biofuel Business Incubator from 2014 to 2019. He was a non-executive director at the SA Essential Oil Business Incubator as well. He served as a non-executive director at the Johannesburg Development Agency as chairperson of the HRREMCO committee from 2020 to 2021 and as a non-executive director at the Johannesburg Market from 2021 to 2022. He is also a co-founder of and chairperson of the Maluti Green Med, a cannabis-licenced pharmaceutical company, based in Lesotho.
Political career
Makwarela was appointed regional chairperson of the Congress of the People in Tshwane in 2020. He was elected as the party's lone proportional representation councillor in the City of Tshwane in the November 2021 local government elections.
Tshwane council speaker
Makwarela was elected speaker of the Tshwane City Council on 20 January 2022 as part of a coalition agreement COPE signed with the Democratic Alliance, ActionSA, the African Christian Democratic Party, the Inkatha Freedom Party, and the Freedom Front Plus to form a majority government in the council. In April 2022, the African National Congress and the Economic Freedom Fighters called for him to resign as council speaker amid allegations of graft and sexual assault levelled against him, which he responded to by saying: It"s all lies. As things stand, it's premature for me to resign. The ANC wants to use these untested allegations as a political plot and to be a law unto themselves."
On 17 November 2022, Makwerela opened a criminal case at the Brooklyn Police Station after he was allegedly assaulted by ANC councillors during a council meeting two days earlier.
On 13 February 2023, Randall Williams announced his resignation as Tshwane mayor, however, he soon after amended it, changing the date of his resignation to 28 February 2023, which caused confusion amongst councillors. Makwarela's office sought legal advice and Makwarela announced on 21 February 2023 that Williams' first resignation letter was valid and his second one not, which meant that the metro was now without a mayor. The DA, as per the coalition agreement signed between the parties, nominated MP Cilliers Brink as their candidate whom Makwarela initially pledged to support. COPE was soon removed from the coalition after Makwarela refused to schedule an urgent council meeting to elect a new mayor.
Mayor of Tshwane
During a council meeting on 28 February 2023, Makwarela was nominated for the position of mayor by the African Transformation Movement with the support of the EFF and ANC. Makwarela defeated Brink in the mayoral vote which saw a majority of 112 councillors voting for him and only 101 councillors voting for Brink. It is suspected that some of the DA's coalition partners voted for Makwarela.
References
1972 births
People from Pretoria
University of the Witwatersrand alumni
Congress of the People (South African political party) politicians
South African academics
21st-century South African businesspeople
Mayors of places in South Africa
Living people
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73170005
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%20Sun%20Belt%20Conference%20women%27s%20basketball%20tournament
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2023 Sun Belt Conference women's basketball tournament
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The 2023 Sun Belt Conference Women's Basketball Tournament will be the postseason women's basketball tournament for Sun Belt Conference during the 2022–23 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. All tournament games will be played at Pensacola Bay Center between February 28 and March 6. The winner will receive the Sun Belt's automatic bid to the 2023 NCAA Tournament.
Seeds
All 14 conference teams will qualify for the tournament. Teams will be seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. The top 10 teams will receive a first round bye and the top four teams received a double bye, automatically advancing them into the quarterfinals.
Schedule
Bracket
References
2022–23 Sun Belt Conference women's basketball season
Sun Belt Conference women's basketball tournament
Basketball competitions in Florida
College sports in Florida
Sports in Pensacola, Florida
2023 in sports in Florida
March 2023 sports events in the United States
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73170019
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eder%20Franchini
|
Eder Franchini
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Eder Giovanni Franchini Pastén (born 26 July 1988) is a Chilean footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder. Besides Chile, he has played in New Zealand.
Career
As a youth player, Franchini was with Huachipato and Universidad de Concepción until 2007. After having no chances to play professional football in his homeland, he switched to futsal, also representing the Chile national team in the 2008 Copa América.
In 2012, he emigrated to New Zealand and began a football career by signing with Manukau City. He has had an extensive career in that country, playing for clubs such as Waikato FC, Hamilton Wanderers, coinciding with his compatriot Alexis Cárcamo, Southern United, Waitakere United, Glenfield Rovers, among others.
In 2014, he returned to Chile for a brief stint and played for the Deportes Concepción futsal team in the Copa Libertadores, coinciding with Bernardo Araya, the most successful Chilean futsal player. At the tournament, they got a historical win against Uruguayan club Peñarol.
In April 2022, he signed with Ngaruawahia United.
Personal life
At the same time he was a player of Waitakere United, he worked as a painter in a his friends' company. He made his home in Auckland, New Zealand, and started a painting company in 2019.
References
External links
Eder Franchini at EverythingForFootball.com
Eder Franchini at Eurosport.com
1988 births
Living people
Footballers from Santiago
Chilean men's futsal players
Deportes Concepción (Chile) footballers
Chilean footballers
Chilean expatriate footballers
WaiBOP United players
Hamilton Wanderers players
Southern United FC players
Waitakere United players
Manurewa AFC players
New Zealand Football Championship players
Chilean expatriate sportspeople in New Zealand
Expatriate association footballers in New Zealand
Association football midfielders
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73170040
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Those%20Who%20Leave%20and%20Those%20Who%20Stay
|
Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay
|
Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay is a 2013 novel written by Italian author Elena Ferrante. It is the third installment of her Neapolitan Novels, preceded by My Brilliant Friend and The Story of a New Name, and succeeded by The Story of the Lost Child. It was translated to English by Ann Goldstein in 2014.
The novel was adapted by HBO and RaiTV in their series My Brilliant Friend. The content of this novels corresponds to the third season of the show, which aired in February 2022.
Plot
Before her wedding, Elena briefly goes back to Naples. Lila finally confides to her about the bad situation she is living in the bologna factory where she works, where she is subject to brutal work and to sexual harassment. Pasquale and Nadia convince Lila to go to a meeting of the Italian Communist Party, where she shares about her working conditions. This causes the people present to write a panphlet about her boss and piquet the factory, which in turn causes her to be more harassed. At night, however, Lila and Enzo study informatics, believing this will lead to a better life.
Lenù writes an article dennouncing the situation of the factory, and, with Pietro's connections, she manages to have it published in the newspaper L'Unità. This brings her a discrete fame, but she soon goes back to Florence for her marriage with Pietro.
Lenù had planned not to have children right away, but discovers too late that Pietro did not agree with that plan. She becomes pregnant in her honeymoon, giving birth to her daughter Adele (Dede), named after Pietro's mother. Two years later she has her second daughter, Elsa. At home with two young girls, Lenù has a hard time writing, and feels trapped and allienated. She manages at cost to write another book, based on her and Lila's childhood in Naples, but after Adele, Pietro's mother and her editor, judges the book to have no merit, she abandons the project.
Lenù briefly comes back to Naples to find the city much changed. Lila and Enzo's computer lessons paid off, and they managed to find work for IBM as computer programs, constructing a better life. They have now been working with Michele Solara, who the neighborhood continues to fear for his Camorra connections. When Lenù is shocked to learn this, and compares it to a betrayal, Lila tells her that Lenù's little sister, Elisa, has been living with Marcello Solara.
In Florence, Lenù runs into Nino again when her husband Pietro brings him home. She discovers she is still attracted to him despite the fact that he abandoned her friend after their love affair. She feels inspired by Nino, who seems to recognize her intellect and blames Pietro for letting her be wasted by a routine with small children. Inspired by this, she writes a feminist text which Adele deems worthy of publication. She and Nino start an affair, which makes Elena realize how unhappy she is in her marriage.
Lenù tells Lila she plans to leave her husband to be with Nino, which horrifies her friend. Nino tells her he can't leave his wife, and Lenù decides to leave Pietro with or without him. The book ends when they board a plane together.
Main characters
Elena Greco (known as Lenuccia or Lenù), the narrator and main character. At the age of twenty-five, she marries Pietro Airota, and they have two young daughters, Adele (Dede) and Elsa. She is quickly disillusioned by the marriage, and which further unravels when she meets again her childhood love, Nino Sarratore.
Raffaella Cerullo (known as Lila or Lina), Lila's best friend. She starts a relationship with Enzo, and starts working at IBM.
Pietro Airota, Lenù's husband, and father to Dede and Elsa. A young professor at the university, he believes his carrier and intellect are superior to his wife's, which she comes to resent. At the end of the novel, she leaves him for Nino Sarratore.
Giovanni Satrratore (Nino), Lenù's childhood love and Lila's former lover, who comes back to her life when she is living in Florence. He is married with a son, and has at least two children outside of the marriage.
Enzo Scanno, Lila and Lenù's childhood friend, who starts a relationship with Lila after he helps her leave her abusive marriage.
Themes and reception
The book was very well received by the critics.
It was praised by its portrayal of an intelligent young woman who finds motherhood stifling, something not often portrayed, as presented by Roxana Robinson for The New York Times: "She (Elena) has joined the intelligentsia and is about to marry into the middle class, yet her life is still rife with limitations. Her distinguished husband is narrow-minded and restrictive, and she finds motherhood numbing."
The novel was also praised for its social themes, showing the neighborhood's changes under the Camorra's influence, and the struggles during the 70s Lead Years in Italy: "During the struggles of the 1970s between the Communists and the Socialists she [Elena] turns to politics, only to find that the Camorra rules here too."
Often presented as the main topic of the series, the theme of female friendship appears also in the third volume, in spite of it being the one where the two main characters spend the most time apart. Lila and Lenù continue to influence each other, since one is always pushing the other: "The book’s center is Elena’s friendship with Lila, yet this woman-to-woman relationship is always threatened."
References
2013 novels
21st-century Italian novels
Novels by Elena Ferrante
Italian novels adapted into television shows
Novels set in Naples
Novels set in Florence
Edizioni E/O books
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73170042
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Story%20of%20the%20Lost%20Child
|
The Story of the Lost Child
|
The Story of the Lost Child () is a 2014 novel written by Italian author Elena Ferrante. It is the fourth and final installment of her Neapolitan Novels, preceded by My Brilliant Friend and The Story of a New Name, and Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay. It was translated to English by Ann Goldstein in 2015.
Since 2018, the series of books has been adapted for a TV show, produced by HBO and RAI. The final season of the show will adapt the fourth novel.
Plot
After spending two pleasant weeks with Nino in France, Lenù comes back home and discovers that he had lied about leaving his wife. She decides however to continue with him, and to go back to Naples to be close to him. There, she once again becomes pregnant. Lila becomes pregnant at the same time by Enzo, and they give birth to two daughters only three weeks apart. Lila names her daughter Nunzia (known as Tina), llike her mother, and Lenù names her daughter Immacolata (known as Imma), also like her mother, who is dying of cancer.
Lenù discovers through Lila that Nino continues to be unfaithful, having had a series of affairs and even propositioned Lila again. She decided to leave him and goes back to the neighborhood, living close to Lila.
Michele Solara attacks Lila in the funerals of Alsonso Carraci, killed in a homophobic attack. In response, Lila and Lenù write an article dennouncing the Solaras, who know sell heroin in the neighborhood. The article brings more fame to Lenù, who has just published her third book.
On September 16, 1984, Lenù invites Nino for lunch, asking him to see his daughter Imma more often. When everyone is outside, and Nino is speaking to Lila, Tina disappears mysteriously. In spite of all their efforts, they are unable to locate her or to find out what happened. Enzo becomes destroyed by pain, believing the Solaras have killed her as pay back, while Lila believes that she is still alive. Their marriage falls apart after the loss of the child.
The Solaras are assassinated in front of the church a while later. Pasquale and Nadia are arrested for their role as communist attivists during the seventies, but Pasquale refuses to answer if he is responsible for the Solaras' murder.
In 1992, Lenù leaves the neighborhood, moving with her daughters to Turin. Having lost touch with Lila, Lenù breaks a promise she had made and writes about her, publishing a book about their lives called A Friendship. After this, Lila never speaks to her again.
In the following years, Lenù's daughters move out of the country, and she becomes a grandmother.
Epilogue
In 2010, after receiving the news from Rino about his mother's disappearance, Lenù receives a package in the mail. Inside, she finds the dolls, Tina and Nu, that she and Lila played with as children, and that became a symbol of their friendship.
Characters
Elena Greco (Lenù) - the narrator of the story. After leaving her husband, she moves back to Naples to be with Nino. She leaves him too, and decides to go back to the neighborhood of her childhood.
Raffaella Cerulllo (Lila or Lina) - she has a daughter, Tina, that disappears in mysterious circumstances. That, plus the death of her friend Alfonso and the discovery that her son Rino is addicted to heroin, have agreat effect on her. She fights all her life against Michele Solara, a man with camorra connections. She disappears at the age of 60.
Enzo Scanno - Lila's husband, leaves town after the disappearance of their daughter Tina.
Michele Solara - Lila's enemy, who starts selling heroin in the neighborhood, including to her brother and her son Rino. He is violent and sadistic, causing suffering to Alfonso and attacking Lila. He is killed with his brother.
Reception
The Novel was very well received by the critics, with The Guardian calling it "a frighteningly insightful finale". Elissa Schappel, writing for Vanity Fair, reviewed the last book of the Quartet as "This is Ferrante at the height of her brilliance." Judith Shulevitz in The Atlantic, praised particularly how the books cicle back to its start, to Lila and Lenu's childhood games, in the final installment. Maureen Corregan has also praised the ending of the novels, calling it "Perfect Devastation".
Roger Cohen wrote for the New York Review of Books: "The interacting qualities of the two women are central to the quartet, which is at once introspective and sweeping, personal and political, covering the more than six decades of the two women’s lives and the way those lives intersect with Italy’s upheavals, from the revolutionary violence of the leftist Red Brigades to radical feminism."
Darrin Franich has called the novels the series of the decade, saying: "The Neapolitan Novels are the series of the decade because they are so clearly of this decade: conflicted, revisionist, desperate, hopeful, revolutionary, euphorically feminine even in the face of assaultive male corrosion."
References
2015 novels
21st-century Italian novels
Novels by Elena Ferrante
Novels set in Naples
Edizioni E/O books
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73170067
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employee%20Retention%20Credit
|
Employee Retention Credit
|
The Employee Retention Credit is a U.S. federal tax credit for employers.
Overview
The Employee Retention Credit is a refundable tax credit against an employer's payroll taxes. It was established during the Donald Trump administration in 2020 through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) in order to help employers during the pandemic.
Eligibility
There are two ways for an employer to be eligible for the Employee Retention Credit for a particular calendar quarter.
The employer experienced a significant decline in gross receipts, or
The employer either fully or partially suspended its operations because of governmental orders related to COVID-19 that limited commerce, travel, or group meetings.
An eligible employer must be either a for-profit entity or an organizations that is tax-exempt under section 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Significant Decline in Gross Receipts
For 2020, a significant decline in gross receipts begins during a calendar quarter in which gross receipts decreased by at least 50percent compared to the corresponding quarter in 2019. Gross receipts include all income for the employer, including donations and grants. When an employer meets this test for a calendar quarter, the effective date is the first day of that particular calendar quarter. When an employer's gross receipts for a calendar quarter decreased no more than 20percent compared to its gross receipts for the same corresponding quarter in 2019, the employer's eligibility ends on the day following that calendar quarter.
For 2021, a "significant decline in gross receipts" begins during a calendar quarter in which gross receipts decreased by at least 20percent compared to its gross receipts for the same corresponding quarter in 2019. Alternatively, an employer can compare its gross receipts to the previous calendar quarter.
Fully or Partially Suspended Operations
The employer is eligible if there was an order from the government to limit commerce, travel, or group meetings that resulted in the employer's partial or full suspension of operations.
An order from the government includes an official rule from any federal, state, or local government that has jurisdiction over the employer. The governmental order must have caused the employer to either fully or partially suspend its operations.
Only governmental orders and manditory requirements qualify. Recommendations, suggestions, and best practices issued by governmental entities do not qualify.
In order to qualify, the order from the government must have affected an activity of the employer that constituted at least 10percent of the employer's total gross receipts in 2019. Alternatively, the limitation must affect a portion of the employer's operations that constituted at least 10% of the working hours performed by its employees in 2019.
Amount of the Employee Retention Credit
For 2020
The Employee Retention Credit is equal to 50percent of qualified wages paid to eligible employees between March 13, 2020, and December 31, 2020.
Eligible employee is defined differently depending on the size of the employer. If the employer averaged 100 or fewer full-time employees during 2019, then all of its employees are eligible employees. For larger employers, only employees who were paid for not performing work are considered eligible employees.
Qualified wages are defined as wages that are subject to social security tax and that were paid to employees between March 13, 2020, and December 31, 2020. Qualified wages may not exceed $10,000 per eligible employee during that period.
In addition, an eligible employer may take the Employee Retention Credit based on 50percent of the qualified health plan expenses that the employer incurred and paid for eligible employees between March 13, 2020, and December 31, 2020. Qualified health plan expenses include employer-paid costs for group health insurance, group dental insurance, group vision insurance, group prescription drug insurance, health flexible spending account (FSA), or a healthcare reimbursement account (HRA).
An employer is not allowed to take the Employee Retention Credit on any wages or health plan expenses that the employer counted for its Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan forgiveness, Emergency Paid Sick Leave, or Emergency Paid Family Leave.
Because an employer may claim a 50-percent tax credit on up to $10,000 per eligible employee, an employer may take a maximum tax credit of $5,000 per eligible employee in 2020.
For 2021
The Employee Retention Credit is equal to 70 percent of qualified wages paid between January 1, 2021, and September 30, 2021. If the employer is a startup recovery businesses, then it is based on qualified wages paid between January 1, 2021, and December 31, 2021.
Qualified wages are wages subject to social security tax and paid to employees between January 1, 2021, and September 30, 2021, limited to up to $10,000 per quarter per employee in 2021. Just like 2020, qualified wages also include qualified health plan expenses, but exclude wages used for its Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan forgiveness and payments of Emergency Paid Sick Leave and Emergency Paid Family Leave. A 70-percent tax credit on up to $10,000 per employee per quarter means the maximum Employee Retention Credit is $7,000 per employee per quarter in 2021.
For 2021, if the employer had an average of 500 or fewer full-time employees in 2019, then all of the employer's employees are eligible employees. Otherwise, only employees who were paid and who did not perform work are generally eligible employees.
Receiving the Employee Retention Credit
During 2020 and 2021, an employer was able to use the Employee Retention Credit to reduce its federal tax deposits, namely its the deposits of federal withholding tax, employee social security tax, employee Medicare tax, employer social security tax, and employer Medicare tax.
If the employer's Employee Retention Credit exceeded its federal tax deposits, the employer was able to receive the additional tax credit refunded to it by check when it filed its Form 941.
Employers that wanted to receive the tax credit before its next Form 941 was filed was able to fax a completed Form 7200 to the Internal Revenue Service in order to request a check sooner.
An employer that has already filed its Form 941 for each quarter may file a Form 941-X with the IRS in order to request the tax credit be refunded to it by a check by mail.
Notes
References
External links
Employee Retention Credit, Internal Revenue Service
Acts of the 116th United States Congress
U.S. federal government response to the COVID-19 pandemic
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73170080
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclone%20Judy%20%282023%29
|
Cyclone Judy (2023)
|
Severe Tropical Cyclone Judy is a currently active tropical cyclone affecting Vanuatu. Judy was the fourth named tropical cyclone and second severe tropical cyclone of the 2022–23 South Pacific cyclone season, Judy was first noted as an area of low pressure to the south of Samoa in Vanuatu on February 22. Initially designated by the Fiji Meteorological Service (FMS) as 08F, the system moved slowly to the north of Fiji for several days before becoming a tropical depression on 26 February. Later that day, the tropical depression intensified into a tropical cyclone and was assigned the name Judy.
Meteorological history
On February 23, the Fiji Meteorological Service reported that Tropical Disturbance 08F had developed about to the southeast of Halalo in Wallis and Futuna. At this stage, the system was poorly organised and located within a marginal environment for further development, with very warm sea surface temperatures of being offset by high levels of vertical windshear. Over the next couple of days, the disturbance slowly consolidated and gradually developed as it moved westwards, before the United States Joint Typhoon Warning Center issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA) on the system on February 26.
On February 27, the FMS reported that 08F had developed into a Category 1 tropical cyclone on the Australian tropical cyclone intensity scale and named it Judy. The JTWC initiated advisories on the system and classified it as Tropical Cyclone 15P. The cyclone convective banding with a central dense overcast (CDO) seen from satellite imagery. At 09:00 UTC on February 28, Judy strengthened into a Category 1-equivalent tropical cyclone on the Saffir–Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS).
Judy further developed due to high sea surface temperatures of , leading to the FMS to upgrade its status to Category 2 tropical cyclone the same day, before upgrading further to a Category 3 severe tropical cyclone on February 28. Continuing to rapidly intensify, Judy intensified, becoming a Category 2-equivalent cyclone. At around 22:00 UTC, Judy made landfall on the island of Efate in Vanuatu, with sustained winds of . During 1 March, the FMS subsequently reported that Judy had become a Category 4 severe tropical cyclone with 10-minute sustained winds of . Judy had intensified with 1-minute sustained wind speeds of , which made it equivalent to a Category 3-equivalent tropical cyclone.
Current storm information
As of 12:00 UTC 28 February, Severe Tropical Cyclone Judy is located near . Maximum 10-minute sustained winds are at with gusts up to , while maximum 1-minute sustained winds are at . The minimum central barometric pressure is , and the system is moving south-southeast at .
For the latest official information, see:
FMS's Tropical Cyclone Warning on Tropical Cyclone Judy
JTWC's Tropical Cyclone Warning on Tropical Cyclone 15P (Judy)
Effects
Solomon Islands
Vanuatu
New Caledonia
See also
Tropical cyclones in 2023
Weather of 2023
Cyclone Uma - impacted Vanuatu as a Category 4 severe tropical cyclone
Cyclone Pam - impacted Vanuatu as a Category 5 severe tropical cyclone
Cyclone Prema (1993) – a tropical cyclone which took a similar path.
Cyclone Harold (2020) – another tropical cyclone that severely impacted Vanuatu.
Cyclone Dovi (2022) – the most recent tropical cyclone to affect Vanuatu.
References
External links
2023 in the Solomon Islands
2023 in Vanuatu
2023 in New Caledonia
2022–23 South Pacific cyclone season
Category 4 South Pacific cyclones
Tropical cyclones in Vanuatu
Tropical cyclones in the Solomon Islands
Tropical cyclones in New Caledonia
Tropical cyclones in 2023
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73170103
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acanthosquilla%20crosnieri
|
Acanthosquilla crosnieri
|
Acanthosquilla crosnieri is a species of stomatopod crustacean in the Nannosquillidae family.
It has been found in waters off the Marquesas, at depths of 0 - 100 m but more usually at 7 - 25 m, and was initially described by the Australian carcinologist Shane T. Ahyong in 2002.
References
External links
Acanthosquilla crosnieri occurrence data
Stomatopoda
Taxa named by Shane T. Ahyong
Crustaceans described in 2002
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73170136
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yolette%20L%C3%A9vy
|
Yolette Lévy
|
Yolette Lévy (May 15, 1938 - December 6, 2018) was a Haitian-born Canadian politician and activist from Val-d'Or, in Abitibi-Témiscamingue, Quebec. She was for many years a municipal councilor in Val-d'Or. She has also worked as a feminist activist, trade unionist, and defender of the rights of seniors.
Early life
Yolette Lévy was born May 15, 1938, in Haiti. Hailing from Cap-Haïtien, she worked as a pharmacist in her country of origin.
After Haiti
Lévy fled Duvalierism to teach for four years in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo) in the service of UNESCO. She and her husband, Jean-Emmanuel Alfred, then submitted their applications for teaching positions in Val-d'Or. She arrived in Val-d'Or in 1969, to work as a chemistry teacher at the Le Carrefour high school.
Lévy sat for 13 years as municipal councilor in Val-d'Or, from 1996 to 2009. She was elected in the municipal elections of 2000, 2001 and 2005, but lost the 2009 elections. During her mandates, she contributed to the revision of the family policy, the implementation of the Taxibus public transport service, defending community organizations, and supporting cultural development.
She first became involved in the teachers' union in 1972. On April 8, 1982, she was elected president of the Union of Education Workers of Northwestern Quebec (STENOQ) and held this position for three years, until June 1984. In June 1984, she was elected to the executive council of the School Board Teachers Commission of the Centrale des syndicats du Québec.
During her union career, she defended several issues concerning women, such as maternity leave, the right to abortion, child care services, and led a major push for pay equity. She also led workshops on the involvement of women in politics.
Lévy was one of the founders of , the intercultural association for welcoming and integrating immigrants in Abitibi-Témiscamingue. With several others, she filed the organization's letters patent on November 23, 1990, with the Quebec government. The association received its official recognition on February 13, 1991.
Finally, in 2015, she became president of the section of the (AQDR) (Quebec Association for the Defense of the Rights of Retired and Pre-Retired Persons) in Val-d’Or.
Lévy served as vice-president of the board of directors of the Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue (UQAT) from 1998 to 2005.
Personal life
She was the mother of three children: Yolette, Jean-Emmanuel, and Henry-Philippe Alfred.
In December 2017, the Regroupement des femmes de l'Abitibi-Témiscamingue supported the creation of an honorary prize, the Yolette Lévy Award.
Yolette Lévy died December 6, 2018, at the Maison de la source Gabriel, a hospice in Val-d'Or, Quebec, Canada.
Awards and honours
2005: Alexina-Croteau Prize, prize from the Regroupement des femmes de l'Abitibi-Témiscamingue which highlights the work of women who have distinguished themselves by their constant commitment to the cause of women in local and regional development
2007: Personality Award from the Val-d’Or Chamber of Commerce
2007: Prix Charlie Biddle, prize that highlights the exceptional contribution of people who have immigrated to Quebec and whose personal or professional commitment contributes to the cultural and artistic development of Quebec
2017: (Lieutenant Governor's Medal)
References
1938 births
2018 deaths
Haitian emigrants to Canada
People from Val-d'Or
20th-century Canadian politicians
Canadian feminists
Canadian women trade unionists
Trade unionists from Quebec
Pharmacists
Black Canadian women
People from Cap-Haïtien
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73170143
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeyar%20Lynn
|
Zeyar Lynn
|
Zeyar Lynn (; born 1958; also known as Myint Aung) is a Burmese poet and writer. He is one of the most influential living poets in Myanmar, leading the post-modern and language poetry movement in Myanmar. He is based in Yangon. He began writing poems in the ninth grade, and Zeyar Lynn debuted in 1982 with Smoke of Depression. In 2006, he published his second poetry collection, Distinguishing Features.
Works
Smoke of Depression (1982)
Distinguishing Features (2006)
Real/Life: Prose Poems (2009)
Kilimanjaro (2010)
Poetry means Craft (2011)
References
External links
Burmese male poets
20th-century Burmese poets
21st-century Burmese poets
People from Yangon
Living people
1958 births
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73170154
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El-Arz
|
El-Arz
|
El-Arz (also spelled Al-Arz or Ariz) (Arabic: الأرز) is a municipality in the Bsharri District of Lebanon. The town is located just west of Bsharri and east of the Cedars of God forest and is east of the Baalbek-Hermel Governorate.
References
Populated places in the North Governorate
Bsharri District
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73170161
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021%20Democratic%20Party%20%28Italy%29%20leadership%20by-election
|
2021 Democratic Party (Italy) leadership by-election
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The 2021 Democratic Party leadership by-election was an election held on 14 March 2021 in which the members of the Democratic Party's National Assembly eleced the party Secretary, whose seat had been vacant since 4 March of the same year.
Procedure
Under the internal rules of the Democratic Party, if an incumbent Secretary resigns, the National Assembly can either decide to dissolve itself and call a new primary election, or choose a new Secretary who will serve until the expiration of the Assembly's five years term.
History
The 2019 Democratic Party leadership election had seen the victory of Nicola Zingaretti, who had become Secretary after winning over 66% of the vote. On 4 March 2021, Zingaretti resigned, claiming he was disappointed in his members for only caring about power, and asked the National Assembly to choose former Prime Minister Enrico Letta as his successor. Letta, who at the time was working in Paris as a university professor, immediately returned to Italy, where he was elected Secretary by the National Assembly in a nearly unanimous vote. In his first speech as leader of the Democratic Party, he claimed there was a need to form a broad alliance of centre-left and centrist political forces. In the same speech he also expressed support for socially progressive measures, such as making it easier for children of immigrants to obtain Italian citizenship and lowering the minimum voting age to 16. He further claimed he would have attempted to introduce institutional reforms which would have discouraged party defections and changed the electoral law.
Results
National Assembly
Sources
2021 elections in Italy
Democratic Party (Italy)
Political party leadership elections in Italy
2021 political party leadership elections
March 2021 events in Italy
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73170170
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgos%20Adamopoulos
|
Giorgos Adamopoulos
|
Giorgos Adamopoulos (; 1946 – 24 February 2023) was a Greek politician. A member of PASOK, he served in the Hellenic Parliament from 1989 to 2000.
Adamopoulos died in Larissa on 24 February 2023.
References
1946 births
2023 deaths
Greek MPs 1989 (June–November)
Greek MPs 1989–1990
Greek MPs 1990–1993
Greek MPs 1993–1996
Greek MPs 1996–2000
PASOK politicians
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens alumni
Politicians from Larissa
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73170179
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A%20Whole%20Lifetime%20with%20Jamie%20Demetriou
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A Whole Lifetime with Jamie Demetriou
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A Whole Lifetime with Jamie Demetriou is a 2023 comedy special from Jamie Demetriou that was broadcast on Netflix in the United Kingdom from February 28, 2023. A one-hour special, it shows a series of sketches depicting life from cradle to grave, featuring guest appearances and songs.
Synopsis
The hour-long comedy sketch special
shows a series of comedy sketches taking the audience from the womb, theough childhood, adulthood and beyond, accompanied by song.
Production
Demetriou said he was approached by Netflix to pitch sketch comedy ideas. Initially, he said he planned “a more sprawling sketch show and then we figured that an hour is a testing amount of time for something that isn’t narrative.” Demetriou described the show as “birth to death in songs and sketches." The show was commissioned prior to the Covid-19 pandemic and had a delayed production until after the outbreak. The project was produced by BBC Studios Productions and Guilty Party Pictures with Demetriou writing and starring.
Cast
Jamie Demetriou
Ellie White
Emma Sidi
Katy Wix
Kiell Smith-Bynoe
Sian Clifford
Bella Glanville
Christopher Jeffers
Mark Silcox
Jonny Sweet
Jon Pointing
Phoebe Walsh
Will Hislop
Al Roberts
Jonny Sweet
Raphale Sowole
Seb Cardinal
Lloyd Griffith
Broadcast
The show was available on Netflix from February 28, 2023 in the United Kingdom.
Reception
Stuart Heritage in The Guardian said he “laughed harder and for longer than I can remember”. Isobel Lewis in The Independent said the comedy was “decidedly British but with a Netflix sheen…silly, but lacking the sharpness of Stath or his live sketch characters. It’s that attempt to straddle both worlds that leaves Demetriou’s comedy feeling surprisingly watered down.” Chris Bennion in The Daily Telegraph called it “a wild, ribald sketch comedy special that… shows, in flashes, its creator’s sublime genius, offering moments of sheer joy, punctuated by longer, more baffling sections that ultimately disappoint.”
References
External links
English-language Netflix original programming
2020s British television sketch shows
British surreal comedy television series
Television productions postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic
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73170211
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carex%20proxima
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Carex proxima
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Carex proxima is a tussock-forming species of perennial sedge in the family Cyperaceae. It is native to Madagascar.
See also
List of Carex species
References
proxima
Taxa named by Henri Chermezon
Plants described in 1923
Flora of Madagascar
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73170227
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%93scar%20L%C3%B3pez%20Balestra
|
Óscar López Balestra
|
Óscar López Balestra (14 October 1934 – 27 February 2023) was a Uruguayan politician. A member of the National Party, he served in the Chamber of Representatives from 1972 to 1973 and again from 1985 to 1990.
López died on 27 February 2023, at the age of 88.
References
1934 births
2023 deaths
National Party (Uruguay) politicians
Members of the Chamber of Representatives of Uruguay
People from Tacuarembó
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73170236
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embassy%20of%20Peru%2C%20Havana
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Embassy of Peru, Havana
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The embassy of Peru in Cuba () represents the permanent diplomatic mission of the South American country in Cuba.
The current Peruvian ambassador to Cuba is Gonzalo Flavio Guillén Beker.
History
Peru and Cuba established relations in 1902. After the Cuban Revolution, relations continued, but their troubled nature led to Peru to sever diplomatic relationships on December 30, 1960, leading to the closure of the Peruvian embassy. After the establishment of Juan Velasco Alvarado's Revolutionary Government, Peru reestablished its relations with Cuba on 8 July 1972, which have remained since.
1980 crisis
On early 1980, a small group of Cuban citizens made their way into the embassy, instigating an international crisis over the diplomatic status of around 10,000 asylum-seeking Cubans who joined them over the following days after the Cuban government ceased its protection of the embassy.
See also
Cuba–Peru relations
List of ambassadors of Peru to Cuba
References
Peru
Havana
Cuba–Peru relations
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73170268
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ennui%20%28novel%29
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Ennui (novel)
|
Ennui is a novel by Maria Edgeworth published in 1809. It is a fictitious memoir of the Earl of Glenthorn, an English man who experiences excessive boredom (ennui) and attempts to find novelty and meaning in life. Edgeworth began writing the novel before 1805, and though she said she finished it that year, she likely continued revising it until around 1808.
Background and textual history
Maria Edgeworth was an Irish writer who wrote about national identity, gender roles, and social issues. Her novels include Ennui, Castle Rackrent (1800), and The Absentee (1812).
The pre-publication history of the novel is unclear. While Edgeworth wrote in an 1805 letter that she was "finishing Ennui", her father later wrote that she substantially revised it after 1805, and she included scenes inspired from an 1806 event. She probably continued writing and revising the novel until a year or two before its 1809 publication. The novel was published shortly after the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and the official union between Ireland and Britain in 1800. It was inspired in part by Erasmus Darwin's Zoonomia; or, The Laws of Organic Life (1794), a medical tract discussing ennui by a family friend, and William Cullen's First Lines of the Practice of Physic (1777–1784). The novel was written during a time of great literary interest in ennui, including Thomas Skinner Surr's A Winter in London (1806) and several stories in Lady's Magazine.
Edgeworth published the novel alongside two others in her Tales of Fashionable Life, a collection of scandalous stories in the model of other commercially successful writing. By 1813, Edgeworth published three further editions of the text, and her Tales were successful.
Synopsis
The Earl of Glenthorn is a rich English man with excessive boredom – ennui, a male condition corresponding to hysteria. His marriage is unhappy and culminates in divorce. He attempts to find novelty in life by gambling, eating food, and traveling; gambling is the only activity which brings him any excitement. He tries to kill himself but fails. He visits Ireland to find meaning in life and engages in democratic projects, yet he remains bored. His parentage is revealed: He was switched at birth and he is not the true Earl of Glenthorn but the son of an Irish mother. Following this reveal, he has a more fulfilling and appreciative life, which includes being remarried and taking on a new name.
Reception and legacy
According to Esther Wohlgemut, in Edgeworth's novel, "foreignness is not so much a political classification as a psychological relationship" that can lead to emotional excesses like ennui. She argues that while Glenthorn ultimately visits Ireland, he remains foreign to that place; even though his parents are Irish, he has an essentially English identity prior to the reveal. Critics generally understand the novel as a commentary on the formation of the British–Irish union, a union which Edgeworth had conflicting opinions on. The novel is understood by critic Deborah Weiss as a commentary on class, though she understands Edgeworth's writing as not anti-aristocratic; for Weiss, Edgeworth's essential point is that all social classes can improve.
References
Citations
Works cited
1809 novels
Irish romance novels
Novels by Maria Edgeworth
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73170285
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricardo%20Garc%C3%ADa%20Garc%C3%ADa-Ochoa
|
Ricardo García García-Ochoa
|
Ricardo García García-Ochoa (25 July 1944 – 21 February 2023) was a Spanish lawyer and politician. A member of the Democratic and Social Centre, he served in the Cortes of Castile and León from 1987 to 1991.
García died in Aranda de Duero on 21 February 2023, at the age of 78.
References
1944 births
2023 deaths
20th-century Spanish politicians
Union of the Democratic Centre (Spain) politicians
Democratic and Social Centre (Spain) politicians
Members of the Cortes of Castile and León
People from the Province of Burgos
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73170291
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shilaidaha%20Rabindra%20Kuthibari
|
Shilaidaha Rabindra Kuthibari
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Shilaidaha Rabindra Kuthibari, in short Shilaidah Kuthibari, is one of the major tourist places in Bangladesh. It is located seven kilometers north of Kushtia on the banks of Padma in Kumarkhali Upazila of Kushtia District.
History
This Kuthi was built by a indigo-planter named Shelly which was later owned by Ramlochan Tagore. In 1807, Dwarkanath Tagore got the ownership of this kuthibari with the inheritance of estate. In 1892, due to the erosion of the river caused by the flood, the Kuthibari was likely to disappear, so it was demolished and a new building was constructed elsewhere in the next year. Dwarkanath Tagore's grandson Rabindranath Tagore came to Shilaidaha several times to look after the estate. He had the opportunity to stay in this cottage. He wrote many literatures during his stay at Shilaidah Kuthibari. During his stay here in 1912, he began the work of translating the Gitanjali into English. During his stay in this building in 1905, he wrote a song which is now the national anthem of Bangladesh.
Before its acquisition to the Government of East Bengal in 1947, the ownership of this Kuthibari was transferred from the Tagore family to another landlord. In 1958 it came under the Department of Archeology of Pakistan. In 1969, the provincial government planned to preserve it as an archaeological site. Since the independence of Bangladesh in 1971, it has been under the Department of Archeology of Bangladesh. In 2013, then President of India, Pranab Mukherjee visited Shilaidah Kuthibari. He then told the government that he wanted to provide financial assistance to build a complex at the Kuthibari site. After four years, the decision was finalized between the two countries and the construction of the complex was completed by 2020. In 2018, a dam was constructed to protect Shilaidah Rabindra Kuthibari, but a part of it collapsed in the same year. Later in 2022, another part of the dam collapsed.
Architecture
Shilidaha Kuthibari was built on 11 acre land of the village. This walled building is three storey museum that has 18 rooms with a central hall. There are a total of 17 doors for entering and exiting the 18 rooms. The building has a total of 30 windows to let in sunlight. The building has an area of 273.87 square meters. Built in Indo-Saracenic style, this building is 8.74 meters high.
Tourist attractions
Layout
There are two buildings near the gate of Kuthibari. The two buildings are named Gitanjali and Sonar Tori. There is a library, two ponds, a mango orchard, a garden and an auditorium.
Museum
In 1986, it became a museum. The Department of Archaeology has preserved at least 80 photographs of Rabindranath Tagore as well as items used by Rabindranath Tagore at Shilaidah Kuthibari.
Tourism
It is a tourist attraction for Bangladeshi as well as foreign tourists. A three-day event is organized every year on the occasion of Rabindranath Tagore's birth anniversary. In the fiscal year 2017-18, the Bangladeshi government earned by selling entry tickets to the Kuthibari. However, the government refrained from organizing events here in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
In popular culture
The stall of the Department of Archeology set up at the 2022 Ekushey Book Fair was modeled after Rabindra Kuthibari.
Gallery
References
External link
Shilaidaha Kuthibari : Beautiful Bangladesh
Kushtia District
Tourist attractions in Bangladesh
Biographical museums in Bangladesh
Memorials to Rabindranath Tagore
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73170309
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buchendorf
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Buchendorf
|
Buchendorf is a village and former municipality in the district of Starnberg in Bavaria, Germany. The village was incorporated into Gauting on 1 January 1978.
References
Starnberg (district)
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73170342
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olanipekun
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Olanipekun
|
Olanipekun is a Yoruba surname common in Nigeria.
Notable people with the surname
Matthew Olanipekun Sadiku, American electrical engineer
Nelson Olanipekun, Nigerian human rights lawyer
Wole Olanipekun, Nigerian jurist
Nigerian names
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73170343
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second%20inauguration%20of%20%C3%81lvaro%20Uribe
|
Second inauguration of Álvaro Uribe
|
The second inauguration of Álvaro Uribe as the 31st President of Colombia and Francisco Santos 9th Vice President of Colombia marked the beginning of his second term in the Chamber of Nariño as Álvaro Uribe's head of state, being the fourth president of Colombia to be reelected for a second term, since the last one was Alfonso López Pumarejo in 1946.
The event was the 44th presidential inauguration. Held in Bogotá, D.C., as of August 7, 2006, the inaugural acts such as the oath and the speech in the open square were suppressed to take place in the senate facilities.
Ceremony
The ceremony took place in the facilities of the National Capitol, in the middle of a wide security ring, after a series of attacks prior to the inauguration ceremony attributed to the FARC, one of the main opponents of Uribe's election.
The ceremony began as usual at 3:00 p.m. standard hours, the President and Vice President in the company of their wives entered the National Capitol in the company of their respective families, after said act Dilian Francisca Toro, president of the Senate and leader A natural member of Congress, he prepared to take the oath of office to Álvaro Uribe as the 31st President of Colombia for a second consecutive term and immediately afterwards he prepared to impose the presidential sash, which was supplied by him incorrectly, which was corrected at instant.
See also
2006 Colombian presidential election
Álvaro Uribe
Francisco Santos
Inauguration of Gustavo Petro
References
Uribe, Álvaro
2006 in Colombia
2006 in politics
August 2006 events in South America
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73170344
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koos/Together
|
Koos/Together
|
The Koos/Together Movement (), officially Social Movement for Peace and Stable Development of Estonia (; ) is a pro-Russian political movement established in Estonia on 19 May 2022, which has joined the Estonian United Left Party for the 2023 Riigikogu election.
The non-profit association Koos Rahu Eest in Eesti is registered with the movement.
The movement is led by chiropractor Aivo Peterson (born Krõlov) and crypto businessman Oleg Ivanov.
On 24 April 2022, Ivanov posted a video where he called the Bucha massacre staged. He also urged the "Baltic regimes", which can organize a similar murder in the Baltic countries, to shoot "dissidents". "Estonia is destined to be destroyed in the war with Russia. The allies are fighting Russia with the hands of their vassal states, and not directly. According to the plans of the allies, Estonia will be destroyed. Everything is being done so that the Baltic states become the next hotbed of war. The same criminals who brought the masses to syringes are now pushing countries to go to war with Russia."
In November 2022, Ivanov participated in the program of the well-known Russian propagandist Vladimir Solovyov, where he said that Estonia should be open to negotiations, but the current orientation towards "escalation" does not bode well: "Our main message is peace and inter-ethnic harmony in Estonia."
"I know that Putin launched a military operation. But I also know that if Putin had not done it, the Ukrainian army would have attacked Donbass within days," Danish Radio (DR) quoted Ivanov as saying.
On 30 November 2022, the registry department of the Tartu County Court did not register the movement as a political party, as the total number of its members was below the required minimum - at least 500 members. Therefore, the movement decided to participate in the 2023 elections as part of the Estonian United Left Party.
The election program of the movement envisages the neutrality of the Republic of Estonia and non-membership of military alliances (i.e. Estonia outside of NATO), as well as granting Estonian citizenship to all people who lived here in 1991 and abolishing the institution of non-citizens (the so-called "gray passport"). The election program also includes "preservation and protection of traditional values, family, religion, cultural and historical heritage. A ban on rewriting history and destroying monuments. Defense spending should not exceed 1% of the gross domestic product."
References
Political movements in Estonia
Political parties established in 2022
2022 establishments in Estonia
Russian political parties in Estonia
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73170350
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money%20Has%20Four%20Legs
|
Money Has Four Legs
|
Money Has Four Legs (), is a 2020 Burmese comedy drama film. The film follows the journey of a young director who attempts to complete a feature film in Myanmar, and satirically depicts systemic issues in the country, including corruption and government censorship, and the state of the Burmese film industry.
In the wake of the 2021 Myanmar coup d'état, the film's producer and lead writer, Ma Aeint, was detained by the military junta in June 2021, after becoming a target of the junta for her involvement in this film. She was sentenced to 3 years of hard labour in April 2022.
Cast
Khin Khin Hsu
Okkar Dat Khe
Ko Thu
Critical reception
The film was well received by audiences, and was shown at international film festivals, including the 25th Busan International Film Festival, 74th Locarno Film Festival, the 20th New York Asian Film Festival, and the 2021 Vancouver International Film Festival.
References
External links
2020s Burmese-language films
Burmese comedy-drama films
Films shot in Myanmar
2020 comedy-drama films
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73170369
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bae%20Duk-kwang
|
Bae Duk-kwang
|
Bae Duk-kwang (; 22 June 1948 – 24 February 2023) was a South Korean accountant and politician. A member of the Saenuri Party, he served in the National Assembly from 2014 to 2018.
Bae died in Busan on 24 February 2023, at the age of 74.
References
1948 births
2023 deaths
South Korean politicians
Members of the National Assembly (South Korea)
Liberty Korea Party politicians
Dong-a University alumni
Kyungsung University alumni
Pusan National University alumni
People from Changwon
|
73170382
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1962%20McNeese%20State%20Cowboys%20football%20team
|
1962 McNeese State Cowboys football team
|
The 1962 McNeese State Cowboys football team was an American football team that represented McNeese State College (now known as McNeese State University) as a member of the Gulf States Conference (GSC) during the 1962 NCAA College Division football season. In their sixth year under head coach Les DeVall, the team compiled an overall record of 6–2–1 with a mark of 3–2 in conference play, and finished tied for second place in the GSC.
Schedule
References
McNeese State
McNeese Cowboys football seasons
McNeese State Cowboys football
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73170392
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne-Christine%20Hladky
|
Anne-Christine Hladky
|
Anne-Christine Hladky-Hennion (born 1965) is a French researcher in acoustic metamaterials. She is a director of research for the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), and scientific deputy director of the CNRS (INSIS).
Education and career
Hladky is originally from Lille, where she was born in 1965. After earning a diploma in 1987 from the Institut supérieur de l'électronique et du numérique in Lille, she continued her education at the Lille University of Science and Technology, where she earned a doctorate in 1990, in materials science. Her doctoral dissertation, Application de la méthode des éléments finis à la modélisation de structures périodiques utilisées en acoustique, was supervised by Jean-Noël Decarpigny.
She joined CNRS in 1992, and became a director of research in 2015.
Recognition
Hladky was the 1990 winner of the Young Researcher Prize of the French Acoustical Society. In 2018 she received the CNRS Silver Medal.
References
1965 births
Living people
Scientists from Lille
French materials scientists
Women materials scientists and engineers
Metamaterials scientists
Research directors of the French National Centre for Scientific Research
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73170425
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yasser%20Al%20Misehal
|
Yasser Al Misehal
|
Yasser bin Hassan bin Mohammed al-Misehal (Arabic: ياسر بن حسن بن محمد المسحل; born on 15 January 1974), is a Saudi Arabian football administrator who is a member of the FIFA Council since February 2021.
He had been the eighth president of the Saudi Arabian Football Federation since its official establishment in 1956. He was elected in June 2019 by acclamation by the General Assembly of the Saudi Football Association for its fourth session from 2019 to 2023.
Biography
Education
He holds a bachelor's degree with honors in financial management from King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in 1996.
Career
Al Mishehal is an honorary member of Al-Ettifaq Club since 1997.
He was a member of the Al-Aghmal Youth Committee at the Chamber of Commerce in Riyadh from 2009 to 2016.
Al Mishehal was elected president of the Saudi Pro League in June 2016. He submitted his resignation in 2017.
Al Mishehal was elected president of the Saudi Arabian Football Federation in June 2019.
In February 2023, Al Mishehal became one of the members of the FIFA Council, as he was elected in January 2023.
References
1974 births
Living people
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73170467
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onofrei
|
Onofrei
|
Onofrei is a Romanian surname that may refer to:
Constantin Onofrei (born 9 May 1976), Romanian former professional boxer
Octavian Onofrei (born 16 May 1991), Moldovan football forward
Orest Onofrei (born 17 March 1957), Romanian veterinarian and politician
Liliana Nicolaescu-Onofrei (born 6 November 1968), Moldovan politician
Romanian-language surnames
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73170507
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024%20Six%20Nations%20Championship
|
2024 Six Nations Championship
|
The 2024 Six Nations Championship (known as the Guinness Six Nations for sponsorship reasons) is a rugby union competition scheduled to take place in February and March 2024, featuring the men's national teams of England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales. It is the 130th season of the competition (including its incarnations as the Home Nations Championship and the Five Nations Championship), but the 25th since it expanded to become the Six Nations Championship in 2000. It will start on 2 February 2024 with a Friday night match between France and Ireland, and end with France against England on 16 March. France will play all three of their home fixtures away from their normal venue, the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, as the stadium is scheduled to be being prepared for use in the 2024 Summer Olympics later in the year.
Fixtures
Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
Round 4
Round 5
References
2024
2024 rugby union tournaments for national teams
2023–24 in European rugby union
2023–24 in Irish rugby union
2023–24 in English rugby union
2023–24 in Welsh rugby union
2023–24 in Scottish rugby union
2023–24 in French rugby union
2023–24 in Italian rugby union
February 2024 sports events in Europe
March 2024 sports events in Europe
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73170508
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma%20Aeint
|
Ma Aeint
|
Ma Aeint () is a Burmese filmmaker and writer, best known for her 2020 film, Money Has Four Legs.
In the wake of the 2021 Myanmar coup d'état, she was detained by the military junta on 5 June 2021 at Insein Prison, after becoming a target of the junta for her involvement in Money Has Four Legs. While in custody, her legs were reportedly broken by interrogation authorities. In April 2022, she was sentenced under section 505A of Myanmar's Penal Code to 3 years of hard labour, after pleading not guilty.
Her sentencing was condemned by PEN America and the international filmmaking community, including the International Coalition for Filmmakers at Risk, the Directors Guild of Japan, eleven South Korean film festivals led by the Busan International Film Festival, and Southeast Asia Fiction Film Lab. In September 2022, actress Julianne Moore led a flash-mob protest at the 79th Venice International Film Festival, calling for the release of Ma Aeint and other imprisoned filmmakers.
References
Burmese producers
People from Yangon
Year of birth missing (living people)
Burmese women writers
Burmese prisoners and detainees
Burmese film producers
Burmese film directors
Burmese film people
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73170520
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ndamase
|
Ndamase
|
'Ndamase is a South African surname that may refer to:
Tutor Nyangelizwe Vulindlela Ndamase (1921–1997), King in the Western Pondoland, President of Transkei from 1986 to 1994 and descendant of Ndamase
Pumelele Ndamase, South African politician and former public servant for the ANC
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73170532
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eustachy%20%C5%BByli%C5%84ski
|
Eustachy Żyliński
|
Eustachy Karol Żyliński (19 September 1889 – 4 July 1954) was a Polish mathematician and university professor known for his work on number theory, algebra, and logic. He was a member of the Lwów School of Mathematics.
Biography
Early life and career (1889–1919)
Żyliński was born in to a landless noble family. In 1907 he graduated with a gold medal from the gymnasium in Kiev, and in 1911 with a first-degree diploma from the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of the University of Imperial Saint Vladimir University in Kiev, where he then worked from 1912to 1914, while doing internships in Göttingen, Cambridge and Marburg. In 1914 he obtained a master's degree (equivalent to today's PhD).
In 1916 he was drafted into the Imperial Russian army. He graduated from a military-engineering school in Kiev and an electrical engineering school in St. Petersburg in 1917 put himself at the disposal of the 1st Polish Corps. From 1918, as an associate professor, he lectured at the Polish University College and the Higher Technical Institute in Kiev. In 1919 he stayed in Warsaw, performing military service as an officer of the Polish Army.
Lwów School of Mathematics (1919–1945)
From October 1919, he was associate professor at the Jan Kazimierz University in Lwów and in July 1922 Żyliński was appointed full professor at University in Lwów, and then head of the Department of Mathematics A at the Faculty of Philosophy. In 1925, he proved that "there are exactly two binary functors (namely, binegation and the Sheffer stroke) each of which is sufficient for defining all other unary and binary functors of classical propositional logic." His colleagues included mathematicians such as Stefan Banach and Hugo Steinhaus. 1929 he was dean of the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences of the Jagiellonian University and was the promoter of Władysław Orlicz's doctoral dissertation.
During the Soviet occupation of Lwów he worked as the head of the Algebra Department at the University of Lwów, and during the German occupation (1941–1944) he took part in clandestine teaching at the Jagiellonian University.
Postwar career (1945–1954)
After Lwów was reoccupied by the Red Army, he started working at the university. From March 15, 1945, Żyliński was a member of the Union of Polish Patriots in Lviv but was removed from the union in 1946. After the deportation from of Poles Lviv, he initially settled in Łódź. At that time, he worked at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and was also nominated as consul general in Kiev, but did not assume this office. In 1947 he moved to Gliwice, where in the years 1946–1951 he was the head of the Department of Mathematics at the Faculty of Engineering and Construction of the Silesian University of Technology. In 1951 he retired and returned to Lodz. Żyliński died there in 1954 of a cerebral hemorrhage.
References
Polish mathematicians
Polish scientists
Lwów School of Mathematics
Mathematicians
Polish academics
Members of the Lwów Scientific Society
20th-century Polish mathematicians
Polish logicians
Academic staff of Jagiellonian University
University of Marburg alumni
Academic staff of the University of Lviv
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73170544
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%E2%80%9324%20CONCACAF%20Nations%20League
|
2023–24 CONCACAF Nations League
|
The 2023–24 CONCACAF Nations League will be the third season of the CONCACAF Nations League, an international association football competition involving the men's national teams of the 41 member associations of CONCACAF. The competition will see a format change, with League A now featuring sixteen teams in two groups of a Swiss system, followed by a quarter-final round. The Nations League will begin with the group stage in September 2023, and will conclude with the Nations League Finals in March 2024. The Nations League also serves as qualification for CONCACAF teams to the 2024 Copa América in the United States.
Format
On 28 February 2023, CONCACAF announced a format change for the 2023–24 season of the CONCACAF Nations League. As a result, no teams will be relegated from the 2022–23 season.
The size of League A will be increased from twelve to sixteen teams, and will now feature a quarter-final round. The twelve lowest-ranked teams in the CONCACAF Rankings of March 2023 will enter the group stage, now using a Swiss-system tournament format. The teams will be divided into two groups of six teams, with each team playing four matches against group opponents (two at home and two away). The top four teams will advance to the quarter-finals, and will be joined by the four top-ranked teams in the CONCACAF Rankings of March 2023. The teams advancing from the group stage will be drawn into ties against the top-ranked teams, which will be played on a two-legged home-and-away basis. The four quarter-final winners will advance to the Nations League Finals, which retains its previous format of a semi-final round, third place play-off and final match to determine the champions. In addition, the 2023–24 Nations League will determine the six CONCACAF teams which will qualify as guests for the 2024 Copa América in the United States. The quarter-final winners will qualify directly to the tournament, while the losers will advance to a qualification play-in, featuring two single-leg matches.
League B will remain unchanged, featuring sixteen teams divided into four groups of four. Each team will play six matches in a double round-robin home-and-away format (three at home and three away). Following the format change, League C will be reduced from thirteen to nine teams and from four to three groups. Teams will be divided into three groups of three teams, with each team playing four matches in a double round-robin home-and-away format (two at home and two away).
Promotion and relegation will resume for the 2023–24 season, with the fifth and sixth placed teams in League A and the fourth-placed teams in League B being relegated for the next season. The group winners of Leagues B and C will be promoted, as will the best second-placed team of League C.
Entrants
All of CONCACAF's 41 member associations will enter in the competition. Teams will be divided into leagues based on their results of the 2022–23 season, while the pots will be determined by the CONCACAF Ranking of March 2023. The four top-ranked teams in League A will receive a bye to the quarter-finals. The group stage draw will take place on 16 May 2023.
League A
League A or B
League B
League B or C
League C
Schedule
Below is the schedule of the 2023–24 CONCACAF Nations League.
League A
Group A
Group B
Quarter-finals
The first and second legs will be played in March 2023. The winners will advance to the Nations League Finals and qualify for the 2024 Copa América, while the losers will advance to the Copa América play-in.
|}
Nations League Finals
Bracket
Semi-finals
Third place play-off
Final
League B
Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
League C
Group A
Group B
Group C
Ranking of second-placed teams
References
External links
2023-24
Nations League
September 2023 sports events in North America
October 2023 sports events in North America
November 2023 sports events in North America
March 2024 sports events in North America
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73170579
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex%20Santana%20%28disambiguation%29
|
Alex Santana (disambiguation)
|
Alex Santana (born 1995) is a Brazilian footballer.
Alex Santana may also refer to:
Alex Muralha (born 1989), full name Alex Roberto Santana Rafael, Brazilian footballer
Alex Santana (baseball), American baseball player
See also
Alexi Santana
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73170602
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Revolution%20and%20the%20Land
|
The Revolution and the Land
|
The Revolution and the Land (Spanish: La revolución y la tierra) is a 2019 Peruvian documentary film directed by Gonzalo Benavente Secco and written by Gonzalo Benavente Secco & Grecia Barbieri. The film is about the 1969 agrarian reform carried out by the left-reformist military dictatorship, calling itself the "Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces".
Synopsis
On June 24, 1969, the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces promulgated Decree Law No. 17716 for agrarian reform throughout the Peruvian territory. The revolution and the land is an analysis of the background, facts and consequences of this law.
The documentary was made based on interviews with historians and protagonists of the agrarian reform undertaken by the regime of General Juan Velasco Alvarado.
Production
Financing
The Revolution and the Land was the winning project of the National Documentary Feature Film Contest of the Ministry of Culture (DAFO 2016).
Filming
It was recorded at the Huando farm, the La Brea y Pariñas oil complex in Talara (Piura) and the photography studio of Martín Chambi. It was also recorded in La Convención (Cuzco)
Release
First release
The film had its premiere in the documentary film competition at the 23rd Lima Film Festival, in August 2019. It premiered on October 10, 2019, in Peruvian theaters.
Second release
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Peru and in memory of the celebration of National Dignity Day, the documentary was re-released on October 9, 2020, through the video hosting platform Vimeo. A percentage of the collection was destined to help indigenous peoples in their fight against COVID-19 in the Amazon.
Reception
During its first week of release, it attracted 18,000 viewers. In the last week of October 2019, it exceeded 38,000 viewers, breaking the record of being the most watched Peruvian documentary in theaters in the national territory. Later it surpassed the sale of 50,000 tickets, and finally attracted 90,000 viewers, becoming the most watched Peruvian documentary.
Controversy
According to journalistic sources, the National Institute of Radio and Television scheduled the broadcast of the documentary for Sunday, April 4 on TV Peru, one day before the commemoration of Fujimori's self-coup, and one week before the 2021 general elections. Through social networks, the production invited voters to watch the documentary and thus decide their vote, which was seen as proselytizing by certain conservative sectors, as former Defense Minister Pedro Cateriano commented on his Twitter profile. Days later, the state body decided to change the date to April 18, which was criticized by the producer of the documentary and was described as an attempt at censorship. Peruvian directors Marcela Cossios and Marina León added to the criticism for the reprogramming, as well as the candidate for the presidency Verónika Mendoza of the Together for Perú party. The time change caused the documentary to be massively pirated and shared. do for viewing through YouTube or Facebook, causing a Streisand effect.
Awards
References
External links
2019 films
2019 documentary films
Peruvian documentary films
2010s Spanish-language films
2010s Peruvian films
Films set in Peru
Films shot in Peru
Documentaries about historical events
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73170608
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ylostins
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Ylostins
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The Ylostins was a Frisian castle or a so-called stins in the city of IJlst, Friesland, Netherlands
History
It is not clear whether the city of IJlst gave its name to the Ylostins, or whether it was the other way around. The Harinxma thoe IJlst family founded the Ylostins in the Middle Ages, probably around 1400. After the family, the castle was also called Harinxmastins. The Ylostins was on the south side of the city. Together with the church on the north side, it formed a defensible complex. The owner of the Ylostins was also the “eeheer or olderman” of IJlst.
The Ylostins consisted of a detached residential tower with bartizans at the top, with an U-shaped residential building next to it. The tower was additionally crowned with a hipped roof with decorative weather vanes. There also seem to have been painted windows, probably by the couple Tiete and Bernardina van Galama. If this is correct, then these windows may have been made by Julius van Galama, who married in IJlst in 1670. The last remains of the Ylostins were demolished in 1778. In terms of shape, the stins had great similarities with the Gruytermastins in Sneek.
The residential center for the elderly in IJlst is named after the castle: 'Nij Ylostins'.
References
Literature
External links
Stins in Friesland
Buildings and structures in Friesland
Castles in the Netherlands
Architecture in the Netherlands
Súdwest-Fryslân
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73170629
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical%20Chairs%20Mixtape%20%28Vol.%201%29
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Musical Chairs Mixtape (Vol. 1)
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Musical Chairs Mixtape (Vol. 1) is an EP by American electronic music producer Zhu, released on July 29, 2022, via the label Astralwerks and distributed by UMG Recordings.
It featured collaborations with Elderbrook, Channel Tres, Kiko Franco, Boy Matthews, partywithray, Phil Scully, and Bava.
Music video
The EP was accompanied by a music video also released on July 29, showing a game of musical chairs in reverse.
Track listing
References
2023 albums
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73170688
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middlesbrough%20Development%20Corporation
|
Middlesbrough Development Corporation
|
The Middlesbrough Development Corporation (MDC) is a proposed mayoral development corporation to fund and manage regeneration in Middlesbrough town centre and Middlehaven, England.
History
The establishment was first proposed in August 2022 by the Tees Valley Combined Authority as a publicly owned statutory body with increased powers (including planning, business rate relief, and acquisition of land by compulsory purchase order). Initially, the corporation was planned to be in operation by the end of 2022.
The proposals included £10 million of investment from the Tees Valley Combined Authority, as well as £8 million from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities to transform the area of Gresham. Following the consultation, a shadow board for the corporation was established comprising elected and private-sector members from:
Tees Valley Combined Authority (mayor Ben Houchen, a chief executive)
Middlesbrough Council (mayor Andy Preston, deputy mayor, a chief executive)
Cleveland Police (commissioner Steve Turner, a chief constable)
Teesside University (vice chair)
and a member of a local non-profit youth organisation
At a council meeting on 24 February 2023, Middlesbrough Council voted 16 to 12 against the planned development corporation. All 16 Labour party councilors opposed the plans, and many councilors (including mayor Andy Preston) did not attend.
The major concerns voiced were around a loss of planning powers for the council, the transfer of council assets to the new entity, and a 'lack of expertise' on the board. The proposed council assets for transfer to the MDC include:
Middlehaven - including brownfield sites, Middlesbrough Dock, and surrounding land of around 40 acres
Middlesbrough bus station
The Crown (former pub) and neighbouring units (Linthorpe Road)
Broadcasting House Enterprise Centre and freehold of Sainsbury's site (Wilson Street)
Units under A66 along Wilson Street
and a number of sites and council owned car parks (Station Street, Amber Street, Buxton Street, and Jurys Inn) earmarked for redevelopment.
On 28 February 2023, the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities confirmed the development corporation would go ahead despite not receiving backing from Middlesbrough Council. Middlesbrough MP Andy McDonald called it a “scandalous denial of democracy". However, the announcement came after 25 of the 46 councilors signed an open letter of support for the MDC sent to the secretary of state Michael Gove.
See also
South Tees Development Corporation
Tees Valley Regeneration
Notes
References
Companies based in Middlesbrough
Redcar and Cleveland
Cleveland, England
Organisations based in North Yorkshire
Development Corporations of the United Kingdom
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73170700
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph%20F.%20Valentine
|
Joseph F. Valentine
|
Joseph Franklin Ferdinand Valentine (1856 – February 7, 1930) was an American labor union leader.
Born in Baltimore, Valentine completed an apprenticeship as an iron molder, then moved to San Francisco. He joined the Iron Molders' Union of North America, and was president of its local 164 from 1880. In 1890, he was elected as vice-president of the international union, and moved to Cincinnati to take up the post.
In 1904, Valentine was arrested on a charge of aiding and abetting in the malicious destruction of property, after some unions were alleged to have blown up molds used at the Eureka Foundry. Valentine protested that he had no involvement with any such act, and the charges were later dropped.
In 1905, Valentine was elected as a vice-president of the American Federation of Labor, while in 1903, he won election as president of his union. He also served on the executive of the National Civic Federation from 1904, and as a vice-president of the Metal Trades Department. He retired in 1924, and in 1927 moved back to San Francisco.
References
1856 births
1930 deaths
American trade union leaders
People from Baltimore
Trade unionists from Maryland
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73170722
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20current%20equipment%20of%20the%20Chilean%20Marine%20Corps
|
List of current equipment of the Chilean Marine Corps
|
This is a list of equipment of the Chilean Marine Corps (CIM) currently in use. It includes small arms, artillery, military vehicles, boats and UAV/drones.
Equipment
Handguns
Battle/assault rifles
Sniper rifles
Machine guns
Grenade launchers
Anti-armor weapons
Mortars
Howitzers
Anti-ship weapons
Fighting vehicles
Transport tracked vehicles
Light transport vehicles
Shelter vehicle
Motorcycles
Military transport trucks
Auxiliary trucks
Boats
UAV/drones
See also
List of current equipment of the Chilean Air Force
List of current equipment of the Chilean Army
List of active ships of the Chilean Navy
List of active Chile military aircraft
References
Chilean Navy
List
Current equipment
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73170765
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadle%20%28disambiguation%29
|
Cadle (disambiguation)
|
Cadle may refer to:
People
Notable people with this surname (and occasional given name) include:
Andrew Cadle (1864–1938), South African cricketer
Brian Cadle (1948–2015), Canadian ice hockey player
George Cadle (1948–2015), American golfer
Giles Cadle, British set designer
E. Howard Cadle (1884–1942), American evangelist
Kevin Cadle (1955–2017), British-based American sports presenter
Richard Fish Cadle (1796–1857), American Episcopalian priest
Scott Cadle (in office 2012–2016/2018–2020), American politician
George Cadle Price (1919–2011), Belizean statesman
Places
Cadle, Alabama, a ghost town
Cadle, Swansea, Wales, a suburban area near Fforestfach
Cadle Monolith, a rock monolith in Antarctica
Other
Cadle Mission, an Episcopal boarding school in Wisconsin
Cadle Tabernacle, a former church in Indianapolis
See also
Cadley (disambiguation)
Candle (disambiguation)
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73170834
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zo%C3%A9%20Karelli
|
Zoé Karelli
|
Zoé Karelli was the pen-name used by Chryssoulas Argyriadou (1901-1998), a Greek poet, playwright and essayist.
Life
Chrysoulas Pentziki was born in Thessaloniki. Her younger brother was the writer Nikos Gavril Pentzikis. She married at the age of 17, acquiring the married name Argyriadou. He first poems were published in the journal The Third Eye, and collected in her debut volume, The March. (1940).
Works
Poetry
The March, 1940
Seasons of Death, 1948
Fantasy of Time, 1949
Of Solitude and Arrogance, 1951
Copper Engravings and Sacred Icons, 1952
The Ship, 1955
Kassandra and Other Poems, 1955
Tales from the Garden, 1955
Contrasts, 1957
The Mirror of Midnight, 1958
Plays
Suppliants, 1962
Simonis, Byzantine Prince, 1965
Orestes, 1971
References
1901 births
1998 deaths
Greek poets
Greek dramatists and playwrights
Greek essayists
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73170846
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann%20Kalmbach
|
Ann Kalmbach
|
Ann Kalmbach (b. 1950) is an American artist and co-founder of the Women's Studio Workshop.
Biography
Kalmbach was born in 1950 in Rochester, New York. She studied at the State University of New York at New Paltz and the Rochester Institute of Technology. In 1974 she co-founded the Women's Studio Workshop (WSW) in Rosendale, New York along with fellow artists Barbara Leoff Burge, Tatana Kellner, and Anita Wetzel.
She frequently collaborates with her life partner Tatana Kellner as Kakeart. In 2017 their collaborative book The Golden Rule, was a Special Merit Honoree at the Minnesota Center for Book Arts MCBA Prize.
Her work is in the collection of the Bridwell Art Library at the University of Louisville, the MassArt Library, the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, the University of Michigan Library, the Walker Art Center, and the library of National Museum of Women in the Arts.
References
External links
WSWTV Presents Ann Kalmbach and Tatana Kellner
1950 births
Living people
People from New York (state)
20th-century American women artists
Women book artists
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73170866
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun%20Odyssey%20379
|
Sun Odyssey 379
|
The Sun Odyssey 379 is a French sailboat that was designed by Marc Lombard as a cruiser and first built in 2011.
The design was named the 2012 Domestic Boat of the Year and Best Midsize Cruiser by Cruising World magazine.
The design was developed into the Sun Odyssey 389 in 2015.
Production
The design was built by Jeanneau in France, from 2011 until 2015, but it is now out of production.
Design
The Sun Odyssey 379 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of polyester fiberglass, with wood trim. The hull is made from solid handlaid fiberglass, while the deck is injection-molded and cored with balsa. It has a 9/10 fractional sloop rig, with a deck-stepped mast, two sets of swept spreaders and aluminum spars with 1X19 stainless steel wire rigging. The hull has a hard chine, a plumb stem, a reverse transom with a drop-down tailgate, an internally mounted spade-type rudder controlled by dual wheels tiller and a fixed "L"-shaped fin keel with a weighted bulb, optional shoal-draft wing keel or stub keel and centerboard, combined with twin rudders. A life raft well is fitted aft.
The fin keel model displaces empty and carries of cast iron ballast, the shoal draft version displaces and carries of cast iron ballast, while the centerboard version displaces and carries of ballast.
The keel-equipped version of the boat has a draft of , the shoal draft keel-equipped version of the boat has a draft of , while the centerboard-equipped version has a draft of with the centerboard extended and with it retracted, allowing operation in shallow water.
The boat is fitted with a Japanese Yanmar diesel engine of for docking and maneuvering. The fuel tank holds and the fresh water tank has a capacity of .
The design was built with two and three cabin interior arrangements. The two cabin version has sleeping accommodation for four people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin, a "U"-shaped settee and a straight settee in the main cabin and an aft cabin with a double berth on the starboard side. The three cabin interior adds a second aft cabin on the port side. The galley is located on the starboard side just forward of the companionway ladder. The galley is "L"-shaped and is equipped with a two-burner stove, an ice box and a double sink. A navigation station is opposite the galley, on the port side. The head is located at the companionway on the port side and is larger on the two cabin. Cabin maximum headroom is .
For sailing downwind the design may be equipped with a symmetrical spinnaker of , an asymmetrical spinnaker of or a Code 0 of .
The design has a hull speed of and a PHRF handicap of 102 to 111.
Operational history
In a 2012 boats.com review, Zuzana Prochazka wrote, "it is a sign of the times that a 37-foot boat like the Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 379 is the entry length in a new product line. Boats have been getting bigger in recent years but larger has not necessarily meant more unique or comfortable. It seems to take more innovation to create a streamlined vessel that offers as much as bigger models, which is exactly what Jeanneau has done with this boat."
In Sail Magazine, Bill Springer's 2012 review concluded, "plenty of boats call themselves good-looking and rewarding to sail. Many boats are also designed to be comfortable at sea and in port. But after testing the Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 379 in a healthy sailing breeze, I can honestly say it comes closer to achieving these goals than most. It was a blast to sail. It was easy to sail. It was comfortable to sail, and its accommodations are both spacious and stylish."
Alvah Simon wrote in a 2013 review for Cruising World, "while wanting to appear hard hitting and discerning, I am hard pressed to find any criticisms of this boat. It’s the rare boat I test that I would personally want to own and operate. But for me the 379 hits its marks perfectly regarding safety, size, style, speed, accommodation and equipment."
See also
List of sailing boat types
References
External links
Keelboats
2010s sailboat type designs
Sailing yachts
Sailboat type designs by Marc Lombard Design
Sailboat types built by Jeanneau
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73170870
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023%20SWAC%20women%27s%20basketball%20tournament
|
2023 SWAC women's basketball tournament
|
The 2023 SWAC Women's Basketball Tournament will be the postseason women's basketball tournament for the 2022–23 season in the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC). The tournament will be held from March 8–11, 2023. The tournament winner will receive an automatic invitation to the 2023 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. The tournament will be sponsored by Cricket Wireless.
Seeds
Teams will be seeded by record within the conference, with a tie–breaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. Only the top eight teams in the conference will qualify for the tournament.
Schedule
Bracket
References
2022–23 Southwestern Athletic Conference women's basketball season
SWAC women's basketball tournament
Basketball competitions in Birmingham, Alabama
College basketball tournaments in Alabama
2023 in sports in Alabama
March 2023 sports events in the United States
|
73170875
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judo%20at%20the%201998%20Asian%20Games%20%E2%80%93%20Men%27s%2066%20kg
|
Judo at the 1998 Asian Games – Men's 66 kg
|
The men's 66 kilograms (Half lightweight) competition at the 1998 Asian Games in Bangkok was held on 7 December 1998 at the Thammasat Gymnasium 1.
Schedule
All times are Indochina Time (UTC+07:00)
Results
Legend
DEC — Won by decision
DQ — Won by disqualification
IPP — Won by ippon
KOK — Won by koka
WAZ — Won by waza-ari
WO — Won by walkover
YUK — Won by yuko
Main bracket
Repechage
References
Results
Top 8
M66
Judo at the Asian Games Men's Half Lightweight
|
73170878
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Htin%20Lin%20Oo
|
Htin Lin Oo
|
Htin Lin Oo (; also spelt Htin Linn Oo; born 21 January 1967) is a prominent Burmese writer and former political prisoner. He previously served as the information officer for the National League for Democracy.
On 23 October 2014, he gave a public speech in Chaung-U Township, where he criticised nationalist Buddhist monks and hardliners of stoking inter-religious tensions in the country. The speech was denounced by Buddhist nationalists, including the Patriotic Buddhist Monks Union. In June 2015, he was sentenced to 2 years of hard labour for defaming religion and 'hurting religious feelings.' His sentencing was condemned by the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. He was pardoned on 16 April 2016 by President Htin Kyaw.
In the aftermath of the 2021 Myanmar coup d'état, he was detained by the military junta. On 22 February 2022, he was sentenced to three years and was released under a mass pardon in January 2023.
References
Burmese writers
20th-century male writers
21st-century male writers
Living people
1967 births
Burmese prisoners and detainees
|
73170880
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pachymerellus
|
Pachymerellus
|
Pachymerellus is a genus of two species of centipedes, in the family Geophilidae. It was described by American biologist Ralph Vary Chamberlin in 1920.
Species
Valid species:
Pachymerellus dentifer (Chamberlin, 1943)
Pachymerellus zygethus Chamberlin, 1920
References
Centipede genera
Animals described in 1920
Taxa named by Ralph Vary Chamberlin
|
73170881
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20ambassadors%20of%20Austria%20to%20Peru
|
List of ambassadors of Austria to Peru
|
The Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador of Austria to Peru is the official representative of the Republic of Austria to the Republic of Peru. The ambassador in Lima is also accredited to Bolivia.
Both countries established relations in the 19th century. In 1851, Austria-Hungary recognized the independence of Peru, and both countries subsequently established relations. By 1859, ethnic Germans from Austria and Germany established and founded the colony of Pozuzo.
As a result of World War I, Peru severed relations with both Germany and Austria-Hungary, reestablishing them with the First Austrian Republic after the war. After the incorporation of Austria into the German Reich in 1938, Peru ceased to have relations with Austria, instead continuing its relations with Germany until 1942. During this period, the Austrian population in Peru saw itself polarized between Austrian loyalists and National Socialists.
In 1947, Peru recognized the Republic of Austria, and in 1949, bilateral relations were resumed, being elevated to embassy level in 1968.
List of representatives
Austria-Hungary
Austria
See also
List of ambassadors of Peru to Austria
References
Peru
Austria
|
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