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This is a list of career achievements by Annemiek van Vleuten, a Dutch professional racing cyclist for UCI Women's Team, . Major results 2008 World University Championships 2nd Time trial 3rd Road race 5th Overall Ster Zeeuwsche Eilanden 6th Grand Prix Elsy Jacobs 2009 1st Ronde van Rijssen 1st Klever Radrennen 10th Overall Holland Ladies Tour 2010 1st Overall La Route de France 1st Stage 3 1st Novilon Eurocup Ronde van Drenthe 1st Ronde van Barendrecht 2nd Overall Gracia–Orlová 1st Stage 2 2nd Overall Iurreta-Emakumeen Bira 1st Stage 4 2nd Ronde van Drenthe 3rd Overall Ster Zeeuwsche Eilanden 3rd Drentse 8 van Dwingeloo 3rd GP Stad Roeselare 3rd GP Ciudad de Valladolid 3rd Emakumeen Saria 3rd Open de Suède Vårgårda TTT 4th Open de Suède Vårgårda 5th Overall Tour de l'Aude Cycliste Féminin 7th Overall Holland Ladies Tour 7th Overall Giro della Toscana Int. Femminile – Memorial Michela Fanini 7th Ronde van Gelderland 8th Grand Prix de Dottignies 10th Tour of Flanders for Women 2011 1st Overall UCI Women's Road World Cup 1st Tour of Flanders 1st Open de Suède Vårgårda 1st GP de Plouay – Bretagne 2nd Overall Tour of Chongming Island Stage race 2nd 7-Dorpenomloop Aalburg 3rd Overall Trophée d'Or Féminin 3rd Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio 3rd Grand Prix de Dottignies 4th Grand Prix Elsy Jacobs 4th Tour of Chongming Island 6th Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 6th Ronde van Drenthe 6th La Flèche Wallonne Féminine 9th Overall Holland Ladies Tour 10th Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 2012 National Road Championships 1st Road race 2nd Time trial 1st GP Stad Roeselare 1st Holland Hills Classic 1st 7-Dorpenomloop Aalburg 2nd Overall Festival Elsy Jacobs 1st Prologue & Stage 2 3rd Overall Emakumeen Euskal Bira 1st Points classification 1st Stage 4 3rd GP Comune di Cornaredo 5th Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 6th Overall Giro della Toscana 1st Points classification 1st Prologue 2013 1st Ronde van Geldrop 1st Ronde van Rijssen 1st Omloop der Kempen 1st Prologue Festival Elsy Jacobs 1st Stage 3 Thüringen Rundfahrt der Frauen 2nd Team time trial, UCI Road World Championships 2nd Overall Holland Ladies Tour 2nd Open de Suède Vårgårda TTT National Road Championships 3rd Road race 3rd Time trial 3rd Holland Hills Classic 4th Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 5th Tour of Flanders 6th Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 7th Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio 8th EPZ Omloop van Borsele 9th 7-Dorpenomloop Aalburg 9th GP de Plouay 10th Overall Trophée d'Or Féminin 1st Stage 6 10th Ronde van Gelderland 2014 1st Time trial, National Road Championships 1st Overall Belgium Tour 1st Prologue, Stages 1 & 2 (TTT) 2nd Open de Suède Vårgårda TTT 5th Ronde van Drenthe World Cup 5th Tour of Flanders 6th Omloop van het Hageland 6th Ronde van Gelderland 6th Ronde van Overijssel 6th Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 7th Open de Suède Vårgårda 8th Overall Giro d'Italia Femminile 1st Prologue & Stage 3 9th Overall Ladies Tour of Norway 9th Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 10th EPZ Omloop van Borsele 2015 1st Prologue Giro d'Italia Femminile 2nd Overall Festival Luxembourgeois du cyclisme féminin Elsy Jacobs 2nd La Flèche Wallonne European Games 3rd Time trial 7th Road race 3rd Road race, National Road Championships 3rd Overall Giro della Toscana Int. Femminile – Memorial Michela Fanini 1st Prologue 3rd Acht van Westerveld 4th Tour of Flanders for Women 7th Overall Emakumeen Euskal Bira 1st Prologue 7th Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio 9th Strade Bianche 10th Overall Holland Ladies Tour 2016 1st Time trial, National Road Championships 1st Overall Belgium Tour 1st Prologue & Stage 3 2nd Overall Energiewacht Tour 2nd Holland Hills Classic 3rd Overall Auensteiner–Radsporttage 1st Stage 2a (ITT) 4th Overall Thüringen Rundfahrt der Frauen 5th Time trial, UCI Road World Championships 6th Omloop van het Hageland 6th Gent–Wevelgem 7th Strade Bianche 7th Tour of Flanders for Women 8th Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio 9th Overall Festival Luxembourgeois du cyclisme féminin Elsy Jacobs 1st Points classification 1st Prologue 9th Ronde van Drenthe 9th Omloop van Borsele 2017 UCI Road World Championships 1st Time trial 4th Road race 1st Time trial, National Road Championships 1st Overall Holland Ladies Tour 1st Prologue & Stage 3 (ITT) 1st Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race 1st Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 1st La Course by Le Tour de France 2nd Individual pursuit, 2017–18 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Pruszków 2nd Overall Emakumeen Euskal Bira 1st Stage 4 3rd Overall Giro d'Italia Femminile 1st Points classification 1st Mountains classification 1st Stages 2 & 5 (ITT) 3rd Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 3rd Amstel Gold Race 4th Tour of Flanders for Women 4th La Flèche Wallonne Féminine 5th Strade Bianche 5th Ronde van Drenthe 5th Liège–Bastogne–Liège 6th Trofeo Alfredo Binda-Comune di Cittiglio 2018 UCI Road World Championships 1st Time trial 7th Road race 1st Overall UCI Women's World Tour 1st Overall Giro Rosa 1st Points classification 1st Stages 7 (ITT), 9 & 10 1st Overall Holland Ladies Tour 1st Points classification 1st Prologue, Stages 1 & 5 (ITT) 1st La Course by Le Tour de France 1st Veenendaal–Veenendaal Classic 2nd Individual pursuit, UCI Track World Championships 2nd Overall Emakumeen Euskal Bira 1st Stage 2 (ITT) 2nd Overall Herald Sun Tour 1st Stage 2 (ITT) 2nd Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 2nd Team time trial, Ladies Tour of Norway 3rd Tour of Flanders 3rd Liège–Bastogne–Liège 4th La Flèche Wallonne Féminine 5th Dwars door Vlaanderen 6th Overall Women's Tour Down Under 2019 UCI Road World Championships 1st Road race 3rd Time trial 1st Time trial, National Road Championships 1st Overall Giro Rosa 1st Points classification 1st Mountains classification 1st Stages 5 & 6 (ITT) 1st Strade Bianche 1st Liège–Bastogne–Liège 2nd Tour of Flanders 2nd Amstel Gold Race 2nd La Flèche Wallonne Féminine 4th Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 6th Overall Emakumeen Euskal Bira 6th Overall Holland Ladies Tour 1st Prologue 7th Dwars door Vlaanderen for Women 7th La Course by Le Tour de France 2020 1st Road race, UEC European Road Championships 1st Omloop Het Nieuwsblad 1st Emakumeen Nafarroako Klasikoa 1st Clasica Femenina Navarra 1st Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 1st Strade Bianche 1st Stage 2 Giro Rosa 2nd Road race, UCI Road World Championships 2nd Road race, National Road Championships 5th La Course by Le Tour de France 6th Overall Challenge by La Vuelta 2021 Olympic Games 1st Time trial 2nd Road race 1st Overall UCI Women's World Tour 1st Overall Setmana Ciclista Valenciana 1st Stage 1 1st Overall Ladies Tour of Norway 1st Stage 3 1st Overall Challenge by La Vuelta 1st Stages 2 (ITT) & 3 1st Dwars door Vlaanderen 1st Tour of Flanders 1st Donostia San Sebastián Klasikoa 1st Emakumeen Nafarroako Klasikoa UCI Road World Championships 2nd Mixed team relay 3rd Time trial 2nd Overall Vuelta a Burgos Feminas 2nd Liège–Bastogne–Liège 2nd Gran Premio Ciudad de Eibar 2nd Durango-Durango Emakumeen Saria 3rd Amstel Gold Race 3rd Clasica Femenina Navarra 4th Time trial, National Road Championships 4th Strade Bianche 4th La Flèche Wallonne 9th Road race, UEC European Road Championships 2022 1st Overall Setmana Ciclista Valenciana 1st Stage 3 1st Omloop Het Nieuwsblad General classification results timeline One-day race results timeline Major championship results timeline Van Vleuten
Saranaca apicalis is a species of ichneumon wasp in the family Ichneumonidae. References External links Ichneumoninae Insects described in 1877 Taxa named by Ezra Townsend Cresson
Voronezh State Pedagogical University () is a public university located in Voronezh, Russia. History Formed in 1931 as Voronezh Agrarian Pedagogical Institute. A year later, the institute was named after the famous Soviet historian - Marxist Pokrovsky M.N., distance learning was opened. In 1941, because of the war, the staff of the institute was evacuated to the city of Urzhum, Kirov Region, and in 1944 they were returned. In 1981, the institute was awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor for success in the education of personnel. And in 1993 the institute was given the title of university. Structure External links Voronezh State Pedagogical University Voronezh
Isgandar Khan Khoyski (Azerbaijani: İsgəndər xan Xoyski; 25 May 1820, Yelizavetpol, Imperial Russia – 16 July 1894, Yelizavetpol, Imperial Russia) was a decorated Imperial Russian and Azerbaijani military commander, having the rank of lieutenant-general. Life He was born in 1820 in Ganja. He began his military service in 1841, and in 1847 was promoted to the rank of cornet. In 1852 he was promoted to the rank of staff-rotmistr, and in 1854 to the rank of rotmistr. After being promoted to the rank of major general in 1883, he was promoted to lieutenant general in 1889. He died on July 16, 1894, in Ganja. While he was still alive, he built a mausoleum for his family in the Sabskar cemetery in Ganja. However, as most of his sons were repressed by the Bolsheviks, only Jahangir Khan and his daughter Tutubeyim were buried there. Family His grandfather Jafargulu Khan was khan of Khoy, after being defeated by Fath-Ali Shah Qajar he went to the north of Araz river and was appointed khan of Sheki for fighting in the Russian-Qajar wars by Alexander I. His father Kalbaliu Khan Khoyski was also major-general in Imperial Russian Army. His elder son Huseyngulu khan was deputy governor of Ganja Governorate between 1918 and 1920. Younger son Rustam Khan Khoyski served as Minister of Social Security of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. His other son Cahangir Khan Khoyski was also major-general in Imperial Russian Army. His son Fatali Khan Khoyski was an Azerbaijani attorney, a member of the Second State Duma of the Russian Empire, Minister of Internal Affairs, Minister of Defense and, later the first Prime Minister of the independent Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. Awards - 3rd Class Order of Saint Anna (1849) 2nd Class Order of Saint Stanislaus (1859) - 2nd Class Order of Saint Anna (1871) 4th Class Order of Saint Vladimir (1871) Order of St. George (1914) References 1820 births 1894 deaths Imperial Russian Army generals Azerbaijani nobility Khoyski family
The 2001–02 season was Ulster Rugby's seventh under professionalism, and their first under head coach Alan Solomons. They competed in the Heineken Cup, the IRFU Interprovincial Championship, and the inaugural Celtic League. Pre-season Alan Solomons, former assistant coach of South Africa and the Western Stormers, was appointed in January to succeed Harry Williams in June. Mark McCall remained assistant coach. Hooker Allen Clarke retired from playing and was named Director of Elite Player Development, establishing Ulster's first academy programme. Players in David Allen Robby Brink from Western Province Kieran Campbell from London Irish Mark Crick from New South Wales Bryn Cunningham from Dungannon RFC Jeremy Davidson from Castres Leopoldo de Chazal Aidan Kearney from UCD Adam Larkin from Castres Matt McCullough from Ballymena R.F.C. Matt Sexton from Canterbury Paddy Wallace from UCD Scott Young from Ballymena R.F.C. Players out Stephen Bell to Bedford Blues John Campbell (released to reserve list) Allen Clarke (retired) Grant Henderson to South Africa Dion O'Cuinneagain to Munster Squad 2001–02 Heineken Cup Pool 2 2001-02 Celtic League Pool A Table Pool A Fixtures Quarter final Semi final 2001-02 IRFU Interprovincial Championship Celtic League pool matches between Irish provinces count towards the Interprovincial Championship. Ulster Rugby Awards The Ulster Rugby Awards ceremony was held on 23 May 2002. Winners were: Ulster player of the year: David Humphreys Ulster Supporters' Club player of the year: David Humphreys Guinness personality of the year: Paddy Wallace Ulster schools player of the year: Lewis Stevenson Coach of the year: Andre Bester, Belfast Harlequins Youth player of the year: Oisin Hennessey Club of the year: Ballynahinch RFC Dorrington B Faulker Memorial Award for services to rugby: Dick Hinds, formerly of Omagh Academy PRO/Media Prize: Terry Jackson, Dungannon RFC References 2001-02 2001–02 in Irish rugby union 2001–02 Heineken Cup
Cecil Noel Sheridan (12 December 1936 – 12 July 2006) was an Irish painter, performance artist, installation artist and actor. He was a member of Aosdána, an elite Irish association of artists. Early life Sheridan was born in Dublin in 1936. His father was Cecil Brinsley Sheridan, a noted comic actor and panto dame at the Olympia Theatre, Dublin. Noel attended Synge Street CBS and worked for the Irish Independent; he studied for a Bachelor of Communications at Trinity College at night, and began to perform with the Trinity Players. Career He was also an amateur artist, painting abstract landscapes, his work appearing from 1958 in the annual exhibitions of Living Art and at the Paris Biennale in 1960; he represented Ireland at the 1962 UNESCO Convention of young painters in Paris and won the Carroll Prize for Painting in 1965 and 1969. Sheridan worked as a gallery attendant in the Museum of Modern Art (New York), painting by night, and got a scholarship for Columbia University in 1967 for a masters in fine art. He was from 1980 to 2002 director of the National College of Art and Design (NCAD, Dublin). He was also a committee member of Rosc and was elected to Aosdána. Sheridan also worked in Australia for many years, and was Director of the Experimental Art Foundation in Adelaide from 1975 to 1980 and won the emeritus medal of the Australia Council for the Arts in 1994. Personal life Sheridan was married to Liz Murphy; they had 5 children. He died in 2006. Paul Durcan wrote a poem in his honour after his death. References External links Irish male painters Aosdána members Painters from Dublin (city) Alumni of Trinity College Dublin Columbia University alumni Columbia University School of the Arts alumni Irish landscape painters 2006 deaths 1936 births
The 51st (Highland) Division War Memorial is located at the North Inch public park in Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. It is dedicated to the soldiers of the 51st (Highland) Division lost in World War II. It was unveiled on 13 May 1995, marking the 50th anniversary of the conclusion of the war. The bronze sculptures depict a Highlander piper being handed a rose from a bunch of flowers held by a young Dutch girl. A bronze dedication plaque is mounted on a tablet on the granite base. Another plaque, listing the regiment's battle honours, is at the rear. By the steps leading up to the memorial is a tablet informing the visitor of the memorial's symbolism. Two bronze relief plaqyes are on the sides of the base; one is a montage of soldiers in the field, the other depicts a gun, an armoured personnel carrier, a tank, medics treating a wounded soldier, a piper leading two soldiers into battle, a chaplain at a burial service and three lorries at a depot. References 1995 sculptures 1995 establishments in Scotland Monuments and memorials in Scotland Outdoor sculptures in Scotland Statues in Scotland Bronze sculptures World War II memorials in Scotland
The 1920 PGA Tour season during the fifth year of the Professional Golfers' Association of America was played from January through October, based on tournaments recognized in PGA Tour records. Tournament results The following table shows all 1920 tournaments recognized in the PGA Tour record books. "Date" is the ending date of the tournament. The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names are the number of wins they had on the tour up to and including that event. Majors are shown in bold. References External links PGA Tour official site PGA Tour seasons 1920 in golf
Batillipes lusitanus is a species of tardigrade in the genus Batillipes. Description B. lusitanus has middle toes on each four feet which are all equal in length. It exhibits a dorsal cuticular ornamentation which is constituted by large pillars, which makes the cuticle itself appear similar to that of B. adriaticus has. References Tardigrades Batillipes
Lechenaultia mimica is a species of flowering plant in the family Goodeniaceae and is endemic to the Kimberley region of Western Australia. It was first formally described in 2015 by Matthew David Barrett and Russell Lindsay Barrett in Australian Systematic Botany from material they collected in 2008. The specific epithet (mimica) means "imitating", referring to the similar Lindernia hypandra with which it grows. The species is only known from the Northern Kimberley region of north-western Western Australia. This lechenaultia is listed as "Priority One" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, meaning that it is known from only one or a few locations that are potentially at risk. References Asterales of Australia mimica Eudicots of Western Australia Plants described in 2015
Church of Annunciation of Virgin Mary is a part of the Bridgettines monastery in Hrodna, listed Cultural Heritage of Belarus. History In the Grand Duchy of Lithuania In 1634 the nobleman Krzysztof Wiesiołowski and his wife Aleksandra-Mariana Sobieski invited the Bridgettines order to Hrodna and presented it with lands in the city and on its outskirts. In 1636 a wooden church was constructed, and replaced in 1642 with a stone one created by the Italian architect . First eight nuns entered the monastery in 1636. In 1646 Flemish artist of German origin Johann Schroeter painted altar pictures for the church. The series included such scenes as the Holy Family, the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary, Saint Anna, the Annunciation, Saint Brigid, etc. The church was consecrated on October 19, 1651, by the bishop Jerzy Tyszkiewicz. The church kept genuine relics of Pope Clement I, confirmed by the Roman Curia in 1768. During the Russo-Polish War of 1654–1667, nuns were forced to leave the city and stayed in Gdańsk for three years. In the Russian Empire After the 1827 fire the complex was restored, a new building was constructed and closed the territory, forming a rectangular inner yard. In 1842 Soviet authorities ordered to close the monastery, but allowed nuns to stay and live there. Also, Benedictine nuns from Nyasvizh, Dominicans from Novogrudok, and Bridgettines from Lutsk were moved there. In the XIX century the authorities used the monastery as prison. In 1827 the Decembrists Kornelia and Ksaveriya Rukevich were kept here. For taking partin the January Uprising the Russian government punished the Roman Catholic church with contributions and the monastery in Grodno was forced to pay 533 roubles to the treasury. In 1885 the church was almost destroyed by fire, it burned down the bell tower and melted the doors of the temple. By 1891, only 5 nuns still lived in the monastery, in 1907 remained only 2. In 1908 the monastery was given to the Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth. XXI Century In 1990 the church and the monastery complex were returned to the Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth. In the following years the facades of the church and its roof were restored. In 2020 the sisterhood opened a museum to exhibit the artifacts collected through its 370-years long history. Gallery References Sources 17th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Belarus Catholic Church stubs Churches in Belarus Landmarks in Belarus
Meghan O'Gieblyn is an American writer, and essayist. Life She studied at Moody Bible Institute. She graduated from University of Wisconsin-Madison, with an MFA. O'Gieblyn was a columnist for Paris Review and Wired. Her work appeared in n+1. Three Penny Review, and Harper's. Works God, Human, Animal, Machine (2021) Interior States (Anchor, 2018) References External links Official website Living people American writers
Iceland is scheduled to compete at the 2022 Winter Paralympics in Beijing, China which takes place between 4–13 March 2022. Alpine skier Hilmar Snær Örvarsson is expected to compete. He previously represented Iceland at the 2018 Winter Paralympics. Competitors The following is the list of number of competitors participating at the Games per sport/discipline. Alpine skiing Hilmar Snær Örvarsson is expected to compete in alpine skiing. See also Iceland at the Paralympics Iceland at the 2022 Winter Olympics References Nations at the 2022 Winter Paralympics 2022 Winter Paralympics
Cyperus diwakarii is a species of sedge that is native to parts of India. See also List of Cyperus species References diwakarii Plants described in 2006 Flora of India
Yeoroo Lee (born October 5, 2006) is an American racing driver. He currently competes in the U.S. F2000 National Championship with Jay Howard Driver Development. Racing record Career summary *Season still in progress. Motorsports career results American open-wheel racing results U.S. F2000 National Championship (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) (Races with * indicate most race laps led) *Season still in progress. References 2006 births Living people Racing drivers from New Jersey U.S. F2000 National Championship drivers People from Fair Lawn, New Jersey
Sceloporus bimaculosus, the twin-spotted spiny lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is found in New Mexico and Texas in the United States and Mexico. References Sceloporus Reptiles of Mexico Endemic fauna of Mexico Reptiles described in 1955
Ivan Matušík (12 July 1930 – 20 February 2022) was a Slovak architect. Life and career Born in Bratislava, a pupil of Emil Belluš, in 1953 Matušík graduated in architecture at the Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava and then started working at the Bratislava City Office and later at the Bratislava Military Design Institute (Vojenského Projektového Ústavu). In 1961 he joined the State Project Institute of Commerce (Štátnom projektovom ústave obchodu, ŠPUO), serving as its director from 1968 to 1989. A functionalist, he designed a large number of iconic Bratislava buildings, including the Shopping Center Slimák (1960 - 1964), the Prior Department Store (1968), and the Kyjev Hotel (1973). Often criticized by authorities and senior colleagues for being an imitator of Western architecture and for being too formalistic, after the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia he faced a serious backlash and some of his buildings got destroyed. During his life he was the recipient of various honors and accolades, including four , a Crystal Wing Award and the 2003 . Beyond his activity as an architect, Matušík served as a professor at his alma mater from 1976 to 1980 and was the founder and an editor of the journal of architecture Projekt. Matušík was married to architect Gabriela Churová. He died on 20 February 2022, at the age of 91. References External links Ivan Matušík at Architectuul 1930 births 2022 deaths Slovak architects Czechoslovak architects People from Bratislava Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava alumni Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava faculty
Giovanni Ferretti (c. 1540-after 1609) was an Italian composer. The name may also refer to: Giovanni Ferretti (footballer) (1940-2007), Italian professional football player Giovanni Domenico Ferretti (1692-1768), Italian painter Giovanni Lindo Ferretti (born 1953), Italian singer-songwriter, composer, and author Pope Pius IX (1792-1878), born Giovanni Maria Mastai Ferretti, head of the Catholic Church from 1846 to 1878
Penny M. Heaton is an American physician who is the Global Therapeutics Lead for Vaccines at Johnson & Johnson. She previously worked at Novavax, Novartis and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. She was included by Stat News on their definitive list of leaders in the life sciences in 2022. Early life and education Heaton has said that she was inspired to work on vaccine development after hearing her father suffered from tuberculosis before she was born. She has credited her high school science teachers with teaching her the importance of blind controlled trials. She was an undergraduate and medical student at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. She remained there as a medical resident in pediatrics. She worked as a services officer for Epidemic Intelligence at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, studying food-borne viruses in infants born to HIV positive mothers. She went on to work in Kenya, where she investigated the roll-out of vaccines in impoverished populations in Kisumu. Career On returning to the United States, Heaton joined Merck & Co. Under her leadership the foundation developed the vaccine for rotavirus and delivered the Rotavirus Safety and Efficacy Trials. The vaccine was recommended by the World Health Organization for all infants around the world, and was predicted to save almost two million lives over the course of ten years. Heaton was made Global Head of Vaccine Research Clusters at Novartis where she worked on maternal immunization, with a particular focus on Group B streptococcal infection. She worked on vaccines against Meningococcal meningitis, including Bexsero and Men. After 3 years at Novartis, Heaton joined the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as Director of Vaccine Development and focssed on developing vaccines for diseases that impact the world's most vulnerable communities. Heaton was made chief executive officer of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Medical Research Institute in 2017. She was recruited as global lead for vaccines at Johnson & Johnson in 2021. Awards and honors 2018 University of Louisville School of Medicine Alumni of the Year 2020 National Foundation for Infectious Diseases Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Award Recipient 2020 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society Distinguished Research Award 2022 Stat News Status List Selected publications References American women physicians American physicians Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Johnson & Johnson people University of Louisville School of Medicine alumni
The Ngāti Raukawa-Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga War was a conflict between the Ngāti Raukawa iwi of Tainui and Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga in the Waikato region of New Zealand in the mid-seventeenth century, which resulted in the complete elimination of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga and Tainui's acquisition of the upper Waikato River. This marked the final destruction of all non-Tainui people within the Waikato region. Sources A detailed account of the war was published by Walter Edward Gudgeon in the 1893 issue of the Journal of the Polynesian Society, with no indication of the sources on which it is based. It is also recorded by Pei Te Hurinui Jones, based on oral testimony given at the Maori Land Court at Cambridge in a dispute over ownership of Waotū. A similar account was given by Hōri Wirihana of Ngāti Kauwhata in evidence to the Maori Land Court at Otorohanga on 17 August 1886. Some events are mentioned in F. L. Phillips' Nga Tohu a Tainui / Landmarks of Tainui (1989), drawing on various oral traditions. Background The Tainui confederation originally settled on the western coast of the Waikato region at Kāwhia, around 1300. From that point onwards, they slowly expanded inland, with the Ngāti Raukawa iwi of Tainui establishing itself around the Waipa River. By the mid-seventeenth century, Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga were the only non-Tainui people remaining in the Waikato region. According to Jones, they were a tribe of Tangata whenua ('people of the land'), who had been presented in Waikato before the arrival of the Tainui. According to the 1886 testimony of Hōri Wirihana, they were part of the Te Arawa confederacy. At this time, they inhabited the upper banks of the Waikato River, from Putaruru to Atiamuri. This was fairly marginal land, but it included two maunga manu ('bird mountains'), Whakamaru and Tū-aropaki (now site of Mokai Power Station), which the people of Tainui desired. Outbreak of war The rangatira (chieftain), Parahore or Purahore of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga married Korokore (called Koroukore or Korokoro in some sources), the sister of Whāita, a prominent rangatira of the southern Tainui, who was based at Wharepuhunga, a hill not far from the west bank of the Waikato. However, a group of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga led by Te Maru-huoko murdered her at Te Aharoa in Waotū because they knew that Tainui wanted their lands and they were angry that they were required to hand many of the birds that they caught over to her. Gudgeon also reports an alternative version, in which Whāita had eloped with Waiarohi, wife of Te Ruamano, a rangatira of Ngāti Waihakari and left her with the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga for safekeeping only for them to murder her for some reason. News of the murder was brought to Tama-te-hura, a cousin of Korokore. He passed the news on to Whāita at Wharepuhunga, who gathered a war party. He was joined by Tama-te-hura's brothers Upoko-iti and Pipito, as well as Wairangi, who may have been a brother of Tama-te-hura or Whāita. Course of the war The Tainui war-party marched past Maungatautari and attacked the local forts of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga on the west side of the Waikato River. According to Jones, the first place to fall was Te Pōhue, and the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga then fled to Te Ana-kai-tangata ('Cannibal Cave') and Te Ana-kōpua ('Deep Pool Cave'). Defeated there, too, the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga fled to another refuge, Takahanga-ahiahi. Gudgeon says that the first conquest was Te Horanga, south of Kihikihi on the Puniu River, which was defended by Korokore's murderer, Te Maru-huoko, and that this was followed, on the same day, by the fall of the village of Te Aro-whenua, and two other places: Pōhue, and Taka-ahiahi. Bruce Biggs says the Te Horanga was the base of Parahore. Wirihana, on the other hand, says that Te Horanga was already in Tainui hands before the war, being the base of Tama-te-hura, and that the first battle of the war was Te Ana-kai-tangata. Invasion of Waotū After this, the Tainui war party split into two groups, which moved up the river on opposite sides. Wairangi and Upoko-iti stayed on the west side, while Whāita, Pipito, and Tama-te-hura crossed the Waikato River and advanced on the Waotū region, where Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga had three fortresses: Pirau-nui (a foothill of Matawhenua), Puke-tōtara / Ōmaru-o-aka, Pawa-iti, and Hōkio, which Whāita captured. At nearby Mangamingi, Pipito killed a Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga chieftain, Matanuku. Gudgeon places the defence of Te Ana-kai-tangata at this point and says that the siege lasted for three days, before the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga forces fled. Four of their chieftains, Kaimatirei, Te Aomakinga, Tokoroa, and Te Rau-o-te-Huia were killed. From there, Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga fled south of Whakamaru, where they had two fortresses, Te-Ahi-pū and Te Aho-roa. Again, Whāita defeated them. At Te Aho-roa, all the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga dead were burnt, as revenge for their murder of Korokore, which had taken place on the site. At nearby Turihemo, Whāita personally killed one Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga rangatira, Manuawhio, while Pipito captured a number of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga hiding in a cave near Tokoroa and brought them back to Te Aho-roa to be eaten. After this, Jones reports that Whāita's forces captured and killed one of the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga chieftains, Tama-pohia, at Wai-mapora, and killed further Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga at Te Ripinga-a-tahurangi. Gudgeon instead says that Whāita's forces killed three chieftains: Pokere, Mangapohue, and Tikitikiroahanga. Te Arawa intervention The Te Arawa tribal confederation of the Bay of Plenty now intervened. Jones suggests that they were worried about Whāita continuing into their lands or that they had marriage ties with the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga. Whāita defeated the Te Arawa forces that had entered Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga lands and pursued them into Te Arawa land, where however, his forces were routed and forced to flee for the Waikato River, with Te Arawa in pursuit. At Te Whana-a-Whāita ('The springing back of Whāita'), Whāita rallied the troops and defeated Te Arawa. This place remained the boundary between Tainui and Te Arawa thereafter. According to Gudgeon, Whāita's illness had prevented him from joining the expedition against Te Arawa, which he says was led by Tama-te-hura and reached Waikuta on the shores of Lake Rotorua before Te Arawa turned the force back, took Tama-te-hura prisoner, and killed Pipito. He says that the leader of the Arawan forces was Ariari-te-rangi, son of Hinemoa and Tūtānekai. In this account the Te Arawa pursued the Tainui forces all the way back to Te Whana-a-Whāita, where Whāita rallied them, as in Jones' version. While this was happening, Wairangi's force passed Te Wawa, killed the rangatira Whakahi at Te Pae-o-Turawau, and killed Korouamaku at Te Ngautuku, near Ātiamuri. Siege of Pōhatu-roa The last of the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga made their stand at Pōhatu-roa, a hill just west of Ātiamuri, which was the base of their allies, the Ngāti Hotu. Whāita and Wairangi's war-parties reunited and surrounded the hill. The two forces clashed repeatedly, but eventually hunger sapped the defenders' strength and they were unable to deflect a Tainui assault, which captured the chieftain Hikaraupi and the mountain. According to Wirihana, at the end of the campaign there was a disagreement about what to do with the captured Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga – Tame-te-hura wanted to keep them as slaves, but Whāita insisted that they must all be killed, so that they would not return with Arawa support to reclaim the land. Jones agrees that all the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga died, while Gudgeon speculates that they may have fled to join Te Arawa. Local tradition identifies a number of large stones as the location where the Ngāti Hotu and Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga prisoners were cooked and eaten. Aftermath The war marked the final stage in the expansion of Tainui to encompass the whole of the Waikato region. The territory of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga passed to the Ngāti Raukawa iwi of Tainui. The portion south of Whakamaru was settled by Wairangi and his descendants, the Ngāti Wairangi, who now share Mōkai marae with a number of other hapu. Whāita took the section furthest up the river, around Pōhatu-roa and his descendants, the Ngāti Whāita, have their marae at Ōngāroto, on the north bank of the Waikato River, a little west of Ātiamuri. The war also established the border between Tainui and Te Arawa at Te Whana-a-Whāita. References Bibliography Ngāti Raukawa 17th-century conflicts History of Waikato 17th century in New Zealand Māori intertribal wars
The Siege of Otrar took place between December 1219 and February 1220, during the Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire, at Otrar, a large trading city on the Syr Darya river. Inalchuq, the city's governor, had seized the goods of a Mongol trade caravan the previous year; after more provocations from Inalchuq's liege and ruler of the Khwarazmian Empire, Shah Muhammad II, Genghis Khan launched a full-scale invasion of the empire. The city had been extensively garrisoned and fortified, and the Mongol troops, who arrived in waves, found it difficult to breach the battlements. However, progress was slowly made, and by February, Genghis felt confident enough to detach part of his army and head southwards towards Transoxiana. His sons Chagatai and Ogedai were left behind to continue the siege. Qaracha, the leading general of the city, deserted in February 1220, and soon afterwards, the inner citadel fell. Inalchuq was captured alive, and was executed. Muhammad had expected the nomadic invaders to fail in capturing Otrar. Its seizure left the Khwarazmian heartland open to conquest — the Mongols would isolate and capture the great cities of Bukhara, Samarkand, and Gurganj in turn. Otrar itself, although razed by the Mongols, would revive during the Pax Mongolica; its final decline only came as the Silk Road declined in importance. References Notes References Otrar Otrar 1219 in Asia 1220 in Asia Otrar Otrar
An election to the was held on . The election took place in the aftermath of the February Revolution (with Russia was governed by the Provisional Government), the formation of the Ukrainian Central Rada and the First World War. The election resulted in a victory for the Russian and Jewish socialists. Candidate lists Eighteen lists of candidates contested the election. Ahead of the election the Ukrainian socialist parties had decided to launch a list of their own, in protest of what they saw as the 'anti-Ukrainian campaign' in the Russian socialist press. On the other extreme stood the Bloc of Russian Voters, one of the Russian nationalist groups that had emerged in response to the formation of the Central Rada in March 1917. Their main electoral slogan was 'Down with Ukraine and Ukrainization'. Whilst the General Jewish Labour Bund contested on the same list as the Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, the United Jewish Socialist Workers Party (Fareynikte) and the Jewish Social Democratic Labour Party (Poalei Zion) had a joint list. On the non-socialist side of Jewish politics there was the list of the Jewish Democratic Bloc - a coalition of Zionists, the Orthodox Agudath Yisrael and the non-affiliated Council of United Jewish Organizations. Election result There were 307,920 eligible voters. Below are two accounts of the election result; an article in the Russian conservative nationalist newspaper Kievlyanin, published , and the work 1917 god na Kiyevshchine: khronika sobytiy ('1917 in the Kiev region: a chronicle of events'), published in 1928 by the Institute of Party History of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine. Ukrainian parties won a fifth of the seats in the City Duma. The General Jewish Labour Bund got 7 of the 44 seats won by of the Menshevik-SR-Bund list, Moisei Rafes being one of the Bundist deputies. was one of the Menshevik deputies. Georgy Pyatakov was one of the Bolshevik deputies. , leader of the Polish section of the Kiev City Bolshevik Committee, was one of the elected deputies. was the deputy of the Polish Socialist Party in the city duma. New city government After the election, B. A. Dreiling (a respected journalist and Menshevik) was elected chairman of the City Duma. A secret ballot was held in the City Duma to elect the new mayor - the Socialist-Revolutionary from Moscow was an elected with a majority of votes (48 votes) whilst Mykola Porsh of the Ukrainian Bloc obtained 24 votes. The Menshevik Abram Ginzburg ('Naumov') became the deputy mayor. Out of the ten members of the city executive, there were only three Ukrainians (, , ). The city government, representing the moderate socialist trend, would face pressure from both Bolshevism and Ukrainian nationalism in the ensuing period. Gordon M. Hahn (2018) argues that the weak showing of Ukrainian parties in urban elections in the summer of 1917 may have contributed to the Russian Provisional Government's August 1917 decision to reject the draft Ukrainian constitution presented by the Central Rada. By the time of the 1917 Russian Constituent Assembly election, the Ukrainian Bloc vote in Kiev city increased to 26%. References Local elections in Russia Russian Revolution 1910s in Kyiv Elections in Kyiv
Count Maurice Frederick of Nassau-Siegen (19 January 1621 – 17 June 1638), , official titles: Graf zu Nassau, Katzenelnbogen, Vianden und Diez, Herr zu Beilstein, was a Count from the House of Nassau-Siegen, a cadet branch of the Ottonian Line of the House of Nassau. He served as an officer in the Dutch States Army. In the propaganda for the House of Orange, he is regarded as one of the twelve heroes of the House of Nassau who gave their lives in the Eighty Years’ War for the freedom of the Dutch people. Biography Maurice Frederick was born at on 19 January 1621 as the second son of Count William of Nassau-Siegen and Countess Christiane of Erbach. Maurice Frederick became a student at Leiden University on 3 September 1633, and on 27 May 1636 he was appointed captain of a infantry company in the Dutch States Army, where his father was field marshal. Prince Frederick Henry of Orange, who intended to lay siege to Antwerp, entrusted Maurice Frederick’s father with an important undertaking in 1638, the occupation of the levee at . William conquered the sconces of Stabroek and Calloo and chased off the Spaniards, but instead of continuing his march, he reinforced himself on the spot. When he heard the false rumour that the Spaniards were approaching with a greater force than his own, he fled in confusion. On 17 June he suffered a considerable loss of 2,000 men. Maurice Frederick was one of those who fell in this Battle of Calloo. He was buried at Heusden. Ancestors Notes References Sources (1911). "Willem, Wilhelm". In: en (redactie), Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek (in Dutch). Vol. Eerste deel. Leiden: A.W. Sijthoff. p. 1572. (1882). Het vorstenhuis Oranje-Nassau. Van de vroegste tijden tot heden (in Dutch). Leiden: A.W. Sijthoff/Utrecht: J.L. Beijers. External links Nassau. In: Medieval Lands. A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, compiled by Charles Cawley. Nassau Part 5. In: An Online Gotha, by Paul Theroff. 1621 births 1638 deaths German Calvinist and Reformed Christians German military officers German people of the Eighty Years' War Maurice Frederick Military personnel of the Eighty Years' War People from Siegen 17th-century German military personnel
The 1919 Campeonato Gaúcho was the first season of Rio Grande do Sul's top association football league. Brasil de Pelotas won the title for the first time. Format The championship was originally going to be contested by the four regional champions in a single round-robin system, with the team with the most points winning the title. The two teams that were able to compete played a single match in order to determine state champions. Qualified teams Originally, Nacional from São Leopoldo, Guarany from Bagé, 14 de Julho from Santana do Livramento, Uruguaiana from Uruguaiana and an unknown team from Cruz Alta would compete. However, these teams could not register their players in time. Championship Notes A. Fonts differ about who scored Brasil de Pelota's goals. RSSSF Brasil cites two goals by Proença and three by Ignácio. Both Diário de Viamão and Futebol Nacional cites three goals by Proença at 11' or 12', 49' and 71' and a goal by Alvariza at 51', differing on the scorer of the second goal, where the former cites Farias at 18' and the latter cites Correa at 19'. References Campeonato Gaúcho seasons 1919 in Brazilian football leagues
All the Great Hits is a compilation album by the Commodores released in July 1982 by Motown records. It consisted of Commodores hit singles, many of which charted high on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, including the number-one hit "Three Times a Lady". The record was very popular and was certified RIAA gold on May 8, 1985, for selling over 500,000 copies. Track listing Side one Painted Picture — 4:55 Lady (You Bring Me Up) — 4:01 Sail On — 3:58 Still — 3:43 Machine Gun — 2:41 Side two Brick House — 3:26 Easy — 4:15 Oh No — 3:00 Three Times a Lady — 3:35 Reach High — 3:35 Production Commodores — writing, producer, arrangements James Anthony Carmichael — producer, arrangements Calvin Harris, Jane Clark — recording/mixing engineer Michael Johnson, Phil Brown, Richard Wells — assistant engineer John Matousek — mastering engineer Paulinho Da Costa — percussion (on "Painted Picture") Johnny Lee — art direction Ron Slenzak — photography Suzee Wendy Ikeda — project manager References Commodores albums 1982 compilation albums Motown compilation albums
Georgios Papadopoulos (; Lechouri, d. 1854), known as Georgios Lechouritis () was a fighter of the Greek Revolution. He was born in the village of Lechouri, where his family's historic tower still stands. His brothers were Anagnostis and Nikolaos. As the commander of a force from Kalavryta, he participated in the battles of Levidi, Lalas, Dervenakia, Nafplion, and Valtetsi. He fought during all three of Ibrahim Pasha's invasions in Kalavryta, and mainly in the villages of Sopoto και Karnesi. He fought in the siege of the Acropolis in 1827, where he was wounded in the leg. He died of cholera in 1854 in Lechouri, where during the last years of his life. References Sources Ioannis Th. Kolokotronis, Ελληνικά Υπομνήματα, Ήτοι Διάφορα Έγγραφα Αφορώντα την Ελληνικήν Επανάστασιν..., Τύποις Χ. Νικολαΐδου Φιλαδελφέως, 1856. Georgios Papandreou, Καλαβρυτινή επετηρίς: ήτοι πραγματεία περί της ιστορικής των Καλαβρύτων επαρχίας, published by Michael I. Saliveros, Athens 1906. Greek people of the Greek War of Independence 1854 deaths People from Aroania Year of birth missing Deaths from cholera Peloponnese in the Greek War of Independence
Damon and Pythias is a legend in Greek historic writings. Damon and Pythias may also refer to: Damon and Pythias (play), a play by Richard Edwards Damon and Pythias (1962 film), an Italian/American film directed by Curtis Bernhardt Damon and Pythias (1914 film), an American silent epic film directed by Otis Turner
The Stone Cross () is a 1968 Ukrainian film. Directed by Leonid Osyka, it is based on Vasyl Stefanyk's short stories The Thief and The Stone Cross. It has been ranked 5th in the list of the 100 best films in the history of Ukrainian cinema. In 2009 began the digital restoration of this film. Plot In the 1890s, a Galician peasant in a desperate attempt to get his family out of poverty decides to leave his ancestral home and emigrate to Canada. On the eve of his departure a thief gets into his house. The village judges sentence the thief to death. The departure for Canada being tantamount to his own death, Ivan holds a farewell party that feels like a funeral for him and his family. In his own memory he erects a stone cross on a hill. References External links Soviet drama films Films set in the 1890s Films set in Ukraine
Leslie Stephanie Ramírez Pérez (born 11 January 1996) is a footballer who plays as a forward for Liga MX Femenil club CD Guadalajara. Born and raised in the United States to a Mexican father and a Guatemalan mother, she has triple nationality and represents the Guatemala women's national team. Early life Ramírez was born in Los Angeles, California, United States and raised in Reseda, California. Her father was born in San Miguel Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico and her late mother in Guatemala City, Guatemala. She has attended the El Camino Real High School. College career Ramírez has attended the California State University, Northridge, the Los Angeles Pierce College and the California State University, Los Angeles in the United States. Club career Ramírez has played for Invictus Club Feminae in the United States and for ŽFK Mašinac Trace in Serbia. On 26 February 2022, Ramírez was officially announced as a new player of Mexican nationalist club Guadalajara. Her signing was questioned by some media since she is cap-tied to Guatemala and therefore no longer eligible to reprensent Mexico, an apparent premise to be able to play for Guadalajara (it was a policy during the administration of the late Jorge Vergara). However, her hiring was defended by current club board which has claimed that, according to the current statutes, there is no restrictions concerning foreign national teams, with the only condition being that "only Mexicans by birth can play", including foreign-born people with a Mexican parent, which it's her case, so she is not going to be asked by them to retire from her international career with Guatemala. International career Ramírez made her senior debut for Guatemala on 16 February 2022, starting in a 9–0 home win over the United States Virgin Islands during the 2022 CONCACAF W Championship qualification. References External links 1999 births Living people People with acquired Guatemalan citizenship Guatemalan women's footballers Women's association football forwards ŽFK Mašinac PZP Niš players Guatemala women's international footballers Guatemalan expatriate footballers Guatemalan expatriates in Serbia Expatriate women's footballers in Serbia Guatemalan people of Mexican descent Citizens of Mexico through descent Mexican women's footballers C.D. Guadalajara (women) footballers Mexican expatriate women's footballers Mexican expatriate sportspeople in Serbia Mexican people of Guatemalan descent Soccer players from Los Angeles People from Reseda, Los Angeles American women's soccer players Cal State Northridge Matadors women's soccer players Los Angeles Pierce College alumni College women's soccer players in the United States Cal State Los Angeles Golden Eagles athletes American expatriate women's soccer players American expatriate sportspeople in Serbia American sportspeople of Mexican descent American people of Guatemalan descent American sportspeople of Latin American descent American sportspeople of North American descent
This is a list of all military equipment ever used by Italy. This list shall go in chronological order of newest military equipment of Italy to oldest. Italian army List of military weapons of Italy Italian Navy List of active Italian Navy ships List of decommissioned ships of the Italian Navy Regia Marina Italian Airforce List of aircraft used by Italian Air Force List of Regia Aeronautica aircraft used in World War II List of World War I Entente aircraft References Italian military-related lists Italy
Overgaden oven Vandet 54–56 is a complex of Late Neoclassical buildings situated at the corner of Overgaden Oven Vandet and Bådsmandsstræde, adjacent to Søkvæsthuset, in the Christianshavn neighborhood of central Copenhagen, Denmark. The two buildings originate in a two-storey bourgeois townhouse from the first half of the 18th century but were both heightened to five storeys by silk hat manufacturer and developer in the 1840s. The two buildings were individually listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1945. History 18th century The site was originally part of a large lot owned by the crown. In 1641, it was ceded to Peder Gregersen. The property was listed as No. 96 in Christianshavn Quarter in Copenhagen's first cadastre of 1689 and was at that time owned by Hans Nansen the Younger (1635-1713). He was active in trade on Iceland. On 27 December 1670, he was appointed as member of Kommercekollegiet. In 1671, he wwas also appointed as a member of Admiralitetskollegiet. In 1688, he was appointed as president of Copenhagen. The large property continued all the way to Bådsmandstsræde in the northeast and Dronningensgade in the southeast.It is unclear when the first buildings were constructed but an old glass manufactory is mentioned in 1708 and the property was home to a family of four people prior to the Copenhagen Fire of 1728. They were joined by nine families with a total of 53 family members who had been left homeless by the devastating fire on the other side of the harbour. The first description of the building is from 1745. The main wing along the canal street was constructed in brick with one storey over a walk-out basement. The facade was crowned by a three-bay gabled wall dormer. A two-storey secondary wing extended along Bådsmandstræsde and was followed by an eight-bays-long, one-storey, hald-timbered building. On the other side of the courtyard was a five bayslong and two storeys high half-timbered side wing. A garden with fruit trees, other plants, statues and a pavilion is also described in connection with the sale. The building may at some point have replaced an earlier timber-framed building. In 1753 the property was sold to pastor at the Church of Our Saviour Hans Leming. His property was listed as No. 175 in the new cadastre of 1756. The half-timbered buildings were demolished in 1761. The main wing along the canal was at the same time heightened to two storeys. Buntzen family The property was later acquired by Anders Buntzen (1733-1810). On 17 June 1772, he was granted citizenship as a merchant [grosserer) in Copenhagen. On 29 December 1774, he was wed to Marie Margrethe Ache (1752–1811). Their household comprised their daughter Anne Bolette Buntzen, their son Andreas Buntzen (1781–1830), the wife's mother Bolette Achem Anne Cathrine Buurmeister, an office clerk in the family's trading firm, a caretaker and two maids at the time of the 1787 census. Andreas Buntzen Jr. was still living with his parents in the building at the 1801 census. His sister had married the military officer Frederik (Friederich) Julius Christian de Saint-Aubain. (1754–1819) in 1798 and they were now residing in an apartment at the corner of Torvegade and Strandgade. On 6 April 1800, Buntzen Jr. was wed to Camilla Cécilie Victoire Du Puy (1790–1871). She was a daughter of the composer Edouard Du Puy (c. 1770–1822) and the actress Julie Henriette Pauline Moulineuf (aka Montroze, died 1833). The family's property was listed as No. 177 in the new cadastre of 1806. Ownership of it passed to Andreas Buntzen Jr. following his father's feath in 1810. His and his wife's home was a lively meetingplace for members of the extensive Buntzen family. It was also frequented by some of the prominent cultural figures of the time, including Jens Baggesen, Thomasine Gyllembourg (née Buntzen, his cousin) and Peter Andreas Heiberg. Buntzen's nephew , who published his books under the pseudonum Carl Bernhard, has descripbed life in the building in Et år i København ("One Tear in Copenhagen"). Buntzen's trading firm ran into economic difficulties during the economic crisis that followed the war with England, culminating with its bankryptcy in 1820. He therefore had to sell the property in 1822. 1840 census The property was home to 17 residents in three households at the 1840 census. (1781-1944), pastor of Our Saviour's Church, resided on the first floor with his wife Tagea Dorothea Schack (née Erasmim 1786–1841), three of their children (aged 20 to 24), one male servant and one maid. Hans Arreboe Clausen (1806–1891), a merchant trading on Iceland, resided on the first floor with his wife Asa Sandholdt (1815-1899), their nine-year-old son Holger Peter Clausen, his sister-in-law Madam Høling and her three-year-old daughter, one apprentice and one maid. Peter Christian Abildgaard Holten, an employee at the Hambroske Møller, resided on the ground flor with the seamstress Karen Marie Hansen. H. P. Lorentzen's 1844-46 redevelopment project The property was acquired by in the middle of the 1840s. He had made a fortune on the production of silk hats and saw a lucretive business opportunity in investing his money in Copenhagen's booming property through densification of old low-density sites. The city had still not been allowed to develop outside its old bastioned fortification ring and new homes for the fast-growing population was therefore in very high demand. Lorentzen's redevelopment plans for the property were therefore aimed at exploiting the site to the utmost. In 1845, No. 177 was divided into No. 177 A (Overgaden Oven Vandet 54) and No. 166B (Dronningensgade 75). In 1846, he heightened the existing building along the canal to five storeys. He also constructed two new side wings, attached to the main wing via two secondary staircases, flanking a central courtyard. In 1846–147,he also used a strip of land along Bådsmandsstræde for the construction of four new five-storey apartment buildings. These buildings were converted into separate properties as No. 177 C (Overgaden Oven Vandet 56), No. 177 D (Bådsmandsstræde 10), No. 177 E (Bådsmandsstræde 12/Dronningensgade 79) and No. 177 F (Dronningensgade 77). No. 177 C contained a corner shop flanked by two apartments on the ground floor and two times two apartments on each of the upper floors. Lorentzen would later engage in a number of other redevelopment projects, most notably on the east side of Nikolah Plads (seven new apartment buildings) and in Nyboder. 1860 census The property was home to 61 residents at the 1860 census. Niels Jensen Lund, a hotelier, resided on the ground floor with his wife Oline Lund, their two-year-old daughter and one maid. Christian Christensen, a firewood retailer, resided on the ground floor with his wife Hanne Rosine Christensen. Hans Nic. Hoff Bay, an auctioner, resided on the first floor with his Severine Andrea Bay, their two daughters (aged 12 and 14) and one maid. Johan Frederik Looft, a [[helmsman}}, resided on the first floor with his wife Emma Sophie Looft, their two children (aged one and three) and the wife's sister Augusta Heinrich. Anders Andersen, a former farmer, resided on the second floor with his wife Adelaide Andersen and four children (aged 1 to six). Ove T. Krarup, a senior clerk in the office of Amager Birk, resided on the second floor with his wife Christiane Krarup, one maid and the lodger Henrik Chr. Berg. Johan P. Rosendahl, a royal customs assistant, resided on the third floor with his wife Elise Marie Rosendahl, their four children (aged 17 to 24), a 10-year-old foster daughter and a lodger (student). Michael Fr. Schrøder, a retired textile merchant (hosekræmmer), resided on the third floor with his wife Wilhelmine Schrøder, their seven children (aged three to 18) and one lodger. Søren Moritz Høyer, a retired infantry captain, resided on the fourth floor with his wife Martha Marie Høyer and two sons (aged 26 and 40). Peter L. Wamberg, a cantor at the Church of Our Saviour, resided on the fourth floor with his wife Henriette Wamberg and their three children (aged fice to 12). Rasmus P. Rasmussen, a cooper, resided in the garret with his wife Frederikke Caroline Rasmussen and their nine-year-old daughter. Søren W. Starup, a carpenter, resided in the garret with his wife Karen Starup (née Rasmussen), their two children (aged three and five) and his mother-in-law Susanne Rasmussen. The side wing was home to another 25 residents. Ane Christine Michelsen, widow of a master weaver, resided on the ground floor with her seven children (aged 10 to 25). Hans Jacob Jacobsen, a warehouse worker, resided on another floor with his wife Ane Marie Jacobsen and their four children (aged three to 12). Hans Christian Poulsen, a prison guard, resided on a third floor with his wife Lovise Poulsen and their three children (aged seven to 13). Marie Kirst. Henriksen, a woman retailer, resided in the side wing with her 12-year-old daughter. 1880 census The property was home to 65 residents at the 1880 census. Jacob Peder Jacobsen, a businessman, resided on the first floor with his wife Eleidse Jacobsenm their four children (aged one to 11) and one maid. Peter Christian Sørensen, a cooper, resided on the ground floor with his wife Margrethe Sørensen (née Andersen( and their two children (aged one and three). Jacob Jensen Larsen, a retailer, resided on the ground floor with his wife Johanne Marie Larsen, f. Nielsen, their two children (aged one and three) and one maid. Karen Helene Elise Sørensen, a laundry woman, resided on the ground floor with one maid. Jacob Peder Jacobsen, a businessman, resided on the first floor with his wife Eleidse Jacobsen, their four children (aged one to 11) and one maid. Julius Villiam Olsen, a blacksmith, resided on the first floor with his wife Augusta Severine Boelsine Olsen and their three children (aged 12 to 22). Ida Mathilde With, widow of civil servant Peter N. With, resided on the second floor with her four children (aged one to 14), a 22-year-old woman and her nephew Henrik Lindemann. Georg Adolph Bosin, a master coppersmith, resided on the first floor with his wife Sophie Frederikke Glies, a 17-year-old coppersmith's apprentice and one maid. Young Harald Dahlstrøm, a machine manufacturer, resided on the third floor with his wife Clara Emilie Dahlstrøm, their four children (aged one to 11) and one maid. One of the children was the later engineering professor Young Harald Dahlstrøm (1878-1928). Johan Henrik Preüss, an artillery sergent, resided in the other third floor apartment. Peter Ludvig Wamberg, a cantor at the Church of Our Lady, resided on the fourth floor with his wife Henriette Louise Wamberg and two children (aged 25 and 28). Sophie Vilhelmine Nielsen, widow of a machine master, resided on the fourth floor with her son Jarl Frederik Nielsen /machinist). Niels Frederik Nielsen, a coppersmith, resided in the garret with his wife Ellen Nielsen /née Sørensdatter). Jens Jensen, a coal worker, resided in the garret with his wife Else Nielsdatter and his 13-year-old stepson Carl Vilhelm Rotkjær. Jens Christian Groth, a pensioner, resided on one of the apartments on the first floor of the side wing with his wife Dorthea Groth (née Skrøder), their two children (aged 10 and 11) and one lodger. Niels Peter Olsen. a master cooper, resided in the other first floor apartment with his wife Vilhelmine Conradine Olsen. Vilhelmine Sophie Knudsen and Sigrid Nilsdatter, a 60-year-old nurse and a 24-year-old factory worker, resided on the second floor of the wide wing. Carl Vilhelm Lindgren, a cigar manufacturer, resided on the third floor of the side wing with his wife Caroline Vilhelmine Lindgren. 20th century TIn 1904 the ground floor apartment at Overgaden Oven Vamdet 56 was converted into an extra shop. The ground floor apartment towards Bådsmandsstræde was at the same time incorporated into the corner shop.A grocery shop was still located at the corner in the 1960s. The shop was converted into a residential apartment in connection with a renovations of the building in the 1980s. Architecture Overgaden Oven Vamdet 54 Overgaden Oven Vandet 54 is constructed with five storeys in a plinth of granite ashlars. Two side wings extend from the rear side of the building. They are attached to the main wing via two secondary staircases. The main wing is nine bays wide of which the central gateway wing is wider than the others. The facade is plastered and red painted with white-painted sill courses below the windows on the first and second flor and a white-painted modillioned cornice. A now red-painted frieze with arcanthus motif runs below the second floor sill course. The tile roof features five dormer windows towards the street. The roof ridge is pierced by two tall chimneys. Overgaden Oven Vamdet 56 Overgaden Oven Camdet 56 is also constructed with five storeys over a walk-out basement. The wing on Overgaden has a faive-bays-long facade on Overgaden, a three-bays long facade on Bådsmandsstræde and a chamfered corner bay. It is followed by a five-bays-long Bådsmandsstræde wing (Nådsmandsstræde 8), whose bays are more narrow than those of the Overgaden wing. The building has a belt course anove the ground floor while a frieze similar to that of No. 54 has been removed. The courtyard (or light well]] between the building and the northeastern side wing of No. 54 is extremely narrow, testifying to how Lorentzen's 1840s redevelopment of the site made an effort to make the most out of the site. Today Overgaden Oven Vamdet 56 is owned by Ejerforeningen Overgaden oven Vandet 54, It contains two shops on the ground floor and two condominiums on each of the upper floors of the front wing. The northeastern side wing contains three more condominiums and the southwestern side wing contains a single condominium. Overgaden Oven Vamdet 56 is owned by E/F Overgaden Oven Vandet 56. The two times two apartments on each floor were merged into two times one apartment on each floor. The shops in the ground floor have also been converted into residential apartments. Commemorative plague A bronze plaque on the facade of No. 45 commemorates the Aksel Hugo Reimer Madsen (1923-1945), a member of the Danish resistance movement, who was killed at the site on 5 May 1945. The inscription reads"Here died in combat / for / Denmark's independence / Reimer Madsen / on 5 May 1945 |ypur fight was / not in cain". References External links Source Buildings and structures in Copenhagen Listed residential buildings in Copenhagen Commemorative plaques in Copenhagen
Whāita was a Maori rangatira (chieftain) of the Ngāti Raukawa iwi in the Tainui tribal confederation based at Wharepuhanga near Rangitoto in the Waikato region, New Zealand and is the ancestor of the Ngāti Whāita hapu. He probably lived in the mid-seventeenth century. Life Whāita was the son of Kurawari and Wharerere. Kurawari was a son of Raukawa and grandson of Tūrongo, the first chieftain of the southern Waikato region, and through him a direct descendant of Hoturoa, captain of the Tainui canoe. Wharerere was also a descendant of Hoturoa, through a collateral line. Whāita had a sister, called Korokore, Koroukore, or Korokoro, who married Parahore or Purahore, rangatira of the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga, who inhabited the upper banks of the Waikato River, from Putaruru to Atiamuri. Outbreak of war with Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga The people of Tainui desired the land of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga, especially their two maunga manu ('bird mountains'), Whakamaru and Tū-aropaki (now site of Mokai Power Station). Because the people of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga knew this, they resented their chieftain's wife, Korokore, especially when they were required to hand many of the birds that they caught over to her, so a group of them, led by Te Maru-huoko, gathered together and murdered Korokore at Waotū. Walter Edward Gudgeon also reports an alternative version, in which Whāita had eloped with Waiarohi, wife of Te Ruamano, a rangatira of Ngāti Waihakari and left her with the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga for safekeeping only for them to murder her for some reason. One of Korokore's slaves escaped and brought news of this murder to Tame-te-hura, a cousin of Korokore. He passed the news on to Whāita at Wharepuhanga, who gathered a war party. He was joined by Tama-te-hura's brothers Upoko-iti and Pipito, as well as Wairangi, who may have been a brother of Tama-te-hura or Whāita. Invasion of Waotū The Tainui war-party marched past Maungatautari and attacked the local forts of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga on the west side of the Waikato River. Then the war party split into two groups, which moved up the river on opposite sides. Wairangi and Upoko-iti stayed on the west side, while Whāita, Pipito, and Tama-te-hura crossed the Waikato River and advanced on the Waotū region, where Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga had three fortresses: Pirau-nui (a foothill of Matawhenua), Puke-tōtara / Ōmaru-o-aka, Pawa-iti, and Hōkio, which Whāita captured. From there, Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga fled south of Whakamaru, where they had two fortresses, Te-Ahi-pū and Te Aho-roa. Again, Whāita defeated them. At Te Aho-roa, all the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga dead were burnt, as revenge for their murder of Korokore, which had taken place on the site. At nearby Turihemo, Whāita personally killed one Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga rangatira, Manuawhio, while Pipito captured a number of Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga hiding in a cave near Tokoroa and brought them back to Te Aho-roa to be eaten. Te Arawa and Te Whana-a-Whāita The Te Arawa tribal confederation of the Bay of Plenty now intervened. Jones suggests that they were worried about Whāita continuing into their lands or that they had marriage ties with the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga. Whāita defeated the Te Arawa forces that had entered Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga lands and pursued them into Te Arawa land, where however, his forces were routed and forced to flee for the Waikato River, with Te Arawa in pursuit. At Te Whana-a-Whāita ('The springing back of Whāita'), Whāita rallied the troops and defeated Te Arawa. This place remained the boundary between Tainui and Te Arawa thereafter. According to Gudgeon, Whāita's illness had prevented him from joining the expedition against Te Arawa, which he says was led by Tama-te-hura and reached Waikuta on the shores of Lake Rotorua before Te Arawa turned the force back, took Tama-te-hura prisoner, and killed Pipito. He says that the leader of the Arawan forces was Ariari-te-rangi, son of Hinemoa and Tūtānekai. In this account the Te Arawa pursued the Tainui forces all the way back to Te Whana-a-Whāita, where Whāita rallied them, as in Jones' version. Pohatu-roa The last of the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga made their stand at Pōhatu-roa, a hill just west of modern Ātiamuri. Whāita and Wairangi's war-parties reunited and surrounded the hill. Eventually hunger sapped the defenders' strength and they were unable to deflect a Tainui assault, which captured the mountain. At this point there was a disagreement about what to do with the captured Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga – Tame-te-hura wanted to keep them as slaves, but Whāita insisted that they must all be killed, so that they would not return with Te Arawa support to reclaim the land. Jones agrees that all the Ngāti Kahu-pungapunga died, while Gudgeon speculates that they may have fled to join Te Arawa. Family Whāita had one son, Huiao, who was the father of Tū-irirangi who married a sister of Maniapoto, and one daughter, Hine-moana, who married Tūpito. His descendants, the Ngāti Whāita, have their marae at Ōngāroto, on the north bank of the Waikato River, a little west of Ātiamuri. Sources A detailed account of Whāita's exploits during the war was published by Walter Edward Gudgeon in the 1893 issue of the Journal of the Polynesian Society, with no indication of the sources on which it is based. A similar account is given by Pei Te Hurinui Jones, based on oral testimony given at the Maori Land Court at Cambridge in a dispute over ownership of the Waotū area. A similar account was given by Hōri Wirihana of Ngāti Kauwhata in evidence to the Maori Land Court at Otorohanga on 17 August 1886. References Bibliography Ngāti Raukawa New Zealand Māori men Māori tribal leaders 17th-century New Zealand people People from Waikato
José Ribeiro de Castro, second baron and only viscount of Santa Rita (Campos dos Goytacazes, 18 May 1802 - Campos dos Goytacazes, 5 August 1890), was a Brazilian nobleman, businessman and farmer. Legitimate son of the first Baron of Santa Rita, Manuel Antônio Ribeiro de Castro, and his camper wife, Dona Anna Francisca Baptista de Almeida Pinheiro, known as "The Fortune" for being heir to an immense latifundium. He was the brother, among others, of the Viscountess of Araruama, of Viscountess of Muriaé, of Commander Antônio Ribeiro de Castro, of Commander Joaquim Ribeiro de Castro. He was the uncle, among others, of Count of Araruama, of Baron of Monte de Cedro, of Viscount of Quissamã, of Baroness of Vila Franca, of Viscount of Ururaí. He was an important farmer, established in the Parish of Santo Antonio de Guarulhos, in Campos dos Goytacazes, where he owned the important Sapucaia Farm, with a steam engine. Genealogy She married her niece Maria Antonia de Castro Netto, in the "Totonha" family, for her husband "Sá Bela", born on November 23, 1824, on the São Francisco de Paula Farm, in a historic building now known as Manor of the Baroness. She was the daughter of Manuel Pinto Netto da Cruz, Barão de Muriaé, and Rachel Francisca Ribeiro de Castro, later widowed Viscountess of the same title. Three children survived from this marriage: Anna Rachel Netto Ribeiro de Castro (1837-1899), "Quéca", married to Doctor João Belisário Soares de Sousa, being the parents of: A) Mariana Belisario Soares de Sousa, married to Doctor José Carlos Torres Cotrim, grandson of Viscounts of Itaborahy. B) Maria José de Castro Belizário Soares de Souza (1867-1925), single. C) Clotilde de Castro Belisário Soares de Sousa, married to Doctor Armando de Carvalho. D) Ana de Castro Belisário Soares de Sousa, "Anita", First Lady of Brazil, wife of the camper lawyer Doctor Nilo Procópio Peçanha, President of the Republic. José Manoel Ribeiro de Castro, died at the age of seven in Rio de Janeiro. Rachel Januária Netto Ribeiro de Castro (?-1861), "Sazinhazinha", married her sister's brother-in-law, Doctor Bernardo Belisario Soares de Sousa, son of the Councilor of the same name and Mariana de Macedo Álvares Soares, sister of the Viscountesses of Itaborahy and Uruguay. No offspring. References JUNQUEIRA, Hilze Peixoto Diniz. Dados sobre o Barão e a Viscondessa de Muriahé. In. O Século, Campos, fevereiro de 1981. CASADEI, Thalita de Oliveira. D. Pedro II na Planície Goitacá: as viagens do imperador ao norte da Província do Rio de Janeiro. 1985, p. 39. JUNQUEIRA, Hilze Peixoto Diniz. Dados sobre o Barão e a Viscondessa de Muriahé. In. O Século, Campos, dezembro de 1980. LAMEGO, Alberto. A Terra Goytacá: Á luz de documentos inéditos. Niterói: Diário Oficial, Tomo Sexto, 1943. MACEDO SOARES, Antonio Joaquim. Nobiliarquia Fluminense ou Genealogia das principais e mais antigas famílias da Corte e Província do Rio de Janeiro, 1878. Parte I, Os Duques Estradas. Niterói: Imprensa Estadual/ Divisão de Obras, Obras Completas do Conselheiro Macedo Soares (Org. Julião Rangel de Macedo soares), 1947. Brazilian people of Portuguese descent Brazilian nobility 19th-century Brazilian people 1802 births 1890 deaths
Pius Lee is an American political power broker and landlord. He was a long-time supporter of Mayor Willie Brown and has served as the commissioner on several governmental commissions in San Francisco, including the San Francisco Port Commission and the San Francisco Police Commission. He serves as the chairman of the Chinese Six Companies and the Chinese Neighborhood Association. Biography Lee's family were landlords. As a teenager, Lee fled to Macau from the newly founded Communist republic in China with his father. From there, they moved to Hong Kong, where they stayed until 1963, when they moved to San Francisco in 1963 under a refugee support program. After moving to San Francisco, he worked odd jobs while attending night school and later became a licensed real estate agent. He sold homes to Chinese families in the Richmond District and Sunset District and built a real estate portfolio consisting of properties across San Francisco, from the Marina District to Chinatown. Lee is the owner of California Land and Realty, Inc. Political career Lee was appointed president of the San Francisco-Taipei Sister City Committee by Mayor Dianne Feinstein. As president, he began the effort to build the Golden Gate Pavilion in Golden Gate Park in 1981. Lee ran for San Francisco Board of Supervisors in the 1980s and got 25,000 votes. Mayor Willie Brown appointed Lee to the San Francisco Port Commission. He's also served on Chinatown Economic Development Group, the Industrial Welfare Commission and the Police Commission among others. In 1992, Lee organized a gun buyback program while serving as a police commissioner that gathered approximately 1,600 guns. Lee resigned from the San Francisco Port Commission in 2002 over remarks by Mayor Willie Brown in regards to Lee's relationship with Planning Commissioner Hector Chinchilla. Brown said, "Pius paid [Chinchilla] what some might look at as a $20,000 bribe". Chinchilla was arrested in November 2002 for misdemeanor charges of allegedly hiring himself out to three developers seeking planning commission permits, one of whom was Lee. Lee believed Brown's remark would have influenced the Board of Supervisor's decision to not approve Lee's project of converting the Apollo Theater on Geneva Avenue in the Outer Mission into a Walgreens. Political influence Lee praised the Democratic Party for their policies toward minorities and the impoverished but also admitted that it is impractical to be a Republican in San Francisco. Lee has an extensive guanxi, or social network. President Lee Teng-hui of Taiwan, a friend of Lee's and then mayor of Taipei, contributed toward the Golden Gate Pavilion project in Golden Gate Park. Lee organized a fundraiser for Willie Brown's 1999 San Francisco mayoral campaign. He endorsed London Breed in the 2018 San Francisco mayoral special election, saying “[Breed] said publicly that she will carry on Ed Lee’s policies and programs in Chinatown". Lee is the chairman of the Chinese Six Companies, which holds significant political influence in San Francisco Chinatown, and the Chinese Neighborhood Association. The two organizations lobbied the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency to ban marijuana ads on MUNI buses and proposed a 50-dispensary cap in San Francisco. Lee endorsed Supervisor Aaron Peskin's call to ban dispensaries in Chinatown. According to Claire Jean Kim, Lee and Chinatown power broker Rose Pak were "famously at odds." Lee and Pak both opposed a proposed recall of Mayor Ed Lee in 2016. References Year of birth missing (living people) Politics of San Francisco People from Chinatown, San Francisco American landlords American real estate brokers
The 1987 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place on March 5–7, 1987 at Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina. defeated , 79–58 in the championship game, to win its sixth consecutive MEAC Tournament title. The Aggies earned an automatic bid to the 1987 NCAA Tournament as a No. 15 seed in the Southeast region. Format Seven of nine conference members participated, with play beginning in the quarterfinal round. Teams were seeded based on their regular season conference record. Bracket * denotes overtime period References MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament 1986–87 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference men's basketball season MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament
John Paul Carr (born September 23, 1974) is an American politician serving in the Arkansas House of Representatives. Arkansas House of Representatives Carr was one of two Republicans running in the 2020 Arkansas House 94th District Republican Primary, alongside Adrienne Woods. Carr won the primary against Adrienne Woods, 1,019 votes to 938. Carr defeated Jene Huffman-Gilreath in the general election, 5,654 votes to 4,681. 93rd Arkansas General Assembly Carr began serving as a Representative on January 11, 2021. During the 93rd Assembly, Carr served on the following committees: House City, County and Local Affairs Committee Public Transportation Committee Advanced Communications and Information Technology Committee Personal life Carr resides in Rogers, Arkansas. Carr is a Christian. References 1974 births Living people Arkansas Republicans Members of the Arkansas House of Representatives 21st-century American politicians People from Benton County, Arkansas
The 1951 Southwest Texas State Bobcats football team was an American football team that represented Southwest Texas State Teachers College (now known as Texas State University) during the 1951 college football season as a member of the Lone Star Conference (LSC). In their first year under head coach Milton Jowers, the team compiled an overall record of 6–3–1 with a mark of 2–2–1 in conference play. Schedule References Southwest Texas State Texas State Bobcats football seasons Southwest Texas State Bobcats football
Una Mujer Como Yo is an album by the Cuban musician Albita, released in 1997. The album peaked at No. 9 on Billboard'''s Tropical Albums chart. It was nominated for a Grammy Award, in the "Best Tropical Latin Album" category. Production The album was produced by Emilio Estefan, Jr. It was recorded more quickly than Albita's previous two albums, and moved beyond traditional Cuban music styles. Albita wrote "Tocame con un Beso" and "Y No Tengo Guano"; Kike Santander contributed to the writing and arranging of some of Una Mujer Como Yo's songs. Critical receptionMiami New Times deemed the album "a shrill pastiche of merengue, salsa, cumbia, vallenato, Cuban jazz riffs and even, God help us, rap." The Orlando Sentinel wrote that "the up-tempo songs celebrate Albita's musical roots and influences but don't sound like a formal excursion into the past." The San Diego Union-Tribune declared that "Albita, with her deep, rich voice, could sing any style and make it sound easy."Newsday called the songs "full pedal-to-the-metal jams," writing that "never has Albita sounded so agreeably aggressive on disc." The Commercial Appeal stated that "the Cuban with the beefy alto fuses folk instruments to modern production without sacrificing one syncopated, seductive note." The Baltimore Sun'' determined that Albita's voice "is dark and lustrous, with all the sweet sonority of a trombone, and she uses that to great effect against the brass and percussion of 'Me Demito' or the breathlessly rhythmic 'Ven a Verme'"; the paper later listed the album as the tenth best of 1997. Track listing References 1997 albums Epic Records albums Albums produced by Emilio Estefan
The Walls Are Way Too Thin is the second extended play (EP) by British singer-songwriter Holly Humberstone. It was released on 5 November 2021, by Interscope Records. Release On 5 August 2021, Holly Humberstone announced the release of her second EP The Walls Are Way Too Thin alongside co-writer Matty Healy (The 1975). Critical reception The Walls Are Way Too Thin was met with "universal acclaim" reviews from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, this release received an average score of 86 based on 4 reviews. In a review for Gigwise, writer Harrison Smith wrote: "Humberstone dives headfirst into first-person narratives, romantic woes and poignant self-discovery on this latest offering. The charming lyrical honesty, infectious groove and playful energy throughout make The Walls Are Way Too Thin a coltish example of Humberstone's dynamic talent and spirit. At Under the Radar, Andy Von Pip said: "The Walls Are Way Too Thin EP provides proof positive that Humberstone is perhaps the brightest Gen Z singer/songwriter to emerge from the U.K. in quite some time. The EP deals with a sense of displacement, of messy relationships, of things falling apart, both physically and emotionally, and attempting to move on whilst trying to find your place in the world." Track listing Charts References External links 2021 EPs Interscope Records albums
Diradops is a genus of parasitoid wasps belonging to the family Ichneumonidae. Diradops contains at least 35 species. References Ichneumonidae Ichneumonidae genera
Hasibe is a Turkish female given name. Notable people with this name include: Hasibe Çerko (born 1971), Turkish author Hasibe Eren (born 1975), Turkish actress Hasibe Erkoç (living), Turkish boxer Turkish feminine given names
Liam Paninski (born 1978) is an American computational neuroscientist who specializes in neural data science. He is a professor in the Departments of Statistics and Neuroscience at Columbia University, where he co-directs the Grossman Center for the Statistics of Mind. Paninski's research focuses on using statistics to decipher electrical signals from the brain. Education Paninski attended Brown University, where he received a Bachelor of Science degree in neuroscience in 1999. At Brown, Paninski was introduced to neuroscience research in the lab of John Donoghue. He was also influenced by applied mathematicians on faculty including Stuart Geman and David Mumford. Paninski completed his Ph.D. in neural science at New York University's Center for Neural Science in 2003 under the direction of Eero Simoncelli. Career Paninski began teaching at Columbia in 2005. In 2006 Paninski was named in MIT Technology Review's list of Innovators Under 35. He received a Sloan Research Fellowship in 2007. References American neuroscientists Data scientists Brown University alumni New York University alumni Sloan Research Fellows Columbia University faculty 1978 births Living people
Diradops bethunei is a species of ichneumon wasp in the family Ichneumonidae. References External links Ichneumoninae Insects described in 1869 Taxa named by Ezra Townsend Cresson
Jorge Pedro Zabalza Waksman (30 November 1943 – 23 February 2022) was a Uruguayan politician and writer. He was a former leader within the political organization Tupamaros and former president of the Junta Departamental de Montevideo. Biography Zabalza was the son of National Party leader and Mary Waksman. He was active in the Uruguayan Anarchist Federation before becoming a founding member of Tupamaros. As a part of the organization, he took part in the largest robbery in Uruguayan history, in which 55 million pesos were taken from the San Rafael Casino in Punta del Este. His brother, Ricardo Zabalza Waksman, also a Tupamaro, was assassinated during the Taking of Pando on 8 October 1969. His cousin, Guillermo Waksman, was a journalist at Brecha. Zabalza was taken prisoner on 26 June 1972 alongside eight others, including , for their participation in the Punta del Este robbery. Interned at the , he was considered to be one of the hostages of the military dictatorship in Uruguay and endured twelve years of imprisonment and torture. Following the restoration of democracy in Uruguay, Zabalza became a member of the Movement of Popular Participation (MPP), created by Raúl Sendic. In 1994, he was elected as President of the Junta Departamental de Montevideo. In 1995, he left the Tupamaros while remaining within the MPP. He began to disagree with Tupamaros such as José Mujica and Huidobro, whose reformist agenda drew criticism from him. In 1997, Intendant of Montevideo Mariano Arana proposed the privatization of the Hotel Casino Carrasco. The MPP voted against the privatization, and Zabalza joined his party in the vote despite pressure from Tupamaros leaders. Zabalza resigned as President of the Junta Departamental de Montevideo following a scandal surrounding Arana regarding a transfer of Vaimaca Pirú's remains with France. Zabalza died in Montevideo on 23 February 2022, at the age of 78. References 1943 births 2022 deaths Uruguayan politicians Broad Front (Uruguay) politicians Uruguayan socialists Uruguayan writers Uruguayan guerrillas People from Minas, Uruguay
Cadmus (Brachycaulus) colossus, or Cadmus colossus, is a species of beetle in the subfamily, Cryptocephalinae, or case-bearing leaf beetles, and the subgenus, Brachycaulus. It was first described by Félicien Chapuis in 1875, from a male specimen collected at Port Denison. It is native to Australia, being found in New South Wales and Queensland. The taxonomic reasoning for the subgeneric arrangement (accepted by the Australian Faunal Directory) is given in Mathews and Reid (2002). References External links iNaturalist: images of Cadmus colossus, Cooktown, QLD Beetles described in 1875 Taxa named by Félicien Chapuis
Jim Early (some sources give the first name of Thomas and family name of "Earlie") was a 25-year-old African-American man who was lynched in Plantersville, Grimes County, Texas by a mob on May 17, 1922. According to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary it was the 24th of 61 lynchings during 1922 in the United States. Background Described as a "half-wit" Early was raised in nearby Montgomery County, Texas but had moved to West Texas several years earlier. He had apparently returned to the region and on Monday, May 15, 1922, officers arrested Early after reports of a white girl screaming that she was being attacked were heard. He was placed in a jail in Anderson, Texas but being familiar with jail locks escaped on May 16, 1922. Lynching An official posse was formed but a mob caught and lynched him on the night of May 17, 1922 or the early morning of May 18, 1922. His body was found hanging from a big oak tree. National memorial The National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018. Featured among other things is the Memorial Corridor which displays 805 hanging steel rectangles, each representing the counties in the United States where a documented lynching took place and, for each county, the names of those lynched. The memorial hopes that communities, like Grimes County, Texas where Jim Early was lynched, will take these slabs and install them in their own communities. Bibliography Notes 1922 riots 1922 in Texas African-American history of Texas Lynching deaths in Texas February 1922 events Protest-related deaths Racially motivated violence against African Americans Riots and civil disorder in Texas White American riots in the United States
Klymivka is a village in the Poltava Raion of the Poltava Oblast of Ukraine. Their local government body is called the . Geography The village of Klymivka is located on the left bank of the . Three kilometers upstream is the village of and downstream is the village of . A drying stream with a dam flows through the village. History The village was founded in the mid-18th century. The earliest recorded mention of the village was in 1775, when it was referred to as the "Klimovka suburb at the Bronyevskaya mill" (Original: ""). In the 18th century, the settlement belonged to the territory. It later became part of the Konstantinogradsky Uyezd of the Poltava Governorate in the Russian Empire. In 1885, the village's population was 1827 people and there were 364 farmsteads, an Orthodox church, school, chapel, 27 windmills, and 2 fairs a year. According to the 1897 census, the population grew to 2,722 (1,351 males and 1,371 females), of whom 2,715 were Orthodox. The village was part of the Karlivka Raion before the district merged with the Poltava Raoin in 2020. Notable people Tamara Hundorova  - Ukrainian literary critic and culturologist References Villages in Poltava Oblast Commons category link is on Wikidata
Sadia is a feminine given name. List of people with the given name Sadia Khateeb, Indian actress and model Sadia Khan, Pakistani television and film actress Sadia Jahan Prova, Bangladeshi model and television actress Sadia Rashid (born 1946), Pakistani educationist Sadia Sheikh (died 2007), Pakistani murder victim Sadia Imam, Pakistani television presenter, actress and model Sadia Bashir, Pakistani computer scientist Sadia Ghaffar, Pakistani actress and model Sadia Olivier Bleu, Ivorian professional footballer Sadia Sadia, Canadian-born British installation artist Sadia Jabbar, Pakistani television and film producer. She is the founder of Sadia Jabbar Production which was established in 2014. It produces Sadia Islam Mou, Bangladeshi model and television actress Sadia Nadeem Malik, Pakistani politician Sadia Azmat, British stand-up comedian Sadia Dehlvi, Indian writer See also Saadia (given name) Pakistani feminine given names
Robert Jordan (1826 - December 21, 1881) was an American sailor and recipient of the Medal of Honor who received the award for his actions in the American Civil War. Biography Jordan was born in New York, New York in 1826. He served in the Union Navy as coxswain aboard the USS Mount Washington during the American Civil War. He earned his medal in action aboard USS Mount Washington on the Nansemond River, Virginia on April 14, 1863. He received his medal on July 10, 1863. He died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on December 21, 1881, and is now buried in Mount Moriah Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where his name is spelled as "Jourdan". Medal of Honor Citation For extraordinary heroism in action while attached to the USS Minnesota and temporarily serving on the USS Mount Washington, during action against the enemy in the Nansemond River, Virginia, 14 April 1863. When the Mount Washington drifted against the bank following several successive hits which struck her boilers and stopped her engines, Coxswain Jordan boarded the stricken vessel and, for six hours as fierce artillery and musketry continued to rake her decks, calmly assisted in manning a 12-pound howitzer which had been mounted on the open hurricane deck. External links Photograph of Jordan's gravestone References American Civil War recipients of the Medal of Honor United States Navy Medal of Honor recipients 1826 births 1881 deaths
Ludvonga I (died 1715) was Chief of the Swazi People from around 1685 until 1715. 1715 deaths Swazi people
UFC 275 is an upcoming mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship that will take place on June 11, 2022, at a TBD location. Background A UFC Light Heavyweight Championship bout between current champion Glover Teixeira and former Rizin Light Heavyweight Champion Jiří Procházka was originally expected to take place at UFC 274, but it was eventually moved to this event due to unknown reasons. Announced bouts UFC Light Heavyweight Championship bout: Glover Teixeira (c) vs. Jiří Procházka UFC Women's Flyweight Championship bout: Valentina Shevchenko (c) vs. Taila Santos. See also List of UFC events List of current UFC fighters 2022 in UFC References UFC Fight Night 2022 in mixed martial arts June 2022 sports events in the United States Scheduled mixed martial arts events
The 1952 Southwest Texas State Bobcats football team was an American football team that represented Southwest Texas State Teachers College (now known as Texas State University) during the 1952 college football season as a member of the Lone Star Conference (LSC). In their second year under head coach Milton Jowers, the team compiled an overall record of 7–2 with a mark of 4–1 in conference play. Schedule References Southwest Texas State Texas State Bobcats football seasons Southwest Texas State Bobcats football
Seven (stylized in all-caps) is the first live album by New Zealand singer-songwriter Brooke Ligertwood and her seventh solo album overall. It was released on 25 February 2022, via Sparrow Records and Capitol Christian Music Group. The album features a guest appearance by Brandon Lake. The album was recorded on 11 November 2021, at The Belonging Co in Nashville, Tennessee. Ligertwood collaborated with Jason Ingram in handling the production of the album. It is her first solo album to be released under her married name (after previously going under the name Brooke Fraser), her first solo album since both Brutal Romantic (2014) and rejoining Hillsong Worship and her first to explore explicitly Christian and biblical themes. The album has been supported by the release of "A Thousand Hallelujahs" as the lead single. "A Thousand Hallelujahs" peaked at number 44 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart. "Nineveh" was also released as promotional single. Background In October 2021, Ligertwood announced that she would be releasing Seven, a live worship album, in 2022. The album recording was held on 11 November 2021, at The Belonging Co, a church in Nashville, Tennessee. Seven marks Ligertwood's first solo live project, and the seventh overall release in her solo career. Her previous solo releases were billed under her maiden name, Brooke Fraser, while concurrently serving as part of Hillsong Worship as a worship leader and songwriter, co-writing critically acclaimed worship songs such as "What a Beautiful Name," and "King of Kings." In the processing of creating the album, Brooke Ligertwood co-wrote the songs with her husband and longtime collaborator Scott Ligertwood, Jason Ingram, as well as Steven Furtick and Brandon Lake among others. The album features a band spanning the worship movement, with musicians from Hillsong, Bethel and Vineyard, along with 30 piece choir. Ligertwood has said that Seven cannot be placed within the context of her Brooke Fraser catalog owing to the fact that the collection of songs was intended for the church, thus inspiring the title, and that the album being her seventh solo record was incidental. Ligertwood elaborated that the title of the album was drawn from the bible in Revelation 1, wherein John the Apostle received instruction to write down his vision and send letters to the seven churches, expressing that she also had written down what she had been given and sending it to the church. Ligertwood emphasised that she had no desire to release a worship album under her own name, but ended up doing so "because of how the songs came about and the way I knew it needed to be made and released into the world." Release and promotion Singles "A Thousand Hallelujahs" was released as the lead single of Seven on 14 January 2022, accompanied with its live music video. "A Thousand Hallelujahs" debuted at number 44 on the Hot Christian Songs chart. Promotional singles "Nineveh" was released as the first and only promotional single from the album on 4 February 2022, accompanied with its live music video. Other songs The music video of "Honey in the Rock" featuring Brandon Lake was released on 25 February 2022, along with the album. Critical reception Timothy Yap of JubileeCast wrote a positive review of the album, saying "If you are looking for worship songs that delve deeper than the recycled lyrical tropes and cliches, give this album a go. These songs are creatively and poetically worded and they are thoughtfully and prayerfully executed." Track listing Release history References External links 2022 live albums Brooke Fraser albums
Pascal Lavergne (born 28 August 1967) is a French politician from En Marche. He was Member of Parliament for Gironde's 12th constituency from 2018 to 2020. References Living people 1967 births People from Limoges La République En Marche! politicians Socialist Party (France) politicians 21st-century French politicians Deputies of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic
Sant'Antonio Abate is a Baroque-style Roman Catholic church in the town of Cerami, in the province of Enna, region of Sicily, Italy. History and Description A church we see today was apparently erected in circa 1623, but likely at the location of an older church that had been erected in the early 16th century under the patronage of the feudal owner of the town, the Baron Vincenzo Gerolamo Rosso. In 1600, the confraternity of San’Antonio Abate was founded, and still remains attached to this church. In 1774, a bid for the interior stucco decoration was awarded to Giuseppe Sciacchitano of Capizzi. In 1854, a new bell tower was designed and built by Ambrogio Castellana. The facade has a protruding portico with a broken tympanum and a horizontal frieze along the second story with floral decorations. The interior has a central nave and two aisles separated by columns and pilasters. The choir and organ from the apse have been removed, and the paintings of the Madonna of the Sorrows and St John the Evangelist (2013) in the apse are modern, and part of a triptych of the Crucifixion by Cesare di Narda. Two 18th-century frescoes in the apse depict the Meeting St Anthony Abbott and St Paul of Thebes and a St Anthony in the desert. The left nave has a presytery altar to Jesus the Good Shepherd with a small 18th-century wooden icon. Above the niche is a pelican, a symbol of the sacrifice of the eucharist. A bas relief in stucco depicts Moses and the mannah of the heavens. There is also a 16th-century icon of St Vito Martire. The right nave has a wooden statue of St Anthony Abbot (1946) signed by Giuseppe Stufflesser. On the walls of the nave are five canvases depicting Madonna of Sorrows, Rest on the way to Egypt; Immaculate Conception; Crucifixion, and a Noli me Tangere. A painting of the Souls of Purgatory was lost in the 1920s. The church houses a processional fercolo, a copy of the original which was attributed to the Li Volsi family of sculptors. References 17th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Italy Churches in the province of Enna
Anton Kade (born 17 January 2004) is a German professional footballer who plays for Hertha BSC. Club career Having already entered the professional squad in early 2022, Anton Kade made his professional debut for Hertha BSC on the 20 February 2022, replacing Ishak Belfodil at the 76th minute of a Bundesliga game against RB Leipzig. Personal life Anton Kade's older brother Julius is also a professional soccer player, playing with Dynamo Dresden in 2022. References External links 2004 births Living people German footballers Germany youth international footballers Association football forwards Sportspeople from Berlin Hertha BSC players Bundesliga players
Nick Lightowlers (1955 - February 26, 2022)) was a British performer, lyricist, producer and music industry professional better known to many by his stage name Nick Tesco, the lead singer of The Members Career As a founder member and co songwriter of The Members, he fronted the band from 1976 until his departure and the subsequent split of the band in 1983. After leaving the band and Tesco co performed and released the 1983 single Cost of Living for UK based independent label Albion Records with J. Walter Negro. Albion Records was a label he had previously worked for as a producer (1981s The Outpatients single New Japanese Hairstyles) and it was as a producer that he continued to work for the remainder of the decade - extensively for CBS, but also East West, WEA and Ariola. In 1989, he appeared in Leningrad Cowboys Go America, written and directed by Aki Kaurismäki, and starring Jim Jarmusch, a film about a fictional Russian rock band touring the US. This fictional band then toured and recorded in real life from 1990 until 1994. Leningrad Cowboys Go America was followed five years later by a sequel, Leningrad Cowboys Meet Moses (1994) and a concert film Total Balalaika Show (1994). In 1998 he joined Music Week and produced the Music Week Directory from 1999 until 2009 and also appeared in other films such as Iron Horsemen and I Hired A Contract Killer and BBC 6's Roundtable In 2007 the Members reformed and toured the UK Death Lightowlers died aged 67 on 26 February 2022 References 1955 births 2022 deaths
The Magic Bedknob; or, How to Become a Witch in Ten Easy Lessons is a 1943 children's book by Mary Norton. The book was later adapted into the Disney movie Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Synopsis References 1943 children's books 1943 British novels 1943 fantasy novels British children's novels British novels adapted into films Fiction about alchemy Fiction set in 1942 1942 debut novels Children's fantasy novels
Christos Pagonis (; Lykoudi, 1901 – May 1997) was a Greek Resistance member, teacher and leftist politician. He was elected member of parliament for Larisa with EDA in 1958. Biography He was born in Lykoudi, Elassona and was descended from a farming family. He got involved in syndicalism as member of the Teachers' Federation and resistance activity and politically with EDA and KKE. He was repeatedly arrested and tortured after 1945 and then imprisoned, as well as during the junta of 1967–1974. He was elected member of parliament in the 1958 elections with EDA. He died aged 96 in 1997 and was buried in Elassona on 11 May 1997. References Greek Resistance members MPs of Larissa Greek MPs 1958–1961 1901 births 1997 deaths People from Elassona Greek torture victims Resistance to the Greek junta
Pascal Brindeau (born 20 June 1974) is a French politician. He is Member of Parliament for Loir-et-Cher's 3rd constituency since 2019, after serving a previous term for the same seat between 2010 and 2012. References Living people 1974 births 21st-century French politicians The Centrists politicians Deputies of the 13th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic Deputies of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic
Brindeau is a French surname. List of people with the surname Jeanne Brindeau (1860–1946), French stage and film actress Pascal Brindeau (born 1974), French politician See also Brandau (surname) French-language surnames Surnames of French origin
Francis W. Judge (February 10, 1838 - December 3, 1904) was an English-born American soldier who received the Medal of Honor for his actions in the American Civil War. Biography Judge was born in England on February 10, 1838. He moved to America sometime between his birth and the start of the American Civil War. He served as First sergeant in Company K of the 79th New York Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War. Judge eventually reached the rank of Brevet Major in the U.S Volunteers. He earned his medal in action at the Battle of Fort Sanders, Knoxville, Tennessee on November 29, 1863. He received his medal on November 2, 1870. He died in New York, New York on December 3, 1904, and is now buried in The Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York. Medal of Honor Citation The color bearer of the 51st Georgia Infantry. (C.S.A.), having planted his flag upon the side of the work, Sgt. Judge leaped from his position of safety, sprang upon the parapet, and in the face of a concentrated fire seized the flag and returned with it in safety to the fort. References American Civil War recipients of the Medal of Honor United States Army Medal of Honor recipients 1838 births 1904 deaths
Brittney Spencer (born September 8, 1988) is an American country singer–songwriter. Spencer received notable attention following the posting of a video on Twitter singing a song by The Highwomen. The cover drew praise from fellow country artists and prompted the release of her first extended play (EP) titled Compassion (2020). She has also released several singles. Spencer has since performed on the Country Music Association Awards and has embarked on a world tour. Early life Spencer is a native of Baltimore, Maryland. She developed an interest in music from singing in church. "Church, for me, was very cultural. It’s spiritual, but also very cultural. Families like mine, we couldn’t really afford singing lessons or anything like that, so I just sang in the church all the time," she told Baltimore magazine. She was raised as an African Methodist Episcopal. Spencer also came from a musical family. Her father was part of a quartet band. A friend from church got Spencer interested in The Chicks, which developed her interest in country music. From there, she developed interest in artists like Taylor Swift. She attended magnet schools in her teen years, including the George Washington Carver Center for Arts and Technology. During this time she learned to play guitar and piano. Spencer also took vocal lessons from a coach who taught her how to sing in a recording studio. She began by singing background vocals for R&B and gospel artists including Jason Nelson. In February 2013, Spencer moved to Nashville, Tennessee to pursue country music full-time. Career After moving to Nashville, Spencer attended Middle Tennessee State University. While attending the university she worked as a vocal coach in a program dedicated to students from low-income homes. She also found work as a background singer and eventually toured with Christopher Cross and Carrie Underwood. She also performed in clubs and other performance venues in the Nashville area. Despite performance opportunities, Spencer found it difficult pursuing country music as an overweight and black performer. "Being a Black woman in Nashville can be challenging when it comes time to book someone to do all sorts of things related to fashion, whether it’s glam or wardrobe. I do feel that systemic or societal pressure at times, but I also feel really empowered," she told Glamour. It was in 2020, that Spencer received notable attention after posting a cover of The Highwomen's "Crowded Table" on Twitter. The video received more than 150,000 views and re-tweeted by Maren Morris and Amanda Shires who praised Spencer's performance. "I just love to sing and write songs. Though there’s really no way I could have ever prepared for the most humbling experience of my life to take place on Twitter," she told Billboard. In 2020, Spencer released her debut extended play (EP) titled Compassion. The project included several songs including "Damn Right, You're Wrong" and "My Perfect Life". During this time, she also launched her first tour titled "In a Perfect World". In June 2021, Spencer released a new single called "Sober & Skinny". In late 2021, Spencer performed alongside Mickey Guyton and Madeline Edwards on the 55th Annual Country Music Association Awards. The trio sang a track off Guyton's Remember Her Name album called "Love My Hair". She is expecting to her release her first full-length album in 2022. Discography Extended plays Singles Music videos References External links Official website 1988 births 21st-century American singers 21st-century American women singers American women singers American women country singers American country singer-songwriters Country musicians from Maryland Living people People from Baltimore Singer-songwriters from Maryland
Ethel Louise Lyman (December 1, 1893 - November 17, 1974) was a music librarian and cataloger known for creating the music library at Indiana University—now called the William & Gayle Cook Music Library—as well as the collections of several important music libraries. Lyman worked as a public librarian in Northampton, notably the Forbes Library which had an extensive music collection and classification scheme which was created under Charles Ammi Cutter. She was eventually promoted to the head of the Fine Arts Department where she oversaw all of the music and art collections. She resigned from the Forbes in 1922 in order to take a position as music librarian at Smith College, the college's first music librarian. While at Smith, during her library school periods, she worked at Harvard's Widener Library, the Boston Public Library, the Brookline Public Library, and the New England Conservatory of Music Library. She also taught library science principles to Smith College students who worked in the library. During her tenure, she revised the entire music catalog and ensured that all books and scores were completely cataloged. In 1936 she took a year off for a sabbatical and conducted a survey of some fifty-three music libraries in the eastern United States. She worked at Smith College until 1938 when she left to do research for a book, and possibly as the result of a personality conflict. She took the job at Indiana University's School of Music as their first music librarian in 1938. She expanded the library's budget and greatly increased their holdings, from "6,915 books, 9,880 musical scores, and 2,920 sound recordings" in 1942 to "44,567 books and bound periodicals, 137,840 scores, and 15,000 sound recordings" in 1958. She oversaw the creation of the Music Library Annex (later called the Record Room) which contained room for phonograph records, sheet music and unbound orchestra program notes. She retired from Indiana University in 1959 and was complimented on "fine service as the first and only Librarian that the School of Music has ever had." Professional associations Lyman was very involved professionally. She was a member of the American Library Association, the Special Libraries Association, and the Ohio Valley Regional Catalogers Association. She was a founding member of the Music Library Association in 1931 and was the chair of its Midwest Chapter from 1949 through 1951. At an SLA meeting in 1940, she was a strong advocate for the classification and cataloging of phonograph records in the 1940s and shared a classification system she had created for records at Smith College that was still in use in the 21st century, a system which focused on classifying the music, not just the physical item. Personal life Lyman was born on December 1, 1893, the only child of Elias Cornelius Lyman, a baker, and Elizabeth Mary Smith Lyman. She graduated from Northampton High School in 1912, studied abroad for a year learning French, German and Italian, and returned to attend Capen School for Girls where she continued her language studies. She took library science classes at Simmons College after beginning her job at Smith College. When she lived in Indiana she rented a small efficiency apartment in Bloomington in which she kept few objects of furniture besides her grand piano. She died on November 17, 1974, in Martinsville, Indiana and is buried with her parents in Bridge Street Cemetery in Northampton, Massachusetts. She endowed the Ethel Louise Lyman Memorial Fund at Indiana University to be used for acquiring of musical scores for the collection. References 1893 births 1974 deaths American librarians Music librarians American women librarians Indiana University people People from Northampton, Massachusetts
Pierre Venteau (born 26 August 1974) is a French politician of La République En Marche! (LREM) who has been a member of the National Assembly since 2019, representing Haute-Vienne's 2nd constituency. As his substitute, he replaced Jean-Baptiste Djebbari in Parliament when he was appointed Minister for Transport in the Second Philippe government. References Living people 1974 births 21st-century French politicians La République En Marche! politicians Deputies of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic People from Haute-Vienne
Cupania cinerea is a plant species in the family Sapindaceae. It was described as a new species in 1843 by German botanist Eduard Friedrich Poeppig. The plant is native to South America (Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Peru, and Venezuela) and Central America (Costa Rica, Ecuador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panamá). Several phytochemicals occur in the plant, including cupacinoside, cupacinoxepin, scopoletin, caryophyllene oxide, two bisabolene sesquiterpenes, lichexanthone, gustastatin, lupenone, betulone, 17β,21β-epoxyhopan-3-one, taraxerol, and taraxerone. References cinerea Flora of Central America Flora of South America Plants described in 1843 Taxa named by Eduard Friedrich Poeppig
In September 2005, armed groups attacked villagers in Chad. Several dozen were killed, with estimates ranging from 36 to 75. Chad blamed Janjaweed forces in what was allegedly a cross border operation. This and subsequent operations then led to a deterioration in relations between Chad and Sudan. See also Chadian Civil War (2005–2010) References 2005 in Sudan 2005 in Chad Chad–Sudan relations Attacks in 2005
Joe Winters was a 20-year-old African-American man who was lynched in Conroe, Montgomery County, Texas by a mob on May 20, 1922. According to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary it was the 27th of 61 lynchings during 1922 in the United States. Background A 14-year-old girl was allegedly assaulted on Friday, 4:00 PM, May 19, 1920, near Leonidas, Texas. Rudolph Manning was initially rounded up and smuggled to Houston, Texas by his employer W.H. Biggers, M.A. Anderson, former sheriff of Montgomery County and J.W. Baker but present day Montgomery Sheriff Hicks brought him back to Conroe and then to Leonidas where the victim said it wasn't him. A large crowd gathered in Conroe and rumours swirled that a new suspect, Joe Winters, had taken a horse near Waukegan, Texas. He was spotted from Waukegan on his way to Youens, Texas. Police arrested him at 2:00 PM on Saturday, May 20, 1922, and he was taken to Leonidas where the victim was allegedly able to identify him. Lynching Since the alleged attack, local newspapers had been calling for a crowd to gather and by the time of the positive identification thousands of people had gathered in Conroe, Texas. When Montgomery Sheriff Hicks returned to Conroe he was quickly overpowered and the mob seized Winters, chained to an iron post in courthouse square and had oil boxes stacked around him. The pile was ignited and he was burned alive proclaiming his innocence. National memorial The National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018. Featured among other things is the Memorial Corridor which displays 805 hanging steel rectangles, each representing the counties in the United States where a documented lynching took place and, for each county, the names of those lynched. The memorial hopes that communities, like Montgomery County, Texas where Joe Winters was lynched, will take these slabs and install them in their own communities. Bibliography Notes 1922 riots 1922 in Texas African-American history of Texas Lynching deaths in Texas February 1922 events Protest-related deaths Racially motivated violence against African Americans Riots and civil disorder in Texas White American riots in the United States
Spiranthes perexilis, the languid ladies’-tresses is a species of orchid native to California and Oregon. Description Spiranthes perexilis plants are closely related to Spiranthes romanzoffiana and similar in appearance, but "gracile and open-spiralled, with narrow subpandurate labella". Spiranthes porrifolia plants also look similar. Distribution and habitat Spiranthes perexilis has been found in California and Oregon. Spiranthes perexilis grows in fens and wet meadows, often along the edge of the fen area and the slightly higher area around it. Within the Sierra Nevada and the Cascade Range it grows in similar habitat to Spiranthes porrifolia and Spiranthes romanzoffiana. Taxonomy Spiranthes perexilis plants were first described by Paul Martin Brown in 2008 as Spiranthes stellata but apparently contained a mix of species in the holotype sheet used to describe the new species. C. J. Sheviak first described the plants now accepted as Spiranthes perexilis as a subspecies called Spiranthes stellata subsp. perexilis in 2012 and M. C. Pace elevated them to species status in 2019. References perexilis Orchids of the United States Plants described in 2019
Communalism is a political philosophy and economic system. Communalism may also refer to: Communalism (Bookchin), a theory of government in which autonomous municipalities are bound in federation , a historical method that follows the development of communities Communalism (South Asia), violence across ethnic or communal boundaries African communalism, a system of interdependence in rural Africa Medieval communalism, a system of mutual allegiance and defense between cities in the European Middle Ages See also Communal (disambiguation)
The 1920 Campeonato Gaúcho was the second season of Rio Grande do Sul's top association football league. Guarany de Bagé won the title for the first time. Format The championship was contested by the four regional champions in a single round-robin system, with the team with the most points winning the title. Qualified teams The regional championships were also contested by Nacional from São Leopoldo and Juventude from Caxias do Sul (first region), Ideal from Pelotas and São Paulo from Rio Grande (second region) and 14 de Julho from Santana do Livramento. Guarany from Cruz Alta, being the only club from the third region affiliated to the Rio Grande do Sul's FA, was invited to participate, but did not answer the invitation. Championship References Campeonato Gaúcho seasons 1920 in Brazilian football leagues
Max Schlossberg (5 November 1873 – 23 September 1936) was a Jewish-Baltic trumpeter, conductor, composer, and teacher. His legacy is a large number of successful trumpet students and the method book, Daily Drills and Technical Studies. Life Max Schlossberg was born in Libau, Courland, Russian Empire, now Liepāja, Latvia in 1873 to Nathan Schlossberg and an unknown mother. He went to the Moscow Conservatory at the age of nine. He emigrated first to the United States in 1894 as his father had done previously, but returned to Riga shortly thereafter for compulsory military service which he never completed. There, Schlossberg married Jennie Lohak in 1902 before emigrating to the United States again that same year. In 1910, Max Schlossberg moved to The Bronx in New York City for his career. He spent the remainder of his career performing and teaching there. He had three children with Jennie: Charles, Katherine Benjamin, and another daughter who would marry Harry Freistadt. In 1936, Schlossberg suffered a heart attack which prompted him to visit Bethlehem, New Hampshire, where he would later die. Career Following his time at the Moscow Conservatory, Max Schlossberg played trumpet in Saint Petersburg. After moving to Berlin, he studied under Julius Kosleck and toured with Arthur Nikisch, Hans Richter, and Felix Weingartner. Following his return to Latvia in the 1890s, he supported himself by conducting. Once in New York City, he performed with the New York Philharmonic for the remainder of his life, first under Gustav Mahler and finally under Arturo Toscanini. He was part of the faculty of Juilliard School. Some of his many trumpet students include Harry Glantz, Saul Caston, Renold Schilke, William Vacchiano, Mannie Klein, Bernie Glow, and James Stamp. Daily Drills and Technical Studies Harry Freistadt compiled the manuscripts left behind by his teacher and father-in-law, Max Schlossberg, after his death. The resulting method book was Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trumpet, first published in 1937 by J. & F. Hill before the copyright passed along to M. Baron Company in 1938. Max Schlossberg's son, Charles, edited an arrangement of the method for trombone titled Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trombone. The daily drills consist of 156 exercises divided into eight parts: long note drills (37 exercises), intervals (11 exercises), octave drills (10 exercises), lip drills (11 exercises), chord drills (19 exercises), scale drills (27 exercises), chromatic scale drills (13 exercises), and short études (28 exercises). The étude labeled as exercise 156, now attributed to Guillaume Balay, has been omitted from the book after the 1941 edition. References 1873 births 1936 deaths 20th-century trumpeters American classical trumpeters American male trumpeters Juilliard School faculty Latvian conductors (music) Latvian people of Jewish descent Latvian trumpeters New York Philharmonic
The NASCAR Truck Series race at Sonoma Raceway is a future NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race that will be held at the Sonoma Raceway road course in Sonoma, California starting in 2022. The race is returning to the schedule for the first time since 1998 when the track was known as Sears Point International Raceway. The race is held in June on the same weekend as the NASCAR Cup Series' Toyota/Save Mart 350 and the ARCA Menards Series West's General Tire 200. In the race's first stint on the Truck Series schedule from the series' inaugural season in 1995 through 1998, it was held in October as a standalone race from the Cup Series schedule. History The 2022 Truck Series schedule was released on September 29 with Sonoma on Saturday, June 11. It replaced the race at the Watkins Glen road course, which had been added back on the Truck Series schedule in 2021 for the first time since 2000. The 2022 race will be 75 laps and 149.25 miles in length according to NASCAR.com. Stage 1 will be 20 laps in length, Stage 2 will be 25 laps in length, and the final stage will be 30 laps in length. Past winners References External links NASCAR Truck Series races NASCAR races at Sonoma Raceway Annual sporting events in the United States 1995 establishments in California 2022 establishments in California
Sceloporus brownorum, Brown's bunchgrass lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is endemic to Mexico. References Sceloporus Reptiles of Mexico Endemic fauna of Mexico Reptiles described in 1997 Taxa named by Hobart Muir Smith
Bonfires and Broomsticks is a 1947 children's book by Mary Norton. Parts of the book were adapted into the 1971 Disney movie Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Synopsis A friendly witch and three children travel back in time to the 17th century and bring him back to the 20th century. References 1947 children's books 1947 British novels 1947 fantasy novels British children's novels British novels adapted into films Fiction about alchemy Fiction set in 1942 1947 debut novels Children's fantasy novels Novels about time travel
Martin Turk (born 21 August 2003) is a Slovene professional footballer who plays for Parma. Club career Martin Turk made his professional debut for Parma on the 22 February 2022, starting the 0–0 Serie B away draw to Pisa. References External links 2003 births Living people Slovenian footballers Slovenia youth international footballers Association football goalkeepers Sportspeople from Koper Parma Calcio 1913 players Serie B players
Patrick Loiseau (born 8 May 1960) is a French politician who has been a member of the National Assembly since 2019 representing Vendée's 2nd constituency. As her substitute, he replaced Patricia Gallerneau in Parliament after she passed away. References Democratic Movement (France) politicians Deputies of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic Living people 1960 births People from Vendée 21st-century French politicians
The Mountains Between Us (German: Zwischen uns die Berge) is a 1956 Swiss romantic drama film directed by Franz Schnyder and starring Hannes Schmidhauser, Nelly Borgeaud and Peter Arens. Made in Eastmancolor, it was part of the post-war boom in heimatfilm which reached its peak around this period. However the film was a commercial failure and received a poor critical reception. It was shot at the Rosenhof Studios in Zurich and on location around Riederalp and Kippel in Valais and in the Italian captail Rome. The film's sets were designed by the art director Max Röthlisberger . Cast Hannes Schmidhauser as Beat Matter Nelly Borgeaud as Jacqueline Escher Peter Arens as Dominik Escher Heinrich Gretler as Posthalter Fred Tanner as Korporal Rémy Heinz Woester as Vater Escher Max Haufler as Federico Alfred Schlageter as Kommandant der Garde Johannes Steiner as Gardekaplan Erwin Kohlund as Arzt Willy Frey as Wirt Rita Liechti as Wirtin Peter Markus as Gardist References Bibliography Bock, Hans-Michael & Bergfelder, Tim. The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009. Kähler, Ursula. Franz Schnyder: Regisseur der Nation. Hier und Jetzt, 2020. External links 1956 films 1956 drama films Swiss drama films Swiss films Swiss German-language films Films directed by Franz Schnyder Swiss black-and-white films
Sceloporus bulleri, Buller's spiny lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is endemic to Mexico. References Sceloporus Reptiles of Mexico Endemic fauna of Mexico Reptiles described in 1895 Taxa named by George Albert Boulenger
Patrick James King is a Canadian far-right activist, based in Alberta, Canada. He is known for protesting government authority on a variety of issues. He has led the Wexit movement advocating for secession from Canada of Alberta and other western provinces, led the United We Roll movement, and acted as a regional organizer for the Canada convoy protest. King was arrested on 18 February 2022, in Ottawa and denied bail on 24 February 2022. Views King has a history of anti-Muslim, white nationalist, and far-right conspiracy theories. He has shared videos online promoting the white genocide conspiracy theory. In 2020, King had a conversation with the Toronto Star in which he shared conflicting views about violence and "ranted" about left wing ideologies, Antifa, and cancel culture. King accused the government of Canada of permitting Islamic State terrorists to enter Canada as refugees, of "normalizing pedophilia", and of adopting an immigration policy to “depopulate the white, Anglo-Saxon race.” He has advocated against a carbon tax, arguing that it puts Canadians at an economic disadvantage. King has said that the only way to end Canadian public health measures against COVID-19 may be achieved "with bullets". King also commented that Justin Trudeau was going to catch a bullet. In 2021, he claimed that The Holocaust death toll of 6 million was overstated. Activism King uses social media to reach hundreds of thousands of followers. He has been involved in a variety of political and social issues: Western Canada secessionism King was an organizer of the Wexit movement that advocated for Canada's prairie provinces to secede. United We Roll King was a co-organizer, and a driver for the United We Roll yellow vest protest in 2019 and was interviewed by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) in which he spoke of the importance of a gas pipeline, and the employment benefits of the oil and gas industry. He spoke of the national benefit of the Albertan economy and the lack of support to Albertans in 2019. King later stated that the CBC distorted the messages of the movement. Alberta anti-racist protest King was part of a right-wing counter protest to an anti-racist demonstration in Red Deer in 2020 where he was noted for saying: "That’s patriots kicking antifa out of their towns!" In September 2020, he organized a second counter-protest in Ponoka and threatened violence against anti-racist protests who he characterized as Antifa. COVID-19 pandemic In August 2021, King and conspiracy theorist Chris Sky visited Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan and spoke as part of a No-Vaxx Pass tour, in which they advocated for Canadians to defy the rules about vaccine passports. Also in August, King incorrectly claimed that his actions led to easing of COVID-19 public health measures in Alberta. His misunderstanding was a result of him misreading court documents rejecting his appeal against a parking ticket. This led to the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms stating that: "It is unclear whether Mr. King fully understands the legal process he is involved in." In October 2021, King broadcast a video, falsely claiming that the Canadian military had set up a base at Black Lake Denesuline First Nation and were forcing COVID-19 vaccinations on women and children. The video went viral, resulting in pressure upon the Athabasca Health Authority and the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations to put out statements, correcting the misinformation. Also in November 2021, King claimed there was no evidence that COVID-19 exists, in a social media message. Also in December, King said of the public health measures: "The only way this is going to be solved is with bullets." Canada convoy protest King was a regional organizer and one of the highest profile promoters of the 2022 Canada convoy protest in Ottawa. King invited Ottawa police officers to arrest the police chief, and his February 6 claims that half of the Ottawa Police Service resigned that day were proven false. Responding to a question about the impact of noise on Ottawa residents, King expressed amusement. In the lead up to the Ottawa protest, MP Jeremy Patzer stated that he had no association with King after meeting him as the protest convoy passed through Swift Current. Arrest and detention King was arrested on 18 February 2022 during the convoy protests as part of a police operation aimed at peacefully ending the occupation. He broadcast the arrest via his Facebook page. He was charged with mischief, counselling to commit mischief, counselling to disobey a court order, and counselling to obstruct police. On 24 February 2022 he was denied bail after Justice of the Peace Andrew Seymour judged that there was a substantive likelihood of King reoffending. Justice Seymour noted King's "history of criminality" and the overwhelming case resented by the Crown. King's lawyer spoke of King's concern about catching COVID-19 as he is detained, awaiting trial, prompting Justice Seymour to address the irony of the situation:" It is somewhat ironic that an individual whose raison d'etre is to protest vehemently against public health measures designed to reduce the spread of COVID, would now suggest that the delay or the potential for being infected at a detention centre could impact the court's decision." King is due in court for trial on 18 March 2022. Personal life King is from Sault Ste. Marie, and lives in Penhold, Alberta. King has claimed Métis heritage, although that claim has been challenged by Métis community. References Living people COVID-19 pandemic in Canada Canadian conspiracy theorists COVID-19 conspiracy theorists Canadian anti-vaccination activists Activists from Ontario People from Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario Canadian white nationalists Social media influencers Yellow vest activists Red Deer, Alberta Prisoners and detainees of Canada
Lyubimovka may refer to: Lyubimovka, Bashkortostan Lyubimovka, Fatezhsky District, Kursk Oblast
Sceloporus caeruleus, the blue ornate spiny lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is endemic to Mexico. References Sceloporus Reptiles of Mexico Endemic fauna of Mexico Reptiles described in 1936 Taxa named by Hobart Muir Smith
Jalolov, Djalolov or Dzhalolov (Cyrillic: Джалолов) is an Central Asian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Jalolova, Djalolova or Dzhalolova. The surname may refer to the following notable people: Bakhodir Jalolov (born 1994), Uzbekistani professional boxer Goolshanoy Jalolova, Uzbekistani football midfielder Najmiddin Jalolov (1972–2009), Uzbekistani militant Uzbek-language surnames
Sceloporus carinatus, the keeled spiny lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is found in Mexico and Guatemala. References Sceloporus Reptiles of Mexico Reptiles of Guatemala Reptiles described in 1936 Taxa named by Hobart Muir Smith
The 1988 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place on March 3–5, 1988 at Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina. defeated , 101–86 in the championship game, to win its seventh consecutive MEAC Tournament title. The Aggies earned an automatic bid to the 1988 NCAA Tournament as a No. 14 seed in the East region. Format Seven of nine conference members participated, with play beginning in the quarterfinal round. Teams were seeded based on their regular season conference record. Bracket * denotes overtime period References MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament 1987–88 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference men's basketball season MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Bernard Bouley (born 11 July 1950) is a French politician who has been Member of Parliament for Essonne's 2nd constituency since 2020, when he replaced Franck Marlin. References Living people 1950 births 21st-century French politicians The Republicans (France) politicians Deputies of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic Politicians from Paris
Sceloporus cautus, the shy spiny lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is endemic to Mexico. References Sceloporus Reptiles of Mexico Endemic fauna of Mexico Reptiles described in 1938 Taxa named by Hobart Muir Smith
Louis Blouwe (born 19 November 1999) is a Belgian cyclist, who currently rides for UCI ProTeam . His uncle Johan Bruyneel was also a professional cyclist. Major results 2021 1st Grote Prijs Stad Sint-Niklaas L'Étoile d'Or 1st Mountains classification 1st Points classification 9th Overall Tour de la Mirabelle References External links 1999 births Living people Belgian male cyclists People from Izegem
The eleventh emergency special session of the United Nations General Assembly centres on the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. The session convened on 28 February 2022, and is being held at United Nations Headquarters in New York City. Background An emergency special session is an unscheduled meeting of the United Nations General Assembly to make urgent, but non-binding decisions or recommendations regarding a particular issue. Emergency special sessions are rare, having previously been convened only ten times in the history of the United Nations. The mechanism of the emergency special session was created in 1950 by the General Assembly's adoption of its "Uniting for Peace" resolution, which made the necessary changes to the Assembly's Rules of Procedure at that time. The resolution likewise declared that: ... if the Security Council, because of lack of unanimity of the permanent members, fails to exercise its primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security in any case where there appears to be a threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression, the General Assembly shall consider the matter immediately with a view to making appropriate recommendations to Members for collective measures, including in the case of a breach of the peace or act of aggression the use of armed force when necessary, to maintain or restore international peace and security. If not in session at the time, the General Assembly may meet in emergency special session within twenty-four hours of the request therefor. Such emergency special session shall be called if requested by the Security Council on the vote of any seven members, or by a majority of the Members of the United Nations... These conditions were deemed to have been met following the Russian Federation's use of its veto power within the United Nations Security Council on 25 February to defeat draft resolution S/2022/155 deploring the invasion and calling for the withdrawal of Russian troops. Convocation On 27 February 2022, the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 2623 (2022), calling for an emergency special session to convene the following day. Eleven members of the Security Council voted in favor, with Russia voting against and China, India, and the United Arab Emirates abstaining. The resolution was passed despite Russia's negative vote because permanent members of the Security Council do not have veto power over procedural matters, such as a vote to convene an emergency special session. Prior to Resolution 2623, the Uniting for Peace resolution had been invoked to call emergency sessions of the General Assembly on 12 occasions: seven times by the Security Council and five times by the General Assembly. Voting Proceedings At the start of the special session, General Assembly President Abdulla Shahid of the Republic of Maldives called for the delegations to observe a minute's silence. Around a hundred delegations have requested to address the Assembly, which is expected to vote on a non-binding resolution on 2 March. Isolated at the Assembly, Russia defended its “military operation” in Ukraine, and blamed the violence on Kyiv. On the other hand, Ukraine’s representative to the UN, Sergiy Kyslytsya condemned Russia’s acts as “war crimes” and called Putin’s decision to increase the nuclear readiness “madness”. He warned, "If Ukraine does not survive, international peace will not survive. If Ukraine does not survive, the United Nations will not survive. ... If Ukraine does not survive, we cannot be surprised if democracy fails." References External links Video of the first plenary meeting Video of the second plenary meeting Remarks by Abdulla Shahid, president of the 76th General Assembly Summary of first day's debate, United Nations Meetings Coverage and Press Releases 11 Russo-Ukrainian War 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022 in international relations 2022 in the United Nations February 2022 events
Bouley is a French surname. List of people with the surname Bernard Bouley (born 1950), French politician David Bouley (born 1953), American chef See also Bouley Bosley (surname) Boulet (surname) Bodley Bouley Bay Bouley Bay Hill Climb French-language surnames Surnames of French origin
Rendez-vous avec Maurice Chevalier n°4 is a French short film directed by Maurice Régamey in 1957. Synopsis Maurice Chevalier visits several artists to discuss their work. Songs References External links 1957 films 1957 short films French black-and-white films French short films French films Maurice Chevalier
The Starwind 19, Starwind 190 and Spindrift 19 are a family of American trailerable sailboats that were designed by Jim Taylor Yacht Designs as cruiser-racers and first built in 1982. The designer claims that the boat was the inspiration for the C. Raymond Hunt Associates' O'Day 192. Production The design was built by Starwind, the sailboat division of Wellcraft in the United States, starting in 1982. Some were built by Chrysler Marine and later by Spindrift One Designs, a division of Rebel Industries. The design is now out of production. Design The Starwind 19 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim. It has a fractional sloop rig, a raked stem, a reverse transom, a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller and a fixed fin keel. The boat is normally fitted with a small outboard motor for docking and maneuvering. The design has sleeping accommodation for four people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin and two straight settee berths in the main cabin. The galley is located on the port side of the companionway ladder and is equipped with a sink. The head is located in the bow cabin under the "V"-berth. Cabin headroom is and the fresh water tank has a capacity of . The design has a PHRF racing average handicap of 288 and a hull speed of . Variants Starwind 19 This model has a length overall of , a waterline length of , displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the centerboard down and with it retracted. Starwind 190 Later version of the Starwind 19. Spindrift 19 This model has a length overall of , a waterline length of , displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the centerboard down and with it retracted. Operational history In a 2010 review Steve Henkel wrote, "Over 600 of these nice-looking boats were built ... Best features: The Starwind is a nicely conceived and well-made boat for her size and era. A good-sized opening hatch forward, rare in a boat this size, is good for ventilation and escape in an emergency An on-deck anchor locker is also a plus. The Starwind, with a PHRF of 288, may have a small advantage on the race course; even the smaller Precision 18, more than a foot shorter on deck, but with a waterline length only four inches less, and with eight square feet less sail area, has a handicap of only 282. Worst features: We could find none significant enough to mention." See also List of sailing boat types References Keelboats 1980s sailboat type designs Sailing yachts Trailer sailers Sailboat type designs by Jim Taylor Yacht Designs Sailboat types built by Starwind Sailboat types built by Chrysler Marine Sailboat types built by Spindrift One Designs
Robert Therry (born 27 June 1947) is a French politician who has been Member of Parliament for Pas-de-Calais's 4th constituency since 2020, when he replaced Daniel Fasquelle. References Living people 1947 births People from Pas-de-Calais Deputies of the 15th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic 21st-century French politicians The Republicans (France) politicians
Alexia Estrada Bigue is a Guatemalan footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for American college team City College of San Francisco Rams and the Guatemala women's national team. Early life Estrada was born in San Francisco, California, United States and raised in South San Francisco, California. Her father is from San Raymundo, Guatemala and her mother is French. She has attended the South San Francisco High School. College career Estrada has attended the City College of San Francisco in the United States. International career Estrada made her senior debut for Guatemala on 16 February 2022, starting in a 9–0 home win over the United States Virgin Islands during the 2022 CONCACAF W Championship qualification. References External links Living people People with acquired Guatemalan citizenship Guatemalan women's footballers Women's association football goalkeepers Guatemala women's international footballers Guatemalan people of French descent Soccer players from San Francisco People from South San Francisco, California American women's soccer players City College of San Francisco alumni College women's soccer players in the United States American people of Guatemalan descent American sportspeople of Latin American descent American sportspeople of North American descent American people of French descent
Sceloporus chaneyi, the Peña Nevada agave lizard, Chaney's spiny lizard, or Chaney's bunchgrass lizard, is a species of lizard in the family Phrynosomatidae. It is endemic to Mexico. References Sceloporus Reptiles of Mexico Endemic fauna of Mexico Reptiles described in 1992 Taxa named by James R. Dixon
Therry is a surname. List of people with the surname John Joseph Therry (1790–1864) was an Irish Roman Catholic priest in Sydney, Australia. Robert Therry (born 1947), French politician Roger Therry (1800–1874), Irish-Australian jurist See also Terry Surnames
Marshall Thornton is an American writer of gay and lesbian mysteries best known for his Boystown series. He's won the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Mystery thrice and has been a finalist for the award six times. He's also been a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Romance twice and placed second for the Rainbow Award for Gay Romantic Comedy in 2016. Biography Thornton was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, then lived in the Adirondack Mountains as a teenager. He lived in Chicago for seven years before moving to Los Angeles, where he still lives. He received a Master of Fine Arts in Screenwriting from the University of California, Los Angeles. Awards Publications The Christmas Visit (2008) The Beneficiary (2009) Coffee Clutch (2009) Simple Addition (2009) Bartholi's Rest (2010) Coyote Bluff (2010) Lucky is Lost (2010) Desert Run (2011) Full Release (2011) The Ghost Slept Over (2014) My Favorite Uncle (2014) Snowman With Benefits (2014) Aunt Belle's Time Travel & Collectibles (2017) Never Rest (2018) Code Name: Liberty (2019) Fathers of the Bride (2021) Boystown series The following books are listed in story order, not publishing order: Little Boy Dead (2012) Little Boy Afraid (2017) Three Nick Nowak Mysteries (2009) Three More Nick Nowak Mysteries (2010) Two Nick Nowak Novellas (2011) A Time For Secrets (2012) Murder Book (2013) From the Ashes (2013) Bloodlines (2015) The Lies That Bind (2016) Lucky Days (2017) Gifts Given (2017) Heart's Desire (2018) Broken Cord (2019) Fade Out (2020) The Perils of Praline series The Perils of Praline: Or, the Amorous Adventures of a Southern Gentleman in Hollywood (2010) Praline Goes To Washington: Or, the Erotic Misdeeds of a Newly Native Californian in Our Nation's Capitol (2017) Jan Birch Mysteries series The Development: Three Jan Birch Mysteries (2011) Mountain View Terrace (2011) Femme series Femme (2016) Masc (2018) A Pinx Video Mystery series Night Drop (2017) Hidden Treasures (2018) Late Fees (2018) Rewind (2019) Cash Out (2020) The Wyandot County Mysteries series The Less Than Spectacular Times of Henry Milch (2020) A Fabulously Unfabulous Summer for Henry Milch (2022) Dom Reilly Mysteries series Year of the Rat (2021) References External links Official website Living people Writers from Pittsburgh University of California, Los Angeles alumni Lambda Literary Award winners
Karāmat ʿAlī Jaunpūrī (, ; 12 June 1800 – 30 May 1873) was a nineteenth-century Indian Muslim social reformer and founder of the Taiyuni movement. He played a major role in propagating to the masses of Bengal and Assam via public sermons, and has written over forty books. Syed Ameer Ali is among one of his notable students. Early life and family Ali Jaunpuri was born in the neighbourhood of Mulla Tola in Jaunpur, North India on 12 June 1800. He is the 35th direct descendant of Abu Bakr, the first Rashidun caliph. His father, Abu Ibrahim Shaykh Muhammad Imam Bakhsh was a student of Shah Abdul Aziz, and his grandfather Jarullah was also a shaykh. It is said that the name Karamat was later prefixed to his name as people started to notice his karamat. From his own books, it can be seen that he used to refer to himself as simply ‘Ali Jaunpuri’ or ‘Ali Jaunpuri better known as Karamat Ali’. Education Jaunpuri's early education in Arabic and Persian began with his father, and he later started Hadith studies and other Islamic studies under Qudratullahi Rudlavi and Ahmadullah Anami. He studied reasoning with Ahmadullah Chiraiyakoti and was taught tajweed and Qur'an by Qari Sayyid Ibrahim al-Madani and Qari Sayyid Muhammad Iskandar. He was also taught calligraphy by Hafiz Abdul Ghani to such a degree that it was said he could write Al-Ikhlas with the basmala on a piece of rice and leave space to write his name as well. Apart from this, he also learned the martial arts and wrestling and the art of running sticks and knots from expert art teachers. At the age of eighteen, Jaunpuri became interested in tasawwuf. After taking his father's permission, Jaunpuri pledged bay'ah to Sayyid Ahmad of Raebareli, who was the founder of the Tariqah-e-Muhammadiya movement. On the very first week of service, Sayyid Ahmad instructed him to get involved in the work of guidance and bestowed the Khilafah (succession) letter with the spiritual genealogy through Shah Ismail Dehlvi. Activism in Jaunpur His religious activities were spread across northern India in places like Jaunpur, Azamgarh, Sultanpur, Ghazipur and Faizabad. At that time, there was no daytime adhan in Jaunpur, it could only be heard with the rising and setting of the sun. He reformed this un-Islamic ritual and with great effort issued adhan in mosques. There were also concerns behind the management of the historic Jama Mosque, Jaunpur. Instead of adhan and prayers, the mosque was used for worldly gatherings like baraat, clubbing and marriage ceremonies regardless of religion. Cattle were also tied in some parts of the Jamia Masjid. It continued for many years after until Jaunpuri managed to re-establish the five daily prayers at the mosque. Similarly, after Jamia Masjid Jaunpur, he started a series of Friday sermons which continued for many years after his death. Due to his preaching efforts, attempts were made to kill him several times but he escaped due to his skill in martial arts. He also established Madrasa Hanafia and Madrasat-ul-Quran in Jaunpur for the publication of religious knowledge. The first teacher of Madrasa Hanafia was Abdul Haleem Farangi Mohali (father of Abdul Hai Lucknowi). Migration to Bengal Under Sayyid Ahmad's instruction in 1822, Jaunpuri began preaching to the Muslim masses in Bengal and Assam. He played an important role in Arabic, Urdu and Islamic studies in the country. Starting in Calcutta, he travelled to various places including Dhaka, Mymensingh, Dinajpur, Faridpur, Noakhali, Chittagong, Goalpara, Dhubri, Kamrup and Rangpur. For most of Karamat Ali Jaunpuri's career, he had to sail in Bengal and Assam for religious activities. For this reason, he established a travelling madrasa within a large boat. His students lived in the boat and Jaunpuri used to bear their expenses and teach them there. Political views Long after his murshid's death in 1831, the Tariqa-e-Muhammadiya split into two with Jaunpuri leading a non-military faction which came to be known as the Taiyunis in 1867. The Taiyunis considered cooperating with the British authorities as the more ideal option rather than rebelling. Karamat Ali Jaunpuri and the Taiyunis were also opponents of Haji Shariatullah's Faraizi movement which declared British India as a Dar al-Harb (house of war) and discarded the Friday prayer and Eid prayers. Instead, he issued a fatwa declaring the colonised territory as a Dar al-Aman as the British government allowed freedom of religion. His fatwa was used by other Muslim scholars as well as Muslim modernists of the subcontinent like Nawab Abdul Latif and later Syed Ahmad Khan to justify their loyalty and cooperation to the British Empire. During his lifetime, Jaunpuri engaged in debate with the Faraizis, most prominently Abdul Jabbar Faraizi. The first debate regarding the Friday prayer was held in Barisal in 1867, and this was followed up by a debate in 1879 by his son Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri in Madaripur. Over five thousand people attended the latter event and it was dubbed by Nabinchandra Sen as the Battle of Jumuʿah. Personal life Karamat Ali Jaunpuri married four times. He first married a lady of Jaunpur but she later died. He married two women in Noakhali who also died during his lifetime. His fourth wife, originally from North India, settled in Rangpur with him and outlived him. Jaunpuri left behind hundreds of spiritual successors and 14 children. Two of his sons, Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri and Abdul Awwal Jaunpuri gained prominence in Bengal later on. Death and legacy During his travels in Rangpur in 1873, Jaunpuri fell ill and subsequently died on 30 May. He was buried near the Munshipara Jame Mosque in Rangpur. Works Jaunpuri has written roughly 46 books. 19 of them were compiled into the three-volume Zakhira-e-Karamat book. The remaining works are scarce. An incomplete list of his works: Miftahul Jannat Zeenat al-Musalli Zeenat al-Qari Sharh-e-Hindi Jazari Kawkab-e-Durri Tarjama-e-Shamail-e-Tirmizi Tarjama-e-Mishkat Sharif Aqaid-e-Haqqa Tazkiratul Aqaid Mafizul Huruf Qawl ath-Thabit Maqami al-Mubtadieen Haqq al-Yaqin Bay'at-o-Tauba Qawl al-Amin Murad al-Murideen Qawl al-Haq Merat al-Haq Imtinan al-Qulub Mokashifat-e-Rahmat Mulakkhas Farz-e-Aam Hujjat-e-Kateya Nur al-Husa Zad at-Taqwa Kitab-e-Esteqamat Nurun Ala Nur Rahat-e-Ruh Quwwat al-Iman Ihqaqul Haqq Rafiq as-Salikeen Tanweer al-Qulub Tazkiyat an-Neswan Nasim al-Haramain Barahin-e-Kateya Maulood-e-Khairul Bariyyah Keramatul Haramain Qurratul Wiyyun Resala-e-Faisala Okazatul Mumineen Fath-e-Bab-e-Sabiyan Dawat-e-Majnun See also Nur Muhammad Nizampuri Notes External links Read Miftah-ul-Jannah, Miftah-ul-Khabta and Rafiq-ul-Salikeen in Urdu online References Sangkhipta Islami Bishwakosh, Volume 1, Islamic Foundation Bangladesh Indian Muslim scholars of Islam 1800 births 1873 deaths Indian revolutionaries 19th-century Indian Muslims 19th-century Indian educators People from Jaunpur district 19th-century Muslim theologians Sunni Muslim scholars Hanafis
Air Balloon was launched in 1784 at Yarmouth as a coaster. She was captured in 1797. She then disappeared from United Kingdom records until 1824. She was almost rebuilt in 1825, only to suffer a major maritime incident in 1826. She was refloated and resumed sailing, but was wrecked in 1829. Career Air Balloon first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1784. On 27 March 1798, Air Balloon was sailing from Blakeney, Norfolk to Salcombe when a French vessel captured her and took her into Boulogne. Air Balloon returned to Lloyd's Register in 1824. She re-entered the Register of Shipping (RS) in 1825, with information that disagreed with that in Lloyd's Register. On 7 September 1826, Air Balloon, James Brown, master was driven ashore at Whitby; her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Littlehampton, to her homeport of Sunderland, County Durham. Air Balloon was refloated on 17 September and taken in to Whitby. Fate On 13 August 1829 Air Balloon sprang a leak and foundered in the North Sea off Scarborough. She was on a voyage from Sunderland to Chatham, Kent. She was refloated on 21 August and taken into Scarborough. She was last listed in the 1829 volume of Lloyd's Register. She was last listed in the Register of Shipping in 1833, but with data stale since 1828. Notes, citations, and references Notes Citations References 1784 ships Age of Sail merchant ships of England Captured ships Maritime incidents in September 1826 Maritime incidents in August 1829
Stevan Kesejić (; born 27 September 1944) is a politician in Serbia. Based in Sombor, Vojvodina, he has served several terms in the federal, republican, provincial, and local parliaments over the course of his career. Kesejić is a member of the far-right Serbian Radical Party (Srpska radikalna stranka, SRS). Private career Kesejić was born in Sombor, at a time when the Axis occupation of Vojvodina was coming to an end and the Partisans were establishing their rule in the area. He is a technologist in private life. According to a 1996 party biography, he developed an international reputation as a specialist in drying and finishing seed corn and was invited on several occasions to Germany, Kazakhstan, and Spain as an expert in the field. Politician Kesejić appeared in the twenty-first position on the Radical Party's list for Novi Sad in the 1992 Serbian parliamentary election. The party won ten seats in the division, and he was not included in its assembly delegation. (From 1992 to 2000, Serbia's electoral law stipulated that one-third of parliamentary mandates would be assigned to candidates from successful lists in numerical order, while the remaining two-thirds would be distributed amongst other candidates at the discretion of the sponsoring parties. It was common practice for the latter mandates to be awarded out of order. Kesejić could have received a mandate despite his low position on the list, but he was not.) Parliamentarian Yugoslavia Kesejić was given the lead position on the SRS's list in Sombor for the Assembly of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia's Chamber of Citizens in the 1996 Yugoslavian parliamentary election. He was elected when the list won a single mandate. The Socialist Party of Serbia (Socijalistička partija Srbije, SPS) won the election and governed in conjunction with its Montenegrin allies; the Radicals initially served in opposition. Kesejić also ran for the Assembly of Vojvodina in the concurrent 1996 provincial election and was defeated. The Radical Party joined Serbia's coalition government in March 1998 and Yugoslavia's coalition government in August 1999. Kesejić served for a time as Yugoslavia's deputy minister of international trade. He again received the lead position on the Radical Party's list for Sombor in the 2000 Yugoslavian parliamentary election. The list did not win any seats in the division. He was also defeated in Sombor's third constituency seat in the concurrent Vojvodina provincial election and in the fifth constituency for Sombor's municipal assembly in the 2000 Serbian local elections. Serbia Slobodan Milošević was defeated as Yugoslavia's president in the 2000 elections, a watershed moment in Serbian and Yugoslavian politics. Serbia's government fell after Milošević's defeat, and a new Serbian parliamentary election was called for December 2000. Prior to the election, Serbia's electoral laws were reformed such that the entire country was counted as a single electoral division and all mandates were awarded to candidates at the discretion of the sponsoring parties or coalitions, irrespective of numerical order. Kesejić was given the twelfth position on the Radical Party's list and was given a mandate when the list won twenty-three seats. The Democratic Opposition of Serbia (Demokratska opozicija Srbije, DOS) won a landslide victory, and the Radicals served in opposition. In June 2001, Kesejić refused to leave the assembly after being sanctioned by speaker Nataša Mičić and was taken out by security. He suffered a medical situation in the process and had to be taken to hospital. He was given the fifty-fourth position on the Radical Party's list in the 2003 parliamentary election and was again given a mandate when the list won eighty-two seats. Although the Radicals emerged as the largest party in the assembly after the election, they fell well short of a majority and continued to serve in opposition. Serbia and Montenegro The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was re-constituted as Serbia and Montenegro in 2003. By virtue of its performance in the 2003 parliamentary election, the Radical party had the right to appoint thirty delegates to the Assembly of Serbia and Montenegro. Kesejić was given a federal mandate on 12 February 2004; by virtue of holding this position, he was required to resign his seat in the republican assembly. He once again served in the federal assembly as an opposition member. The State Union of Serbia and Montenegro ceased to exist in 2006 when Montenegro declared independence. Vojvodina Vojvodina switched to a system of mixed proportional representation for provincial elections following the 2000 vote. Kesejić was elected to the provincial assembly for Sombor's redistributed second division in the 2004 provincial election. The Democratic Party (Demokratska stranka, DS) and its allies won the election, and Kesejić served as a member of the opposition at this level as well. He was not a candidate for re-election in 2008. The Radical Party experienced a serious split in late 2008, with several members joining the more moderate Serbian Progressive Party (Srpska napredna stranka, SNS) under the leadership of Tomislav Nikolić and Aleksandar Vučić. Kesejić remained with the Radicals. Serbia's electoral laws were reformed in 2011, such that mandates were awarded in numerical order to candidates on successful lists. Kesejić appeared in the fourteenth position on the SRS's electoral list in the 2012 provincial election. Weakened by the 2008 split, the party won only five mandates, and he was not returned. Local politics Serbia introduced the direct election of mayors in the 2004 local elections, and Kesejić ran as the Radical Party's candidate in Sombor. He was defeated by Jovan Slavković of the Democratic Party in the second round of voting. He was elected to the municipal assembly, however, and served once again as an opposition member. In April 2007, Kesejić led to the SRS in holding a "parallel" meeting of the local assembly in the streets of Sombor, due to a conflict over the municipality's credit indebtedness. Later in the same year, he advocated for a motion that would have made Russian president Vladimir Putin an honorary citizen of Sombor. The motion was not approved by the assembly. The direct election of mayors proved to be a short-lived experiment and was abandoned with the 2008 Serbian local elections. The DS narrowly defeated the SRS in Sombor in this cycle; Slavković was included on the Radical Party's list and was again given a mandate for the sitting of the assembly that followed. Following the SRS split and Serbia's electoral reforms, he received the lead position on the Radical list for Sombor in the 2012 local elections and was re-elected when the list won four out of sixty-one mandates. He did not seek re-election in 2016. Electoral record Provincial (Vojvodina) Local (Sombor) References 1944 births Living people Politicians from Sombor Members of the Chamber of Citizens in the Assembly of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Members of the National Assembly of Serbia Members of the Assembly of Serbia and Montenegro Members of the Assembly of Vojvodina Serbian Radical Party politicians