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Q Pyrenula quartzitica – Brazil Pyrenula quassiicola
R Pyrenula ravenelii Pyrenula reebiae – North America Pyrenula reginae – Brazil Pyrenula relicta Pyrenula rhomboidea – Brazil Pyrenula rinodinospora – Papua New Guinea Pyrenula rubroanomala Pyrenula rubroinspersa – South America Pyrenula rubrojavanica – Java Pyrenula rubrolateralis – Brazil Pyrenula rubromamillana – Brazil Pyrenula rubronitidula – South America Pyrenula rubrostigma – South America Pyrenula rubrostoma
S Pyrenula sanguinea – Brazil Pyrenula sanguineomeandrata Pyrenula sanguineostiolata Pyrenula santensis Pyrenula schiffneri Pyrenula segregata Pyrenula seminuda – South America Pyrenula sexlocularis Pyrenula sexluminata Pyrenula shirleyana – Australia Pyrenula sipmanii – South Korea Pyrenula spissitunicata – South Solomons Pyrenula subcongruens Pyrenula subcylindrica – India Pyrenula subsoluta Pyrenula subumbilicata – Australia Pyrenula subvariabilis Pyrenula subvariolosa – Australia Pyrenula supracongruens Pyrenula supralaetior – Brazil
T Pyrenula tetraspora – South America Pyrenula thailandica – Papua New Guinea; India; Thailand Pyrenula tokyoensis – Japan Pyrenula triangularis – South America
V Pyrenula velatior Pyrenula vermicularis – Japan Pyrenula violaceastroidea – Brazil Pyrenula viridipyrgilla – South America
W Pyrenula warmingii Pyrenula welwitschii
X Pyrenula xanthinspersa Pyrenula xanthoglobulifera – Brazil Pyrenula xanthominuta – Australia
Former Pyrenula species
Many taxa once placed in Pyrenula have been moved to other genera or have been synonymized; these former Pyrenula species are listed here.
Pyrenula achariana = Melanotheca achariana Pyrenula achroopora = Pyrenula dermatodes Pyrenula addubitans = Pleospora addubitans Pyrenula aenea = Pseudosagedia aenea Pyrenula aethiobola = Verrucaria aethiobola Pyrenula albissima = Leptorhaphis epidermidis Pyrenula americana = Anisomeridium americanum Pyrenula analepta = Arthopyrenia analepta Pyrenula annularis = Astrothelium annulare Pyrenula aractina = Hydropunctaria aractina Pyrenula areolata = Staurothele areolata Pyrenula arthonioides = Pyrenula arthoniotheca Pyrenula biformis = Microthelia biformis Pyrenula canellae-albae = Sulcopyrenula canellae-albae Pyrenula carpinea = Segestria carpinea Pyrenula cartilaginea = Astrothelium cartilagineum Pyrenula catalepta = Verrucaria aethiobola Pyrenula catervaria = Trypethelium variolosum Pyrenula cerasi = Arthopyrenia cerasi Pyrenula ceratina = Astrothelium ceratinum Pyrenula chilensis = Parmentaria chilensis Pyrenula chlorotica = Pseudosagedia chlorotica Pyrenula cinchonae = Constrictolumina cinchonae Pyrenula circumrubens = Pyrenula cruenta Pyrenula clandestina = Clandestinotrema clandestinum Pyrenula clopima = Staurothele clopima Pyrenula coactella = Melanothecopsis coactella Pyrenula collospora = Bogoriella collospora Pyrenula diluta = Pseudopyrenula diluta Pyrenula discissa = Phaeotrema discissum Pyrenula discolor = Ampliotrema discolor Pyrenula elaeina = Verrucaria elaeina Pyrenula emergens = Pyrenula pinguis Pyrenula endococcoidea = Phaeospora rimosicola Pyrenula epidermidis = Leptorhaphis epidermidis Pyrenula fallaciosa = Arthopyrenia fallaciosa Pyrenula flaventior = Pyrenula mastophora Pyrenula fraxini = Naetrocymbe fraxini Pyrenula fuliginea = Thelignya lignyota Pyrenula funckii = Verrucaria funckii Pyrenula fusca = Pyrenula anomala Pyrenula gaudichaudii = Nigrovothelium tropicum Pyrenula gelatinosa = Agonimia gelatinosa Pyrenula gemmata = Acrocordia gemmata Pyrenula gemmifera = Tichothecium gemmiferum Pyrenula gibbosa = Rimularia gibbosa Pyrenula glabra = Swinscowia glabra Pyrenula glabratula = Pyrenula dermatodes Pyrenula guayaci = Parapyrenis guayaci Pyrenula harrisii = Pyrenula occidentalis Pyrenula henatomma = Ocellularia henatomma Pyrenula hyalospora = Lithothelium hyalosporum Pyrenula hydrela = Verrucaria hydrela Pyrenula infernalis = Megalotremis infernalis Pyrenula interjungens = Pseudosagedia interjungens Pyrenula kakouettae = Pyrenula acutispora Pyrenula kunthii = Pyrenula mamillana Pyrenula leucocephala = Lecanactis abietina Pyrenula leucoplaca = Eopyrenula leucoplaca Pyrenula libricola = Pyrenula leucostoma Pyrenula lignyota = Thelignya lignyota Pyrenula lithina = Staurothele fissa Pyrenula marcida = Astrothelium marcidum Pyrenula margacea = Verrucaria margacea Pyrenula marginata = Pyrenula mamillana Pyrenula martinicana = Pyrenula caraibica Pyrenula mastoidea = Clathroporina mastoidea Pyrenula megalospora = Acrocordia megalospora Pyrenula melanospora = Mycomicrothelia melanospora Pyrenula micromma = Pyrenula occulta Pyrenula microscopica = Mycoporopsis microscopica Pyrenula microthelia = Roselliniella microthelia Pyrenula neoculata = Anthracothecium oculatum Pyrenula nigrescens = Verrucaria nigrescens Pyrenula nitens = Architrypethelium nitens Pyrenula nitidella f. chlorospila = Pyrenula chlorospila Pyrenula obovata = Bogoriella obovata Pyrenula ocellata = Polymeridium ocellatum Pyrenula ochraceoflavens = Pyrenula ochraceoflava Pyrenula olivacea = Pseudosagedia borreri Pyrenula olivacea = Arthopyrenia analepta Pyrenula oxyspora = Leptorhaphis epidermidis Pyrenula oxyspora = Pyrenula oxysporiza Pyrenula papularis = Thelidium papulare Pyrenula perpusilla = Endococcus rugulosus Pyrenula pertusarioidea = Polyblastiopsis pertusarioidea Pyrenula planorbis = Constrictolumina planorbis Pyrenula punctiformis = Naetrocymbe punctiformis Pyrenula pupula = Astrothelium pupula Pyrenula pygmaea = Muellerella pygmaea Pyrenula quercus = Cyrtidula quercus Pyrenula quinqueseptata = Polymeridium quinqueseptatum Pyrenula quinqueseptata = Pyrenula sexluminata Pyrenula rhyponta = Naetrocymbe rhyponta Pyrenula salicis = Arthopyrenia salicis Pyrenula sphaeroides = Zignoella sphaeroides Pyrenula staurospora = Sulcopyrenula staurospora Pyrenula subandamanica = Parmentaria andamanensis Pyrenula subfarinosa = Phaeotrema subfarinosum Pyrenula submersa = Verrucaria hydrela Pyrenula subprostans = Anisomeridium subprostans Pyrenula subsimplex = Melanotheca vainioensis Pyrenula tetracerae = Porina tetracerae Pyrenula thelena = Bogoriella thelena Pyrenula tremulae = Leptorhaphis tremulae Pyrenula tropica = Nigrovothelium tropicum Pyrenula uberina = Architrypethelium uberinum Pyrenula umbonata = Pyrenocarpon thelostomum Pyrenula umbrata = Thelotrema umbratum Pyrenula variolosa = Anthracothecium variolosum Pyrenula ventosicola = Muellerella ventosicola Pyrenula vermicellifera = Opegrapha vermicellifera Pyrenula verrucosa = Polyblastia verrucosa Pyrenula wallrothii = Mycomicrothelia wallrothii Pyrenula zwackhii = Thelidium zwackhii
Notes
References
Pyrenula
James P. "Jim" Roers is an American politician and businessman serving as a member of the North Dakota Senate from the 46th district. He assumed office on December 1, 2016.
Early life and education Roers was born in Alexandria, Minnesota and raised in Fargo, North Dakota. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in agriculture from North Dakota State University.
Career Roers is the president of Roers Development, a property development company. He was appointed to the North Dakota Senate in April 2012, succeeding Tom Fischer, and served until December 2012. He was elected to the Senate in November 2016. Roers has also served as vice chair of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
Personal life Roers and his wife, Sandra, have five children, including Shannon Roers Jones.
References
Living people North Dakota Republicans North Dakota state senators People from Alexandria, Minnesota People from Fargo, North Dakota Politicians from Fargo, North Dakota North Dakota State University alumni
The 2013 CNBC Prime's The Profit 200 was the 17th stock car race of the 2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series and the 24th iteration of the event. The race was held on Saturday, July 13, 2013, in Loudon, New Hampshire, at New Hampshire Motor Speedway a 1.058 miles (1.703 km) permanent, oval-shaped, low-banked racetrack. The race was extended from its scheduled 200 laps to 2013 due to multiple green–white–checker finishes. At race's end, Kyle Busch, driving for Joe Gibbs Racing, would defend the field on a drama-filled final restart to complete a dominant run in the race. The win was Busch's 58th career NASCAR Nationwide Series win and his seventh win of the season. To fill out the podium, Brian Vickers of Joe Gibbs Racing and Austin Dillon of Richard Childress Racing would finish second and third, respectively.
Background
New Hampshire Motor Speedway is a 1.058-mile (1.703 km) oval speedway located in Loudon, New Hampshire, which has hosted NASCAR racing annually since the early 1990s, as well as the longest-running motorcycle race in North America, the Loudon Classic. Nicknamed "The Magic Mile", the speedway is often converted into a 1.6-mile (2.6 km) road course, which includes much of the oval.
The track was originally the site of Bryar Motorsports Park before being purchased and redeveloped by Bob Bahre. The track is currently one of eight major NASCAR tracks owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports.
Entry list
(R) denotes rookie driver. (i) denotes driver who is ineligible for series driver points.
*Withdrew to qualify for Dexter Stacey.
Practice
First practice The first practice session was held on Friday, July 12, at 11:00 AM EST, and would last for 50 minutes. Regan Smith of JR Motorsports would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 29.720 and an average speed of .
Second and final practice The second and final practice session, sometimes referred to as Happy Hour, was held on Friday, July 12, at 1:40 PM EST, and would last for one hour and 20 minutes. Regan Smith of JR Motorsports would set the fastest time in the session, with a lap of 29.330 and an average speed of .
Qualifying Qualifying was held on Saturday, July 13, at 10:05 AM EST. Each driver would have two laps to set a fastest time; the fastest of the two would count as their official qualifying lap.
Kyle Busch of Joe Gibbs Racing would win the pole, setting a time of 28.873 and an average speed of .
Two drivers would fail to qualify: Morgan Shepherd and Mike Harmon.
Full qualifying results
Race results
References
2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series NASCAR races at New Hampshire Motor Speedway July 2013 sports events in the United States 2013 in sports in New Hampshire
21000 series may refer to: Kintetsu 21000 series EMU Sotetsu 21000 series, an 8-car derivative of the Sotetsu 20000 series EMU
In a 2000 paper titled "Generalized Schmidt Decomposition and Classification of Three-Quantum-Bit States" Acín et al. described a way of separating out one of the terms of a general tripartite quantum state. This can be useful in considering measures of entanglement of quantum states.
General decomposition For a general three-qubit state there is no way of writing
but there is a general transformation to where .
References
The 1957 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 1957 NCAA College Division football season as a member of the Lone Star Conference (LSC). In their fourth year under head coach R. W. Parker, the team compiled an overall record of 4–6 with a mark of 3–4 in conference play.
Schedule
References
Southwest Texas State Texas State Bobcats football seasons Southwest Texas State Bobcats football
Martha Cecilia Pinilla-Perdomo is a Colombian diplomat and journalist. She is the Colombian ambassador to Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago. She attended the Externado University of Colombia where she studied journalism. Martha also holds a degree in law from the Nueva Granada Military University. She has been a career diplomat of the Republic of Colombia since 1989.
She has served as Consul in New York, Counselor of the Embassy of Colombia in Malaysia and Minister Counselor in Argentina. She has been Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Colombia in Bolivia and South Africa; and also non-resident Ambassador of Colombia in Botswana, Namibia, Mauritius and Madagascar. Perdomo has also been in charge of the Passport and Treaty Offices and has been Director of the Augusto Ramirez Ocampo Diplomatic Academy at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Bogotá. She is currently a professor of Public International Law at the Sergio Arboleda University.
References
Living people Colombian diplomats
Nieuw-Scheemda (also: Scheemderhamrik; Gronings: Nij Scheemte) is a village in the Dutch province of Groningen. It is a part of the municipality of Oldambt. The village has grown together with 't Waar, however both are considered separate entities even though they share facilities.
History Nieuw-Scheemda was established in 1659 as a daughter settlement of Scheemda. In 1545, a first dike was built along the Dollart. In 1597, a second dike was constructed which resulted in more than of additional land to be cultivated. Nieuw-Scheemda is located in the reclaimed land. In 1661, the church of the village was constructed.
There are three polder mills in Nieuw-Scheemda. It contains the Paaltjasker Nieuw-Scheemda, the only remaining tjasker in Groningen which was constructed in 1992 by the municipality Scheemda. The polder mill is a 1855 windmill which used to be located in 't Waar, however the polder had fallen dry and it was decided to move the mill to the Tichelwaark polder where it functions as an emergency backup in case the pumping station fails.
Between 1910 until 1934, a railway line and train station was located in Nieuw-Scheemda, however only the coffee house has remained. In 2009, the municipality of Scheemda merged into Oldambt.
References
External links Village website (in Dutch)
Populated places in Groningen (province) Oldambt (municipality) 1659 establishments in the Dutch Republic
Wayland Hall, also known as Watton Town Hall, is a community events venue in Middle Street, Watton, Norfolk, England: the structure, which also accommodates a local history museum, is a grade II listed building.
History In the mid-19th century, a group of local businessmen decided to form a company to raise funds for the erection of an events venue in the town: the site they selected was on the north side of what was then the Market Place. The foundation stone was laid by Lady Walsingham of Merton Hall on 26 April 1853. The building was designed by Edward Buckton Lamb in the Gothic Revival style, built in red and buff bricks with stone dressings and was completed later that year. The name chosen for the building, Wayland Hall, recalled the location of the town and its town hall within the ancient Wayland Hundred.
The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with a single bay facing onto the Market Place; there was a three-light casement window flanked by single-light windows on the ground floor, a two-light casement window flanked by shorter single-light windows on the first floor and a gable containing an oculus above. The corners were canted and featured bartizan-type structures on the first floor. Internally, the principal rooms were the reading room on the ground floor and the main hall, which featured a hammerbeam roof, on the first floor.
Petty session hearings were held in the building once a fortnight in the 19th century and one of the rooms was converted into a cinema so that silent films could be shown in 1933. During the Second World War, the US Eighth Air Force used the airfield at RAF Watton as an air depot and the United States Air Force subsequently presented a shield and an accompanying commemorative plaque to the town: these were later installed in the building. In the 1950s, a public library was established in the building and, following local government re-organisation in 1974, the new town council acquired the building, converted one of the rooms into a council chamber and also established its own offices in the building.
A programme of works, funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, to convert two of the rooms in the building into a local history museum was completed in March 2018. A room on the ground floor became a research room and a room on the first floor was used as an exhibition area. Items in the collection include a model of a human skeleton, records relating to the manorial court of Watton Hall and memorabilia from RAF Watton. The memorabilia from RAF Watton had its origins in the Wartime Watton Museum which was established in the 1980s but closed when many of buildings on the airfield were demolished to make for the Blenheim Grange Housing Estate. The collection also includes an axe which is thought to be up to 600,000 years old.
References
Government buildings completed in 1853 City and town halls in Norfolk Watton, Norfolk Grade II listed buildings in Norfolk
The Great Synagogue of Marseille () is a synagogue on Rue Breteuil in the 6th arrondissement of Marseille. It is classed as a monument historique since 2007.
When the previous synagogue on the Rue Grignan was in disrepair and too small, a campaign began in 1855 to raise money for a new site. The design by the architect Nathan Salomon was approved in 1860 and the building finished in 1864.
The synagogue takes the basilica form more commonly associated with ancient Greece and Rome, and churches. It is built in the Romano-Byzantine style, and takes influence from the Synagogue de Nazareth, completed in Paris in 1852. A pulpit and an organ – both also associated more with Christian buildings than Jewish ones – feature inside, and the mix of Western and Oriental designs was chosen to reflect the diversity of the worshippers.
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve visited the synagogue in January 2016, in solidarity with a local teacher who was attacked by a teenage Islamic State sympathiser. In September 2018, former President of France Nicolas Sarkozy spoke at the synagogue to denounce antisemitism.
References
Marseille Buildings and structures completed in 1864 Monuments historiques of Marseille 6th arrondissement of Marseille
The 2022 Colombian Women's Football League (officially known as the Liga Femenina BetPlay DIMAYOR 2022 for sponsorship purposes) is the sixth season of Colombia's top-flight women's football league. The season started on 18 February and is scheduled to end on 5 June 2022.
Deportivo Cali are the defending champions.
Format On 13 January 2022, the División Mayor del Fútbol Profesional Colombiano (DIMAYOR) confirmed the format for the 2022 Liga Femenina season, following a meeting of its Board of Competition. For this season the league will have 17 teams competing as well as a change of format for the first stage, which will be played as a single round-robin tournament with all teams playing each other once and having a bye day, instead of the group stage used in previous editions of the tournament. The top eight teams at the end of the first stage will advance to the quarter-finals, with the winners advancing to the semi-finals. The winners of each semi-final will qualify for the finals to decide the champions. All rounds in the knockout stage will be played on a home-and-away, double-legged basis. The champions and runners-up will qualify for the 2022 Copa Libertadores Femenina.
Teams 17 DIMAYOR affiliate clubs are taking part in the competition with their women's teams. No teams from the previous season withdrew, whilst Junior, Deportes Tolima, Deportivo Pereira, Orsomarso and former champions Atlético Huila returned to the competition for this season. Cortuluá, who withdrew from the previous season due to financial reasons, also fielded a team for this season.
Stadia and locations
First stage The first stage started on 20 February and consists of a single-round robin tournament with the 17 participating teams playing each other once. It is scheduled to end on 8 May with the top eight teams advancing to the knockout stage.
Standings
Results
Top scorers
Source: Soccerway
See also Colombian Women's Football League
References
External links Liga Femenina on Dimayor's official website
Col W 2022
Boone County Museum of History is an interactive museum of history, art, and popular culture located in the South State Street Historic District in Belvidere, Illinois. Established by members of the Boone County Historical Society, the museum's mission is to stimulate interest in Boone County history through education, research, and collection and preservation of artifacts and archival material. An extensive museum complex encloses under its roof an exhaustive Boone County archival collection, thousands of artifacts, several historic carriages and vintage automobiles, an exhibit celebrating 1969 Miss America Judith Ford, and the entire two-story pioneer log cabin of a Manchester Township family farm.
History The Boone County Historical Society was incorporated in 1903, and began collecting items and records from its first announcements. Converted from the downtown Belvidere Gas & Electric building, the Boone County Historical Museum opened to visitors in 1968. In 2013, the museum was re-opened, enlarged by the addition of a neighboring bank building and a more modern, vaulted creation providing meeting and gathering space. A bronze statue by a local artist honoring Boone County first responders is displayed on the museum's grounds.
Exhibits
Duxtad log cabin In 1974, the Duxtad family partially disassembled their 130-year old log farmhouse and began moving the entire structure fourteen miles south to be reassembled on a concrete slab next to the museum. By 1976, the entire two-story cabin had been restored and completely enclosed by an extension of the museum's building. Today the first floor of the farmhouse helps demonstrate the tools and artifacts of 1840's pioneer life in Northern Illinois while the second story helps to familiarize young children with concepts of the family farm.
Judy Ford exhibit In 1968, local Belvidere beauty Judy Ford competed for Miss Illinois and was eventually selected 1969 Miss America in the national pageant. The museum hosts a number of unique artifacts of Ford's competition and reign, including a short film of her talent competition entry which features Bert Parks serenading Ford with There She Is, Miss America as she wore her crown for the first time.
Vehicles In the collection are several rare conveyances, including horse-drawn brougham and hearse carriages. An 1904 Eldredge Runabout manufactured in Belvidere by the National Sewing Machine Company occupies a prominent place in the museum's foyer opposite an ivory 1965 Plymouth Fury II, the first chassis to come off the production line at the Belvidere Assembly Plant, an early donation to the museum by Chrysler. A 1924 Ford Model T convertible occupies a space next to an example of the penny-farthing, the first bicycle.
Funderburg House In 2020, the Funderburg House, an historic 1906 Belvidere mansion, was donated by K-B Farms. Since the donation, the society has spent time and expertise restoring the donated property as museum and meeting space, officially opening the facility in early 2022 after a preview in December.
References
External links
Museums established in 1968 Museums in Boone County, Illinois History museums in Illinois Institutions accredited by the American Alliance of Museums
The 103rd Independent Territorial Defense Brigade is a military formation of the Territorial Defense Forces of Ukraine. It is part of Operational Command West.
History On 16 October 2018, as part of a working trip to Lviv Oblast, the then President, Petro Poroshenko took part in several events dedicated to the Day of Territorial Defense Soldiers, which took place at the International Center for Peacekeeping and Security. Poroshenko inspected the bases used for training territorial defence battalions, in particular the personnel of the 64th Territorial Defense Battalion of the 103rd Independent Territorial Defense Brigade of the Lviv Oblast.
From 17 to 20 July 2019, about two hundred reserve officers of the brigade underwent combat training at the International Center for Peacekeeping and Security.
Structure
Headquarters 62nd Independent Territorial Defense Battalion (Lviv) 63rd Independent Territorial Defense Battalion (Kamianka-Buzka) 64th Independent Territorial Defense Battalion (Brody) 65th Independent Territorial Defense Battalion (Stryi) 66th Independent Territorial Defense Battalion (Yavoriv) 67th Independent Territorial Defense Battalion (Drohobych) Counter-Sabotage Company Engineering Company Communication Company Logistics Company Mortar Battery
Commanders
Lieutenant Colonel Mykola Andrushchak (2018) Lieutenant Colonel Valery Kurko (2022)