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1905 Faroese general election
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Electoral system
Members of the Løgting were elected by first-past-the-post voting, with voters having as many votes as there were seats available in their constituency. Nine of the 18 seats were elected every two years. Voting was restricted to men aged 25 or over who met certain tax-paying criteria.
SFSU College of Liberal & Creative Arts
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The College of Liberal & Creative Arts at San Francisco State University is the largest of the university's seven colleges.
SFSU College of Liberal & Creative Arts
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Programs
The college offers 34 majors, 51 minors, 23 master's degrees, 10 undergraduate certificates, and 6 graduate certificates.
SFSU College of Liberal & Creative Arts
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Schools and Departments
The college is organized into six schools and 15 departments.
Powerlifting at the 2023 Parapan American Games – Men's 72 kg
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The men's 72 kg competition of the powerlifting events at the 2023 Parapan American Games was held on November 18 at the Chimkowe Gym in Santiago, Chile.
Powerlifting at the 2023 Parapan American Games – Men's 72 kg
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Records
Prior to this competition, the existing world and Pan American Games records were as follows:
Powerlifting at the 2023 Parapan American Games – Men's 72 kg
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Results
The results were as follows:
University of Pittsburgh School of Law alumni
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Following is a list of notable alumni of the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.
Matthias Ciappara
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Matthias Ciappara is a Maltese rapper, songwriter, and visual artist. He is the frontman of experimental hip hop group Dying Echoes.
Yunus Hussain
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Flight Lieutenant Yunus Hussain SJ (یونس حسین; 1 June 1935 — 6 September 1965) was a Pakistan Air Force officer who shot down 2 Hawker Hunters, one being flown by F/O AR Gandhi of the Indian Air Force over Halwara. Shortly after, Yunus was shot down in the same area by F/L Vinod Neb after making a mistake by turning to the left into Nebs range. 16:25 18:10 20:26-21:07 He is considered one of the greatest war heroes of Pakistan during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965. In the book Sentinels in the Sky, it is mentioned that Yunus Hussain received the "green endorsement" award twice from C-in-C Pakistan Air Force Asghar Khan. This recognition was in honor of his intense passion for flying, which led him to achieve the fastest 500 and then 1000 flying hours in the PAF. The Tempest House at the PAF College Sargodha was renamed to Yunus House in 1967 and again on 26 March 2015 in his honour.
Yunus Hussain
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In a December 2020 podcast, former Air Commodore Sajad Haider said that Kaiser Tufail falsely told the Indian Air Force to credit Cecil Chaudhry instead of Yunus for Gandhis plane getting shot down. Sajad's Indian counterpart Pushpinder Singh Chopra, confirmed that Yunus had originally been credited before Kaiser Tufail had came to him. When Sajad questioned Kaiser Tufail on the lie, he said he wanted Cecil to be credited because Cecil was his senior. Sajad also added that Cecil Chaudhry had been lying his whole life and claiming Yunus' success for his own for 40 years. Further stating that the lie was concoted in order to glorify Sargodha pilots.
Yunus Hussain
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Early life and education
Yunus was born on 1 June 1935 in Panipat, British Raj 18 years after the marriage of his father, Khawaja Yusuf Hussain, a businessman. The only child of his parents, Yunus had a very modest upbringing due to the families weak financial position. The early days of his life were stories of hardships and struggle for acquiring the basic of amenities of life, in particular education.
Yunus Hussain
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Early life and education
His family moved to Jhang after the Partition of British India. He was enrolled into the Government High School Jhang City where he did his Matriculation examination. Afterwards, he did his FSc from Multan. He wasn't able to continue further education and was forced to take a job in Lahore which during the early years he was restless and dissatisfied with his job. He eventually ended up at the PAF Selection Centre in Lahore but was rejected for being overage.
Yunus Hussain
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Personal life
Yunus was known for being tall and handsome. He married Surayya Jabeen in 1961, she was the sister of Mushaf Ali Mir and oldest daughter of the Kashmiri family from Lahore. Their first child Sajad was born in 1962 and Fawad on 22 August 1965. Fawad was 15 days old when his father lost his life.
Yunus Hussain
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Personal life
In their father's footsteps they both joined the Pakistan Air Force. Sajad Yunus Hussain became an Air Defence Controller and retired as an Air Commodore. Fawad Yunus Hussain SI(M) joined as an Aeronautical Engineer and retired as an Air Vice Marshal.
Yunus Hussain
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Pakistan Air Force career
[[File:Pakistani F-86F (31125).jpg|thumb|right|200px|An F-86 similar to the one Yunus crashed in As tensions grew between Pakistan and India, the Pakistan Air Force began asking for volunteers under slightly relaxed rules. Yunus Hussain once again applied and this time he was successful and joined the RPAF College in 1956.
Yunus Hussain
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Pakistan Air Force career
He was known as a brilliant and hardworking student. Due to his outstanding performance during training, he eventually became the Squadron Under Officer in his last year at PAF Academy. He was commissioned on 25 June 1958 as part of the 26 GD(P) course.
Yunus Hussain
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Bajaur Campaign
Yunus participated in the skirmishes of the Dir-Bajaur Campaign in 1960-62 for which he was awarded the Tamgha-e-Diffa.
Yunus Hussain
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1965 war and death
At 1715 hours, Sarfaraz Ahmed Rafiqui led a formation of 3 F-86 Sabres with Yunus Hussain as his No. 2 and Cecil Chaudhry as No. 3. The formation took off from PAF Base Sargodha heading towards Halwara. On the way there, they met up with MM Alams formation who was returning from an aborted raid on the Indian Air Force Adampur Air Force Station. Alam informed them about his enounter with four Indian Hawker Hunters over Tarn Taran (Alam had shot down one of them, while the rest managed to escape). Rafiqui's formation continued on and reached the Halwara base in the evening, where the remaining three Hawker Hunters were taxiing after landing. Just as Rafiqui was positioning himself for a strafing run, two IAF Hunters (flown by F/O P.S. Pingale and A. R. Gandhi) on Combat Air Patrol intercepted his formation. Cecil Chaudhry fled back to base leaving Rafiquis tail exposed and Yunus alone. Rafiqui quickly aborted his strafing run and engaged Pingale. He manoeuvered behind the Hunter and shot it down. Yunus shot A.R. Gandhi destroying his Hawker Hunter but Gandhi ejected and landed on the outskirts of Halwara. After this, Vinod Neb shot down Yunus Hussain after Yunus mistakenly turned to the left.
Yunus Hussain
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Sitara-e-Jurat
The Sitara-e-Jurat citation reads:
Yunus Hussain
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Sitara-e-Jurat
Flt Lt Yunus fought in air battle over enemy territory aggressively, fearlessly and with great professional skill. On 6 Sep while attacking Halwara airfield, a large number of enemy aircraft intercepted his small formation. He fought them with exceptional gallantry exceeding all limits and in the process shot down two Hunters. Although his aircraft was hit, he refused to break off engagement in complete disregard to his personal safety. He became a symbol of courage and professional ability for the other pilots. For his valour, professional skill and devotion to duty; he is awarded SJ.
JS (Indian magazine)
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Junior Statesman, commonly known as JS, was an Indian youth magazine that ran from 1967 to 1977. It was based in West Bengal, India.
JS (Indian magazine)
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History
JS was founded by Alfred Evan Charlton, the last British editor of The Statesman newspaper. JS initially served as a platform to engage young readers with the parent publication. The magazine underwent a transformation under Desmond Doig, an Anglo-Irish journalist, diverging from its initial child-focused concept to a broader youth audience, targeting individuals aged 15 to 25 from urban, English-speaking, middle and upper-class backgrounds.
JS (Indian magazine)
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History
Published in a politically tumultuous era in Kolkata, JS filled a niche in the Indian media landscape, lacking in youth-specific publications. Its content spanned music reviews, notably of Western genres, alongside diverse features like crosswords, comics, and columns. Notable sections included "Disc-Cussion" and "Rear Window", with the latter tactfully navigating censorship during the Emergency period by substituting restricted vocabulary.
JS (Indian magazine)
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History
JS mirrored global cultural trends while simultaneously contributing to the development of a unique Indian youth culture. Its influence extended to fashion and lifestyle, popularizing Western trends among Indian youths. The magazine's staff was predominantly male, but it also featured contributions from female writers. Over its decade-long run, JS played a significant role in shaping the perceptions and tastes of urban Indian youth, marking a transition in the country's cultural landscape.
Statue of Bill Mazeroski
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In 2010, the Pittsburgh Pirates unveiled a 14-foot, 2,000-pound statue of Baseball Hall of Fame second baseman Bill Mazeroski, commemorating the 50th anniversary of his walk-off home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series, one of the most iconic moments in baseball and sports history.
Statue of Bill Mazeroski
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The statue, designed by artist Susan Wagner, stands outside PNC Park's right field gate. It depicts Mazeroski rounding second base, jumping for joy with his batting helmet in his right hand, after hitting the game-winning home run. Wagner modeled it after a photograph taken by James Klingensmith of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Behind the sculpture is a small section of the original Forbes Field wall, over which Mazeroski homered that day.
Statue of Bill Mazeroski
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Next to the statue is a small marker describing the walk-off home run which took place on October 13, 1960:
Statue of Bill Mazeroski
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On October 13, 1960, Pirates second baseman William Stanley Mazeroski was the batter in the bottom of the 9th inning of Game 7 of the World Series at Forbes Field. The Pittsburgh Pirates were still battling the New York Yankees and the Series was tied at three games apiece. The score was tied 9-9. There were no outs with no one on base when Mazeroski stepped to the plate. On a 1-0 pitch at 3:36 p.m., Maz hit the only walk-off home run in Game 7 to win a World Series with a blast over the 406-foot sign on the outfield wall. This statue captures the moment when Bill Mazeroski rounded second base in celebration of one of the greatest moments in Pittsburgh sports history.
2023 Southern Miss Golden Eagles baseball team
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The 2023 Southern Miss Golden Eagles baseball team represented University of Southern Mississippi during the 2023 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Golden Eagles played their home games at Pete Taylor Park and were led by fourteenth year head coach Scott Berry. This was their first year in the Sun Belt Conference, and the last season with legendary coach Scott Berry as head coach before his retirement during the offseason.
2023 Southern Miss Golden Eagles baseball team
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Schedule and results
*Rankings are based on the team's current ranking in the D1Baseball poll.
The Australian and Other Verses
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The Australian and Other Verses is a collection of poetry by the Scottish-Australian writer Will H. Ogilvie, published by Angus and Robertson, in 1916. The collection includes two illustrated plates by Hal Gye.
The Australian and Other Verses
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The collection consists of 81 poems from a variety of sources. The first edition notes: "The verses from which this volume takes its title — The Australian — first appeared in London Punch. Other pieces have appeared in the Spectator, Bulletin, Lone Hand, Pall Mall Magazine, Glasgow Herald, Westminster Gazette, British Australasian and Scotsman. My thanks are due to the Proprietors for permission to reprint."
The Australian and Other Verses
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Critical reception
A writer in The Daily Telegraph (Sydney) noted: "Many Australians who admire Will Oglivie's lilting ballads of the fair girls and brave horses of the bush will be glad to have another volume from him. The Australian and Other Verses contains a number of tributes to, the bushman and the horse, besides some tender poems of children and some stirring lines evoked by the war. The best of the war verses is that which gives its name to the book."
The Australian and Other Verses
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Critical reception
The reviewer of the collection in The Sydney Morning Herald admired the book: "Not all the contents of The Australian, Mr. Will Ogilvie's latest volume of poems, are new. Some of the best verses, such as 'The Riding Camel,' 'The Team Bullock,' and 'The Outlaw,' were published in a collection that appeared three or four years ago. Of the rest the most effective are those inspired by the war. Mr. Ogilvie's Scottish ancestry and his Australian associations make him single out for special attention the Highlanders and the Anzacs, and he celebrates their martial exploits in stirring, spirited strains, which. If they are not perhaps the rarified essence of poetry, are, at any rate, excellent verse."
The Australian and Other Verses
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Publication history
After the initial publication of the collection by Angus and Robertson in 1916, it was reissued as follows:
Charles Coudert
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Charles Coudert (1795-1879), was a member of the Guard of Honor in Napoleon’s Army during the Napoleonic Wars. In 1821, he conspired to make the son of Napoleon king of France in place of Louis XVIII, was captured and sentenced to death. With the aid of his older brother Eugène, and the influential Madame Recamier, Coudert obtained a conseil de révision, a reprieve, escaping prison and fleeing France. He moved to New York in 1824, with 200 francs to his name, and found work teaching French and horsemanship, eventually opened a French school, married Jeanne Clarisse du Champ (1809-1845) and had a daughter and three sons, Frederic René, Charles Jr. and Louis Léonce, who together founded the law practice Coudert Brothers. His son Frederic René helped bring Bartholdi's Statue of Liberty to New York and spoke at the 1876b dedication of the same artist's portrait of Lafayette in Union Square Park in 1876. His great-grandson Frederic R. Coudert was a member of the United States House of Representatives from New York.
Lam Family College of Business
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The Lam Family College of Business at San Francisco State University is the one of the university's seven colleges.
Lam Family College of Business
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The college operates at the university's main campus and downtown campus.
Lam Family College of Business
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In 2019, the after a gift of $25 million from Chris Larsen and his wife, Lyna Lam, "Lam Family" was added to the college's name. The name was recommended by Larsen in honor of his wife's family, especially his father-in-law, Quang Lam.
Lam Family College of Business
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Programs
The college offers four bachelor's degree programs. The Bachelor of Science in Business Administration is offered by the SFSU's College of Professional and Global Education.
Lam Family College of Business
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Programs
The college also offers three blended Bachelor's and Master's degree programs, in Accounting, Decision sciences, and Economics.
Lam Family College of Business
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Programs
Six Master's degree programs, two undergraduate certificate programs, and 10 graduate certificate programs are also offered.
Lam Family College of Business
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Departments
There are 10 departments housing within the college.
Godfrey Morgan (cricketer)
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Godfrey Noel Richards Morgan (19 January 1890 – 27 November 1957) was an English first-class cricketer and an officer in the British Indian Army.
Godfrey Morgan (cricketer)
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The son of W. Morgan, he was born at Stafford in January 1890. He was educated at Uppingham School, Morgan served in the British Indian Army, being commissioned as a second lieutenant in June 1912. He served in the First World War, during which he was promoted to lieutenant in April 1917. Morgan later played first-class cricket in India for the Europeans cricket team against the touring Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) at Karachi in October 1926. In the MCC first innings, he took the wickets of Bob Wyatt, Guy Earle, and Raleigh Chichester-Constable for the cost of 65 runs. Batting once from number eleven in the Europeans only innings, he was dismissed without scoring by Maurice Tate.
Godfrey Morgan (cricketer)
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Morgan was married to Rosamond Margaret Millbank Wyer at Christ Church in Lancaster Gate in 1925. He later died at Folkestone in November 1957.
Ljuba Manz-Lurje
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Ljubov Manz-Lurje (Russian: Любовь Манц Лурье née Lurje; born 1940) is a Ukrainian-born Swiss businesswoman who is primarily known for being the controlling shareholder of Manz Privacy Hotels in Switzerland. She is a Russian and Swiss dual citizen.
Ljuba Manz-Lurje
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Personal life
Manz relocated to Switzerland around 1968 according to different sources either due to her first husband who was a fishmonger (she was often referred to as oyster salesperson) but to her own reference she studied in Zurich. On 14 August 1974, she married recently widowed Caspar E. Manz (1923-2010), a well-known and wealthy hotelier from Zurich, with whom she had two sons, twins Alexander and and Michael (born 1980).
Ljuba Manz-Lurje
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Personal life
On 15 August 2014, Manz married Dr. Marco Conte (born 1972), at the town hall of Zollikon near Zurich.
Nelson Torres
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Nelson Rubén Torres Flores (born 19 June 1944) is a Chilean former football player and manager who played as a winger for clubs in Chile and Mexico.
Nelson Torres
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Club career
Torres came to the Green Cross youth system after a trial in front of the coach Dante Pesce in 1961. As a member of the team, he won the 1962 national youth championship alongside players such as Leopoldo Vallejos, Juan Rodríguez Vega, Juan Carlos Gangas, among others. He signed his first professional contract the same year and made his professional debut in a match against Universidad de Chile, facing his cousin Alfonso Sepúlveda, who helped him inside the field.
Nelson Torres
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Club career
After making two appearances for Green Cross in 1962, he switched to Palestino the same year. He stayed with them until 1971 with a season on loan to Green Cross in 1964.
Nelson Torres
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Club career
After Palestino was relegated to the 1971 Segunda División de Chile, he moved to Mexico in the middle of 1971 and signed with Toluca, where he coincided with his teammate in Palestino, Carlos Valenzuela.
Nelson Torres
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Club career
Back in Chile, he joined Unión Española in 1974.
Nelson Torres
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International career
As a youth player, he was a member of a preliminary squad in the context of preparations for the 1964 South American U20 Championship.
Nelson Torres
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International career
At senior level, he made four appearances for the Chile national team between 1966 and 1968.
Nelson Torres
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Personal life
He is the cousin of the also Chile international footballer, Alfonso Sepúlveda, died in 2021. In addition, his older brother, Jorge, played for Universidad de Chile and Palestino and his cousin, José Failla Torres, played for Ferrobádminton. Another relatives played football at different levels: his younger brothers Hugo and Rodi and his cousin Sergio Torres.
Nelson Torres
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Personal life
As a student, he attended both the Andrés Bello and the Miguel Luis Amunátegui high schools.
Nelson Torres
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Personal life
In June 2022, he was honored as a historical player of Green Cross.
New Zealand men's national under-23 football team results (1992–2019)
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This page details the match results and statistics of the New Zealand men's national under-23 football team from 1992 until 2019.
New Zealand men's national under-23 football team results (1992–2019)
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A-International results
New Zealand's score is shown first in each case.
Roberto Gramajo
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Roberto Artemio Gramajo (28 July 1947 – 1 July 2023) was an Argentinian football player. Nicknamed "Chango", he played as a forward primarily throughout the 1970s with his most notable participation being with Rosario Central, Panathinaikos and Huracán. He also briefly played for Argentina to be listed in the Brazil Independence Cup roster despite not traveling with the team.
Roberto Gramajo
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Club career
Gramajo began his career when he was fifteen years old with Central Argentino de La Banda. Despite just turning sixteen, he would be a starting player within his home province of Santiago del Estero. As an adolescent he would be a starting player within his club, but had disciplinary problems and had issues with all the demands placed on him. He would begin his senior career by signing on for Rosario Central after a 4,750,000 Argentine peso transfer. Arriving at Rosario in 1967, he would only play in one match within the third before playing from the reserves for the rest of the year. He made his debut within the Argentine Primera División at the 1967 Campeonato Nacional against Platense in a 3–0 victory at the Estadio Marcelo Bielsa.
Roberto Gramajo
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Club career
He then gained an opportunity to become a starting player as in his prior match, Gramajo would be the substitute for Enzo Gennoni [es] who had recently been removed from the starting line-up. He would score his first goal within the club in his second match against River Plate at the Estadio Monumental despite the team losing 2–3 in the match. Due to his physical status not being the ideal to appear as a starter and would return to the reserves to play as a substitute. His second season with Rosario Central came in the 1968 Campeonato Metropolitano and would score 11 goals in the tournament, becoming the top-scorer for Rosario Central. During the 1968 Campeonato Metropolitano, he would participate in nine matches, scoring two goals in the process.
Roberto Gramajo
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Club career
In 1969, Rosario Central would only participate in the 1969 Campeonato Metropolitano, scoring just one goal in the tournament. Gramajo would have a better season during the 1970 Campeonato Metropolitano, playing in nineteen matches and scoring nine goals with an additional thirteen matches during the 1970 Campeonato Nacional. Gramajo recalls an unforgettable night on 2 October 1970 during a match against Independiente at the Estadio Presidente Perón where the match would end 5–3 with the match being televised. Another match he would remember from the season would be the annual Rosario derby against Newell's Old Boys where Central would win 4–1 at the Estadio Marcelo Bielsa. When recalling the chronology of the match, he would partake in a gambit against Carlos Fenoy and would have the ball cross the goal line barley half a meter. With the same movement and pacing, he would aim with his right hand and scored a goal, being described as a waiter carrying a tray.
Roberto Gramajo
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Club career
During the 1971 Campeonato Metropolitano, he would play in 32 matches and score 5 goals. Following the club's qualification to the 1971 Copa Libertadores, he would play in four matches and would score a goal during Rosario Central's match against Sporting Cristal. During the Metropolitano Championship on August 22, 1971, he would observe the 2–1 defeat against Racing, taking particular note on the movements and penalty kick of Juan Carlos Cárdenas after their two goalkeepers were expulsed from the match. Afterwards, Gramajo would execute 14 penalties while with Rosario Central of which he converted 10, 2 were detoured and only two were stopped with a similar scenario occurring with Miguel Ángel Santoro during the 1970 Campeonato Nacional. Gramajo would play as a right-winger during the 1971 Campeonato Nacional where he would be part of the winning team along with players such as Ramón Bóveda and Aldo Poy and play in 13 matches with 7 goals.
Roberto Gramajo
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Club career
His last season with Rosario Central would occur during the 1972 Campeonato Metropolitano where he would score three goals. During the subsequent 1972 Copa Libertadores, he would score the winning goal against Atlético Nacional in a 1–0 victory. In total, Gramajo would play in 160 matches and score 57 goals for Rosario Central. He would also play in 16 editions of the Rosario derby and would only lose one with the rest being five wins and ten draws. He would score five goals against the Rojinegros with one against Jorge Traverso in the 1969 edition and the other four against Carlos Fenoy with two during the 1970 Campeonato Metropolitano in a 1–1 draw and 3–1 victory as well as an additional two during a 4–1 victory at the Campeonato Nacional with one of them being a penalty kick.
Roberto Gramajo
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Club career
In 1972, Gramajo would be transferred to the Greek club Panathinaikos. His career there however wasn't as prominent as in within his career in Rosario Central as he would only play in 9 matches and scored 2 goals during the 1972–73 season and the 1973–74 season. His relationship with the club's manager, Ferenc Puskás wasn't great either and Gramajo decided to return to Argentina. He would attempt to return to Rosario Central but the club had already decided on making Mario Kempes his successor as the club's main midfielder.
Roberto Gramajo
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Club career
In 1974, Gramajo decided to play for Club Atlético Huracán upon the request of the club's manager, César Luis Menotti. While within the club, he would be part of the Huracán squad to reach runners-up during the 1975 Campeonato Metropolitano. In 1976, he would transfer over to Quilmes where he would play in 10 matches and score 3 goals. In 1977, he would play in Ecuador as he was signed over to play for Deportivo Cuenca where he would play in the 1977 Copa Libertadores. In 1978, he would return to Argentina again to play for Club Jorge Newbery de Ucacha with his final season playing for Atlético Olimpo Asociación Mutual [es] in 1987.
Roberto Gramajo
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International career
He would play for the Argentina national football team in a friendly against France on 8 January 1971 at La Bombonera. The match would end in a 4–3 victory for the French with Gramajo being substituted for Ángel Marcos during the second half of the match. The team would be managed by Juan José Pizzuti and Gramajo would play alongside other players such as Norberto Madurga, Roberto Perfumo, Juan Ramón Verón, Jorge Carrascosa, Alfredo Obberti and others. He would also be listed for the Brazil Independence Cup but Gramajo would ultimately not travel with the rest of the team.
Roberto Gramajo
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International career
Gramajo would pass away on 1 July 2023.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Rebecca Rodgers (born June 20, 2000 in Ventura, California) is an American curler originally from Leyden, Massachusetts, now living in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She currently plays lead on Team Delaney Strouse. She won the 2020 United States Junior Curling Championships and represented the U.S. at the 2023 Winter World University Games.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Career
After skipping during most of her U18 career, Rodgers joined the new Beth Podoll rink at lead for the 2017–18 season. The team, with third Emily Quello and second Susan Dudt finished 7–2 through the round robin at the 2018 United States Junior Curling Championships, enough to earn them a spot in the 1 vs. 2 game. They then lost 7–5 to Madison Bear before dropping the semifinal 6–5 to Abbey Kitchens, eliminating them from contention. Later that season, the team had enough points to qualify for the 2018 United States Women's Curling Championship, Rodgers' first national women's championship. They finished in fifth place out of the eight competing teams with a 3–4 record. In her final year of U18 eligibility, Rodgers teamed up with Dudt, Anna Cenzalli and Sydney Mullaney for the 2018 United States U18 Curling Championships. After an undefeated round robin record and semifinal victory, they lost to Leah Yavarow 8–4 in the final. Also during the 2017–18 season, Rodgers partnered with Charlie Thompson for the 2018 United States Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, finishing 2–3 through the round robin.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Career
The next season, Rodgers, Dudt and Quello joined forces with a new skip Ariel Traxler. At juniors, the team again finished third after a semifinal loss to Cait Flannery. They also qualified again for the 2019 United States Women's Curling Championship where they finished in sixth place with a 2–5 record.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Career
For the 2019–20 season, Rodgers and Dudt added Sydney Mullaney and Delaney Strouse to form a new junior team. Playing lead on the team skipped by Dudt, they reached the semifinals of the St. Paul Cash Spiel and represented the U.S. at the 2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite where they finished 0–7. In the new year, Strouse took over skipping duties on the team with Dudt moving down to second. The change paid off as the team won the 2020 United States Junior Curling Championships, winning 9–8 in the final against Alaska's Cora Farrell. This qualified them to represent the States at the 2021 World Junior Curling Championships, however, the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They ended their season by playing in the 2020 United States Women's Curling Championship where they finished 2–5 through the round robin.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Career
The following season, Leah Yavarow joined the team at third, shifting Mullaney down to second and Dudt to alternate. Despite the limited number of events due to the pandemic, Team Strouse won the lone tour event they played in, the contender round of the US Open of Curling. They also played in the 2021 United States Women's Curling Championship which was held in a bio-secure bubble at the Wausau Curling Club in Wausau, Wisconsin in May 2021. They finished with a 2–4 record, not advancing to the playoffs. Rodgers also played in the bubble for the 2021 United States Mixed Doubles Curling Championship with Daniel Casper where they went 1–4.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Career
Team Strouse began the 2021–22 season by capturing a second U.S. junior title, going undefeated to win the event. Rodgers was too old to compete, however, and was replaced by alternate Dudt for the event. They also earned qualification into the 2021 United States Olympic Curling Trials by winning the Mayfield qualifying event, beating Christine McMakin in the final qualifier. Before the Trials, Leah Yavarow was replaced on the team by Anne O'Hara who became the team's new third. At the Trials, they finished tied for fifth with a 3–7 record. At the end of the season, Rodgers teamed up with Samuel Crouse at the 2022 United States Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, failing to reach the playoffs.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Career
The Strouse rink found major success during the 2022–23 season, beginning at the US Open of Curling where they had an undefeated run until the final where they were defeated by Ha Seung-youn. They also qualified for the playoffs in their next event, the 2022 Stu Sells Toronto Tankard, before falling in the quarterfinals to Lauren Mann. The team next played in the playdowns for the 2023 Winter World University Games where they won all four of their games to win the event. Back on tour, they had four more playoff appearances, reaching three quarterfinals and one semifinal at the Curling Stadium Contender Series. In the new year, the team represented the U.S. on home soil at the 2023 Winter World University Games in Saranac Lake, New York. The team was dominant through the round robin, with Strouse, O'Hara, Mullaney, Rodgers and Dudt securing an 8–1 record, finishing just behind Korea's Ha Seung-youn who was their sole loss. In the semifinals, they met China's Han Yu where they suffered a narrow 6–5 loss. They would claim the bronze medal after a 7–3 win against Great Britain's Fay Henderson. Continuing their momentum from the season, Team Strouse finished 6–1 through the round robin at the 2023 United States Women's Curling Championship. In the 1 vs. 2 game, they faced the top ranked Tabitha Peterson rink where they gave up four in the tenth end to lose 11–10. They rebounded by beating Sarah Anderson 9–4 in the semifinal. They could not take revenge on Peterson in the final, however, dropping the game 8–5 and settling for the silver medal.
Rebecca Rodgers
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Personal life
Rodgers studied ecology and environmental biology at the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire. She previously attended Pioneer Valley Regional School.
2023–24 Giresunspor season
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The 2023–24 season is Giresunspor's 99th season in existence and first one back in the TFF First League, the second division of Turkish football. They will also compete in the Turkish Cup.
2023–24 Giresunspor season
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Players
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
2023–24 Giresunspor season
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Pre-season and friendlies
Win Draw Loss Fixtures
2023–24 Giresunspor season
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Competitions
Last updated: August 2023 Source: Soccerway
2023–24 Giresunspor season
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Competitions
Last updated: August 2023. Source:
2023–24 Giresunspor season
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Competitions
The league fixtures were unveiled on 19 July 2023.
The Good Scout
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The Good Scout is an American animated short film produced by Ub Iwerks and featuring Willie Whopper. It has a copyright date of September 1, 1934.
The Good Scout
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Summary
At Boy Scout Headquarters, a troop leader blows a bugle call summoning his charges to discuss their daily good turns. The boys line up, Willie's turn coming after his Cantonese- and Yiddish-speaking comrades deliver their incomprehensible tales. Willie narrates his derring-do:
The Good Scout
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Summary
Clad in a sailor suit, young Willie saves a dog from a cruel prank by severing some tin cans that have been tied to his tail by a string; several other dogs with the same problem follow at the first's direction, but Willie must dash off to help a poor waif whose newspapers have been stolen by a bruiser in a beret. Willie steps between the two and commands the bully to let the lad alone. The big fellow cries after Willie punches him in the face and takes back the papers, but the scrawny victim, now sympathizing with his old tormentor, punches Willie into the street and walks off hand-in-hand with the battered brute.
The Good Scout
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Summary
A lady in a white gown cautiously foots a mud puddle as she considers crossing the street; Willie chivalrously lays his jacket over the puddle for the lady, but as she steps down she is instantly engulfed in mud as if by the sea. An incredulous Willie helps the lady out of the mess, and she, brandishing her umbrella, chases him off, Willie grasping the spare tire on the back of a speeding car to get away. Posters advertising a $5,000 reward for the return of the kidnapped Mary fly into the air as the careless driver plows into a trash can abandoned by a street cleaner who flees the car by diving down the sewer. Mary is tied up in the back of the car, and Willie, having looked over the poster and begged silent confirmation from the damsel of her identity, attempts to board the vehicle, but as he tries to step onto the spare tire, it detaches from the car and leaves the scout flailing atop the rubber as it rolls rapidly down the road after the perpetrator & his prey (and over the face of an old man who emerges from another sewer grate!) The villain pulls up to an apartment building and enters with Mary in his arms; Willie tries to steer his wheel, but loses control as it crashes into and bursts a fire hydrant, whose consequent surge shoots Willie up some dozen flights to the flagpole on the building's roof. Willie hangs on for dear life as the pole inclines over the precipice; now it bends down, down, and Willie grasps the pole's rope, which descends just so that he can see within the apartment where the evildoer terrorizes the young lady. Willie, kicking off from the windowsill, swings away and swings back again, kicking the cur away from the girl. Mary rescues Willie from a fall, and he storms in furiously to finish his business. Charging Willie grasps a hanging lamp, and swings again feet forward at his foe, who dazed but an instant lunges at Willie just as the boy-pendulum reaches too high for the villain's grasp, which is now perforce for the open window and Willie's perilous rope. Our hero works the pulley such that the defeated dastard must dangle from the roof! Willie and Mary eye each other amorously as the scout ends his tale, and the scout master gives Willie a medal for his fantastic lie.
The Good Scout
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Cameo by Bosko
As Willie waits on line to speak to the scout master, Bosko, the trademark character of Harman and Ising, waits behind him. Steve Stanchfield explains this as an anticipation of that duo's 1934 replacement of the Iwerks Studio as MGM's cartoon producer.
LHS 3154 b
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LHS 3154 b is a Neptune-sized exoplanet orbiting the red dwarf LHS 3154. It is located about 50 light-years from Earth, in the constellation of Hercules. As it is a massive planet that orbits very close to a low-mass star, it is challenging current models about exoplanet formation,, as it would require 10 times more mass than there was in the protoplanetary disk where the planet formed.
LHS 3154 b
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Characteristics
LHS 3154 b is a Neptune-like exoplanet with a minimum mass is 13.2 MEarth and a estimated radius of 3.65 R🜨. It orbits its parent star at a distance of 0.02262 astronomical units (3,384,000 km), and completes one revolution every 3 days and 17 hours.
LHS 3154 b
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Importance
The discovery of LHS 3154 b raises doubts about the formation of planets, challenging current planetary models, because such a massive planet (13.2 MEarth) was not expected to orbit such a small star, with just 1 9 {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{9}}} the mass of the Sun, and currently it is the only short-period Neptune-mass planet to orbit a low mass star. Although there are more massive exoplanets orbiting red dwarfs, such as TZ Arietis b and GJ 3512 b, they have wide orbits, with periods longer than 200 days, and likely formed in a different way than LHS 3154 b (core accretion), such as gravitational instability within a massive gaseous outer disk.
LHS 3154 b
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Importance
One of the ways in which planets form is through core accretion, where they form from initial cores that accrete dust and gas. Planets formed from core accretion orbiting low-mass stars should have a maximum mass of 5 MEarth. LHS 3154 b, however, with a minimum mass of 13 MEarth, presents a challenge to this theory.
LHS 3154 b
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Importance
Suvrath Mahadevan, one of the planet's discoverers, says: "The planet-forming disk around the low-mass star LHS 3154 is not expected to have enough solid mass to make this planet. But it’s out there, so now we need to reexamine our understanding of how planets and stars form.". According to Guðmundur Stefánsson, another discoverer of the planet, the recent discovery of LHS 3154 b creates doubts about the formation of planets around less massive stars, as it was previously believed that only terrestrial planets could form around these stars.
LHS 3154 b
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Discovery
A team of scientists led by Suvrath Mahadevan discovered LHS 3154 b using the Habitable Zone Planet Finder, a spectrograph designed to detect planets orbiting cool stars that might have liquid surface water. The dscovery was announced in November 30, 2023, in the journal Science.
LHS 3154 b
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Host star
LHS 3154 is a dim red dwarf located at a distance of 15.75 parsecs (51.4 ly) from the Earth in the constellation Hercules. With an apparent magnitude of 17.5, it cannot be seen with the naked eye or even a small telescope. LHS 3154 has radius of 0.14 R☉ and a mass of 0.11 M☉, which is comparable to the nearby red dwarf Wolf 359.
Mariam Solaimankhil
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Mariam Solaimankhil is an Afghan politician and critic of the Taliban.
Mariam Solaimankhil
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Life
Daughter of Hamidullah, Solaimankhil holds a BS degree in Media Studies from California State University and worked as a beautician in the US before moving to Afghanistan. Upon returning to Afghanistan, she was appointed as the Head of International Relations at the Presidential Palace and advisor to the Ministry of Deputy. In the 2018 election, she was elected as a member of House of the People representing Kuchi with 839 votes. In 2019, she was chosen as the secretary of the defense committee.