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54827438_1_0 | 54827438 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson%20Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo. Fortaleza CEIF
Born in Quibdó, Arroyo finished his formation with Fortaleza C.E.I.F. He made his senior debut on 19 November 2015, coming on as a late substitute in a 3–1 Categoría Primera B home win over Deportivo Pereira, and appeared in one further match during the year as his team achieved promotion. |
54827438_1_1 | 54827438 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson%20Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo. Club career
Arroyo made 22 appearances during three seasons, and described his time at Fortaleza as "unforgettable". |
54827438_2_0 | 54827438 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson%20Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo. Loan to Mallorca
Immediately after joining Liverpool, Arroyo was loaned to RCD Mallorca on an 18-month deal. He was initially assigned to the B-team in Tercera División, and played in 12 matches for the remainder of the season. |
54827438_2_1 | 54827438 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson%20Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo. Loan to Gent
For the 2018–19 season, Arroyo was loaned to Belgian club K.A.A. Gent, where he joined fellow Liverpool loanee Taiwo Awoniyi. |
54827438_2_2 | 54827438 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson%20Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo. Loan to Mladá Boleslav
On 24 September 2019, Arroyo joined Czech club FK Mladá Boleslav on loan for the 2019–20 season. |
54827438_2_3 | 54827438 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson%20Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo. Loan to Salamanca
Arroyo joined Salamanca on loan for the 2020–21 season. |
54827438_2_4 | 54827438 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anderson%20Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo | Anderson Arroyo. Loan to Mirandés
On 9 July 2021, Arroyo joined CD Mirandés on loan for the season. |
54827439_0_0 | 54827439 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%20Bride%27s%20Church%2C%20Llansantffraed | St Bride's Church, Llansantffraed | St Bride's Church, Llansantffraed.
The Church of St Bride (or St Bridget) in Llansantffraed near Raglan, Monmouthshire, Wales, is a parish church of Norman origins. The church was restored by John Prichard and John Pollard Seddon in the 19th century but retains much of its earlier fabric. It is an active parish church in the parish of Llansantffraed, Monmouthshire's smallest parish, and is a Grade II* listed building. |
54827439_0_1 | 54827439 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%20Bride%27s%20Church%2C%20Llansantffraed | St Bride's Church, Llansantffraed | St Bride's Church, Llansantffraed. History
The church has Norman origins with a considerable amount of the fabric remaining. The building date for the bellcote is uncertain, but it post-dates the Norman building, and pre-dates the Victorian restoration. Pollard and Seddon worked at the church during 1856–1857, adding the porch in the process. Aside from re-roofing and general maintenance in the 1990s, it has been little altered since. It remains an active church in the parish of Llansantffraed, Monmouthshire's smallest parish. A late-medieval cross in the churchyard has its own Grade II listing. |
54827439_0_2 | 54827439 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St%20Bride%27s%20Church%2C%20Llansantffraed | St Bride's Church, Llansantffraed | St Bride's Church, Llansantffraed. Architecture and description
The church is built of Old Red Sandstone. It is small, with an "oversize(d)" bellcote. The architectural historian John Newman notes the "unforgettable monuments", comprising a series of wall-mounted gravestones dating from the 17th century which record the ancestors of a William Jones, and run back to 1438. |
54827460_0_0 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos.
Pital is a district of the San Carlos canton, in the Alajuela province of Costa Rica. |
54827460_0_1 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. History
Pital was created on 5 November 1948 by Decreto 36. |
54827460_0_2 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Geography
Pital has an area of km² which makes it the third district of the canton by area and an elevation of metres. |
54827460_0_3 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos.
It is located in the northern region of the country and borders with 3 districts; Venice to the south, Cutris and Aguas Zarcas to the west. While to the north it borders with Nicaragua and to the east with the province of Heredia. |
54827460_0_4 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos.
Its head, the city of Pital, is located 28.6 km (50 minutes) NE of Quesada (Costa Rica) and 91.9 km (2 hours 30 minutes) to NW of San José the capital of the nation. |
54827460_0_5 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos.
It is located at an elevation of 100 meters above sea level. |
54827460_0_6 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos.
It is located at low altitude, because much of the district is located in the plains of San Carlos. |
54827460_1_0 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Demographics
For the 2011 census, Pital had a population of inhabitants. |
54827460_1_1 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Demographics
It is the third most populated of the canton, only behind Quesada and Aguas Zarcas, but surpassing to La Fortuna and Florencia. |
54827460_2_0 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Road transportation
The district is covered by the following road routes:
National Route 4
National Route 250
National Route 744
National Route 745
National Route 746 |
54827460_3_0 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Pital (head of the district)
Piedra Alegre
El Encanto
Los Ángeles
Veracruz
Chaparrón
El Palmar
Golfito
Cuatro Esquinas
La Josefina
Puerto Escondido
Yucatán
Tierras Buenas
Coopeisabel
Santa Elena
El Saíno
La Trinchera
San Marcos |
54827460_4_0 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Economy
The economy is based on the extensive cultivation of pineapple for export purposes. |
54827460_4_1 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Economy
Livestock meat and milk also has great relevance in the area, as currently Pital
Is the second district that produces more milk in the canton. |
54827460_4_2 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Economy
Pital center, has health services, educational, financial, food and some places of accommodation. |
54827460_4_3 | 54827460 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pital%2C%20San%20Carlos | Pital, San Carlos | Pital, San Carlos. Economy
The trade is represented by supermarkets, shops and premises in which the sale of fast food, groceries, shoes, clothes and appliances and accessories in general stands out. |
54827462_0_0 | 54827462 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bravilor%20Bonamat | Bravilor Bonamat | Bravilor Bonamat.
Bravilor Bonamat is a Dutch manufacturer of commercial and office-grade coffee machines, espresso machines and hot water dispensers, founded in Amsterdam by A.J.M. Verheijen in 1948. The company originally began as a wholesale reseller of espresso machines, before later branching out into manufacturing. |
54827462_0_1 | 54827462 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bravilor%20Bonamat | Bravilor Bonamat | Bravilor Bonamat.
Typical systems can also make hot soup, froth milk or brew other hot drinks in addition to coffee. More recent units can store fresh milk in a separate internal container, instead of relying on powder. |
54827462_0_2 | 54827462 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bravilor%20Bonamat | Bravilor Bonamat | Bravilor Bonamat.
The company employs over 450 people in offices in Europe and the United States, and has authorized dealers in over 100 countries worldwide. Production of units takes place primarily in Heerhugowaard, The Netherlands. A second production facility in Białystok, Poland, opened in 2018. |
54827466_0_0 | 54827466 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodson%20%28disambiguation%29 | Goodson (disambiguation) | Goodson (disambiguation). Goodson, Missouri
HMS Goodson (K480), British warship
Goodson Records, A British record company and label that produced flexible records active 1928-1931 |
54827468_0_0 | 54827468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari.
Nadia Bukhari is a British pharmacist of Pakistani origin living in London, United Kingdom. In 2018, she was awarded the status of Fellow of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS) making her the youngest female fellow under the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain; an honor bestowed to those who have achieved excellence and distinction in their pharmacy career. In addition, she is the first Muslim female and British Pakistani to be a board member of the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy for England, UK. Since 2003, she has been serving in academia at University College London (UCL). She wrote and published many articles on the pharmacy and leadership field at Pharmaceutical Press and BMC Series. In Pakistan, she received the honor to launch the National Alliance for Women in Pharmacy (NAWP) under the Pakistan Pharmacists Association (PPA). She is the global lead at the International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) to promote gender equity in the pharmaceutical industry. Also, she has been serving as a trustee and an ambassador for the Pakistan Alliance for Girls Education (PAGE); a charity program supported by the Government of Pakistan. She is also an executive committee member at Indus Health Network UK. She is the chief pharmacist at doctHERs; a telemedicine company in Pakistan enabling home-based healthcare females to work in the pharmaceutical industry and connect with low-income patients across Pakistan. She is the director of Equity Pakistan; a gender equity hub for the pharmaceutical workforce in Pakistan; a collaborated initiative taken by Hamdard University Islamabad Campus and University College London (UCL). |
54827468_0_1 | 54827468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari. Personal life
She is a British Pakistani born in a Muslim family living in London, United Kingdom. She is raised in London and studied pharmacy from her early age. She has roots in Karachi, while she is well connected with the renowned Faqir family living in Lahore through her marriage with Faqir Syed Murtaza Bukhari. |
54827468_0_2 | 54827468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari. Education
Bukhari graduated from the School of Pharmacy, the University of London in 1999. She received her postgraduate diploma as a pharmacist in the year 2006. Later in 2008, she did a postgraduate diploma in teaching & learning for higher education from the Institute of Education, University of London. In 2011, she studied professional counseling from Oxford College while for further pharmacy education from Higher Education Academy, London. Around 2012, she enrolled in Ph.D. focusing on the leadership and pharmacy field. |
54827468_0_4 | 54827468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari. Philanthropy
Bukhari has been working for charitable programs, reducing the gender gap, and other philanthropy projects. The prominent projects are following:
In 2017, she began to serve as a trustee and an ambassador for the Pakistan Alliance for Girls Education (PAGE) to reduce the gender gap and increase access to education for all females across Pakistan.
In 2019, she became the global lead at International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) to advocate for gender equity in the workforce of the pharmaceutical industry.
In 2019, while serving as an ambassador for the Pakistan Alliance for Girls Education (PAGE), she also became its trustee to support female education across Pakistan.
In 2019, she launched the National Alliance for Women in Pharmacy (NAWP) under Pakistan Pharmacists Association (PPA) to provide opportunities for females pharmacists in the health industry across Pakistan.
In 2020, she joined Indus Health Network UK as an executive committee member to advocate and raise funds for the charity programs of the hospital.
In 2020, she began to work as the chief pharmacist at doctHERs; a telemedicine company connecting home-based and underutilized female healthcare workers to serve low-income patients remotely through technology. Under Bukhari's leadership role, they have launched projects in the rural areas of Pakistan where the community health workers, like Guddi Bajis, are selling the medicines to underserved patients under the supervision of telehealthcare workers of doctHERs.
In 2021, she became the Director of Equity Pakistan; a gender equity hub created to address the issues related to gender inequities in the pharmaceutical workforce of Pakistan. |
54827468_0_5 | 54827468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari. Media coverage
Bukhari has been invited by the media on multiple occasions to speak about the role and challenges faced by the healthcare workers, prominently by pharmacists, in the health industry. The following are the prominent media coverage:
She educated the public on the role of pharmacists, particularly minority groups, through a TV series on the Islam Channel called ‘Health is Wealth’; a Ramadan initiative project by British Islamic Medical Association.
Her achievements were highlighted by UK 44; a Pakistani news channel for the Asian community residing in the United Kingdom.
She was interviewed by BBC Asian Network's Nihal Show and Geo News. And also, by famous magazines like OK Pakistan, Hello Pakistan, and Scientia Pakistan to speak about her efforts and achievements in the healthcare industry.
During the year 2020, she was invited by PTV News, 24 News HD, Dawn News, and other leading channels to speak about the role and importance of healthcare workers during the pandemic.
In 2021, she was interviewed by Dr. Nazish Affan on UrduPoint, a digital media network, to discuss the effects of the vaccine developed for the Coronavirus. |
54827468_0_6 | 54827468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari. Honors and awards
Bukhari received the following honors and awards throughout her career: |
54827468_0_7 | 54827468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadia%20Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari | Nadia Bukhari.
She gained the Fellowship of the HEA in 2011.
She was a member of the winning team for 'Training & Development' at C+D Awards 2015.
She was shortlisted for the ‘Outstanding Teaching Award 2015’ at UCL.
She received the honor of being the youngest Asian Muslim female Fellow by the Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS) in 2015.
She is the first Muslim female and British Pakistani to be a board member of the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy for England in 2017.
She has been titled as the ‘UCL Global Pharmacy Ambassador’ for her global advocacy work and nominated for the Provost’s Global Engagement Awards 2018. |
54827469_0_0 | 54827469 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin%20Stizz | Cousin Stizz | Cousin Stizz.
Stephen Goss (born March 15, 1992), known professionally as Cousin Stizz, is an American rapper and songwriter. He is from Dorchester, Massachusetts and signed to RCA Records. |
54827469_0_1 | 54827469 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin%20Stizz | Cousin Stizz | Cousin Stizz. Early life
Stephen Goss was born on March 15, 1992, in Boston, Massachusetts. He grew up in the Boston, Massachusetts neighborhood of Dorchester. A childhood friend gave him the nickname "Cousin Stizz" when he was 12. After a close friend was shot to death, he began to behave recklessly. He attended Reading Memorial High School, graduating in 2010. |
54827469_0_2 | 54827469 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin%20Stizz | Cousin Stizz | Cousin Stizz. Career
In his late teens, he began freestyling with friends in a local cypher series and released music as part of the group Pilot Nation later that year. A boost to his drive to turn rapping into a full-time career came in 2013 with the early success of friend and fellow Boston rapper Michael Christmas. In 2014 after months of recording, Stizz released his first official single as a solo artist, "Shoutout." |
54827469_0_3 | 54827469 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin%20Stizz | Cousin Stizz | Cousin Stizz.
His debut mixtape as a solo artist, Suffolk County, released June 1, 2015, received over 12 million listens on SoundCloud. Wide notice also came with the release on the internet of a video of Drake playing Stizz's single "Shoutout" at the star's birthday party. His next mixtape, MONDA, released in the summer of 2016, was named one of DigBoston's Best Local Albums of 2016. |
54827469_0_4 | 54827469 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin%20Stizz | Cousin Stizz | Cousin Stizz.
He signed a record deal with RCA Records in late 2016, and his third release and first on RCA, One Night Only, came out on July 12, 2017. It includes features from Offset (of Migos), G-Eazy, Big Leano, and Buddy, and production credits from Tee-WaTT, Tedd Boyd, Vinylz, FrancisGotHeat, Smash David, WondaGurl, and Dave Sava6e. Three weeks after the album's release, the single "Headlock" (feat. Offset) had been streamed over 11.3 million times on Spotify, reaching No. 12 on Billboard's Next Big Sound chart, while viewers on YouTube had watched Stizz's videos (combined) over 8 million times. Author Shea Serrano of The Ringer is an active fan of the rapper and also his No. 1 fan in the entire world, calling his music inspiring. |
54827469_0_5 | 54827469 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin%20Stizz | Cousin Stizz | Cousin Stizz.
In December 2018, he was crowned "Artist of the Year" at the Boston Music Awards. With his victory, Stizz became the first hip-hop musician to receive the awards ceremony's highest honor. |
54827469_1_0 | 54827469 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin%20Stizz | Cousin Stizz | Cousin Stizz. 1992 births
Living people
American rappers
Songwriters from Massachusetts
Rappers from Boston
East Coast hip hop musicians
21st-century American rappers |
54827479_0_0 | 54827479 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20Drissell | George Drissell | George Drissell.
George Samuel Drissell (born 20 January 1999) is an English cricketer. He made his first-class debut for Gloucestershire in the 2017 County Championship on 6 August 2017. He made his List A debut for Gloucestershire in the 2018 Royal London One-Day Cup on 6 June 2018. |
54827483_0_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open.
The 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 12th edition, for men, and 15th edition, for women, of the tournament and part of the 2017 ATP Challenger Tour and the 2017 ITF Women's Circuit, offering totals of $100,000, for men, and $100,000, for women, in prize money. It took place in West Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada between August 14 to August 20, 2017. |
54827483_1_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
Philip Bester
Filip Peliwo
Brayden Schnur
Benjamin Sigouin |
54827483_1_1 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. 1 Rankings are as of August 7, 2017
The following players received entry into the singles main draw as special exempts:
Liam Broady
Taylor Fritz |
54827483_1_2 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. 1 Rankings are as of August 7, 2017
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
Takanyi Garanganga
Lloyd Harris
Thai-Son Kwiatkowski
Max Purcell |
54827483_1_3 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. 1 Rankings are as of August 7, 2017
The following players received entry as lucky losers:
JC Aragone
Marc Polmans
Ryan Shane |
54827483_2_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
Katherine Sebov
Aleksandra Wozniak
Carol Zhao |
54827483_2_1 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. 1 Rankings are as of August 7, 2017
The following players entered the singles main draw with a protected ranking:
Polona Hercog
Stefanie Vögele |
54827483_2_2 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. 1 Rankings are as of August 7, 2017
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
Ysaline Bonaventure
Priscilla Hon
Eri Hozumi
Sílvia Soler Espinosa |
54827483_3_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. Men's singles
Cedrik-Marcel Stebe def. Jordan Thompson, 6–0, 6–1 |
54827483_4_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. Women's singles
Maryna Zanevska def. Danka Kovinić, 5–7, 6–1, 6–3 |
54827483_5_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. Men's doubles
James Cerretani / Neal Skupski def. Treat Huey / Robert Lindstedt, 7–6(8–6), 6–2 |
54827483_6_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. Women's doubles
Jessica Moore / Jocelyn Rae def. Desirae Krawczyk / Giuliana Olmos, 6–1, 7–5 |
54827483_7_0 | 54827483 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open. Odlum Brown Vancouver Open
Odlum Brown Vancouver Open
Vancouver Open
Odlum Brown Vancouver Open |
54827485_0_0 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico.
Pedro Rico Cutillas, better known as Pedrito Rico (Elda, Alicante, 7 September 1932 - Barcelona, 21 June 1988) was a Spanish singer, dancer and actor who spent most of his career in Argentina. |
54827485_0_1 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico. Biography
In 1955 he debuted at the Ruzafa Theater in Valencia, then moved to the Price Theater in Madrid. In 1956 he was hired by an Argentine theatrical entrepreneur to perform at the Avenida Theater, the theater of zarzuelas, located in a place where a large Spanish community is concentrated in the city of Buenos Aires. In 1958 he was awarded the Golden Record in Cuba and the Guaicaipuro in Venezuela as the best foreign interpreter. |
54827485_0_2 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico.
It has been argued that Pedrito Rico was just one Argentinian more for his continuous and successful visits to that country. He sang Spanish songs, flamenco, melodic and sometimes also new olero or tropical songs with Spanish-style arrangements and adapted to his particular way of singing. He had started very young and was consecrated in Argentina with the company "Romería", in Avenida Theater, in 1956. He immediately won the favor of the public, which gave him the alias of "El Ángel de España", which subsequently served as title to one of his films. |
54827485_0_3 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico.
He had an excellent voice and was a good dancer, taking into account that he made big efforts to always present his performances in very good conditions, both physical in general and vocal in particular. His colorful performances and colorful shirts were famous, as well as his special make-up, which served to evoke perverse comments and bitter criticism from his detractors, from those who did not consider him a true Spaniard. However, none of this prevented him from filling the theaters where he appeared or that his performances and his songs were the object of great acclaim, as well as positive journalistic reviews of entertainment. Being a homosexual—at that time he maintained a relationship with Miguel de Mairena—he suffered serious problems during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco in Barcelona, where he was frequently harassed and detained, a situation that forced him to move to America, a continent in which he had an assured triumph. It was speculated that he imitated Antonio Amaya, who was known as "El Gitanillo de Bronce". When Antonio Amaya visited America, he was not liked because it was believed that he imitated Pedrito Rico. |
54827485_0_4 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico.
He died in Barcelona. The singer was under medical treatment due to severe anemia that he had suffered for a year. A relapse in his state of health caused his death minutes before three in the morning of June 21, 1988. He had been greatly affected by the death of his mother, which occurred the previous year. It is said that he was one of the pioneers of the Spanish song, of which he recorded several dozen albums, with hits such as La Campanera, Dos Cruces and Mi Escapulario. Among his best-known songs are also The Ship of Oblivion, Black Dove, But Pray For Me, Paper Doll, Only Smile and Consuelo The Cantaora. The movie "The Angel of Spain" gave him great popularity throughout Latin America, where he was already known by this name. |
54827485_0_5 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico.
Pedrito Rico was distinguished in 1980 with the Medal of Merit at Work for his dedication to Spanish folk music. The mortal remains of the singer were transferred to his hometown, where they were buried. In Elda, the loss of the singer caused a deep impression. The ardent chapel, after the arrival of his mortal remains, was installed in the headquarters of the local Assembly of The Red Cross, as his house was insufficient to receive the testimony of pain from his friends and admirers. |
54827485_0_6 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico.
Pedrito Rico used to spend a summer season in his hometown, although his favorite place to spend the summer was the town of Benidorm, also in Alicante, where he had a house. He also owned another residence in Buenos Aires, where he spent most of the year and was his center of operations during his seasons of performances. |
54827485_0_7 | 54827485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedrito%20Rico | Pedrito Rico | Pedrito Rico. Filmography
Vestida de novia (1966)
Buenas noches, Buenos Aires (1964)
Feria en Sevilla (1962)
Venga a bailar el rock (1957)
El ángel de España (1957) |
54827495_0_0 | 54827495 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neves%20%28crater%29 | Neves (crater) | Neves (crater).
Neves is an impact crater on Mars, within the Aeolis Dorsa on the edge of Elysium Planitia. The crater was named after the town of Neves, São Tomé and Príncipe, by the IAU in 2013. |
54827499_0_0 | 54827499 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gooding%20%28surname%29 | Gooding (surname) | Gooding (surname).
Gooding is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include: |
54827499_0_1 | 54827499 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gooding%20%28surname%29 | Gooding (surname) | Gooding (surname).
Caroline Gooding (1959–2014), British solicitor and activist for individuals with disabilities
Cuba Gooding Sr. (1944–2017), American soul singer
Cuba Gooding Jr. (born 1968), American actor and son of Cuba Gooding Sr.
Omar Gooding (born 1976), American actor and son of Cuba Gooding Sr.
Cynthia Gooding (1924–1988), American folk singer
David Gooding (1947–2009), British academic
Frank R. Gooding (1859–1928), American politician
Hattie B. Gooding (1877 - 1938), American publicity agent
Jason Gooding (born 1979), Trinidadian triathlete
Mick Gooding (born 1959), British footballer |
54827510_0_0 | 54827510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias%20G.%20Mealey%20House | Tobias G. Mealey House | Tobias G. Mealey House.
The Tobias G. Mealey House is a historic house in Monticello, Minnesota, United States. Its original section was built in 1855 by Tobias Mealey (1823–1904). The Mealey family made numerous additions to the house throughout the latter 19th century, and later owners added a large wing to the east. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976 for having local significance in the themes of commerce, exploration/settlement, and politics/government. It was nominated for its association with Mealey, an influential local settler, entrepreneur, and politician. It was delisted in 2020. |
54827510_0_1 | 54827510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias%20G.%20Mealey%20House | Tobias G. Mealey House | Tobias G. Mealey House. Description
The Tobias G. Mealey House stands in seclusion on a thickly vegetated hill on the outskirts of Monticello's historic core. The original section is a simple two-story frame building with gables adorned with open pediments. The main entrance was on the west façade, which was spanned at one time by a colonnaded porch. The house gradually developed a rambling, complex structure with the addition of porches, gables, chimneys, and rooms, including a kitchen and summer kitchen extending to the east, and the main entrance shifted to the southeast corner. However a consistent exterior treatment of narrow-lap clapboard maintained uniformity. Later owners added a full wing to the east, which contained a garage and antique shop at the time of the house's National Register nomination in 1976. |
54827510_0_2 | 54827510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias%20G.%20Mealey%20House | Tobias G. Mealey House | Tobias G. Mealey House. History
Tobias Mealey grew up in New Brunswick, Canada, but went west in his late 20s to participate in the California Gold Rush. Returning to New Brunswick in 1852 he passed through Minnesota and liked what he saw there. In 1855 he married Catherine Prescott and together they emigrated to Minnesota. Saint Paul was too well established for him and Minneapolis had yet to come into prominence, so Mealey opted to settle in Monticello, then still called Moritzious. He sited their house on a hill away from the Mississippi riverfront to get away from the boatmen and lumberjacks he deemed unsavory. |
54827510_0_3 | 54827510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias%20G.%20Mealey%20House | Tobias G. Mealey House | Tobias G. Mealey House.
Mealey invested in several businesses, including a sawmill, two factories, and a general store, helping to grow Monticello's economy. He also farmed the property around the house. Active in politics, he served in some local judicial positions before running for office in the Minnesota Legislature as a Democrat, where he served several terms in the 1870s. He forged connections with other influential Minnesotans, selling land to Thomas Lowry for a summer home and becoming close friends with railroad magnate James J. Hill. |
54827510_0_4 | 54827510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias%20G.%20Mealey%20House | Tobias G. Mealey House | Tobias G. Mealey House.
Tobias and Catherine Mealey had two sons and three daughters, and their growing family prompted successive additions to the house. In 1884 their daughter Susan married Rufus Rand, then vice-president of the Minneapolis Gas Light Company. As a wedding gift, the Mealeys gave the couple a large lot next to their own, upon which Susan designed the 30-room Rand House as a summer home. James J. Hill had a railroad spur constructed nearby for the convenience of his friend's wedding guests. |
54827510_0_5 | 54827510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias%20G.%20Mealey%20House | Tobias G. Mealey House | Tobias G. Mealey House.
Tobias Mealey died in 1904, whereupon Catherine moved in with one of their daughters. The Mealey family continued to use the house as a summer home until about 1940. It stood vacant until 1947, when it was purchased by Carl and Jeanette Sebey, who undertook a restoration. After the Sebeys moved out the house suffered another period of vacancy during which it was vandalized, inhabited by skunks, and encroached on by vegetation. Antique dealers Bob and Marion Jameson purchased the property in 1965 and began restorations again. As of the 2010s, though, the house appears to be vacant once more. |
54827510_0_6 | 54827510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias%20G.%20Mealey%20House | Tobias G. Mealey House | Tobias G. Mealey House. See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Wright County, Minnesota |
54827513_0_0 | 54827513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open%20%E2%80%93%20Men%27s%20singles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's singles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's singles.
Dudi Sela was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Liam Broady. |
54827513_0_1 | 54827513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open%20%E2%80%93%20Men%27s%20singles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's singles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's singles.
Cedrik-Marcel Stebe won the title after defeating Jordan Thompson 6–0, 6–1 in the final. |
54827527_0_0 | 54827527 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1964%20United%20States%20Senate%20special%20election%20in%20Oklahoma | 1964 United States Senate special election in Oklahoma | 1964 United States Senate special election in Oklahoma.
The 1964 United States Senate election in Oklahoma took place on November 3, 1964. Democratic Senator Robert S. Kerr, who won re-election to his third term in 1960, died in office on January 1, 1963. Governor J. Howard Edmondson resigned from office so that his Lieutenant Governor, George Nigh, could appoint him to the U.S. Senate. Edmondson ran for re-election in the ensuing special election, and faced strong competition from former Governor Raymond D. Gary and State Senator Fred R. Harris. Edmondson placed first in the primary, but failed to win a majority, with Harris narrowly beating out Gary for second place. In the runoff, Harris defeated Edmondson in a landslide. In the general election, Harris faced former Oklahoma Sooners football coach Bud Wilkinson, the Republican nominee. Even though President Lyndon B. Johnson won Oklahoma by a wide margin over Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater, the Senate race was much closer. Ultimately, Harris only narrowly defeated Wilkinson by just 2% of the vote. |
54827527_1_0 | 54827527 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1964%20United%20States%20Senate%20special%20election%20in%20Oklahoma | 1964 United States Senate special election in Oklahoma | 1964 United States Senate special election in Oklahoma. Candidates
J. Howard Edmondson, incumbent U.S. Senator, former Governor of Oklahoma
Fred R. Harris, State Senator
Raymond D. Gary, former Governor of Oklahoma |
54827527_2_0 | 54827527 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1964%20United%20States%20Senate%20special%20election%20in%20Oklahoma | 1964 United States Senate special election in Oklahoma | 1964 United States Senate special election in Oklahoma. Candidates
Bud Wilkinson, former Oklahoma Sooners football coach
Thomas J. Harris, Oklahoma City businessman
Forest W. Beall, former Chairman of the Oklahoma Republican PRunoff election arty |
54827530_0_0 | 54827530 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open%20%E2%80%93%20Men%27s%20doubles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's doubles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's doubles.
Treat Huey and Frederik Nielsen were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Huey partnered Robert Lindstedt but lost in the final to James Cerretani and Neal Skupski. Nielsen partnered Andreas Siljeström but lost in the semifinals to Huey and Lindstedt. |
54827530_0_1 | 54827530 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Odlum%20Brown%20Vancouver%20Open%20%E2%80%93%20Men%27s%20doubles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's doubles | 2017 Odlum Brown Vancouver Open – Men's doubles.
Cerretani and Skupski won the title after defeating Huey and Lindstedt 7–6(8–6), 6–2 in the final. |
54827553_0_0 | 54827553 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livengood%20%28surname%29 | Livengood (surname) | Livengood (surname).
Livengood is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: |
54827553_0_1 | 54827553 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livengood%20%28surname%29 | Livengood (surname) | Livengood (surname).
Henry Livengood (1933–1988), American politician
Scott Livengood (born 1952), American chief executive officer
Victoria Livengood (born 1959), American opera singer
Wes Livengood (1910–1996), American baseball player, scout and manager |
54827584_0_0 | 54827584 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daphne%20van%20de%20Zande | Daphne van de Zande | Daphne van de Zande.
Daphne Van De Zande (born 21 July 1974 in Vilvoorde) is a former Belgian tennis player. |
54827584_0_1 | 54827584 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daphne%20van%20de%20Zande | Daphne van de Zande | Daphne van de Zande.
She has career-high WTA rankings of 161 in singles, achieved on 22 June 1998, and 210 in doubles, reached on 5 October 1998. Van De Zande won four singles and three doubles titles on the ITF Circuit in her career. |
54827584_0_2 | 54827584 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daphne%20van%20de%20Zande | Daphne van de Zande | Daphne van de Zande.
She made her WTA Tour main-draw debut at the 1997 Volvo Women's Open. |
54827586_0_0 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
Americo-Liberian people or Congo people or Congau people in Liberian English, are a Liberian ethnic group of African-American, Afro-Caribbean, and Liberated African descent. The sister ethnic group of Americo-Liberians are the Sierra Leone Creole people, who share similar ancestry and related culture. Americo-Liberians trace their ancestry to free-born and formerly enslaved African Americans who emigrated in the 19th century to become the founders of the state of Liberia. They identified there as Americo-Liberians. Some African Americans following resettlement in Canada also participated as founding settlers in Sierra Leone and other Recaptive repatriates settled in present-day Côte d'Ivoire. |
54827586_0_1 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
Although the terms "Americo-Liberian" and "Congo" had distinct definitions in the nineteenth century, they are currently interchangeable and refer to an ethnic group composed of the descendants of the various free and ex-slave African-American, Caribbean, Recaptive and Sierra Leone Creoles who settled in Liberia from 1822. |
54827586_0_2 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
The designation 'Congo' for the Americo-Liberian population came into common usage when these African Americans integrated 5,000 liberated Africans called Congos (former slaves from the Congo Basin, who were freed by British and Americans from slave ships after the prohibition of the African slave trade) and 500 Barbadian immigrants into the Americo-Liberian hegemony. Americo-Liberians rarely intermarried with indigenous West Africans. |
54827586_0_3 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
Although Western literature and discourse in the United States and United Kingdom use the term "Americo-Liberians", this term is largely outdated. Indeed, in common parlance, many Liberians and other West Africans, including the Americo-Liberian people themselves, refer to the group as "Congo" or "Congau" people. |
54827586_0_4 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
In addition to indigenous Liberian chiefs and royal families, upper-class Americo-Liberians and their descendants led the political, social, cultural and economic sectors of the country; alongside indigenous Liberian elites, upper-class Americo-Liberians ruled the new nation from 19th century until 1980 as a small but dominant minority. From 1878 to 1980, the Republic of Liberia was a de facto one-party state, ruled by elites of both the indigenous and Americo-Liberian-dominated True Whig Party and Masonic Order of Liberia. |
54827586_0_5 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people. History and settlement
Americo-Liberians were descended from African-American and Afro-Caribbean settlers, many of whom were freed slaves and their descendants who emigrated to Liberia with assistance from the American Colonization Society (ACS). The first black American settlers arrived in Liberia in 1822. The ACS's plan of encouraging black American migration to Africa was met with mixed responses at the time. Some members of the abolitionist movement, such as Gerrit Smith, opposed the idea, arguing that African-American families had lived in the United States for generations, and their prevailing sentiment was that they were no more African than white Americans were European. Other historians have argued that white Americans encouraged the emigration of people of color to Africa due to their opposition to integration. Additionally, some slave owners manumitted some of their slaves on the condition of emigration. However, other African Americans believed they would face better economic opportunities in Africa and be free from racial prejudice, a sentiment that was endorsed by the Back-to-Africa movement. As black American emigration to Liberia continued steadily into the mid to late nineteenth century, the movement gained support from an assortment of influential figures, including UNIA president Marcus Garvey, who would go on to become president of the Black Star Line which encouraged emigration and economic shipping commerce between the United States and Liberia. |
54827586_0_6 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
The early African-American settlers practiced Christianity, sometimes in combination with traditional African religious beliefs. They spoke an African-American Vernacular English, which developed into Liberian English. |
54827586_0_7 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
The early African-American settlers who arrived in the region that was established as Liberia between 1820 and 1843 were mainly free blacks from Virginia, South Carolina, and Georgia, while smaller numbers came from northern states like New Jersey, New York, Delaware, and Connecticut. Subsequent movements also included emigrants from Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Kentucky, and Florida. |
54827586_0_8 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
The Liberian exodus saw mass emigration of African Americans from South Carolina to Liberia. Congressman Richard H. Cain called for a million men to leave the injustices they suffered in the United States and leave for Africa. In 1877, the Liberian Exodus Joint Stock Steamship Company was formed in Charleston, South Carolina with a fund of $6,000 to assist the emigration of black Americans to Africa. The company then purchased a bark called the Azor, which arrived in Charleston in March 1878 to start shipping African-American migrants to Liberia. Enthusiasm for the Liberian exodus had been fed partly by exaggerated reports of Liberia's fertility, including claims that potatoes grew so large that a single one could feed a family for a day, and that certain trees produced bacon. However, 23 of the emigrants died during the journey and upon arrival, the passengers discovered that these claims were not true and many found themselves impoverished. Those who could afford it returned to the U.S. in 1879 and plans for a second voyage by the Liberian Exodus Company were scrapped. However, passengers from the Azor who stayed did find success and established themselves as some of the most prominent Americo-Liberians, including farmer and agricultural businessman Saul Hill, Liberian Senator Reverend David Frazier and Daniel Frank Tolbert who was the grandfather of future Liberian president William R. Tolbert, Jr. |
54827586_0_9 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
Although the number of Afro-Caribbean immigrants to Liberia were relatively small in comparison to colonial Sierra Leone, at least 300 Afro-Barbadians settled in Liberia in 1865 and smaller numbers of Afro-Caribbean immigrants settled in Liberia between 1865 and 1930 from Caribbean islands such as Trinidad, Jamaica, and Grenada. |
54827586_0_10 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
The American Navy was responsible for the recapture of illegal slave vessels seeking to transport enslaved Africans to the Americas following the American abolition of the slave trade in 1808. These enslaved Africans called Liberated Africans or Recaptives, many of whom were from the Congo Basin were designated as 'Congoes' and all Recaptives, including those from modern-day Nigeria, Cameroon, and Ghana were all described as 'Congoes.' |
54827586_0_11 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people.
The early African-American settlers did not relate well to the native African inhabitants they first encountered in Liberia due to cultural differences and soon began to establish a social and economic elite in the country. They retained preferences for Western style of dress, Southern plantation-style homes, American food, Protestantism, the English language, and monogamous kinship practices. Demographically, the Americo-Liberians tended to concentrate in larger cities and towns while native Africans remained in more poorly developed areas before the two groups started to intermingle in the twentieth century. |
54827586_0_12 | 54827586 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo-Liberian%20people | Americo-Liberian people | Americo-Liberian people. Development of society
The settler community developed an Americo-Liberian society, culture, and political organization that was strongly influenced by their roots in the American South as well as the Anglophone Caribbean. |