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27th Legislature of Yukon
References
References
27th Legislature of Yukon
External links
External links Yukon Legislature
27th Legislature of Yukon
Table of Content
Short description, Membership in the 27th Assembly, Membership changes, By-elections, Notes, References, External links
Municipality of Wyalong
Use Australian English
The Municipality of Wyalong was a local government area of New South Wales centred around the town of Wyalong. It existed for 36 years from 1899 to 1935 when it was absorbed into Bland Shire.
Municipality of Wyalong
Council
Council
Municipality of Wyalong
First Council
First Council The first Wyalong Municipal Council was elected on the 3rd of March 1900 and met for the first time two days later to elect a mayor on Thursday the 5th of March 1900. The council privately elected Jeremiah Moriarty. The first meeting of council was held at the Wyalong Courthouse. Mr. J. Smethurst, who was the returning officer for the election and the one who called the meeting, was appointed temporary Council Clerk and the newly elected Mayor was given the responsibility of exploring a suitable building for council business to take place in. +First CouncilAldermanPartyNotes  Jeremiah Moriarty Unaligned Mayor  George Davis Unaligned   Ernest A. Neeld Unaligned   William T. James Unaligned  Edward E. Tyler Unaligned   G. S. Duncan Unaligned   James McDonell Unaligned  Edward J. Pike Unaligned  James Hodge Unaligned
Municipality of Wyalong
Third Council
Third Council The third council was elected in 1906. The Mayor was Alderman Sully. The Council Clerk was Mr. V. G. Manning who received a salary of £13. +Third CouncilAldermanPartyNotes  Ald. Sully Unaligned Mayor  Ald. Channon Unaligned   Ald. Butler Unaligned   Ald. Aiken Unaligned  Ald. Campbell Unaligned   Ald. Moody Unaligned   Ald. Brookman Unaligned  Unaligned  Unaligned
Municipality of Wyalong
Final Council
Final Council The final Wyalong Municipal Council was elected in 1934 and served for exactly 10 months, being elected on the 1st of December 1934 and being abolished on the 1st of October 1935. The Mayor was G. J. Bland who went on to serve as Wyalong's only representation on the Provisional Council that governed the new amalgamated shire for 6 months until an election was held. Alderman P. H. Curry served as Deputy Mayor. Alderman Compton who was elected last tied with the only excluded candidate in the poll at 84 votes each but was the one elected after a draw. The council held its final meeting on Thursday, the 26th of September 1935. All aldermen, excepting M. Hart, as well as the Town Clerk, Mr. S. N. Drew, were in attendance. Additionally, the Bland Shire Clerk, Mr. S. M. Smith, was present at the meeting to make some suggestions to the council in regards to the merger and relief work and services associated with it before the council was dissolved and the provisional council took over. +Final CouncilAldermanPartyNotes  G. J. Bland Unaligned Mayor  P. H. Curry Unaligned Deputy Mayor  G. H. Wheeler Unaligned   A. A. Hart Unaligned  M. A. Hart Unaligned   J. T. Wallace Unaligned   J. W. Delaney Unaligned  G. A. Grintell Unaligned  S. G. Compton Unaligned
Municipality of Wyalong
References
References Category:Former local government areas of New South Wales Category:Bland Shire
Municipality of Wyalong
Table of Content
Use Australian English, Council, First Council, Third Council, Final Council, References
Allegra Hyde
Short description
Allegra Hyde is an American writer. She is originally from Peterborough, New Hampshire. She teaches creative writing at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. She has also taught at Oberlin College and Warren Wilson College.
Allegra Hyde
Early life and education
Early life and education Born in Peterborough, New Hampshire, Hyde graduated from ConVal Regional High School. She earned a Bachelor of Arts from Williams College and Master of Fine Arts from Arizona State University. At Williams College, Hyde studied with Jim Shepard. She received a Fullbright Grant to teach in English in Bulgaria.
Allegra Hyde
Career
Career During graduate school, she published a series of short stories titled "Of This New World." The collection received a positive review in The Gazette. Hyde published her debut novel, Eleutheria, in 2022. The New Yorker named Eleutheria a Best Book of 2022 and it also received a positive review in the Los Angeles Times. It was also shortlisted for the First Novelist Award and featured on Late Night with Seth Meyers. Her short story collection The Last Catastrophe (2023) was a New York Times Editors' Choice Selection. Hyde's work has been awarded the Pushcart Prize four times and has appeared in The Best American Travel Writing and The Best American Short Stories. Hyde's influences include Octavia Butler, Julie Otsuka, and Denis Johnson. Much of Hyde's work falls into the category of climate fiction.
Allegra Hyde
Publications
Publications
Allegra Hyde
Books
Books Eleutheria (2022)
Allegra Hyde
Short fiction
Short fiction
Allegra Hyde
Non-fiction
Non-fiction
Allegra Hyde
References
References
Allegra Hyde
External links
External links Category:American women novelists Category:People from Peterborough, New Hampshire Category:Williams College alumni Category:Arizona State University alumni Category:Smith College faculty Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people
Allegra Hyde
Table of Content
Short description, Early life and education, Career, Publications, Books, Short fiction, Non-fiction, References, External links
Belal Attia
short description
Belal Mohamed Ibrahem Attia (; born 1 January 2008) is an Egyptian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Al Ahly.
Belal Attia
Club career
Club career Seen as a promising player in Al Ahly's academy, Attia began to attract interest from European clubs in November 2024, where he was reportedly subject to offers from clubs in Germany and Spain. Egyptian media claimed in January 2025 that he had been offered a trial at Barcelona's La Masia academy, as well as with Espanyol. Football news website 365scores later revealed that, having contacted both clubs, no offers for a trial had been made by either. Later in the January he was promoted to first-team training for the first time ahead of Al Ahly's Egyptian Premier League match against Pharco. He was again linked with a move to Europe in May 2025, with an unnamed Danish club reported to have made an offer.
Belal Attia
International career
International career Attia was called up to captain Egypt's under-17 team for the 2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament in Algeria, where he was named Man-of-the-Match against Libya before fracturing his right arm in Egypt's 3–1 win against Morocco. Despite not featuring in their last game against Algeria, his contribution was enough to lead Egypt to the title. He represented Egypt again at the 2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament held in Morocco, where he finished top scorer with five goals as Egypt were again crowned champions. Called up for the 2025 U-17 Africa Cup of Nations, Attia stated in an interview that Egypt had "prepared well" for the tournament, and that they "dream of reaching the World Cup". Following his nation's opening 4–3 loss to South Africa, Attia scored in Egypt's 2–1 loss to Burkina Faso in their second group stage game.
Belal Attia
References
References
Belal Attia
External links
External links Category:2008 births Category:Living people Category:Egyptian men's footballers Category:Egypt men's youth international footballers Category:Men's association football midfielders Category:Al Ahly SC players Category:21st-century Egyptian sportsmen
Belal Attia
Table of Content
short description, Club career, International career, References, External links
Draft:Daniel Morley
AfC submission/draft
Daniel Morley (born 25 January 1997) is an English Professional boxer and Internet Personality.
Draft:Daniel Morley
Table of Content
AfC submission/draft
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Short description
The 2025–26 season is the 160th season in the history of Nottingham Forest Football Club, and the club's fourth consecutive season competing in the Premier League. In addition to the domestic league, the club will also participate in the FA Cup, the EFL Cup, and the UEFA Conference League This season would be the first time in 29 years that Nottingham Forest would compete in a European competition.
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Contracts and transfers
Contracts and transfers
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Transfers in
Transfers in DatePos.PlayerFromFeeRef.
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Transfers out
Transfers out DatePos.PlayerToFeeRef. 1 June 2025 CM Jack Perkins Northampton Town Undisclosed
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Loans in
Loans in Date fromPos.PlayerFromLoaned untilRef.
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Loans out
Loans out Date fromPos.PlayerToLoaned untilRef.
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Released / out of contract
Released / out of contract DatePos.PlayerSubsequent clubJoin dateRef.
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
New contracts
New contracts Date Pos. Player Contracted until Ref.
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Pre-season and friendlies
Pre-season and friendlies
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Competitions
Competitions
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Overall record
Overall record
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Premier League
Premier League
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
League table
League table
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Results summary
Results summary
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Results by round
Results by round
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Matches
Matches
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
FA Cup
FA Cup
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
EFL Cup
EFL Cup
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
UEFA Conference League
UEFA Conference League
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Statistics
Statistics
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Appearances and goals
Appearances and goals No.Pos.PlayerPremier LeagueFA CupEFL CupUEFA Conference LeagueTotalDisciplineAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals13px13px
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
References
References Category:Nottingham Forest F.C. seasons Nottingham Forest Nottingham Forest
2025–26 Nottingham Forest F.C. season
Table of Content
Short description, Contracts and transfers, Transfers in, Transfers out, Loans in, Loans out, Released / out of contract, New contracts, Pre-season and friendlies, Competitions, Overall record, Premier League, League table, Results summary, Results by round, Matches, FA Cup, EFL Cup, UEFA Conference League, Statistics, Appearances and goals, References
Banasri Maity
Short description
Banasri Maity (born 28 December 1960) is an Indian politician from West Bengal. She is a former member of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly from Kanthi Uttar Assembly constituency in Purba Medinipur district. She was elected in the 2016 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election representing the All India Trinamool Congress Party.
Banasri Maity
Early life and education
Early life and education Maity is from Kanthi Dakshin, Purba Medinipur district, West Bengal. She married Achin Maity. She completed her BA honours in 1987 at Prabhat Kumar College, Contai, which is affiliated with Calcutta University. Later, she did her postgraduate diploma in teaching at Hestings College. She works as a teacher at Basantia High School.
Banasri Maity
Career
Career Maity was elected as an MLA for the first time winning 2011 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election from Kanthi Uttar Assembly constituency representing the All India Trinamool Congress. She polled 91,528 votes and defeated her nearest rival, Chakradhar Maikap of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), by a margin of 7,955 votes. She retained the Kanthi Uttar seat for the Trinamool Congress in the 2016 West Bengal Legislative Assembly election defeating the Communist Party's Chakradhar Maikap again, by a margin of 18,576 votes. In December 2020, ahead of the 2021 elections, she resigned from the Trinamool Congress Party following the resignation of rebel Trinamool Congress leader Suvendu Adhikari, and later joined the Bharatiya Janata Party along with him and three other MLAs.
Banasri Maity
References
References Category:1960 births Category:Living people Category:Trinamool Congress politicians from West Bengal Category:People from Purba Medinipur district Category:West Bengal MLAs 2011–2016 Category:West Bengal MLAs 2016–2021 Category:Women members of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly Category:21st-century Indian women politicians
Banasri Maity
Table of Content
Short description, Early life and education, Career, References
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Summary
Summary
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Licensing
Licensing
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Table of Content
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Category:Serbian expatriate sportspeople in Brunei
Fooian expatriate sportspeople in Bar cat
Category:Serbian expatriate sportspeople in Brunei
Table of Content
Fooian expatriate sportspeople in Bar cat
Category:Mongol Empire stubs
WPSS-cat
For articles relating to a particular battle in the history of the Mongol Empire, please use instead. *Mongol Empire *Mongol Empire
Category:Mongol Empire stubs
Table of Content
WPSS-cat
Draft:Strathcona Hotel (Edmonton)
AfC submission
The Strathcona Hotel is a historic building and former hotel, located in Edmonton, Alberta. Constructed in 1891, It is one of the oldest wood framed hotels in Alberta. It was designated as an Alberta Provincial historic resource in March 2001, and an Edmonton municipal historic resource in May 2007.
Draft:Strathcona Hotel (Edmonton)
History
History The prohibition of alcohol in 1916 led to a steep decrease in revenues, forcing the sale of the hotel. It was purchased by the Presbyterian Church who used the building to house the Westminster Ladies College until 1923 when the repealing of prohibition led the property to be sold and operated again as a hotel. In 2018, Beljan Development purchased the hotel with the intent to transform it into a multi-use retail and office space. Following several years of renovations, including a small fire in 2019, the building reopened in 2021. Currently, several business, including restaurants and offices, occupy the building.
Draft:Strathcona Hotel (Edmonton)
References
References
Draft:Strathcona Hotel (Edmonton)
Table of Content
AfC submission, History, References
File:Padai Thalaivan.jpg
Summary
Summary
File:Padai Thalaivan.jpg
Licensing
Licensing Category:Film posters for Tamil-language films
File:Padai Thalaivan.jpg
Table of Content
Summary, Licensing
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Benjamin Sherrod
short description
Benjamin Sherrod (January 16, 1777 – February 25, 1847) was an American capitalist who owned cotton plantations and slaves in Lawrence County, Alabama, in the vicinity of the Tennessee River. He has been described as a "planter-baron."
Benjamin Sherrod
Biography
Biography Sherrod was born in Halifax County, North Carolina, to Mary Ricks Copeland and Isaac Sherrod. His parents died when he was very young, and he was raised by an uncle or grandfather. He was educated at the College of William and Mary, and the University of North Carolina. Sherrod served in the War of 1812 as a quartermaster or commissary of North Carolina troops. He had bread ovens set up for the troops at every place they camped. He was politically a Whig (opposed to Andrew Jackson and Jacksonism). He moved first to Georgia and then to the then-newly opened section of northern Alabama drained by the Tennessee River. He was remembered for his precise and careful agricultural systems used on the plantation he called Cotton Garden. He was unusual in his use of nitrogen-fixing clovers, and was remembered for burying a rotten split-rail fence that had to be replaced: "these poles were buried in deep furrows, and ridges for cotton thrown up over them, and for years afterward you could see how far the fertilizer went." He was a major investor in the Tuscumbia, Courtland and Decatur Railroad, which failed, leaving him $300,000 in debt, but "he managed to discharge this debt, and at his death to bequeath to each of his children a plantation stocked with slaves." Sherrod enslaved over 300 people as of 1830 and "may have been the state's largest slaveholder." A river steamboat named Ben Sherrod was in operation by 1836 and plied the "western rivers," traveling between places like New Orleans, Natchez, Nashville, Louisville, and Tuscumbia, Alabama. In May 1837, reportedly while racing the steamboat Prairie, the Ben Sherrod caught fire just north of Fort Adams, Mississippi; the fire then spread and triggered explosions of alcohol and gunpowder in the cargo hold. Of the 200 people aboard, approximately 175 were killed in the fire, explosion, and immediate catastrophic sinking. The captain and his family survived. The burning, explosion, and sinking of the Ben Sherrod became one of the most infamous mass-casualty disasters of the 19th century United States, in part because it was re-reported in compilations like Lloyd's Steamboat Directory, and Disasters on the Western Waters. thumb|Dramatized depiction of the "conflagration and explosion of the Ben Sherod" (etching published 1846) Sherrod's Cotton Garden is mentioned in an minister's essay about Alabama slavery that was included in American Slavery As It Is (1839), which was compiled by Theodore Dwight Weld, Angelina Grimké, and Sarah Moore Grimké. When Sherrod died in 1847 his estate consisted of 700 enslaved people and 15,000 acres of land in the Tennessee River valley. Sherrod is buried at Courtland Cemetery in Courtland, Alabama. His youngest son, William Crawford Sherrod, served one term in the U.S. Congress as a Representative from Alabama.
Benjamin Sherrod
See also
See also Joseph Wheeler Plantation
Benjamin Sherrod
References
References Category:1777 births Category:1847 deaths Category:American cotton plantation owners Category:Alabama Whigs Category:American slave owners Category:People from Lawrence County, Alabama Category:People from Halifax County, North Carolina Category:American military personnel of the War of 1812
Benjamin Sherrod
Table of Content
short description, Biography, See also, References
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Table of Content
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Draft:FoodBank of Waterloo Region
AfC submission
The FoodBank of Waterloo Region is a non-profit community food assistance program that has served the Region of Waterloo since its inception in 1984.
Draft:FoodBank of Waterloo Region
History
History The recession of the 1980s affected Waterloo Region adversely leading to unemployment and food insecurity. In response, the Kitchener Social Planning Council organized a committee to look for solutions to ameliorate the situation and provide relief. A food bank, a concept first developed in the United States, was one such proposal. In January 1984 the FoodBank opened in the basement of a house owned by the House of Friendship. This made it the first institution of its kind in Ontario. Initially, the FoodBank supported six agencies in Waterloo Region. The success of the FoodBank led to other municipalities seeking to develop their own foodbanks. Within a year, the FoodBank joined with others in the province to cooperate and pool resources. Alongside Toronto, Ottawa, Windsor, Barrie, and Montreal this allowed for food to be distributed greater distances and to share resources. By 2004, the FoodBank was operating out of its current location of 50 Alpine Court Kitchener. It had a budget of 1.3 million and 15 staff. This made it the first institution of its kind in Ontario. In 2018, the FoodBank built a room designed for food processing. The Fresh Approaches room allows the FoodBank to cut down on waste and extend the life of products that it receives. This also allows it to meet the demand for fresh produce in the Region. As of 2022, the FoodBank serves more than 120 agencies in the community. In December 2024, the FoodBank received 1.5 million in funding from the Region of Waterloo.
Draft:FoodBank of Waterloo Region
Mission
Mission 
The FoodBank is a non-profit community food assistance program which provides food for those who need it. It operates as a central processing and distribution centre for the many food agencies it supports. The FoodBank relies on individual and corporate donations. Corporate donors include the FoodBank in their special purchases, one provision of which is that the FoodBank not sell the food it receives.
Draft:FoodBank of Waterloo Region
References
References
Draft:FoodBank of Waterloo Region
Table of Content
AfC submission, History, Mission, References
9th federal electoral district of Nuevo León
Short description
250px|thumb|Federal electoral districts of Nuevo León since 2022 thumb|Nuevo León under the 2017 districting plan The 9th federal electoral district of Nuevo León () is one of the 300 electoral districts into which Mexico is divided for elections to the federal Chamber of Deputies and one of 14 such districts in the state of Nuevo León. It elects one deputy to the lower house of Congress for each three-year legislative session by means of the first-past-the-post system. Votes cast in the district also count towards the calculation of proportional representation ("plurinominal") deputies elected from the second region. The 9th district was created by the 1977 electoral reforms and was first contested in the 1979 mid-term election. The current member for the district, re-elected in the 2024 general election, is of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).
9th federal electoral district of Nuevo León
District territory
District territory In its 2022 districting plan, which is to be used for the 2024, 2027 and 2030 federal elections, the National Electoral Institute increased Nuevo León's congressional seat allocation from 12 to 14. The reconfigured 9th district covers 274 electoral precincts () across 13 municipalities in the south of the state: Allende, Aramberri, Doctor Arroyo, Galeana, General Terán, General Zaragoza, Hualahuises, Iturbide, Linares, Mier y Noriega, Montemorelos, Rayones and Santiago. The district's head town (), where results from individual polling stations are gathered together and tallied, is the city of Linares. The district reported a population of 370,547 in the 2020 Census.
9th federal electoral district of Nuevo León
Previous districting schemes
Previous districting schemes + Evolution of electoral district numbers 1972 1978 1996 2005 2017 2022 Nuevo León 7 11 11 12 12 14 Chamber of Deputies 196 300 Sources: 2017–2022 Between 2017 and 2022, the district's head town was at Linares and it covered 355 precincts across 23 municipalities: Los Aldamas, Allende, Aramberri, Cerralvo, China, Doctor Arroyo, Doctor Coss, Doctor González, Galeana, General Bravo, General Terán, General Treviño, General Zaragoza, Los Herreras, Hualahuises, Iturbide, Linares, Melchor Ocampo, Mier y Noriega, Montemorelos, Los Ramones, Rayones and Santiago. 2005–2017 Under the 2005 districting plan, the district covered 325 precincts across 16 municipalities: The link contains comparative maps of the 1996 and 2005 schemes. Allende, Aramberri, China, Doctor Arroyo, Doctor Coss, Galeana, General Bravo, General Teran, General Zaragoza, Hualahuises, Iturbide, Linares, Mier y Noriega, Montemorelos, Rayones and Santiago. 1996–2005 From 1996 to 2005, the district's head town was at Linares and it covered 14 municipalities: Allende, Aramberri, Doctor Arroyo, Galeana, General Terán, General Zaragoza, Hualahuises, Iturbide, Juárez, Linares, Mier y Noriega, Montemorelos, Rayones and Santiago. 1978–1996 The districting scheme in force from 1978 to 1996 was the result of the 1977 electoral reforms, which increased the number of single-member seats in the Chamber of Deputies from 196 to 300. Under that plan, Nuevo León's seat allocation rose from 7 to 11. The newly created 9th district's head town was at Guadalupe and it covered a part of that city. The link contains an exact description of the area covered.
9th federal electoral district of Nuevo León
Deputies returned to Congress
Deputies returned to Congress + Ninth federal electoral district of Nuevo León Election Deputy Party Term Legislature1979Amparo Aguirre Hernández22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party1979–198251st Congress1982Alejandro Lambretón Narro22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party1982–198552nd Congress1985Humberto Cervantes Vega22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party1985–198853rd Congress1988María Elena Chapa Hernández22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party1988–199154th Congress1991Erasmo Garza Elizondo22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party1991–199455th Congress1994María Cristina Díaz Salazar22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party1994–199756th Congress1997Arturo Charles Charles22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party1997–200057th Congress2000Juan Paredes Gloria22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2000–200358th Congress2003Adrián Villagómez García22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2003–200659th Congress2006Ramón Salas López22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2006–200960th Congress2009Fermín Montes Cavazos22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2009–201261st Congress2012Marco Antonio González Valdez22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2012–201562nd Congress2015Ramón Villagómez Guerrero22px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2015–201863rd Congress201822px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2018–202164th Congress202122px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2021–202465th Congress202422px|link=Institutional Revolutionary Party2024–202766th Congress