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51990583_0
1903 German football championship Final
The 1903 German football championship Final decided the winner of the 1903 German football championship, the 1st edition of the German football championship, a knockout football cup competition contested by the regional league winners to determine the national champions. The match was played on 31 May 1903 at the Exerzierweide in Altona. VfB Leipzig won the match 7–2 against DFC Prag to become the first national champions in German football history. Route to the final The German football championship was a six team single-elimination knockout cup competition, featuring the champions of regional football associations. There were a total of two rounds leading up to the final. For all matches, the winner after 90 minutes advances. If still tied, extra time was used to determine the winner. Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away; N: neutral). VfB Leipzig Round DFC Prag Opponent Result 1903 German football championship Opponent Result Britannia Berlin (A) 3–1 Quarter-finals Karlsruher FV (N) Cancelled Altonaer FC 93 (H) 6–3 Semi-finals Karlsruher FV (N) Walkover Match Details 31 May 1903 16:45 CET VfB Leipzig 7–2 DFC Prag * W. Friedrich 31' * A. Friedrich 49' Report Meyer 22', 65' * Riso 54', 71', 88' * Stanischewski 69', 85' Exerzierweide, Altona Attendance: 2,000 Referee: Franz Behr (Altona) VfB Leipzig DFC Prag
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1903 German football championship Final
GK [Germany] Ernst Raydt (c) GK [Austria-Hungary] Charles Pick RB [Germany] Erhardt Schmidt RB [Austria-Hungary] Ladislaus Kurpiel LB [Germany] Arthur Werner LB [Austria-Hungary] Johann Schwarz RH [Germany] Wilhelm Rößler RH [Austria-Hungary] Béla Robitsek CH [Germany] Walter Friedrich CH [Austria-Hungary] Paul Fischl LH [Germany] Otto Braune LH [Austria-Hungary] Franz Sedlacek OR [Germany] Georg Steinbeck OR [Austria-Hungary] Karl Beck IR [Germany] Bruno Stanischewski IR [Austria-Hungary] Karl Kubik CF [Germany] Heinrich Riso CF [Austria-Hungary] Meyer IL [Germany] Adalbert Friedrich IL [Austria-Hungary] Fischer OL [Germany] Ottomar Aßmus OL [Austria-Hungary] Kubik Match rules * 90 minutes. * 30 minutes of extra time if necessary. * Unlimited 10 minute intervals of sudden death extra time if scores still level. * Replay at the referee's discretion if no winner. * No substitutions.
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1961 Coupe de France Final
The 1961 Coupe de France Final was a football match held at Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir, Colombes on May 7, 1961, that saw UA Sedan-Torcy defeat Nîmes Olympique 3–1 thanks to goals by Max Fulgenzi, Claude Brény and Mohamed Salem. Match details 7 May 1961 Sedan 3–1 Nîmes Fulgenzi 16' Brény 74' Constantino 86' Salem 82' Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir, Colombes Attendance: 39,070 Referee: Marcel Bois GK [France] Pierre Bernard GK [France] Alexandre Roszak DF [Cameroon] Zacharie Noah DF [Morocco] Mustapha Bettache DF [France] Louis Lemasson DF [France] Jean Bandera DF [France] Maryan Synakowski DF [France] Pierre Barlaguet (c) DF [France] Thadée Polak DF [France] Daniel Charles-Alfred MF [France] Guy Hatchi MF [France] Christian Oliver MF [Spain] Emilio Salaber MF [France] Alain Garnier FW [France] Marcel Mouchel (c) MF [Brazil] Pirès Constantino FW [Algeria] Mohamed Salem FW [Morocco] Hassan Akesbi FW [France] Max Fulgenzi FW [France] Alphonse Cassar FW [France] Claude Brény FW [France] Bernard Rahis Manager: Manager: [France] Louis Dugauguez [France][Algeria] Kader Firoud Assistant Referees: Fourth Official: * Coupe de France 1960-61 * Coupe de France results at Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation * Report on French federation site
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1968 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's Giant Slalom
1968 Women's Giant Slalom World Cup Previous: 1967 Next: 1969 Women's Giant Slalom World Cup 1967/1968 Main article: 1968 Alpine Skiing World Cup Calendar Round Race No Place Country Date Winner Second Third 1 1 Oberstaufen West Germany January 5, 1968 [Switzerland] Fernande Bochatay [France] Florence Steurer [Canada] Nancy Greene 2 3 Grindelwald Switzerland January 10, 1968 [Canada] Nancy Greene [France] Marielle Goitschel [Switzerland] Fernande Bochatay 3 11 Grenoble France February 15, 1968 [Canada] Nancy Greene [France] Annie Famose [Switzerland] Fernande Bochatay 4 13 Oslo Norway February 24, 1968 [Switzerland] Fernande Bochatay [France] Isabelle Mir [United States] Kiki Cutter 5 19 Aspen United States March 17, 1968 [Canada] Nancy Greene [France] Marielle Goitschel [West Germany] Rosi Mittermaier 6 21 Rossland Canada March 31, 1968 [Canada] Nancy Greene [France] Florence Steurer [Austria] Gertrude Gabl 7 22 Heavenly Valley United States April 5, 1968 [Austria] Gertrude Gabl [France] Florence Steurer [France] Isabelle Mir Note: Round 3/Race 11 was the Olympic event, which count also for the World Cup. See also 1968 Winter Olympics and Alpine skiing at the 1968 Winter Olympics Final point standings In Women's Giant Slalom World Cup 1967/68 the best 3 results count. Deductions are given in brackets.
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1968 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's Giant Slalom
Place Name Country Total Points Deduction 1[Germany] 3[Switzerland] 11[France] 13[Norway] 19[United States] 21[Canada] 22[United States] 1 Nancy Greene Canada 75 (48) (15) 25 25 - 25 (25) (8) 2 Fernande Bochatay Switzerland 65 (18) 25 15 (15) 25 (2) (1) - 3 Florence Steurer France 60 (19) 20 (8) (11) - - 20 20 4 Gertrude Gabl Austria 51 (16) (3) 11 (2) - (11) 15 25 5 Marielle Goitschel France 44 - 20 4 - 20 - - 6 Isabelle Mir France 41 (10) 6 (1) (6) 20 - (3) 15 7 Annie Famose France 32 (4) (4) - 20 - - 6 6 8 Rosi Mittermaier West Germany 29 - 3 - - 15 11 - 9 Judy Nagel United States 28 (4) - - - 11 6 (4) 11 10 Kiki Cutter United States 25 (2) - 4 - 15 - (2) 6 11 Divina Galica United Kingdom 17 (2) - 6 3 - 8 - (2) 12 Olga Pall Austria 16 8 - 8 - - - - 13 Burgl Färbinger West Germany 14 11 2 1 - - - - 14 Brigitte Seiwald Austria 10 2 - - - - 8 - 15 Judy Leinweber Canada 8 - - - 8 - - - 16 Gina Hathorn United Kingdom 7 - - - - 4 - 3 17 Dietlinde Wurmer West Germany 6 - - - 6 - - - 18 Wendy Allen United States 4 - - - 4 - - - 19 Suzy Chaffee United States 3 - - - 3 - - - Marilyn Cochran United States 3 - - - - 3 - - 21 Betsy Clifford Canada 2 - - - 2 - - - 22 Robin Morning United States 1 1 - - - - - - Penny McCoy United States 1 - - - 1 - - - Christine Béranger France 1 - - - - 1 - - Wiltrud Drexel Austria 1 - - - - - - 1 Women's Giant Slalom Team Results All points were shown including individual deduction. bold indicate highest score - italics indicate race wins
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1968 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's Giant Slalom
Place Country Total Points 1[Germany] 3[Switzerland] 11[France] 13[Norway] 19[United States] 21[Canada] 22[United States] Racers Wins 1 France 211 30 29 41 20 21 29 41 5 0 2 Canada 133 15 25 25 10 25 25 8 3 4 3 Austria 94 13 11 10 - 11 23 26 4 1 4 Switzerland 83 25 15 15 25 2 1 - 1 2 5 United States 71 1 4 - 34 9 6 17 7 0 6 West Germany 49 11 5 1 6 15 11 - 3 0 7 United Kingdom 26 - 6 3 - 12 - 5 2 0 Alpine skiing World Cup Women Overall | Downhill | Giant Slalom | Slalom 1968 * fis-ski.com
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Outlets at Anthem
The Outlets at Anthem is an outlet mall located in Anthem, Arizona, that has hosted the tallest Christmas tree in America for multiple years. * U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Prime Outlets at New River Shopping Center * Official website
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SFO–Millbrae line
The SFO–Millbrae line (also known as the SFO–Millbrae shuttle) was a Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) shuttle line in the San Francisco Bay Area that ran between Millbrae station and San Francisco International Airport station (SFO). The line was colored purple on maps, and BART sometimes called it the Purple Line. Service history 2003–2004 service Detail from 2003 BART map showing the SFO-Millbrae shuttle service When the BART-SFO Extension opened on June 22, 2003, the Pittsburg/Bay Point line (Yellow Line) was extended to Millbrae station, while the Dublin/Pleasanton line (Blue Line) was extended to San Francisco International Airport station. Service between the SFO and Millbrae terminals was provided by this line, which operated every 20 minutes. For the next several years, direct service between SFO and Millbrae was provided by other BART lines. Between February 2004 and September 2005, the Richmond line (Red Line) connected the stations on weekdays and Pittsburg/Bay Point line (Yellow Line) connected the stations on nights and weekends. Between September 2005 and January 2008, the Dublin/Pleasanton line (Blue Line) provided the connection at all times. On January 1, 2008, direct service between Millbrae and the airport was discontinued and passengers connecting between SFO and Millbrae needed to transfer at San Bruno station. 2019–2021 service A shuttle train at Millbrae in February 2019 On June 24, 2018, SamTrans began operating route SFO, a dedicated bus service between the two stations. Unlike BART service, the bus route operates on irregular headways timed to meet certain Caltrain trains at Millbrae. On February 11, 2019, BART resumed direct SFO–Millbrae service at all times. On weekdays until 9 pm and on Sundays, a dedicated shuttle train operated between the two stations, with timed transfers to Antioch line (Yellow Line) trains at SFO. The Antioch line continued to run between SFO and Millbrae on weeknights and Saturdays. Beginning on March 22, 2021, the shuttle was interlined with the Richmond line on weekdays, and with the Antioch line on weekends.
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SFO–Millbrae line
On March 6, 2022, a break in a power cable near Berkeley caused SFO–Richmond service to be temporarily discontinued. On March 8, a shuttle service began operating between SFO and Millbrae. Route map: Template:Attached KML/SFO–Millbrae line KML is not from Wikidata
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Ioannis Nikolidis Pindos
Ioan Nicolidi of Pindus
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Quercus praineana
Quercus praineana is a species of plant in the family Fagaceae. It is endemic to the Mexican states of Jalisco and Sinaloa.
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1919 Coupe de France Final
The 1919 Coupe de France Final was a football match held at Parc des Princes, Paris on 6 April 1919, that saw CASG Paris defeat Olympique de Paris 3–2 thanks to goals by Emilien Devic and Louis Hatzfeld (2). Match details 6 April 1919 CASG Paris 3–2 (a.e.t.) Olympique de Paris Devic 20' Darques 60' Hatzfeld 110' 118' Dewaquez 100' Parc des Princes, Paris Attendance: 10,000 Referee: Armand Thibaudeau CASG PARIS: OLYMPIQUE DE PARIS: GK [France] Lucien Ganneval GK [France] Blochet DF [England] John Mentha (c) DF [France] A. Fievet DF [France] Célestin Frizon DF [France] Henri Vasselin DF [England] Hadden DF [France] Marcel Jousserand DF [France] Alphonse Schmer DF [France] Maurice Ninot MF [France] Emilien Devic MF [Belgium] Van Steck MF [France] Eugène Devicq MF [France] Jules Dewaquez FW [France] Paul Deydier FW [France] Paul Landauer FW [England] Louis Hatzfeld FW [France] Marcel Mainguet FW [France] Jean Boyer FW [France] Louis Darques (c) FW [France] Julien Devicq FW [France] Eugène Dartoux Manager: Manager: ? ? Assistant Referees: Fourth Official: * Coupe de France 1918-1919 * Coupe de France results at Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation * Report on French federation site
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1988 African Cup of Champions Clubs Final
The 1988 African Cup of Champions Clubs Final was a football tie held over two legs in November and December 1988 between Entente de Sétif,Iwuanyanwu Nationale FC. Road to the final Further information: 1988 African Cup of Champions Clubs [Algeria] Entente de Sétif Round [Nigeria] Iwuanyanwu Nationale FC Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Round Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Bye Preliminary round Bye [Mali] Stade Malien 5–1 1–1 (away) 4–0 (home) First round [Benin] Requins de l'Atlantique FC 3–0 2–0 (home) 1–0 (away) [Tunisia] ES Sahel 3–2 1–2 (away) 2–0 (home) Second round [Cameroon] Tonnerre Yaoundé 4–3 2–0 (home) 2–3 (away) [Gabon] FC 105 Libreville 4–3 1–3 (away) 3–0 (home) Quarter-finals [Ivory Coast] Africa Sports 3–2 2–0 (home) 1–2 (away) [Egypt] Al Ahly SC 2–2 (4–2p) 2–0 (home) 0–2 (away) Semi-finals [Morocco] FAR Rabat 5–5 (5–3p) 4–1 (home) 1–4 (away) First leg Match details 26 November 1988 --:-- UTC+1 Iwuanyanwu Nationale [Nigeria] 1–0 [Algeria] Entente de Sétif * Ozogula 29'
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1988 African Cup of Champions Clubs Final
Liberty Stadium, Ibadan Attendance: 25,000 Referee: Idrissa Traoré (Mali) Iwuanyanwu Nationale: Entente de Sétif: GK – [Ghana] Edward Ansah GK 1 [Algeria] Antar Osmani DF – [Nigeria] Ramson Madu DF 2 [Algeria] Djamel Nabti DF – [Nigeria] Godwin Eke DF 3 [Algeria] Kamel Adjas DF – [Nigeria] Andrew Uwe DF 4 [Algeria] Ammar Bernaoui MF – [Nigeria] Uwakwe Eke DF 5 [Algeria] Abdelhakim Serrar (c) MF – [Nigeria] Friday Ekpo MF 6 [Algeria] Dhia Eddine Djihad Boulahdjilet MF – [Nigeria] Thompson Oliha FW – [Algeria] Chawki Raïs [downward-facing red arrow] FW – [Nigeria] Paul Uzokwe MF 8 [Algeria] Malik Zorgane MF – [Nigeria] Lawrence Ukaegbu FW 9 [Algeria] Abderrazak Rahmani FW – [Nigeria] Michael Obiku MF 10 [Algeria] Nacer Adjissa DF – [Nigeria] Samson Ozogula FW – [Algeria] Ammar Doudou [downward-facing red arrow] Substitutes: Substitutes: GK – [Nigeria] Wahab Haruna GK – [Algeria] Fayçal Kessai Manager: FW – [Algeria] Derradji Bendjaballah [upward-facing green arrow] [Greece] Dimitris Theofanis FW – [Algeria] Abderrahim Bendjaballah [upward-facing green arrow] Manager: [Algeria] Abdelkrim Khelfa Technical Director: [Algeria] Mokhtar Aribi Second leg Match details 9 December 1988 --:-- UTC+1 Entente de Sétif [Algeria] 4–0 [Nigeria] Iwuanyanwu Nationale * Zorgane 50' * Rahmani 52' * Uwe 85' (o.g.) * A. Bendjaballah 87'
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1988 African Cup of Champions Clubs Final
Stade 17 Juin, Constantine Attendance: 55,000 Referee: Badara Sène (Senegal) Entente de Sétif: Iwuanyanwu Nationale: GK 1 [Algeria] Antar Osmani GK 1 [Ghana] Edward Ansah DF 2 [Algeria] Djamel Nabti DF 3 [Nigeria] Godwin Eke DF 3 [Algeria] Kamel Adjas DF 4 [Nigeria] Cyril Levi (c) DF 4 [Algeria] Ammar Bernaoui DF 5 [Nigeria] Toyin Ayinla MF 6 [Algeria] Dhia Eddine Djihad Boulahdjilet [downward-facing red arrow] MF 6 [Nigeria] Andrew Uwe FW 7 [Algeria] Abderrahim Bendjaballah FW 7 [Nigeria] Uwem Ekarika MF 8 [Algeria] Malik Zorgane [downward-facing red arrow] MF 8 [Nigeria] Samson Ozogula FW 9 [Algeria] Mustapha Gharib FW 9 [Nigeria] Uwakwe Eke MF 10 [Algeria] Nacer Adjissa MF 10 [Nigeria] Friday Ekpo FW 11 [Algeria] Hamid Rahmouni FW 11 [Nigeria] Lawrence Ukaegbu DF 14 [Algeria] Abdelhakim Serrar (c) DF 14 [Nigeria] John Benson Substitutes: Substitutes: GK – [Algeria] Fayçal Kessai MF 13 [Nigeria] Peter Nieketien MF – [Algeria] Chawki Raïs [upward-facing green arrow] FW 15 [Nigeria] Paul Uzokwe MF – [Algeria] Ammar Doudou [upward-facing green arrow] GK – [Nigeria] Wahab Haruna FW – [Algeria] Derradji Bendjaballah DF – [Nigeria] Ramson Madu FW – [Algeria] Salah Bourahla MF – [Nigeria] Thompson Oliha Absents: Absents: FW – [Algeria] Abderrazak Rahmani FW – [Nigeria] Michael Obiku Manager: Manager: [Algeria] Abdelkrim Khelfa [Greece] Dimitris Theofanis Technical Director: [Algeria] Mokhtar Aribi Notes and references * African Club Competitions 1988 - Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation
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1963 Golden Helmet (Poland)
1963 Golden Helmet Previous 1962 Next 1964 The Golden Helmet (Polish: Turniej o Złoty Kask, ZK) is an annual motorcycle speedway event, and has been organized by the Polish Motor Union (PZM) since 1961. Currently the race is held in PC Team 3rd from last season (previously Wrocław), with the top twelve riders in the Extraleague and the top four riders in the First League. 1963 Golden Helmet season was the third since its establishment. Calendar Date Venue Winner 27 IV Gorzów Wlkp. Stanisław Tkocz (Rybnik) 25 V Rybnik Stanisław Tkocz (Rybnik) 8 VI Leszno Joachim Maj (Rybnik) 6 VII Bydgoszcz Florian Kapała (Rzeszów) 27 VII Świętochłowice Joachim Maj (Rybnik) 21 IX Wrocław Joachim Maj (Rybnik) Final classification Note: Result from final score was subtracted with one the weakest events. Pos. Rider Club Total GOR RYB LES BYD ŚWI WRO 1 Joachim Maj Górnik Rybnik 68 9 11 14 13 15 15 2 Stanisław Tkocz Górnik Rybnik 66 15 15 8 12 11 13 3 Henryk Żyto Unia Leszno 55 11 10 10 9 13 11 4 Paweł Waloszek Śląsk Świętochłowice 55 10 13 9 - 14 9 5 Antoni Woryna Górnik Rybnik 54 - 9 12 12 10 11 6 Marian Kaiser Wybrzeże Gdańsk 47 10 9 12 6 10 - 7 Bronisław Rogal Stal Gorzów Wlkp. 38 10 5 8 7 3 8 8 Andrzej Pogorzelski Gorzów Wlkp. 30 9 4 2 6 - 9 9 Stanisław Rurarz Włókniarz Częstochowa 27 3 8 6 6 4 3 10 Jan Mucha Śląsk Świętochłowice 25 0 6 9 2 6 2 11 Stefan Kępa Stal Rzeszów 22 7 1 1 8 2 4 12 Jan Kusiak Unia Leszno 21 3 2 7 4 - 5 13 Edmund Migoś Stal Gorzów Wlkp. 21 7 1 5 3 3 3
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1963 Golden Helmet (Poland)
* Roman Lach - Polish Speedway Almanac Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine * 1963 in sports
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1968 Challenge Cup Final
The 1968 Challenge Cup Final also remembered as the Watersplash Final was a rugby league match contested between Leeds and Wakefield Trinity on 11 May 1968 at Wembley Stadium in London. It was the 67th final of English rugby league's primary cup competition, the Challenge Cup. The match was played in virtually unplayable conditions due to the state of the waterlogged pitch caused by heavy downpours both before and during the game. The final is best remembered for Wakefield's Don Fox missing a conversion from in front of the posts in the last minute of the game, handing Leeds an 11–10 victory. It was the club's eighth Challenge Cup win, and the first since 1957. Fox was the winner of the Lance Todd Trophy, as he had already been voted as man of the match before his miss. Match details 11 May 1968 15:00 Leeds 11 – 10 Wakefield Trinity Try: Atkinson Report Try: Hirst (2) Goal: Risman (4) Goal: Fox (2) Wembley, London Attendance: 87,100 Referee: John Hebblethwaite (York) Player of the Match: Don Fox FB 1 [England] Bev Risman FB 1 [England] Gary Cooper RW 2 [England] Alan Smith RW 2 [England] Ken Hirst RC 3 [England] Syd Hynes RC 3 [England] Ian Brooke LC 4 [England] Bernard Watson LC 4 [South Africa] Gert Coetzer LW 5 [England] John Atkinson LW 5 [England] Kenneth Batty SO 6 [England] Mick Shoebottom SO 6 [England] Harold Poynton (c) SH 7 [England] Barry Seabourne SH 7 [England] Ray Owen PR 8 [England] Mick Clark (c) PR 8 [England] David Jeanes HK 9 [England] Tony Crosby HK 9 [England] George Shepherd PR 10 [England] Ken Eyre PR 10 [England] Don Fox SR 11 [England] Bill Ramsey SR 11 [England] Bob Haigh SR 12 [England] Albert Eyre SR 12 [England] Matthew McLeod LF 13 [England] Ray Batten LF 13 [England] David Hawley Coach: Coach: Roy Francis Ken Traill * Pathe News coverage of the Rugby Cup Final 1968 * Rugby Football League website
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Sergei Makarov (footballer, born 1996)
For other people named Sergei Makarov, see Sergei Makarov (disambiguation). Sergei Vasilyevich Makarov (Russian: Сергей Васильевич Макаров; born 3 October 1996) is a Russian footballer. He plays as a right-back for Akron Tolyatti. Club career During 2016–2017 he played for Minsk.Anorthosis, but only played for their Under-21 team, making no appearances for the senior squad. On 14 January 2018 he signed a 1-year contract with FC SKA-Khabarovsk. International He won the 2013 UEFA European Under-17 Championship with the Russia national under-17 football team, with which he also participated in the 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup. He also participated in the 2015 UEFA European Under-19 Championship, in which Russia national under-19 football team was the runner-up. Career statistics As of 4 March 2018 Club Season League Cup Continental Total Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Lokomotiv Moscow 2012–13 Russian Premier League 0 0 0 0 – 0 0 2013–14 0 0 0 0 – 0 0 2014–15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2015–16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Minsk 2016 Belarusian Premier League 30 2 4 0 – 34 2 2017 13 0 2 0 – 15 0 Total 43 2 6 0 0 0 49 2 Anorthosis Famagusta 2017–18 Cypriot First Division 0 0 0 0 – 0 0 SKA-Khabarovsk 2017–18 Russian Premier League 0 0 0 0 – 0 0 Career total 43 2 6 0 0 0 49 2 * Sergei Makarov at Soccerway * Sergei Makarov at FootballFacts.ru (in Russian) * Sergei Makarov at Russian Premier League * Profile at Lokomotiv Moscow website
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Palestinian prisoners of Israel (or as used by the Israel Prison Service: Security prisonersPalestinians imprisoned in Israel in the context of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The future of Palestinian prisoners detained by Israel is considered central to progress in the Israeli–Palestinian peace process.terrorism or being a member of an "illegal terrorist organization", such as Hamas or prior to the Oslo Accords the Palestine Liberation Organization, but according to some accounts also by political activism such as raising a Palestinian flag. In December 2011, 4,772 Palestinian security prisoners were serving terms in Israeli prisons. Of these, 552 were sentenced to life terms. In April 2022, there were 4,450 Palestinian security prisoners in Israeli prisons – including 160 children, 32 women, and 530 "administrative detainees" (incarcerated without charge). Overview Damon prison, located at the depopulated Palestinian village of Khirbat Al-Dumun Jalame Prison (Kishon Detention Center), located at the depopulated Palestinian village of Al-Jalama, Haifa The military court system for the occupied territories, modeled partially on the British military court system set up in 1937, The measures it applies, combining elements of colonial administration and martial law, cover not only incidents involving recourse to violence but many other activities, non-violent protests, political and cultural statements and the way Palestinians are allowed to move or associate with each other. Some of the problematic facets of the system Palestinian prisoners are subject to are, according to sociology professor Lisa Hajjar; prolonged detention of suspects incommunicado, impeding a client's access to his lawyer, the routine use of coercion under interrogation to obtain confessions and the introduction of "secret evidence".
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have been put on trial since 1967. According to Saree Makdisi the cumulative total of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel reached 650,000 in 2005.Tamar Pelleg-Sryck (2011), tens of thousands have been subjected to administrative detention.First Intifada (1987-1992) – and their conviction rates varied from 90 to 95%, being for the most part secured by plea bargains in 97% of cases. According to Red Cross statistics, in the first two decades of the occupation, from 1967 to 1987, one in three Palestinians, about 500,000, were detained by Israeli forces,Area C, causing greater difficulty for lawyers and family of the defendant to get access to the tribunals because of the permit system. The specific practice of administrative detention was initially introduced by the British to subdue Palestinians, but was then increasingly applied to cope with behavior by Jewish political activists and suspected members of Jewish paramilitary organizations, an extension vigorously opposed by Jewish settlers at the time and one which Jewish lawyers in July 1936 argued should be repealed. Dov Yosef likewise argued in 1948 that the practice abolished the writ of habeas corpus and had led to the improper incarceration by the British of numerous Jewish activists. statute book.Order Concerning Security Instructions, and applied it to cases where the rules of evidence of Israeli courts would not allow the suspect to be convicted.Bir Zeit University professor of Mathematics, was arrested at night on 21 April 1974 and released on 18 January 1978, after suffering 45 months of imprisonment without trial or charges being laid, only after Amnesty International issued a public protest. Writing in 1978 Michael Goldstein called the detention system "an aberration of criminal justice", but temporary in nature and dictated by an ongoing war situation. He credited Israel with refraining from making it part of their judicial, as opposed to military, system.NGO workers, without charge or trial under renewable orders, based on information withheld from detainees and their lawyers", and that administrative detainees numbered 441. Notable Palestinians who have been recently subjected to the process include Khalida Jarrar and Ahmad Qatamesh, both of whom are regarded by Amnesty International as prisoners of conscience. Number of prisoners
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Number of prisoners According to the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights, from the Six-Day War (1967) to the First Intifada (1988), over 600,000 Palestinians were held in Israeli jails for a week or more.The Guardian's Jerusalem correspondent, estimated that one-fifth of the population has at one time been imprisoned since 1967.Salam Fayyad stated that since 1967, 800,000 Palestinians, or roughly 20% of the total population and 40% of the male population, had been imprisoned by Israel at one point in time. About 100,000 had been held in administrative detention. According to B'Tselem, there was a decline, starting in 1998, in the number of Palestinians held in administrative detention. Less than 20 were held from 1999 to October 2001. However, with the start of the Second Intifada (2000), and particularly after Operation Defensive Shield (2002), the numbers steadily rose. In 2007, the number of Palestinians under administrative detention averaged about 830 per month, including women and minors under the age of 18.Ofer Prison in the West Bank and Megiddo and Ketziot prisons in Israel. In April 2008, Adalah: The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel stated that 11,000 Palestinians were in prison and detention in Israel, including 98 women, 345 minors, 50 members of the Palestinian Legislative Council, and 3 ministers of the Palestinian National Authority.West Bank, 762 from the Gaza Strip, and 694 from within Israel itself (including 552 from Jerusalem).Haaretz reported that 600 Palestinians were being held in administrative detention in Israel, including "about 15 minors who do not know even know why they are being detained." In May 2020, there were 4,236 Palestinian security prisoners in Israeli prisons, including 352 held in administrative detention, meaning incarceration without charge. In April 2022, there were 4,450 Palestinian security prisoners in Israeli prisons – including 160 children, 32 women, and 530 "administrative detainees" (incarcerated without charge). Minors
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Minors In 2000–2009, 6,700 Palestinians between the ages of 12 and 18 were arrested by the Israeli authorities, according to Defence for Children International's Palestine Section (DCI/PS). In 2009, a total of 423 were being held in Israeli detention and interrogation centers and prisons. In April 2010 the number dropped to 280. DCI/PS states that these detentions stand in contravention of international law.The Economist, "nearly all" were "brought to court in leg shackles and handcuffs." Public figures Marwan Barghouti, a leader of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades militia, convicted by Israeli court on five counts of murder and sentenced to five life sentences and forty years in prison. There are several Palestinian leaders and politicians held in Israeli jails, including 47 Hamas members of the Palestinian Legislative Council, in addition to some ministers and the mayors and municipal council members of various towns and cities in the West Bank. Marwan Barghouti a leader of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades militia and al-Mustaqbal political party, was arrested and tried by an Israeli civilian court for attacks carried out by the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades. He was convicted on 20 May 2004 on five counts of murder and sentenced to five life sentences and forty years. Ahmad Sa'adat, secretary-general of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) is currently held by Israel.Jericho by the Palestinian National Authority, for his role in the assassination of Israeli Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi on 17 October 2001 by the PFLP. The Palestinian Supreme Court later declared his imprisonment unconstitutional. His imprisonment by the PNA, rather than extradition to Israel as required by the Oslo Accords, was negotiated between the PNA, Israel the US and the UK. Under the terms of that agreement, the imprisonment was to be monitored by US and UK observers. On 14 March 2006, after both the American and British monitors, as well as the Palestinian guards of the Jericho jail abandoned their posts, Israeli forces surrounded the prison in Jericho and took Sa'adat, who has been under administrative detention since then.
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
In 2005, three members of Nablus's municipal council including the mayor Adly Yaish, Qalqilya mayor Wajih Qawas, Beita mayor Arab Shurafa,Bani Zeid municipal council – all members of Hamas were arrested. Payments by Palestinian Authority Main article: Palestinian Authority Martyrs Fund In 2003, Palestinian law mandated a monthly salary of $250 to Palestinian security detainees imprisoned in Israel for up to five years, with a higher payment to those serving a longer term. Those who served a life sentence were paid $1,000 per month. In January 2011, Prime Minister Salam Fayyad enacted an amendment to increase these payments by 300%. In March 2009, an extra $190 was added to these payments to prisoners affiliated with Palestine Liberation Organization factions in Israeli prisons. Each PLO-affiliated prisoner receives $238 per month, along with an extra $71 if they're married and $12 for each child. As of May 2011, the Palestinian Authority spent $4.5 million per month paying Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, including prisoners convicted of murdering civilians, and $6.5 million to the families of suicide bombers. The salaries, funded by the PA, are given to Fatah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad prisoners. These payments comprise 6% of the PA's budget. Hamas member Abdullah Barghouti, who was sentenced to 67 life terms for perpetrating the killings of 67 Israelis, receives NIS 4,000. In addition, prisoners who have been imprisoned for over 30 years receive NIS 12,000 ($3,000) per month. In November 2011, ahead of the Eid Al-Adha holiday, the Palestinian Authority paid Palestinian prisoners 550 NIS (about $140), as well as 50 NIS (about $12) to purchase sweets during the holiday. Prisoner exchanges and releases
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Prisoner exchanges and releases Israel has released Palestinians in prisoner exchange agreements concluded with various Palestinian militia factions. In 1985, Israel released 1,150 prisoners, including Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, in exchange for three Israeli POWs being held by Ahmed Jibril.Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip called for the release of Palestinian detainees in stages, as part of a series of "confidence-building measures."Wye River Memorandum specified that Israel was to release 750 Palestinian prisoners, some 250 of which were released by the time of the Sharm el-Sheikh Memorandum in 1999.Ramadan,East Jerusalem were released the next day after protests from the Palestinian Authority, which had expected more. At the Sharm el-Sheikh Summit on 8 February 2005, Israel pledged to release another 900 Palestinian prisoners of the 7,500 being held at the time.Qassam rocket attacks on Sderot on 5 May, Ariel Sharon withheld the release of the remaining 400, citing the need for the Palestinian Authority to rein in militants. On 25 August 2008, Israel released 198 prisoners in a "goodwill gesture" to encourage diplomatic relations and support Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas. On 15 December 2008, Israel released 224 Palestinian prisoners from Ofer Prison in the West Bank, 18 of them released to the Gaza Strip. In 2011, the Israeli government released 1,027 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held by Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip for more than five years.Hamas leader Ahmed Jabari was quoted in the Saudi Arabian newspaper Al-Hayat as confirming that the prisoners released as part of the deal were collectively responsible for the killing of 569 Israeli civilians.
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
In October 2012, according to data compiled by the Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth, dozens of the prisoners released in the Gilad Shalit exchange had resumed terror activity. Many had joined the leadership of Hamas, others had developed weapons and fired rockets, some had recruited members to terrorist cells in the West Bank. Former prisoners in the West Bank have also engaged in violent activity, and Israel arrested 40 of them for rioting, throwing Molotov cocktails, funneling money to terrorism, and other acts. One cell in Hebron planted a bomb in Jerusalem and plotted to kidnap an Israeli soldier. However, a senior defense official stated that cooperation between Israeli security forces and Palestinian Authority was effective in tracking the individuals and preventing further attacks. In August 2013, the Israeli Cabinet agreed on a four-stage process by which 104 Palestinian prisoners will be released as part of a "confidence-building" measure aimed at boosting renewed Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. In December 2013, Israel freed another 26 Palestinian prisoners under the peace talks brokered by US Secretary of State John Kerry. Breach of international law Terrorists versus "prisoners of war" Further information: right to resist In July 2003, the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) reported that "Israel does not recognize Palestinian prisoners as having the status of prisoners of war."terrorists, and either charged with terrorist offences or violent crimes or administratively detained without charge. It has been argued by supporters of the Palestinian cause that according to the Geneva Conventions, Palestinians who are members of armed resistance organizations should be entitled to prisoner of war status and not called terrorists. The position of the Geneva Conventions with regard to Palestinians detained for armed activity against Israeli forces is not entirely clear. Additional Protocol I The Third Geneva Convention of 1949, Deportation of prisoners Until the early 1990s, Palestinian prisoners were held in detention facilities in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Since then, most of them are deported to prisons and detention centres on Israeli territoryFourth Geneva Convention, which states that detained persons have the right to remain in occupied territory in all stages of detention, including serving of sentences if convicted.Supreme Court of Israel rejected a petition by the human rights group Yesh Din seeking to halt the practice of detention inside Israel. Administrative detention
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Administrative detention Further information: Defence (Emergency) Regulations Khalida Jarrar has been in Administrative detention since October, 2019. Amnesty International has stated that Israel has imprisoned Palestinians for prolonged periods, without charging them or putting them on trial.European Union has criticized the policy. The Defense Minister has the authority to issue Administrative Detention orders for up to six months in cases where there is a reasonable chance that the person harms the security of the state. The same Minister has the authority to renew such orders. Likewise, the Chief of the General Staff can issue such orders, but valid for only 48 hours. Law enforcement authorities have to show cause within 48 hours (in a hearing behind closed doors). Administrative Detention orders can be appealed to the District Court and, if denied there, to the Supreme Court of Israel. The District Court can annul such orders if it finds the administrative detention occurred for reasons other than security (e.g., common crimes, or the exercise of freedom of expression). Overall supervisory authority on the application of the relevant law rests with the Minister of Justice. Within the West Bank, any local army commander can issue an administrative detention order, and the order can be appealed at the local military court, or, if denied there, at the Supreme Court. However, the Supreme Court almost never intervenes.Geneva Convention 1949, which states that "If the Occupying Power considers it necessary, for imperative reasons of security, to take safety measures concerning protected persons, it may, at the most, subject them to assigned residence or to internment." The first use of an administrative detention order in the West Bank following the 1967 War was on 3 September 1967. Over 100 people were detained during the first year of the occupation. The detainees were held for up to a year or deported. In 1974 there was a crack down on Palestinian nationalist organizations which led to 200 people being detained, some of whom were held without trial for five years. In 1978 Amnesty International launched an appeal against the use of administrative detention which led to a change in procedures. The number detained fell from 30 cases in 1978 to only one in 1981. He was released in March 1982 having been held for seven years. The use of administrative detention orders resumed in August 1985 with over 100 detained in two weeks. Some notable examples include:
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Some notable examples include: * On 20 March 2010, Moatasem Nazzal, a 16-year-old Palestinian was arrested at his home in Qalandiya refugee camp without explanation and remained imprisoned until 26 December 2010. Khader Adnan graffiti in Ramallah * On 17 December 2011, Israel arrested Khader Adnan for "activities that threaten regional security." While Adnan was a member of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Israel did not accuse Adnan of direct involvement in any attacks by the group. Israeli officials did not charge him with any crime. After Adnan went on a hunger strike, the Israeli justice ministry announced that he would be released. This announcement reportedly cancelled a judicial review of the Israeli practice to hold prisoners without trial. * On 21 November 2015, Palestinian journalist Muhammad al-Qiq was put on administrative detention, allegedly for "terror activity." His case gained notoriety as he went on a hunger strike to protest his detention. He was released on 19 May 2016 after enduring a 94-day hunger strike and without having been charged with any crime. * On 15 June 2016, Bilal Kayed was placed under administrative detention after being released from a 15-year-long prison sentence. Kayed went on a hunger strike and eventually reached a deal with Israeli authorities to be released at the end of the six months. * On 3 April 2017, a 16-year-old boy Nour Issa was placed under administrative detention for four months (subsequently extended to seven) on charges of "incitement on Facebook." As of January 2012, 309 Palestinians were held without criminal charges, according to B'Tselem: * 16 Palestinians have been held without charge for 2–4.5 years * 88 have been held for 1–2 years * 80 have been held for 6 months-1 year In July 2012 the number had decreased to 250.Israel Prison Service figures for December 2012, 178 Palestinians were being held in administrative detention (without charge or trial). As of August 2022, more than 700 persons were held in administrative detention, all of them Palestinian including 7 Israeli citizens. Allegations of human rights abuse The IDF has been accused of prisoner abuse by Palestinian advocacy organizations. Physical torture
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Physical torture Until 1999, "moderate physical pressure" was permitted in the interrogation of suspects by the Israeli Shin Bet, as outlined in the Landau Commission report of 1987. In 1997, the United Nations Committee Against Torture stated that such methods constituted torture and were in breach of the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, a convention ratified by Israel in 1991. Uri Davis wrote that the ruling of 1999 came after 50 years of silence "in the face of systematic torture practiced in Israeli jails and detention centers against Palestinian prisoners and detainees, as well as other prisoners."Public Committee Against Torture in Israel found that "torture has, in most cases, ceased." In 2000, an official Israeli report acknowledged torture of detainees during the First Intifada. The report said that the leadership of Shin Bet knew about the torture but did nothing to stop it. Human rights organisations claim some detainees died or were left paralysed. Prisoners of Gaza More than 334 prisoners from Gaza includes 2 women and a child.Israelis prisons.Israeli Security Agency, so they can visit their relatives. While there is many limitations on Gaza families to enter in Israel. They allow prison visits every 2-month at most for 3 members of the family, only the spouses, parents and children under 16 years- old. In 2007, Israel prevented families from Gaza to visit their relatives after the capture of the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. The restrictions increased after armed groups in Gaza kidnapped the bodies of two Israeli soldiers killed during the 2014 Gaza conflict. Education programs In 1967, Palestinian prisoners were initially denied pencils and paper.Hebrew in Israeli prisons. In the 1980s, according to Maya Rosenfeld, the option of armed resistance was completely blocked and prisons became a "sanctuary". Her research among Palestinian refugees in the Dheisheh camp in Bethlehem found that the politicization process of young men from the camp underwent a qualitative transformation during their period of imprisonment, which she attributes to the internal organization practices of Palestinian prisoners and the central role of studies and education.
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Eventually, Palestinian prisoners were allowed to take online courses from the Open University of Israel and to complete academic degrees. Under the program, education for the prisoners was free, with prison authorities paying their university tuition. In 2009, there were 250 Palestinian prisoners studying at Israel's Open University. In June 2011, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced, in response to a halt in the peace talks, that Palestinian prisoners would no longer be granted the right to pursue academic degrees in prison.Israeli Supreme Court, which rejected their appeal. In their ruling, the judges stated that the right to free university education does not apply to those convicted of terror offenses. The ruling did, however, call on prison authorities to be "considerate" in deciding the cases of prisoners already in the midst of academic programs. Hunger strikes In 1998, there were nine hunger strikes conducted by Palestinian prisoners in different prisons in Israel.Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)."Nakba) and ending on 18 May, with 7 Palestinians killed and 1,000 injured. In addition, 60 Israelis were also wounded.Occupied Palestinian Territories were held, and concluded that the exposed tents and filthy bathrooms in which prisoners were housed and bathed were unfit for human use. In February 2017, Mohammed al-Qiq, a Palestinian journalist in an Israeli prison threatened an open hunger strike against administrative detention upon his re-arrest which the Israel Security Agency stated was for "terror activity" for the Islamist group Hamas.hunger strike and re-arrested in mid-January after participating in a protest on the West Bank demanding the release of bodies of Palestinian militants. Al-Qiq was one of a number of prominent Palestinian hunger strikers in 2016, who included the Balboul brothers who went without food for 77 and 79 days, Malik al-Qadi for 68 days, Bilal Kayid for 71 days. 2012 mass strikes Following his arrest on 17 December 2011, Khader Adnan, alleged by Israel to be a leader of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, began a hunger strike in protest at what he claims were the violent circumstances of his arrest.
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
In February 2012, approximately 1,800 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli prisons began a mass hunger strike in protest at the practice of administrative detention. Israel holds about 4,500 Palestinian prisoners, of which about 310 are being held in administrative detention, without the right to a trial. Four of the hunger strikers spent over two months without food. The demands of the hunger strikers included the right to family visits for prisoners from Gaza, the end of the use of extended solitary confinement and the release of those held under the administrative detention laws. Demonstrations in support of the prisoners were held in Nazareth, Umm al-Fahm, Kfar Kanna and Haifa. On 7 May 2012, the Israeli Supreme Court rejected the appeals on human rights grounds of two of the prisoners, Tha'er Halahlah and Bilal Diab.United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and the International Committee of the Red Cross both expressed concern about the condition of the hunger strikers. On 14 May, it was announced that the prisoners had agreed to end their hunger strike, having reached a deal with the Israeli authorities, brokered by Egypt and Jordan and following a formal request from Mahmoud Abbas. Under the deal, Israel agreed to limit administrative detention to six months, except in cases where new evidence against a suspect had emerged, to increase access to family visits and to return prisoners in solitary confinement to normal cells.Hanan Ashrawi of the Palestinian National Council stated the hunger strikers had "truly demonstrated that non-violent resistance is an essential tool in our struggle for freedom". Detention of Hisham Abu Hawash In August 2021, Hisham Abu Hawash, a 40-year-old construction worker and father of five from Dura, began a hunger strike in protest of his detention, as he had been held without charges or evidence against him since October 2020.
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
In January 2022, his lawyer, Jawad Boulos, announced that the detainee had agreed to end the 141-day strike, which was believed to be the longest hunger strike held by a Palestinian prisoner since Samer Issawi's hunger strike in 2013 after a compromise was reached between Israeli and Palestinian Authority (PA) officials to have him released him on 26 February 2022, when the second renewable six-month term of his detention would end. Palestinian officials agreed they'd ensure Abu Hawash would not be involved in any terrorist activities. The deal was mediated by Egyptian officials. During his hunger strike, Abu Hawash had also refused medical care. A medical team from the International Committee of the Red Cross visited the prisoner in early January and warned that he was in critical condition and could face irreversible health consequences or even death. He is to remain in the hospital until his release. Political and social activism According to Yezid Sayigh, an "inadvertent consequence" of Israel's internal security measures was to contribute to the social mobilization of Palestinian society.civil disobedience and unarmed protest." Palestinian Prisoners' Document Main article: Palestinian Prisoners' Document Five Palestinian prisoners being held in Israeli jails, affiliated with Fatah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), authored the Palestinian Prisoners' Document in 2006. The document outlined 18 points on the basis of which negotiations with Israel should proceed. Palestinian Prisoners Club The Palestinian Prisoners Club is an independent, non-governmental, Palestinian organization which was established in 1993 with around 1,600 members of former Palestinian prisoners who were at least a year in an Israeli jail. The purpose of the club is to assist and support the thousands of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. The club operates in variety of ways, ranging from legal aid, political action for the release of the prisoners, to aid to the families of prisoners.Qadura Fares has been consistently referred to as the "head" of the Palestinian Prisoners Club, so it is unclear exactly what position Fares actually holds. Mohammed Abu Sakha
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Palestinian prisoners of Israel
Mohammed Abu Sakha In March 2016, Amnesty International launchedShin Bet claims that the reason for the detention is that Sakha is a member of a terrorist organisation.Israel and to highlight * Camp 1391 * Ktzi'ot Prison * Lebanese prisoners in Israel * Ofer Prison * Revolving door policy (Palestinian Authority) * Prison’s, Detention center and the Interrogation center. Map, Addameer * 9 July 2008 Debate in the European Parliament on the issue of Palestinian prisoners in Israel * ad Dameer * Israeli Physicians for Human Rights * BtSelem human rights links * US State Department Human Rights Report 2011
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Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Church (London)
Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Church is a church in Kensington, London, located at the south-west corner of the intersection of Allen Street and Scarsdale Villas. It is dedicated to the founder of the Church of Alexandria, Mark the Evangelist. The building was previously Saint John's Presbyterian Church and was opened in 1863. Purchased from the Scottish Presbyterian church in 1975, Saint Mark's was the first Coptic Orthodox church in Europe. It was the seed church of the Coptic Orthodox Church in Britain and Ireland, first served by three hieromonks who later became members of the Holy Synod of the Coptic Orthodox Church. Services are conducted in both English and Arabic. The exterior of the church has remained almost unchanged since its construction in 1862-1863 in the Victorian Gothic style. However, the interior has changed significantly since then: in the 19th century to address aesthetic and practical issues apparent after the initial construction, involving several architects in the changes, and in the 20th century with its conversion to a Coptic Orthodox church. As part of the conversion, it was the first church outside Egypt to display Neo-Coptic iconography. History Construction (1862–1863) The construction of the church building originated in a suggestion made by the minister of the Regent Square church to the Reverend Gavin Carlyle, a nephew of Edward Irving, that Carlyle should travel from Edinburgh to preach in London. As a Scottish Presbyterian church (1863–1975) After the initial construction was completed, there were practical problems and aesthetic discontent with the interior of the church. A visitor to the church remarked: a feeling of disappointment it is impossible to repress ensues. The interior in no way accords with the idea conveyed by the outside inspection. It is roofed in one span, and heavily ceiled and panelled, producing a sense of depression. The walls are simply bare plaster, the pulpit very large and heavy, the pewing poor and plain. A northern gallery, evidently intended for an organ, is organless, and not much improved by large curtains.
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Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Church (London)
To attempt to address these issues, alterations were soon begun. In 1866–1867, advice was sought from J. J. Stevenson about acoustical matters, and in particular the design of the pulpit.chancel arch was inserted, galleries inserted at either end of the transept to increase the seating from 500 to 750. A missing organ was supplied and the pulpit replaced. The heating apparatus and stained glass were also replaced in the work. The last service of the Presbyterian church was held in October 1975. The congregation joined the former Congregational Kensington Chapel further up Allen Street, within the Kensington United Reformed Church. As a Coptic Orthodox church (1975–present) The nave of the church in 2015 In 1975 St John's was sold to the Coptic Orthodox Church and has been home to the congregation of St Mark's ever since. The church was consecrated by Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria in 1979, Ministry and functions A single holy liturgy is held each morning from Tuesday to Saturday, with two Sunday liturgies, one in Arabic and one in English. Description The church is built in the Victorian Gothic style. Exterior Externally the church stands about the same as when it was first constructed in 1863. Interior Iconography St Mark's was the first church outside of Egypt to display Neo-Coptic iconography. There are two stained glass windows, and a cycle of narrative icons, including a very large icon depicting the martyrdom of Saint Mark. * Coptic Orthodox Church in Britain and Ireland * St Mark's Coptic Orthodox Church - Official website
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Simplemente Lo Mejor (Ricardo Arjona album)
Not to be confused with Simplemente La Mejor (Jenni Rivera album). Simplemente Lo Mejor is a greatest hits album by Guatemalan singer-songwriter Ricardo Arjona that was released on December 2, 2008. The album is composed of Arjona's number-one hits, drawn from Animal Nocturno (1993) to Galería Caribe (2000). It served as his final project under the Sony Music label after signing a contract with Warner Music in 2008. A CD+DVD and a DVD edition of the album were released in several countries; these included a collection of music videos for the compilation's songs. Simplemente Lo Mejor was made available one month after the release of Arjona's eleventh studio album, 5to Piso (2008). This led to speculation that the labels were in a fight to win Arjona's fanbase and sales. Simplemente Lo Mejor reached number seven on the Mexican Albums Chart, the US Billboard Latin Pop Albums chart and number 33 on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart. It was awarded platinum certifications in Argentina and Mexico. Background and release [Ricardo Arjona, singing into a microphone] Despite Arjona signing a record deal in 2008 with Warner Music, Simplemente Lo Mejor was released by Sony Music. Background After spending the majority of his career signed to Sony and Sony BMG, Arjona signed a long-term recording deal with Warner Music LatinaWarner Music Latin America commented that "he's an artist that fits perfectly with our company"; he also stated "We are a label that has a major catalog of songwriters and quality pop and rock from the likes of Maná, Alejandro Sanz, Laura Pausini, and now, Arjona."5to Piso, on 18 November 2008. In the first month of retail sales, approximately 200,000 copies were purchased; it went Platinum in Mexico,Grammy Award nomination for Best Latin Pop Album and a Latin Grammy Award nomination for Best Singer-Songwriter Album. Release
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Simplemente Lo Mejor (Ricardo Arjona album)
Release While Warner Music released Arjona's new studio album, Sony Music released Simplemente Lo Mejor. This led to speculation that the labels were in a fight to win his fanbase and sales.5to Piso hit shelves on 18 November 2008 in the United States,Simplemente Lo Mejor followed on 2 December 2008.Univisión named Simplemente Lo Mejor "a true collector's item that every fan of Arjona or just happy to his poetry should not be without." Reception Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating AllMusic Simplemente Lo Mejor entered the Top 100 Mexico at number 35 the week of its debut. The following week, the album jumped to number 17 and, on its third week of release, reached its peak of number seven. It spent three weeks inside the top ten and 27 weeks on the chart.Billboard Top Latin Albums chart, the album attained a peak of number 33 and stayed on the chart for 70 weeks.Simplemente Lo Mejor was awarded a platinum certification in Argentina and Mexico for 40,000 copies sold and shipped, respectively. Simplemente Lo Mejor received positive critical reception; Jason Birchmeier from AllMusic awarded the compilation four-and-a-half stars out of five and stated that the compilation is "nothing short of stellar, filled with major hits and showcasing perfectly Arjona's mid-'90s rise to fame." Track listing Following, the track list of Simplemente Lo Mejor as is shown on the iTunes Store.
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Simplemente Lo Mejor (Ricardo Arjona album)
No. Title Length 1. "Realmente No Estoy Tan Solo" 3:50 2. "Quien Diría" 3:55 3. "Historia de Taxi" 6:44 4. "Se Nos Muere El Amor" 4:08 5. "Mujeres" 3:27 6. "Cuándo" 4:37 7. "Señora de Las Cuatro Décadas" 5:11 8. "Jesús, Verbo No Sustantivo" 6:45 9. "Te Conozco" 4:10 10. "Si El Norte Fuera El Sur" 4:54 11. "Dime Que No" 4:26 12. "Primera Vez" 3:45 13. "Tu Reputación" 4:48 14. "Olvidarte" 5:27 15. "Me Enseñaste" 4:42 16. "Desnuda" 4:16 17. "Ella y Él" 6:15 Personnel Credits are taken from AllMusic. * Ricardo Arjona – composer, direction, primary artist, producer, realization * Carlos Cabral Jr. – arranger * Carlos Greene – artist direction * Waldo Madera – arranger * Angel "Cucco" Peña – arranger, producer Chart performance Charts Sales and certifications Chart (2008) Peak Region Certification Certified units/sales position Argentina (CAPIF) Platinum 40,000^ Mexican Albums (Top 100 Mexico) 7 Mexico (AMPROFON) Gold 40,000^ US Top Latin Albums (Billboard) 33 ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. US Latin Pop Albums (Billboard) 7 Release history Country Date Format(s) Label United States 2 December 2008 Digital download Sony Music CD+DVD,DVD Mexico Digital download Venezuela * Official website of Ricardo Arjona
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1936 Tschammerpokal Final
The 1936 Tschammerpokal Final decided the winner of the 1936 Tschammerpokal, the 2nd season of Germany's knockout football cup competition. It was played on 3 January 1937 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin.VfB Leipzig won the match 2–1 against Schalke 04 to claim their 1st cup title. Route to the final The Tschammerpokal began the final stage with 64 teams in a single-elimination knockout cup competition. There were a total of five rounds leading up to the final. Teams were drawn against each other, and the winner after 90 minutes would advance. If still tied, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a replay would take place at the original away team's stadium. If still level after 90 minutes, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a second replay would take place at the original home team's stadium. If still level after 90 minutes, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a drawing of lots would decide who would advance to the next round. Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away). VfB Leipzig Round Schalke 04 Opponent Result 1936 Tschammerpokal Opponent Result 1. SV Jena (H) 5–0 Round 1 VfvB Ruhrort (A) 5–2 Vorwärts-Rasensport Gleiwitz (A) 2–2 (a.e.t.) Round 2 SpVgg Röhlinghausen (H) 2–0 Vorwärts-Rasensport Gleiwitz (H) 3–0 (replay) Berliner SV 1892 (H) 2–0 Round of 16 VfB Stuttgart (A) 0–0 (a.e.t.) VfB Stuttgart (H) 6–0 (replay) VfB Peine (A) 4–2 Quarter-finals Werder Bremen (A) 5–2 (a.e.t.) Wormatia Worms (H) 5–1 Semi-finals FC Schweinfurt 05 (H) 3–2 Match Details
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1936 Tschammerpokal Final
Match Details 3 January 1937 VfB Leipzig 2–1 Schalke 04 * May 21' Report Kalwitzki 42' * Gabriel 32' Olympiastadion, Berlin Attendance: 70,000 Referee: Egon Zacher (Berlin) VfB Leipzig Schalke 04 GK 1 [Germany] Bruno Wöllner GK 1 [Germany] Hermann Mellage RB [Germany] Erich Dobermann RB [Germany] Hans Bornemann LB [Germany] Rudolf Große LB [Germany] Otto Schweisfurth RH [Germany] Gerhard Richter RH [Germany] Rudolf Gellesch CH [Germany] Erich Thiele CH [Germany] Hermann Nattkämper LH [Germany] Walter Jähnig LH [Germany] Otto Tibulski OR [Germany] Hans Breidenbach OR [Germany] Ernst Kalwitzki IR [Germany] Martin Schön IR [Germany] Fritz Szepan CF [Germany] Jacob May CF [Germany] Ernst Poertgen IL [Germany] Georg Reichmann IL [Germany] Ernst Kuzorra (c) OL [Germany] Herbert Gabriel OL [Germany] Ernst Sontow Manager: Manager: [Germany] Heinrich Pfaff [Germany] Hans Schmidt Match rules * 90 minutes. * 30 minutes of extra time if necessary. * Replay if scores still level. * No substitutions. * Match report at kicker.de (in German) * Match report at WorldFootball.net * Match report at Fussballdaten.de (in German)
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1988 Copa Libertadores Finals
The 1988 Copa Libertadores de América Finals was the final two-legged tie to determine the 1988 Copa Libertadores champion. It was contested by Uruguayan club Nacional and Argentine club Newell's Old Boys. The first leg of the tie was played on 19 October at Estadio Gigante de Arroyito of Rosario,Estadio Centenario of Montevideo. Nacional won the series 3–1 on aggregate, achieving their third Copa Libertadores trophy. Format The finals were played over two legs; home and away. The team that accumulated the most points —two for a win, one for a draw, zero for a loss— after the two legs was crowned champion. If the two teams had tied on points after the second leg, a playoff in a neutral venue would have become the next tie-breaker. Goal difference was used as a last resort. Qualified teams Team Previous finals app. [Argentina] Newell's Old Boys None [Uruguay] Nacional 5 (1964, 1967, 1969, 1971, 1980) Bold indicates winning years Venues Estadio Gigante de Arroyito (left) and Estadio Centenario, venues for the series Match details First leg 1988 Copa Libertadores Finals 19 October 1988 First leg Newell's Old Boys [Argentina] 1–0 [Uruguay] Nacional Gabrich 60' Report Gigante de Arroyito, Rosario Attendance: 45,000 Referee: Hernán Silva (Chile) Newell's Nacional
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1988 Copa Libertadores Finals
GK 1 [Argentina] Norberto Scoponi GK 1 [Uruguay] Jorge Seré DF 19 [Argentina] Darío Franco DF 20 [Uruguay] José Pintos Saldanha DF 2 [Argentina] Jorge Theiler DF 19 [Uruguay] Hugo De León (c) DF 6 [Argentina] Jorge Pautasso DF 4 [Uruguay] Felipe Reveléz DF 3 [Argentina] Roberto Sensini DF 23 [Uruguay] Carlos Soca MF 10 [Argentina] Juan J. Rossi MF 14 [Uruguay] Santiago Ostolaza MF 5 [Argentina] Juan Manuel Llop MF 5 [Uruguay] Jorge Cardaccio MF 8 [Argentina] Gerardo Martino (c) [downward-facing red arrow] 81' MF 8 [Uruguay] Yubert Lemos MF 9 [Argentina] Roque Alfaro MF 10 [Uruguay] William Castro FW 11 [Argentina] Sergio Almirón [downward-facing red arrow] 46' FW 9 [Uruguay] Ernesto Vargas [downward-facing red arrow] 89' FW 7 [Argentina] Gabriel Batistuta FW 6 [Uruguay] Juan C. de Lima Substitutes: Substitutes: FW 16 [Argentina] Jorge Gabrich [upward-facing green arrow] 46' FW 21 [Uruguay] Daniel Carreño [upward-facing green arrow] 89' DF 13 [Argentina] Miguel Fullana [upward-facing green arrow] 81' Manager: Manager: [Uruguay] Roberto Fleitas [Red card] 51' [Argentina] José Yudica Second leg Ostolaza scoring the second goal for Nacional in Montevideo 26 October 1988 Second leg Nacional [Uruguay] 3–0 [Argentina] Newell's Old Boys Vargas 13' Ostolaza 36' Report De León 78' Centenario, Montevideo Attendance: 75,000 Referee: Arnaldo Coelho (Brazil) Nacional Newell's
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1988 Copa Libertadores Finals
GK 1 [Uruguay] Jorge Seré GK 1 [Argentina] Norberto Scoponi DF 20 [Uruguay] José Pintos Saldanha DF 19 [Argentina] Darío Franco DF 19 [Uruguay] Hugo De León (c) DF 2 [Argentina] Jorge Theiler DF 4 [Uruguay] Felipe Reveléz DF 6 [Argentina] Jorge Pautasso [Red card] 115' DF 23 [Uruguay] Carlos Soca DF 3 [Argentina] Roberto Sensini MF 14 [Uruguay] Santiago Ostolaza MF 10 [Argentina] Juan J. Rossi MF 5 [Uruguay] Jorge Cardaccio MF 5 [Argentina] Juan Manuel Llop [downward-facing red arrow] 90' MF 8 [Uruguay] Yubert Lemos MF 8 [Argentina] Gerardo Martino (c) MF 10 [Uruguay] William Castro [downward-facing red arrow] 101' MF 9 [Argentina] Roque Alfaro [downward-facing red arrow] 46' FW 9 [Uruguay] Ernesto Vargas [downward-facing red arrow] 115' FW 16 [Argentina] Jorge Gabrich FW 6 [Uruguay] Juan C. de Lima FW 7 [Argentina] Gabriel Batistuta Substitutes: Substitutes: FW 7 [Uruguay] Héctor Morán [upward-facing green arrow] 101' [Red card] 115' FW 11 [Argentina] Sergio Almirón [upward-facing green arrow] 46' FW 21 [Uruguay] Daniel Carreño [upward-facing green arrow] 115' FW 15 [Argentina] Víctor Ramos [upward-facing green arrow] 90' Manager: Manager: [Uruguay] Roberto Fleitas [Argentina] José Yudica
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1963 Taça de Portugal Final
The 1963 Taça de Portugal Final was the final match of the 1962–63 Taça de Portugal, the 23rd season of the Taça de Portugal, the premier Portuguese football cup competition organized by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF). The match was played on 30 June 1963 at the Estádio Nacional in Oeiras, and opposed two Primeira Liga sides: Sporting CP and Vitória de Guimarães. Vitória de Guimarães defeated Sporting CP 4–0 to claim their sixth Taça de Portugal. Match Details 30 June 1963 Sporting CP 4 – 0 Vitória de Guimarães Figueiredo 25', 70' Lúcio 73' (Report) Mascarenhas 87' Estádio Nacional, Oeiras Referee: Francisco Guerra (Porto) Sporting CP Vitória de Guimarães GK 1 [Portugal] Joaquim Carvalho (c) GK 1 [Portugal] Mário Roldão DF [Portugal] Pedro Gomes DF [Portugal] Daniel DF [Portugal] Hilário DF [Portugal] João da Costa (c) DF [Portugal] Lúcio DF [Portugal] Manuel Pinto MF [Portugal] João Morais MF [Portugal] Virgílio MF [Portugal] David Júlio MF [Brazil] Caiçara MF [Brazil] Osvaldo Silva MF [Portugal] Paulino MF [Portugal] José Pérides MF [Portugal] Peres FW [Portugal] Ernesto Figueiredo FW [Portugal] Armindo Silva FW [Portugal] Mascarenhas FW [Portugal] António Mendes FW [Brazil] Géo Carvalho FW [Brazil] Lua Substitutes: Substitutes: Manager: Manager: [Portugal] Juca [Argentina] José Valle 1962–63 Taça de Portugal Winners Sporting CP 6th Title Match officials Match rules * Assistant referees: * 90 minutes. * Fourth official: * 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
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1968 NCAA Soccer Tournament
The 1968 NCAA Men's Soccer Tournament was the tenth organized men's college soccer tournament by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, to determine the top college soccer team in the United States. The Michigan State Spartans and the Maryland Terrapins were co-national champions after the championship game ended in a 2–2 tie after two overtime periods. This was Michigan State's second and Maryland's first national title. The final match was played on December 7, 1968, in Atlanta. Tournament bracket First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals Championship Atlanta, Georgia Brockport State 3 Army (pen.) 3 Harvard 1 Army 4 Army 1 Brown 3 Brown 3 Fairleigh Dickinson 1 Fairleigh Dickinson 3 Hofstra 1 Brown 0 Michigan State 2 Akron 0 Michigan State 1 North Carolina 1 Michigan State 5 Michigan State 2 West Chester 2 West Chester 4 Temple 3 Delaware 2 Temple 3 Michigan State 2 Maryland 2 Maryland 3 Saint Louis 2 Saint Louis 3 West Virginia 2 Maryland 2 Hartwick College 1 Hartwick College 4 Trinity College 0 Maryland 4 San Jose State 3 San Jose State 3 UCLA 1 San Jose State 1 Air Force 0 San Francisco 2 Air Force 3 Final 7 December 1968 Michigan State 2–2 (2OT) Maryland Grant Field, Atlanta Attendance: 1,112 * 1968 NAIA Soccer Championship
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Altisurface
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Passive fluency
Passive fluency is where a person can fluently read and audibly understand a language whilst not having the ability to fluently speak or write the language. People who are passively fluent in a language are often latent speakers who were raised in an environment where the language was spoken but did not become native speakers. Language Attitudes regarding "Passive Bilinguals" A more common term for this phenomenon is 'passive bilingualism'. Grosjean argues that there has been a monolingual bias regarding who is considered a 'bilingual', where people who do not have equal competence in all their languages are judges not speaking properly. 'Balanced bilinguals' are, in fact, very rare, and the fluency of a bilingual in his/ her languages is domain- specific: it depends on what they need the languages for. A Need for Passive Bilinguals in Basque Country Karlos Cid Abasolo discusses that passive bilingualism would be a minimum requirement for the co- official status of Basque and Spanish to become a working reality. As there are currently many monolingual Spanish speakers, and no monolingual Basque speakers, there is not yet a situation where an individual fluent in Basque could speak in his/ her mother tongue, regardless of the domain, circumstance or interlocutor. Help:Images#Supported media types for images
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Sakura Wars the Animation
For the 2000 TV series, see Sakura Wars (TV series). Sakura Wars the AnimationSanzigen.Sakura Wars, and takes place after the events of the game. Set in 1941, the series follows the adventures of Seijuro Kamiyama and the Imperial Combat Revue. The series ran on Tokyo MX and BS11 from April 3 to June 19, 2020 and is streamed in North America by Funimation.Pony Canyon, with the first two being released on June 17, 2020.Medialink and released on Ani-One YouTube channel. Plot See also: Sakura Wars (2019 video game) § Synopsis Sakura Wars the Animation is set in a fictionalized version of 1941 (one year after the events of the video game) during the Taishō era and follows the adventures of the Imperial Combat Revue, a military unit dedicated to fighting supernatural threats against Tokyo while maintaining their cover as a theater troupe. With its captain Seijuro Kamiyama absent, Sakura Amamiya temporarily assumes command. Following an incident in Europe, Kamiyama takes a young Russian girl named Klara M. Ruzhkova and leaves her in the Flower Division's care. However, Moscow Combat Revue captain Valery Kaminski is sent to Tokyo to retrieve Klara and the Flower Division must stop him. Cast
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Sakura Wars the Animation
Cast Character Voice actor Japanese English Seijuro Kamiyama Yōhei Azakami Ian Sinclair Sakura Amamiya Ayane Sakura Cherami Leigh Hatsuho Shinonome Maaya Uchida Amber Lee Connors Azami Mochizuki Hibiku Yamamura Sarah Wiedenheft Anastasia Palma Ayaka Fukuhara Stephanie Young Clarissa "Claris" Snowflake Saori Hayami Amanda Gish Sumire Kanzaki Michie Tomizawa Michelle Ruff Komachi Oba Ryōko Shiraishi Tia Ballard Kaoru Rindo Yui Ishikawa Monica Rial Reiji Shiba Tomokazu Sugita Zeno Robinson Itsuki Saijo Mayu Yoshioka Alexis Tipton Hiromi Hongo Haruka Terui Caitlin Glass Hakushu Murasame Miyuki Sawashiro Luci Christian Yui Huang Sumire Uesaka Kate Bristol Arthur Nobunaga Shimazaki Stephen Fu Lancelot Manami Numakura Felecia Angelle Elise Nana Mizuki Emily Neves Klara M. Ruzhkova Misaki Watada Lindsay Seidel Leyla M. Ruzhkova Haruka Shiraishi Terri Doty Valery Kaminski Kenji Akabane Aaron Dismuke Natalia Ruzhkova Mayuno Yasokawa Jessica Cavanagh Episode list No. Title Original air date
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Sakura Wars the Animation
1 "The Curtain Rises! The New Combat Revue" April 3, 2020 Transcription: "Dōdō Kaimaku! Shinsei Kagekidan" (Japanese: 堂々開幕! 新生華撃団) A masked person in a white cape battles with a demon girl over the possession of a young girl, but they are both forced to withdraw when Flower Division captain Seijuro Kamiyama intervenes. In order to protect the girl, Klara M. Ruzhkova, Seijuro takes her to Japan to be an apprentice member of the Imperial Combat Revue. He explains to the members of the Flower Division that Klara is the apparent sole survivor of the Moscow Combat Revue, who have gone missing after their airship was mysteriously shot down. However, Klara has lost her memories due to the crash, so there still no leads in the case. Demons suddenly attack Tokyo, but are quickly defeated when the Flower Division mobilizes. Seijuro leaves Klara in the Flower Division's care while he leaves to further investigate the Moscow Combat Revue's disappearance. As Seijuro leaves, a masked figure spies on the Imperial Combat Revue. 2 "Identity Unknown! A Mysterious Foe Appears" April 10, 2020 Transcription: "Shōtai Fumei! Nazo no Kaijin Arawaru" (Japanese: 正体不明! 謎の怪人現る)
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Sakura Wars the Animation
The next day, the masked person with the white cape, nicknamed the "White Cape" by the people of Tokyo, is seen abducting a young boy. At the Theater, Sakura Amamiya takes it upon herself to take care of Klara, and gives her a tour of the Theater and introduces her to the members of the Imperial Combat Revue. As Sakura shows Klara around the city, they are attacked by a black caped figure who attempts to kidnap Klara. The rest of the Flower Division and White Cape arrive and help drive off Black Cape, who is revealed to be a robot when Sakura slashes its chest open. Sakura then attempts to chase White Cape but runs into her sword teacher Hakushu Murasame, who says she has seen White Cape flee in a different direction. Back at the Theater, the Flower Division ponders why Black Cape is after Klara when a massive airship appears over Tokyo. The airship then announces that it is the Sevastapol, carrying the Moscow Combat Revue. 3 "Tokyo Trembles! The New Moscow Combat Revue!" April 17, 2020 Transcription: "Teito Gekishin! Shinsei Mosukuba Kagekidan" (Japanese: 帝都激震! 新生莫斯科華撃団) The captain of the Moscow Combat Revue, Valery Kaminski, arrives at the Theater to meet the Imperial Combat Revue. When Sakura points out they were told the Moscow Combat Revue was destroyed, Valery admits that their airship was shot down. However, they managed to survive and were revived as the New Moscow Combat Revue. Valery demands the return of Klara, since she is a member of his Revue. However, Klara refuses to join him, prompting the Flower Division to side with her. Sumire Kanzaki, the revue's commander, also points out that they cannot hand over Klara without Seijuro's approval. Valery decides to back off, planning to wait for the WLOF to step in. A large demon attacks Tokyo and the Flower Division deploys to stop it. However, the demon proves too powerful for the Flower Division to defeat, and Hatsuho Shinonome's overconfidence gets her Mugen disabled. Before the demon can finish off Hatsuho, the Moscow Combat Revue intervenes, easily destroying the demon and humiliating the Flower Division.
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4 "Friendship in Full Bloom! Thousand Year Cherry Blossoms!" April 24, 2020 Transcription: "Yūjō Mankai! Senbonzakura" (Japanese: 友情満開! 千年桜) Frustrated at her poor performance against the demon, Hatsuho decides to return to her family shrine. Concerned, Sakura takes Klara there to check on her. Along the way, Sakura explains that she and Hatsuho are childhood friends, so they've always been very close. Meanwhile, Azami Mochizuki begins investigating Klara and secretly follows her and Sakura. At the shrine, Hatsuho reflects on her insubordination in the previous battle, and wonders why she feels jealous that Sakura was put in charge in Seijuro's absence. Sakura and Klara then arrive and help Hatsuho prepare for a festival the shrine. During the festival, Klara begins recovering some of her memories. Hatsuho later reveals to Sakura that the cherry blossom tree that they used to play under hasn't bloomed ever since they had an argument as children. Inspired by Sakura and Hatsuho's friendship, Klara uses a mysterious power that causes the cherry blossom tree to bloom again, surprising Sakura and Hatsuho. Azami, who also witnessed the event, notes the power seems to be coming from Klara's left eye. 5 "The Goofball Detective Combo! Find Klara's Secret!" May 1, 2020 Transcription: "Ōtotsu Tantei! Kurāra no Himitsu wo Sagure" (Japanese: 凸凹探偵! クラーラの秘密を探れ)
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Having witnessed Klara using her power, Azami is convinced that she is somehow involved in the incident that almost destroyed Moscow Combat Revue and therefore a potential threat to the Imperial Combat Revue. She recruits Clarissa "Claris" Snowflake to help her investigate and they quietly spy on Klara's movements. However, all they find out is that Klara is secretly taking care of a kitten she had adopted. Meanwhile, Valery once again requests to Sumire that she hand over Klara, but is refused until the WLOF gives specific orders. Azami and Claris then follow Klara into an alley where she is attacked by a demon. THe demon proves to be resistant against Azami's weapons and Claris' magic, but Klara helps power up one of Claris' spells, allowing her to destroy the demon. Black Cape then attempts to kidnap Klara, but is thwarted by White Cape and both figures as Sakura and Hatsuho arrive. Later, Azami deduces that Klara has a special ability that enhances other people's spiritual power. Both she and Claris no longer consider Klara a threat and decide to protect her. 6 "Strange and Bizarre! The True Identity of Black Cape!" May 8, 2020 Transcription: "Kikikaikai! Kuro Manto no Shōtai" (Japanese: 奇々怪々!黒マントの正体)
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One morning, Hakushu arrives at the Theater and asks for Sakura's help in cleaning a storage room at an orphanage she frequents. Both Sakura and Klara accompany Hakushu to the orphanage, where one of the orphans, Naoya, is the boy that was abducted by White Cape. Meanwhile, Valery keeps track of Klara's movements and is shocked when he recognizes Hakushu. Black Cape then attacks the orphanage, but the Flower Division mobilizes in their Mugen to fight it. Outmatched, Black Cape transforms into a massive golem-like creature. White Cape then arrives and instructs the Flower Division to destroy Black Cape's crystal core in its chest, which they achieve. The destruction of the core causes Black Cape to explode. Klara witnesses the explosions, which triggers her memories and causes her distress. Back at the Theater, Hakushu admits she brought Sakura and Klara to the orphanage as bait to draw out Black Cape. She then takes her leave, satisfied to know that Klara has chosen to stay with the Imperial Combat Revue. Meanwhile, Valery recalls the aftermath of the explosion that destroyed the Moscow Combat Revue's previous airship, where he witnessed an angelic being emerge from a large blue crystal before it flew away. 7 "Stealth Mission! Tail the Date!" May 15, 2020 Transcription: "Onmitsu Sakusen! Dēto o oe" (Japanese: 隠密作戦!デートを追え)
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Sakura Wars the Animation
Seijuro returns to Tokyo and reveals to Sumire that there are no existing public records showing that Valery was part of the Moscow Combat Revue, and all relevant WLOF files were destroyed by Director A, suggesting some sort of conspiracy. In addition, there is evidence a prototype Kobu was taken to Moscow. Concerned, Sumire assigns a new mission to Seijuro. That night, Seijuro tells Sakura that he needs to return to Europe to conduct more investigations, but he can spend a day with her as thanks for leading the Flower Division in his absence. The next day, Seijuro, Sakura, and Klara leave the Theater together. Valery and Klara's older sister Leyla M. Ruzhkova Ruzhkova decide to follow them. Meanwhile, the rest of the Imperial Combat Revue believes Seijuro is going on a date with Sakura and vow to sabotage the date. Sakura encounters Hakushu, who warns her she's being tailed. Being cautious, the group starts taking precautions to shake their pursuers. Valery and Leyla try to pursue but end up falling into a river, while the Imperial Combat Revue members lose interest when they realize Klara is with Seijuro and Sakura so they aren't on a date. Safe from pursuit, Seijuro, Sakura, and Klara enjoy the rest of the day together. At the Theater, Sumire receives a mysterious letter. 8 "No End to the Chaos! The Combat Revue Challenge!" May 22, 2020 Transcription: "Haranbanjō! Kagekidan Taisen" (Japanese: 波乱万丈!華撃団大戦)
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Sakura Wars the Animation
Leyla recalls when she first met Valery, where it is revealed she is in fact an angel-like being. Later, the Imperial Combat Revue is forced to answer a challenge by the Moscow Combat Revue to determine Klara's fate, though Sumire notes that the Imperial Combat Revue has no choice since refusing would hurt their reputation. The first match is a dance competition. Hatsuho starts with a traditional Shinto dance, but Leyla answers with a ballet and secures her the win. The second match is an obstacle court, but Valery voluntarily forfeits so that he can give the Imperial Combat Revue a handicap. The third and last match is a mock battle between the two teams. However, the Moscow Combat Revue cheats and uses real weapons to incapacitate the Flower Division. Sakura attempts to protect Klara, and Leyla reveals her black angel wings before knocking Sakura off a tower. This triggers Klara to transform into her true form, growing white angel wings. Valery claims triumph as he believes Klara is a savior from God who will destroy the world and rebuild it. Ashamed of her true nature, Klara flies away despite Sakura's pleas. 9 "Unbelievable! The Truth About Klara!" May 29, 2020 Transcription: "Kyōtendōchi! Kurāra no Shinjitsu" (Japanese: 驚天動地!クラーラの真実)
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Sakura Wars the Animation
In the aftermath of the battle, the Sevastapol hides underwater where Valery orders Leyla to track down Klara. Leyla begins to have doubts about Valery's motives, but is mind controlled through a crystal Valery wields. Klara awakens at the orphanage, where Hakushu reveals it is a shelter for both human and demon children and that she will be safe among them. Seijuro reports back to Sumire, telling her his investigation has revealed that all of the members of the original Moscow Combat Revue were killed in their airship crash, meaning the Moscow Combat Revue led by Valery are impostors. Furthermore, he discovered that Russia had been experimenting in creating human/demon hybrids called Nadezhda of which only two, Leyla and Klara, are known to exist. Valery was one of the scientists involved in the experiments, and he recruited Leyla and tried to take Klara. Meanwhile, Leyla tracks down Klara and abducts her. The Flower Division and White Cape intercept her, with White Cape revealing her true identity as Hakushu. Klara decides to stay with the Imperial Combat Revue, but Valery begins bombarding the area with the Sevastapol's guns, distracting them long enough for Leyla to escape with Klara. 10 "The Destruction of Tokyo? The Rage of Tunguska!" June 5, 2020 Transcription: "Teito Kaimetsu? Tsungūsuka no Ikari" (Japanese: 帝都壊滅?ツングースカの怒り)
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Sakura Wars the Animation
The Flower Division is left reeling in the wake of the previous battle, with all of their Mugen heavily damaged while Sakura's is completely destroyed. Meanwhile, Valery connects Klara to the core of the Sevastapol, using it to power a massive energy cannon. He demonstrates its power by destroying a mountain just outside of Tokyo and gives the world governments and ultimatum: disband and recognize him as a ruler or be destroyed. Seijuro kills one of the WLOF directors, revealing him to be Valery's robotic mole in the organization. Despite Valery's threats, the Flower Division decides to mobilize to save Klara, with Sakura choosing to mobilize in an older Type-3 Kobu to replace her destroyed one. The Flower Division and Hakushu board the Sevastapol and begin to battle the defenders, but Sakura's Type-3 Kobu breaks down. Seeing Sakura's determination to save Klara, Sumire authorizes her to use the more advanced Obu, even though there is a risk it might drain Sakura's spirit energy and kill her. She manages to successfully activate the Obu and annihilates the remaining defenders, swearing to save Klara. 11 "A Fantastic, Tragic Love! Leyla's Heart!" June 12, 2020 Transcription: "Hiren Gensō! Reira no Omoi" (Japanese: 悲恋幻想!レイラの想い)
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Sakura Wars the Animation
The Flower Division fights their way to the core of the Sevastapol where they confront Valery and Leyla. Valery reveals that he discovered a blue crystal that crashed to Earth that Hakushu apparently emerged from, and by touching and absorbing the crystal, he has become immortal and gifted with supernatural powers. Seeing the corruption in human society, he had decided to use Klara's power to rule the world as its new God, despite the fact he is the one who killed the members of the original Moscow Combat Revue with the Sevastapol during activation before he killed the scientists. He then attempts to force the Flower Division to join him by threatening to destroy Tokyo, but Hakushu sabotages the main cannon. Leyla battles the Flower Division as Valery repairs the cannon but manages to overcome her brainwashing when her love for Klara overrides her loyalty to Valery. She frees Klara but is mortally wounded in the process. Shocked at the sight of Leyla's supposed death, Klara suffers an emotional breakdown and her powers begin to go out of control. 12 "The Grand Finale! Hope for Tomorrow!" June 19, 2020 Transcription: "Daidan'en! Ashita e no Kibō" (Japanese: 大団円! 明日への希望)
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Sakura Wars the Animation
Sakura manages to calm Klara down, but Valery uses the power the Sevastapol absorbed from her to transform himself into a more powerful form. The Flower Division are outmatched until Seijuro arrives with the Shanghai, Berlin, and London Combat Revues, who shoot down the Sevastpol with their aerial battleships. Undeterred, Valery fuses himself with the Sevastapol and moves to attack Tokyo despite the Combat Revues' attempts to stop him. Klara then arrives in the experimental Tenjin and combines it with Sakura's Obu, giving them the power to break the shield protecting Valery while Leyla's spirit distracts and drains him, thus making him no longer immortal. Sakura then stabs and kills Valery with her katana through his chest, putting a stop to his plans. Afterwards, Klara becomes an official member of the Imperial Combat Revue and joins in their stage performances as Hakushu bids farewell. Meanwhile, Leyla, who has apparently survived, finds a crystal fragment at the wreckage of the Sevastapol that opens a portal to Shadow Tokyo.
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Sakura Wars the Animation
Citations Notes * Official website [Edit this at Wikidata] * Sakura Wars: The Animation at IMDb * Sakura Wars: The Animation (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
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Regional Air Services
Regional Air Services may refer to: * Regional Air Services (Romania) * Regional Air Services (Tanzania)
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1941 Taça de Portugal Final
The 1941 Taça de Portugal Final was the final match of the 1940–41 Taça de Portugal, the 3rd season of the Taça de Portugal, the premier Portuguese football cup competition organized by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF). The match was played on 22 June 1941 at the Campo das Salésias in Lisbon, and opposed two Primeira Liga sides: Belenenses and Sporting CP. Sporting CP defeated Belenenses 4–1 to claim their first Taça de Portugal. Match Details 22 June 1941 Belenenses 1 – 4 Sporting CP Gilberto 53' (Report) Cruz 36', 48', 52' Peyroteo 79' Campo das Salésias, Lisbon Referee: Álvaro Santos (Coimbra) Belenenses Sporting CP GK 1 [Portugal] Salvador Jorge GK 1 [Portugal] João Azevedo DF [Argentina] Oscar Tellechea DF [Portugal] Octávio Barrosa DF [Portugal] António Feliciano DF [Portugal] Álvaro Cardoso DF [Portugal] José Simões MF [Portugal] Manuel Marques (c) MF [Portugal] Francisco Gomes MF [Portugal] Aníbal Paciência MF [Portugal] Mariano Amaro (c) MF [Portugal] Gregório dos Santos MF [Portugal] Gilberto FW [Portugal] Fernando Peyroteo FW [Argentina] Horácio Tellechea FW [Portugal] Armando Ferreira FW [Portugal] Varela Marques FW [Portugal] João Cruz FW [Portugal] Bernardo Soares FW [Portugal] Adolfo Mourão FW [Portugal] Rafael Correia FW [Portugal] Manuel Soeiro Substitutes: Substitutes: Manager: Manager: [Portugal] Artur José Pereira [Hungary] József Szabó 1940–41 Taça de Portugal Winners Sporting CP 1st Title Match officials Match rules * Assistant referees: * 90 minutes. * Fourth official:
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
The 1988 Hamilton municipal election was held on November 14, 1988 to elect a Regional Chairman, a Mayor, sixteen members to Hamilton, Ontario City Council, seventeen members to the Hamilton Board of Education and thirteen members to the Hamilton-Wentworth Roman Catholic Separate School Board. Regional Chairman election Summary of the November 14, 1988, Hamilton, Ontario Regional Chairman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Reg Whynott 45,417 35.03% n/a Reg Wheeler 38,203 29.47% n/a Pat Valeriano 21,116 16.29% n/a Paul Cowell 21,116 12.70% n/a Ian Stout 21,116 6.52% n/a Total Votes 129,655 100% Registered Voters n/a n/a n/a Note: The 1988 election was the first where voters elected the Regional Chairman. Note: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: LeFaive, Doug. "New chairman tackles province," Hamilton Spectator, Tuesday, November 15, 1988, Metro, B1 Mayoral Election The 1988 Mayoral race was overshadowed by a number of events, namely aldermanic contests, the 1988 Federal election and the first general election for the Hamilton-Wentworth regional chairman. The two-person race drew little attention from local media, with reporters and commentators noting that Church of the Universe minister Michael Baldasaro had little chance of defeating incumbent mayor Bob Morrow. On election night, Morrow said that his return with over 90% of the vote was nearly an acclamation, while Baldasaro indicated that he would not stop contesting elections and advancing the use of marijuana.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Candidates for the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Mayoral Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Robert Morrow (incumbent) 74,969 90.87% n/a Michael Baldasaro 7,528 9.12% n/a Total votes 82,497 Note 1 Registered voters n/a n/a n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: Christmas, Brian. "Morrow swept back in with over 90% of the vote," The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. City Council Election Ward One (West Hamilton-McMaster) The 1988 Election in Ward One saw tensions between homeowners and student residents come to the forefront of the campaign. In the summer of 1988, Hamilton, Ontario City Council passed a bylaw aimed at reducing the prominence of student houses in the area by limiting the number of unrelated tenants in a single family home to five. This decision angered the McMaster Students Union and prompted a concentrated effort on behalf of the undergraduate representative body to find a pro-student candidate to challenge incumbent aldermen Terry Cooke and Mary Kiss. Ultimately, the attempt was unsuccessful. MSU president Cyrus Barucha noted that "Our real hope was to find someone respected by both the community and the students...we had several people in mind, but none of them were willing to come forward." While student housing in the area was a main issue, the incumbent candidates stood firmly on a platform of their track records. Cooke, a one-term alderman and, at the time, the youngest member of council, pushed for more affordable housing and improvements to the area's roads while fighting for fiscal responsibility. The Spectator noted that Cooke had attempted to secure over $250,000 in budget cuts in 1988.Practical Progressive Representation.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Kiss maintained her track record of a champion for the people, while highlighting the importance of preserving both the unique neighbourhoods and environmental characteristics of Ward One. A two-term alderman at the time, Kiss faced considerable criticism from members of the community over her opposition to the construction of two three-storey apartment buildings on Broadway Avenue near McMaster University. A small group of residents disapproved of the proposal to change the site's zoning from light industrial to residential and stormed a meeting of city council where the issue was to be discussed. Kiss championed their cause, but was ultimately unsuccessful thanks to a ruling against their stand by the Ontario Municipal Board. Challenger Neil Hughes was a local businessman and political activist, having worked on the campaigns of Lincoln Alexander and Victor Copps. Hughes was upset about a perceived attitude of favourability toward special interest groups by members of council and the handing of the student housing bylaw that he called "unenforceable".1991, which he ultimately did not do. On election night, Cooke and Kiss were returned to council by a comfortable margin over Hughes. Cooke joked with Spectator reporter Mike Hanley that, if early results showed he was losing, people should look for him at the high-level bridge. Kiss commented that, despite placing second to Cooke for a second time, she was merely humbled to be elected to a third term. Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward One Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Terry Cooke (incumbent) 7,723 43.09% n/a Mary Kiss (incumbent) 6,567 36.64% n/a C. Neil Hughes 3,633 20.27% n/a Total votes 11,067 Note 1 Registered voters n/a 41.65% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: Hanley, Mike. "No need for trip to the High Level Bridge", The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. Ward Two (Downtown)
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Ward Two (Downtown) Of the major issues facing Ward Two in the 1988 election, high-rise development, an aging population and the actions of the incumbent aldermen were at the forefront of the campaign. Traffic and parking issues were prominent as well, but more pressing were issues relating to the ward's long-time representatives. Incumbent alderman Vince Agro had served in his capacity as one of Ward Two's two representatives at city hall since 1964, with only three years off from 1976 to 1979 after a failed mayoralty bid. The former teacher had come under fire for his campaign against the city's executive committee and was widely critiqued in the area for his support of a high-density senior's building near a popular local landmark, the Thistle Club. Agro also cited the completion of a park on the harbourfront and maintaining the Durand neighbourhood's character in the face of proposed high-rise developments. His main opposition came from residents of the city's Corktown and Stinson neighbourhoods, who were, "less than impressed with his efforts at ward healing."Liberal, garnering the support of Culture and Communications Minister Lily Munro and CHCH-TV reporter Stan Keyes, who would represent Hamilton West in Parliament from 1988 until 2004. Agro's seatmate, Bill McCulloch, sought his eleventh term on council, and was, at the time, the longest-serving alderman in the city. His decision to seek another term surprised many in the city, as he had indicated he would not be running in the 1988 election. This announcement placed him in the most objective position to review the pay of alderman, which was completed during his tenth term at city hall and recommended increasing the pay of municipal representatives by 24%. McCulloch was chairman of the city's Hamilton–Scourge Project, which sought to raise two schooners from the War of 1812 from Lake Ontario, which was a priority for the former naval officer. William Laidlaw, a Canada Post worker, challenged Agro and McCulloch for a second time, running on a platform of open communication. Laidlaw noted that he was frustrated the city spent considerable amounts of money on improving the Gore Park area and then allowed 'peep shows' to open up around it. Laidlaw was supported in his bid by the local New Democratic Party, the Hamilton and District Labour Council and the Letter Carriers Union of Canada, Local 3.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Retiree Joe Gaul sought election, running on an anti-incumbency platform, challenging McCulloch's plan to raise the Hamilton and Scourge. Gaul was active with the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 163.Go For Gaul! during the campaign. Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward Two Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Vince Agro (incumbent) 4,372 49.78% ±0% Bill McCulloch (incumbent) 4,229 48.16% +0.9% William Laidlaw 3,110 35.41 n/a Joe Gaul 2,287 26.04 n/a Total votes 8,782 Note 1 Registered voters 28,848 30.44% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: Morrison, Suzanne. "McCulloch, Agro team re-elected in Ward 2", The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. Ward Three (East Hamilton-Stipley) Ward Three was a hotly contested race, with incumbent alderman Pat Valeriano seeking the office of Regional Chairman over another term as East Hamilton-Stipley's representative. A working-class ward, the area faced the problem of slum landlords failing to maintain neighbourhoods, heavy trucks posing safety problems and industrial-residential mixing that negatively impacted the health of residents. Incumbent alderman Brian Hinkley had considered seeking the office of Regional Chairman, but after unsuccessfully standing as a New Democratic candidate against Liberal Lily Munro in Hamilton Centre during the 1987 Ontario Provincial Election, he found his resources drained and threw his energies into retaining his Ward Three seat. Hinkley, a long-time labour activist, focused his campaign on moving trucks from local roads to larger thoroughfares and improving access to the waterfront. The highest profile contender for the open Ward Three seat was Don Drury, campaign manager and assistant to Liberal MP Sheila Copps. Drury was a candidate in 1985, finishing fourth, and ran on a similar platform in 1988, focusing on affordable housing and attracting clean industry to the city.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Marketing consultant Doreen Johnson was a community activist, serving on the Status of Women subcommittee at the city level and volunteering with the Immigrant Action Committee and the Hamilton and District Multicultural Centre. Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward Three Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Brian Hinkley (incumbent) 6,848 64.8% n/a Don Drury 4,673 44.22% n/a Doreen Johnson 2,779 26.3% n/a Tim Nolan 2,210 21% n/a Total votes 10,568 Note 1 Registered voters 30,323 34.85% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: Milton, Steve. "Drury vows he won't be meek voice", Hamilton Spectator November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. Ward Four (East Hamilton-Barton) Following the defeats of both incumbent alderman in Ward Four during the 1985 election, only one challenger entered the race against David Christopherson and Geraldine Copps. Road upgrades, improving sewers and the environmental impact of sewage treatment plants and the regional garbage incinerator were all cited as major concerns by the residents of the ward during the election. Wife of former mayor Victor and the mother of MP Sheila, Copps had built a record on supporting local residents against business interests. Early in her first term, she fought against a proposal to have food waste from Pearson International Airport in Toronto incinerated in Hamilton and stood with workers at the Hamilton's water treatment plant in their fight to prevent PCBs from being stored at their facility. During the 1988 campaign, she fought for improvements to local traffic and lower taxes. Christopherson earned a reputation as a diligent committee chairman and advocate for the ward's disadvantaged. He championed changes to the city's subsidized bus pass for seniors, but attempts to broker a similar deal for Hamilton's unemployed failed. After a vote of council approved a 24% pay increase for aldermen, Christopherson refused to accept his, saying he disagreed with the process.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
The only challenger to Copps and Christopherson was right-leaning plumber Bob Fanjoy, who ran last in the 1985 election. Fanjoy ran on a campaign of increasing the number of retirement homes in the ward, as well as pushing to clean up pollution and improving transportation in the area. Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward Four Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Geraldine Copps (incumbent) 8,174 69.38% n/a David Christopherson (incumbent) 8,055 68.38% n/a Bob Fanjoy 2,319 19.67% n/a Total votes 11,787 Note 1 Registered voters 28,764 40.90% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: Benedetti, Paul. "Clean campaign for a dirty job in Ward 4", The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. Ward Five (Red Hill-Rosedale) Issues for the residents of Ward Five nearly all centered around traffic, as the ward was to play host to the controversial Red Hill Valley Expressway. The ward's political makeup was altered between the 1985 and 1988 elections, with incumbent alderman Shirley Collins stepping down in 1987 to successfully stand as Liberal candidate for MPP for Hamilton East. A 1987 by-election brought Catholic school board trustee Dominic Agostino to council, who had only 11 months of experience as alderman before contesting the 1988 election. The ward's second alderman, Reg Wheeler, announced he would not be seeking reelection to council, rather entering the race for regional chairman instead. Agostino, for his part, ran on a platform of building more affordable housing, reducing local taxes and increasing voter connection to city hall. During his short tenure on council, Agostino angered some of his colleagues who criticized him of opportunism, after he created a bingo task force to examine how the industry operated in Hamilton, became the chairman of it and subsequently disbanded it.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
After the Wheeler's announcement that he would be seeking higher office, former alderman Fred Lombardo, whom Wheeler defeated in 1985, announced his intention to contest his old seat. After a failed attempt in 1985 to become MPP for Hamilton East as a Progressive Conservative, Lombardo ran on a platform of improving transportation and increasing police presence in the area. Shipping foreman Tom Rusich sought election for the third time in 1988, after contesting both the 1985 election and 1987 by-election in the ward. Risich supported the Red Hill Valley Expressway and campaigned on better parks for local residents. Elizabeth Savelli was an expressway opponent and campaigned on a platform of better planning and bringing down taxes though one-tier local government.anti-drug program and using abandoned local factories as uniform manufacturers for school children. Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward Five Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Dominic Agostino (incumbent) 7,120 60.89% n/a Fred Lombardo 3,828 32.73% n/a Tom Rusich 3,505 29.97% n/a Elizabeth Savelli 3,165 27.07% n/a Vera Raiser 1,307 11.18% n/a Total votes 11,694 Note 1 Registered voters 28,848 30.44% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: McNeil, Mark. "Long night's vigil for Lombardo", The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. Ward Six (East Mountain)
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Ward Six (East Mountain) Ward Six faced issues characteristic of the city's mountain wards in 1988, with older neighbourhoods close to the Escarpment requiring significant road repairs, senior citizens demanding more services and new families in suburban developments to the south expecting low taxes. Neglect of sidewalks, parks and other municipal services were major issues, with challengers proposing to fix the problems and keep taxes low to appease the ward's diverse communities.Hamilton Mountain, Cowell was also threatened with a slander lawsuit in 1988 after making allegations about illegal dumping against a local waste management company. Incumbent alderman John Smith, who served as Hamilton Mountain's Progressive Conservative MPP from 1967 until being defeated by New Democrat Brian Charlton in 1977, fought the 1988 race on improving water quality and improving council conduct. Of the challengers, Tom Jackson ran the most aggressive campaign, noted in local media as appearing as if he was seeking federal or provincial office. A local businessman and McMaster graduate, Jackson ran third in the 1985 race. During the 1988 campaign, he called for the city to curb its spending habits, referred to the pay increase approved by alderman as 'disgusting' and was quoted as saying "I sense a yearning for a return to politicians who have honour, integrity, decency and accessibility." Ken Stone, a local Canada Post employee and activist, worked with the Hamilton-Wentworth Social Planning and Research Council, the Hamilton and District Labour Council and the local New Democratic Party. Stone fought for more openness in government and improved services for the residents of the ward. Two-time candidate and high school gym teacher Vince Formosi sought election once more in 1988, fought for Escarpment beautification, opening City Hall on Saturdays and proposed a south-Mountain superpark with a wave pool, golf course, hotel and shopping mall. Peter O'Hagan was an opponent of the Red Hill Valley Expressway and ran on a conservative platform of reducing alderman's pay, dropping council's responsibilities to a part-time and cutting most civic spending.University of Waterloo urban planning student Allan McDiarmid ran a very low-key campaign, pushing for all-day GO Train service, a quick completion of the Red Hill Valley Expressway and one-tier local government.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward Six Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% John Smith (incumbent) 7,448 53.72% n/a Tom Jackson 6,706 48.37% n/a Ken Stone 3,785 27.3% n/a Vince Formosi 3,311 23.88% n/a Peter O'Hagan 1,689 12.18% n/a Allan McDiarmid 482 3.48% n/a Total votes 13,864 Note 1 Registered voters 27,676 50.09% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: Holt, Jim. "Void left by Cowell filled by Jackson", The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. Ward Seven (Central Mountain) Ward Seven faced a 20% population jump between the 1983 and the 1988 election, quickly cementing its status as the city's most populated ward. In addition to a major flood in the summer of 1988 following a heavy storm, the growing senior population necessitated the construction of more retirement homes. Incumbent alderman Henry Merling was one of city hall's most controversial characters, gaining wide support among residents while earning the ire of his colleagues. Merling took on developers who were building new subdivisions to the south of the ward over issues residents had with their foundations and called for better sewage treatment facilities in the face of the flooding issues in the summer of 1988. Alternately, Merling was embroiled in controversy after he physically attacked his Ward Seven seat-mate, John Gallagher, choking him after a dispute at city hall. Later, he accused Ward One alderman Mary Kiss of promoting nepotism over what he viewed as unfair hiring processes.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Gallagher was a one-term incumbent at the time of the election and faced sharp criticism from local media over a number of controversial incidents. Early in his term, Gallagher demanded a management review of HSR commissioner Heinz Schweinbenz and attacked administrative officer Mac Carson over allegedly understating a report that critiqued aldermen for interfering in the operations of the city's bus service. Following those incidents, Gallagher was accused of attempting to remove the city's director of culture, Audell Schimmel. During the 1988 election, Gallager fought for the Red Hill Valley Expressway and promised to help improve sewage issues in the ward. Among those challenging the incumbent aldermen were HSR operator Andy Asselin, who stood on a platform of improving the physical infrastructure of the ward and dealing with sewage issues.New Democratic Party, sporting their party colours on his campaign literature and signs.1979 election. At the time of the election, Asselin was the Treasurer of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 107. Stelco lab analyst Steve Cooper sought election a second time after placing fifth in the 1985 election. Cooper ran on a platform of zero-based budgeting, where the city would view expenditures on a program by program basis and ending secrecy at city hall. Blair O'Halloran styled himself as a one-issue candidate, fighting back against the pay increase issued to aldermen. O'Halloran posted flyers across the ward shaming the sitting aldermen with the slogan "Don't Forget! Don't Elect!"1984 as a representative of the Communist Party of Canada. Mann called for higher corporate taxes and an end to downloading of services to the municipality.apprentice Stephen Jones called for the renovation of the abandoned Inverness School into a seniors centre and day care, the only issue noted as a campaign plank in local media.
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1988 Hamilton, Ontario municipal election
Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward Seven Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Henry Merling (incumbent) 9,667 65.89% n/a John Gallagher (incumbent) 7,397 50.42% n/a Andy Asselin 3,557 24.24% n/a Steve Cooper 1,955 13.32% n/a Blair O'Halloran 924 6.3% n/a Bob Mann 771 5.3% n/a Steven Jones 630 4.3% n/a Total votes 14,670 Note 1 Registered voters 31,783 46.16% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: Dreschel, Andrew. "'The people' return the favour at ballot box", The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. Ward Eight (West Mountain) Summary of the November 14, 1988 Hamilton, Ontario Ward Eight Alderman Election Candidate Popular vote Votes % ±% Don Ross (incumbent) 6,541 46.61% n/a Tom Murray (incumbent) 6,320 45.04% n/a Lindsay Nelson 3,650 26.01% n/a Ed Herechuk 3,254 23.19% n/a Mike Oddi 2,569 18.30% n/a John Lewis 1,358 9.7% n/a Total votes 14,031 Note 1 Registered voters 30,076 46.65% n/a Note 1: Each ward elected two aldermen and percentages are specific to each candidate, not for the overall total. Note 2: All Hamilton Municipal Elections are officially non-partisan. Note 3: Candidate campaign colours are based on the prominent colour used in campaign items (signs, literature, etc.) and are used as a visual differentiation between candidates. Sources: MacPhail, Wayne. "Arena battle fails to hurt Murray", The Hamilton Spectator, November 15, 1988, Metro, B2. * List of Hamilton, Ontario municipal elections
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1964 NCAA Soccer Tournament
The 1964 NCAA Men's Soccer Tournament was the sixth organized men's college soccer tournament by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, to determine the top college soccer team in the United States. The Navy Midshipmen, in their second straight title game appearance, won their first title, defeating the Michigan State Spartans 1–0 in the final on December 5, 1964. In the title game, all-time lacrosse Hall of Famer Jimmy Lewis scored the game's only goal. Lewis was named the tournament outstanding player. This tournament featured 15 teams, a drop down from 16 teams the previous year. The tournament final was played in Providence, Rhode Island. Teams See also: 1964 NCAA Division I men's soccer season Qualified Teams School Record Appearance Last Bid Air Force 6–1–1 1st Never Army 8–2 2nd 1963 Bridgeport 9–1–2 4th 1963 Cortland State 10–1 2nd 1960 Dartmouth 7–4 1st Never East Stroudsburg State 9–0 1st Never Fairleigh Dickinson 9–0–1 2nd 1963 Franklin & Marshall 7–1–2 1st Never Hartwick College 9–1 2nd 1962 Maryland 8–2 6th 1963 Michigan State 7–0–2 3rd 1963 Navy 11–0 2nd 1963 Saint Louis 10–0–1 6th 1963 San Jose State 8–3–2 2nd 1963 Trinity College (CT) 8–1 1st Never Bracket First round Second round Semifinals Final Saint Louis 5 San Jose State 0 San Jose State 5 Air Force 3 Saint Louis 1 Navy 2 Navy 2 Fairleigh Dickinson 1 Navy 5 Bridgeport 3 Bridgeport 1 Hartwick 0 Navy 1 Michigan State 0 Trinity College 2 Dartmouth 1 Trinity College 1 Army 6 Army (3OT) 4 Cortland State 3 Army (OT) 2 Michigan State 3 Michigan State 1 Maryland 0 Michigan State 4 East Stroudsburg State 0 East Stroudsburg State 6 Franklin & Marshall 0 * 1964 NAIA Soccer Championship
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1968 Taça de Portugal Final
The 1968 Taça de Portugal Final was the final match of the 1967–68 Taça de Portugal, the 28th season of the Taça de Portugal, the premier Portuguese football cup competition organized by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF). The match was played on 16 June 1968 at the Estádio Nacional in Oeiras, and opposed two Primeira Liga sides: Porto and Vitória de Setúbal. Porto defeated Vitória de Setúbal 2–1 to claim a third Taça de Portugal. Match Details 16 June 1968 Porto 2 – 1 Vitória de Setúbal Valdemar 15' (Report) Pedras 5' Nóbrega 23' Estádio Nacional, Oeiras Referee: Joaquim Campos (Lisbon) Porto Vitória de Setúbal GK 1 [Portugal] Américo Lopes (c) GK 1 [Portugal] Dinis Vital DF [Portugal] João Atraca DF [Portugal] Herculano Oliveira DF [Portugal] Valdemar Pacheco DF [Portugal] Joaquim Conceição MF [Portugal] Custódio Pinto DF [Portugal] Carlos Cardoso MF [Portugal] Pavão MF [Portugal] Fernando Tomé MF [Portugal] Rolando Gonçalves MF [Portugal] Pedras FW [Portugal] Bernardo da Velha MF [Portugal] Carriço FW [Brazil] Djalma Freitas MF [Portugal] Petita FW [Portugal] Vítor Gomes FW [Portugal] Félix Guerreiro FW [Portugal] Francisco Nóbrega FW [Portugal] José Maria (c) FW [Portugal] Jaime Silva FW [Portugal] Jacinto João Substitutes: Substitutes: Manager: Manager: [Portugal] José Maria Pedroto [Portugal] Fernando Vaz 1967–68 Taça de Portugal Winners Porto 3rd Title Match officials Match rules * Assistant referees: * 90 minutes. * Fourth official: * 30 minutes of extra time if necessary.
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Snooze (The Goodies)
"Snooze" is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies. Written by The Goodies, with songs and music by Bill Oddie. Plot It is morning, and Graeme's intricate alarm system goes off. Graeme and Tim wake from sleep, but Bill is already awake, having been awake all night. Bill mentions that he never sleeps, commenting that he is afraid to go to sleep because he goes sleepwalking whenever he sleeps. A fast-talking man Rupert Windcheater (Roddy Maude-Roxby) arrives and asks the Goodies to help with his company's excellent bedtime drink called "Venom". For some reason, good though it is, it just isn't selling. The Goodies set to work on a new marketing plan, starting with changing the name to "Snooze". Graeme decides to upgrade the formula to New and Improved Snooze. The new mixture instantly knocks the drinker unconscious, as proven by its test subject Bill who goes into a three-day sleep. After Windcheater and the Board of Directors try the new formula, they too are instantly put into a long-term sleep for being a bit too hasty. Soon after, Bill starts sleepwalking and leaves the office. Tim must chase Bill as he sleepwalks, while Graeme sets to work on an antidote. Upon finishing it, Graeme plans to test it by drinking some of the new improved Snooze but falls asleep before being able to drink the antidote. Tim, who is still chasing Bill, catches up with him. However, when Tim gets Bill to sleepwalk back to the office, he notices Graeme is now sleepwalking. Tim manages to get them both back to the office, where he then gives them the antidote and they wake up. They check the news, but as a result of Snooze being shipped out to the entire country, the newsreader (Corbet Woodall) has fallen asleep on his desk. Graeme says that the effect will be lessened if they add the antidote to every reservoir in the country.
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Snooze (The Goodies)
The Goodies take a barrel of Graeme's antidote down to a creek, to put a teaspoon of formula into the creek (with the intention of taking the remainder to all other waterways in Britain). While Graeme is carefully filling his teaspoon with the antidote, the barrel suddenly rolls down the bank into the creek by Bill's sneeze and Tim's carelessness, spilling out all the contents. Tim demands to know what will happen because of the unintentional spillage, and Graeme tells him that the effect would be to speed up metabolism, as well as speeding up the people themselves. However, they realize that because of the mass amount of antidote that was spilled, the effect will be amplified up to a hundred times. Life takes on a surreal effect as the whole of Britain reacts to the effects of the spillage by talking and doing everything extremely fast — a cricket Test match between England and Australia takes only minutes to play, instead of days; a Royal car goes by very rapidly, carrying the Queen; and the British Prime Minister sounds like a cartoon chipmunk as he rushes through his speech in Parliament. The sleeping newsreader wakes up and takes a sip of water — followed by more sips — and, getting faster and faster with his speech, he finally jumps up and pounds his chest with his fists (like King Kong), before rushing off. Windcheater arrives in a furious mood. His company has been forced to part with the entire quantity of Snooze free-of-charge, to counteract Graeme's antidote. Windcheater intends to take out his anger on the Goodies by shooting them — but, after drinking some of the antidote, the Goodies quickly run away. * "The Complete Goodies" — Robert Ross, B T Batsford, London, 2000 * "The Goodies Rule OK" — Robert Ross, Carlton Books Ltd, Sydney, 2006 * "From Fringe to Flying Circus — 'Celebrating a Unique Generation of Comedy 1960-1980'" — Roger Wilmut, Eyre Methuen Ltd, 1980 * "The Goodies Episode Summaries" — Brett Allender * "The Goodies — Fact File" — Matthew K. Sharp * "Snooze" at IMDb
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Senallang (state constituency)
Senallang is a state constituency in Sabah, Malaysia, that has been represented in the Sabah State Legislative Assembly. Demographics Ethnic breakdown of Tawau's electorate as of 2018 Muslim bumiputera (93.78%) Chinese (3.94%) Non-muslim bumiputera (1.80%) Other ethnicities (0.47%) History Member of Sabah State Legislative Assembly for Senallang Assembly Years Member Party Constituency created 11th 1999 – 2004 Nasir Sakaran BN (UMNO) 12th 2004 – 2008 13th 2008 – 2013 14th 2013 – 2018 15th 2018 – 2020 Shafie Apdal WARISAN 16th 2020 – Election results Sabah state election, 2020 Party Candidate Votes % ∆% Sabah Heritage Party Shafie Apdal 6,363 75.33 +1.58 PN Norazman Utoh Nain 1,201 14.22 N/A USNO (Baru) Mohammad Ramzan Abdul Wahab 61 0.72 N/A Love Sabah Party Madjalis Lais 51 0.60 N/A PPRS Ahmad Alialam 39 0.46 N/A Total valid votes 8,246 97.62 Total rejected ballots 163 1.93 Unreturned ballots 38 0.45 Turnout 8,447 58.92 Registered electors 14,336 Majority 4,631 Sabah Heritage Party hold Swing N/A Source(s) "RESULTS OF CONTESTED ELECTION AND STATEMENTS OF THE POLL AFTER THE OFFICIAL ADDITION OF VOTES". Sabah state election, 2018 Party Candidate Votes % ∆% Sabah Heritage Party Shafie Apdal 7,754 73.75 N/A BN Nasir Sakaran 2,453 23.33 -49.85 Total valid votes 10,207 97.08 Total rejected ballots 244 2.32 Unreturned ballots 63 0.60 Turnout 10,514 73.02 Registered electors 14,399 Majority 5,301 Sabah Heritage Party gain from BN Swing N/A Source(s) "RESULTS OF CONTESTED ELECTION AND STATEMENTS OF THE POLL AFTER THE OFFICIAL ADDITION OF VOTES".
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Senallang (state constituency)
Sabah state election, 2013 Party Candidate Votes % ∆% BN Nasir Sakaran 7,425 73.18 -10.88 PKR Mohd Amin Abdul Mem 1,516 14.94 +6.84 Independent Abdul Manang Hatib Lawari @ Osman 546 5.38 N/A Independent Badaruddin Mustapha 164 1.62 N/A Independent Abdul Karim Talip 145 1.43 N/A Total valid votes 9,796 96.55 Total rejected ballots 326 3.21 Unreturned ballots 24 0.24 Turnout 10,146 76.81 Registered electors 13,210 Majority 5,909 BN hold Swing -8.86 Source(s) "KEPUTUSAN PILIHAN RAYA UMUM DEWAN UNDANGAN NEGERI". Sabah state election, 2008 Party Candidate Votes % ∆% BN Nasir Sakaran 6,083 78.46 +7.81 Independent Asmara Asmad 651 8.40 N/A PKR Hasaman Sagaran 628 8.10 +3.08 Independent Mohd Sayadi Bakal 0 0.00 N/A Total valid votes 7,362 94.96 Total rejected ballots 366 4.72 Unreturned ballots 25 0.32 Turnout 7,753 63.56 Registered electors 12,198 Majority 5,432 BN hold Swing Source(s) "KEPUTUSAN PILIHAN RAYA UMUM DEWAN UNDANGAN NEGERI SABAH BAGI TAHUN 2008". Sabah state election, 2004 Party Candidate Votes % ∆% BN Nasir Sakaran 5,361 70.65 -21.74 Independent Maharani Ali Hani 742 9.78 N/A Independent Abdul Mim @ Abdul Aziz Taib 452 5.96 N/A PKR Mohd Abdul Wahab Abdullah 381 5.02 N/A Independent Joseph Yapp Yuk Tong 264 3.48 N/A Total valid votes 7,200 94.89 Total rejected ballots 280 3.69 Unreturned ballots 108 1.42 Turnout 7,588 63.02 Registered electors 12,041 Majority 4,619 BN hold Swing N/A Source(s) "KEPUTUSAN PILIHAN RAYA UMUM DEWAN UNDANGAN NEGERI SABAH BAGI TAHUN 2004".
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Senallang (state constituency)
Sabah state election, 1999 Party Candidate Votes % ∆% BN Nasir Sakaran 4,855 48.91 N/A BERSEKUTU Abdullah Sani Abdul Salleh 3,297 33.22 N/A PBS Sabardin Ombra 1,637 16.49 N/A Total valid votes 9,789 98.62 Total rejected ballots 137 1.38 Unreturned ballots 0 0.00 Turnout 9,926 68.19 Registered electors 14,556 Majority 1,558 This was a new constituency created. Source(s) "KEPUTUSAN PILIHAN RAYA UMUM DEWAN UNDANGAN NEGERI SABAH BAGI TAHUN 1999".
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Roman Tolochko (footballer, born 1998)
In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions, the patronymic is Romanovych and the family name is Tolochko. Roman Tolochko (Ukrainian: Роман Романович Толочко; born 25 October 1998) is a Ukrainian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder. Career Tolochko is a product of the Karpaty Lviv School Sportive System. He made his senior debut for FC Karpaty against FC Lviv on 3 March 2019 in the Ukrainian Premier League. Personal life His father, Roman Tolochko, is a retired football player. * Roman Tolochko at Soccerway
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1941 Tschammerpokal Final
The 1941 Tschammerpokal Final decided the winner of the 1941 Tschammerpokal, the 7th season of Germany's knockout football cup competition. It was played on 2 November 1941 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin.Dresdner SC won the match 2–1 against Schalke 04, to claim their 2nd cup title. Route to the final The Tschammerpokal began the final stage with 64 teams in a single-elimination knockout cup competition. There were a total of five rounds leading up to the final. Teams were drawn against each other, and the winner after 90 minutes would advance. If still tied, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a replay would take place at the original away team's stadium. If still level after 90 minutes, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a second replay would take place at the original home team's stadium. If still level after 90 minutes, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a drawing of lots would decide who would advance to the next round. Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away; N: neutral). Dresdner SC Round Schalke 04 Opponent Result 1941 Tschammerpokal Opponent Result LSV Wurzen (A) 4–1 Round 1 Rot-Weiss Essen (A) 2–1 (a.e.t.) Polizei-SV Chemnitz (A) 3–0 Round 2 Fortuna Düsseldorf (H) 4–2 Hannover 96 (H) 9–2 Round of 16 Schwarz-Weiß Essen (A) 5–1 LSV Kamp-Köslin (N) 4–1 Quarter-finals Austria Wien (H) 4–1 Admira Wien (H) 4–2 Semi-finals Holstein Kiel (H) 6–0 Match Details 2 November 1941 Dresdner SC 2–1 Schalke 04 * Kugler 8' Report Kuzorra 51' * Carstens 88' Olympiastadion, Berlin Attendance: 65,000 Referee: Helmuth Fink (Frankfurt) Dresdner SC Schalke 04
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1941 Tschammerpokal Final
GK 1 [Germany] Willibald Kreß GK 1 [Germany] Hans Klodt RB [Germany] Karl Miller RB [Germany] Hans Bornemann LB [Germany] Heinz Hempel (c) LB [Germany] Otto Schweisfurth RH [Germany] Herbert Pohl RH [Germany] Bernhard Füller CH [Germany] Walter Dzur CH [Germany] Rudolf Gellesch LH [Germany] Helmut Schubert LH [Germany] Herbert Brudenski OR [Germany] Heiner Kugler OR [Germany] Ernst Kalwitzki IR [Germany] Heinz Schaffer IR [Germany] Fritz Szepan CF [Germany] Richard Hofmann CF [Germany] Hermann Eppenhoff IL [Germany] Helmut Schön IL [Germany] Ernst Kuzorra (c) OL [Germany] Gustav Carstens OL [Germany] Karl Barufka Manager: Manager: [Germany] Georg Köhler [Germany] Otto Faist Match rules * 90 minutes. * 30 minutes of extra time if necessary. * Replay if scores still level. * No substitutions. * Match report at kicker.de (in German) * Match report at WorldFootball.net * Match report at Fussballdaten.de (in German)
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1988 Miller High Life 400 (June)
The 1988 Miller High Life 400 was a NASCAR Winston Cup Series race that took place on June 26, 1988, at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn, Michigan. An unrelated race with the same sponsor was implemented on September 11, 1988, at Richmond International Raceway in Richmond, Virginia. Background Michigan International Speedway is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2 miles (3.2 km) long. Race report Rusty Wallace defeated Bill Elliott by a time of 0.28 seconds in front of an audience of 68,000.pole position with a speed of 172.687 miles per hour (277.913 km/h) while the average race speed was 153.551 miles per hour (247.116 km/h). Rick Wilson was the last-place finisher due to an engine issue on lap 3 of 200 with two more engine failures happening on laps 44 and 167. Elmer Simko would make his last appearance as a NASCAR team owner at this event.Owosso Speedway in Ovid, Michigan shortly after retiring from NASCAR. This would be the best career finish in four starts for Dana Patten with a 22nd-place finish.American-born males. David Simko would retire from NASCAR Cup Series racing after this event; finishing 40th in the process.David Sosebee would also retire after this race; completing the race in 31st place. Notable crew chiefs in attendance for this race were Junie Donlavey, Darrell Bryant, Joey Arrington, Andy Petree, Jimmy Means, Dale Inman, Travis Carter, Elmo Langley among others. Jimmy Horton, Jay Sommers, J.D. McDuffie, and Connie Saylor would fail to qualify for this race.146,867.28 when adjusted for inflation) to the last-place finisher's share of $3,050 ($6,988.22 when adjusted for inflation). The total prize purse for this event was advertised at $440,975 ($1,010,371.25 when adjusted for inflation). Finishing order
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1988 Miller High Life 400 (June)
POS ST # DRIVER SPONSOR / OWNER CAR LAPS MONEY STATUS LED PTS 1 5 27 Rusty Wallace Kodiak (Raymond Beadle) Pontiac 200 64100 running 106 185 2 1 9 Bill Elliott Coors (Harry Melling) Ford 200 42875 running 24 175 3 18 11 Terry Labonte Budweiser (Junior Johnson) Chevrolet 200 28075 running 29 170 4 9 3 Dale Earnhardt GM Goodwrench (Richard Childress) Chevrolet 200 26175 running 12 165 5 2 5 Geoffrey Bodine Levi Garrett (Rick Hendrick) Chevrolet 200 20325 running 0 155 6 11 25 Ken Schrader Folger's Coffee (Rick Hendrick) Chevrolet 200 16000 running 3 155 7 35 55 Phil Parsons Crown Petroleum (Leo Jackson / Richard Jackson) Oldsmobile 200 14150 running 0 146 8 4 17 Darrell Waltrip Tide (Rick Hendrick) Chevrolet 199 15450 running 1 147 9 28 29 Cale Yarborough Hardee's (Cale Yarborough) Oldsmobile 199 9700 running 1 143 10 12 12 Mike Alexander Miller High Life (Stavola Brothers) Buick 199 15950 running 0 134 11 31 26 Ricky Rudd Quaker State (Kenny Bernstein) Buick 199 10425 running 0 130 12 10 8 Bobby Hillin Jr. Miller High Life (Stavola Brothers) Buick 199 9950 running 0 127 13 21 88 Buddy Baker Red Baron Frozen Pizza (Buddy Baker / Danny Schiff) Oldsmobile 198 9500 running 1 129 14 13 6 Mark Martin Stroh's Light (Jack Roush) Ford 198 7050 running 0 121 15 29 2 Ernie Irvan Kroger (D.K. Ulrich) Chevrolet 198 6250 running 0 118 16 26 31 Joe Ruttman Slender You Figure Salons (Bob Clark) Oldsmobile 198 6250 running 0 115 17 32 10 Ken Bouchard Whitcomb Racing (Bob Whitcomb) Ford 197 4675 running 0 112 18 39 71 Dave Marcis Lifebuoy (Dave Marcis) Chevrolet 197 7500 running 0 109
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1988 Miller High Life 400 (June)
19 20 75 Neil Bonnett Valvoline (Rahmoc Enterprises) Pontiac 197 10985 running 0 106 20 41 98 Brad Noffsinger Sunoco (Mike Curb) Buick 196 4420 running 0 103 21 6 7 Alan Kulwicki Zerex (Alan Kulwicki) Ford 195 6725 running 0 100 22 37 96 Dana Patten U.S. Chrome (Dana Patten) Buick 194 3510 running 0 97 23 30 67 Buddy Arrington Pannill Sweatshirts (Buddy Arrington) Ford 188 5375 running 0 94 24 24 43 Richard Petty STP (Petty Enterprises) Pontiac 186 6265 running 0 91 25 33 1 Dale Jarrett Port-A-Lube (Hoss Ellington) Buick 183 3255 running 0 88 26 7 23 Eddie Bierschwale Wayne Paging (Don Bierschwale) Oldsmobile 174 3070 cylinder 0 85 27 16 15 Brett Bodine Crisco (Bud Moore) Ford 165 11610 engine 0 82 28 34 30 Michael Waltrip Country Time Lemonade (Chuck Rider) Pontiac 158 5900 engine 0 79 29 22 83 Lake Speed Wynn's / Kmart (Lake Speed) Oldsmobile 128 3715 crank 0 76 30 14 97 Rodney Combs GM Tech Team (Tom Winkle) Buick 126 2805 engine 0 73 31 27 92 David Sosebee Lucky Compton Ford 124 2750 ignition 0 32 25 68 Derrike Cope Purolator Filters (Jim Testa) Ford 121 5410 clutch 0 67 33 17 21 Kyle Petty Citgo (Wood Brothers) Ford 105 9650 engine 0 64 34 23 33 Morgan Shepherd Skoal Bandit (Hal Needham) Chevrolet 83 5275 engine 0 61 35 3 28 Davey Allison Havoline (Harry Ranier) Ford 70 12440 engine 23 63 36 40 52 Jimmy Means Eureka Vacuum Cleaners (Jimmy Means) Pontiac 51 5185 engine 0 55 37 15 44 Sterling Marlin Piedmont Airlines (Billy Hagan) Oldsmobile 41 5150 engine 0 52 38 8 90 Benny Parsons Bull's Eye Barbecue Sauce (Junie Donlavey) Ford 22 5110 oil pump 0 49
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1988 Miller High Life 400 (June)
39 36 36 H.B. Bailey National Motors (H.B. Bailey) Pontiac 21 2470 oil leak 0 46 40 38 51 David Simko Tom Company (Elmer Simko) Pontiac 9 2450 engine 0 41 19 4 Rick Wilson Kodak Film (Larry McClure) Oldsmobile 2 3050 engine 0 40 Failed to qualify POS NAME NBR SPONSOR OWNER CAR Connie Saylor Jay Sommers J.D. McDuffie 70 Rumple Furniture J.D. McDuffie Pontiac Jimmy Horton 80
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1988 Miller High Life 400 (June)
Timeline Section reference: Bill Elliott Davey Allison Rusty Wallace Bill Elliott Terry Labonte Rusty Wallace Terry Labonte Ken Schrader Terry Labonte Dale Earnhardt Rusty Wallace │ 1 │ 11 │ 21 │ 31 │ 41 │ 51 │ 61 │ 71 │ 81 │ 91 │ 101 │ 111 │ 121 │ 131 │ 141 │ 151 │ 161 │ 171 │ 181 │ 191 Standings after the race Pos Driver Points Differential 1 Rusty Wallace 2145 0 2 Dale Earnhardt 2015 -130 3 Bill Elliott 1995 -150 4 Terry Labonte 1939 -206 5 [Increase] Ken Schrader 1829 -316 6 [Increase] Geoffrey Bodine 1814 -331 7 [Decrease] Sterling Marlin 1808 -337 8 [Increase] Phil Parsons 1762 -383 9 [Increase] Darrell Waltrip 1734 -411 10 Bobby Hillin Jr. 1723 -422
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1965 DFB-Pokal Final
The 1965 DFB-Pokal Final decided the winner of the 1964–65 DFB-Pokal, the 22nd season of Germany's knockout football cup competition. It was played on 22 May 1965 at the Niedersachsenstadion in Hanover.Borussia Dortmund won the match 2–0 against Alemannia Aachen, to claim their 1st cup title. Route to the final The DFB-Pokal began with 32 teams in a single-elimination knockout cup competition. There were a total of four rounds leading up to the final. Teams were drawn against each other, and the winner after 90 minutes would advance. If still tied, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a replay would take place at the original away team's stadium. If still level after 90 minutes, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a drawing of lots would decide who would advance to the next round. Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away). Borussia Dortmund Round Alemannia Aachen Opponent Result 1964–65 DFB-Pokal Opponent Result Preußen Münster (A) 1–0 Round 1 VfL Osnabrück (A) 3–1 Tennis Borussia Berlin (A) 2–1 Round of 16 Rot-Weiß Oberhausen (A) 1–0 Eintracht Braunschweig (A) 2–0 Quarter-finals Hannover 96 (H) 2–1 1. FC Nürnberg (H) 4–2 Semi-finals Schalke 04 (H) 4–3 (a.e.t.) Match Details 22 May 1965 16:00 CET Borussia Dortmund 2–0 Alemannia Aachen * Schmidt 10' Report * Emmerich 18' Niedersachsenstadion, Hanover Attendance: 55,000 Referee: Rudibert Jacobi (Heidelberg) Borussia Dortmund Alemannia Aachen
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1965 DFB-Pokal Final
GK 1 [West Germany] Hans Tilkowski GK 1 [West Germany] Gerhard Prokop RB [West Germany] Gerhard Cyliax RB [West Germany] Herbert Krisp LB [West Germany] Theodor Redder LB [West Germany] Werner Nievelstein RH [West Germany] Dieter Kurrat RH [West Germany] Erwin Hermandung CH [West Germany] Wolfgang Paul CH [West Germany] Josef Thelen LH [West Germany] Hermann Straschitz LH [West Germany] Christian Breuer OR [West Germany] Reinhold Wosab OR [West Germany] Herbert Gronen IR [West Germany] Wilhelm Sturm IR [West Germany] Franz-Josef Nacken CF [West Germany] Alfred Schmidt (c) CF [West Germany] Josef Martinelli (c) IL [West Germany] Friedhelm Konietzka IL [West Germany] Alfred Glenski OL [West Germany] Lothar Emmerich OL [West Germany] Wilhelm Krieger Manager: Manager: [West Germany] Hermann Eppenhoff [West Germany] Oswald Pfau Match rules * 90 minutes. * 30 minutes of extra time if necessary. * Replay if scores still level. * No substitutions. * Match report at kicker.de (in German) * Match report at WorldFootball.net * Match report at Fussballdaten.de (in German)
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1969 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Men's Downhill
1969 Men's Downhill World Cup Previous: 1968 Next: 1970 Men's Downhill World Cup 1968/1969 Main article: 1969 Alpine Skiing World Cup Final point standings In Men's Downhill World Cup 1968/69 the best 3 results count. Deductions are given in (). Place Name Country Total Points Deduction 4[Switzerland] 6[Austria] 8[France] 10[Austria] 13[Italy] 14[Italy] 1 Karl Schranz Austria 75 25 25 - 25 - - 2 Heinrich Messner Austria 60 (3) 20 - 20 20 - (3) Henri Duvillard France 60 (12) - 15 25 (6) (6) 20 4 Jean-Daniel Dätwyler Switzerland 56 (24) 11 20 (11) (11) (2) 25 5 Josef Minsch Switzerland 44 (7) 8 - (3) (4) 25 11 6 Karl Cordin Austria 41 (8) 15 15 - - 11 (8) 7 Rudi Sailer Austria 31 (6) - (6) - 8 8 15 8 Jean-Pierre Augert France 24 4 - - - 20 - 9 Alfred Matt Austria 19 - 2 15 2 - - 10 Hans Peter Rohr Switzerland 17 - - - - 15 2 11 Franz Vogler West Germany 15 - - - 15 - - 12 Andreas Sprecher Switzerland 14 - 4 6 - - 4 13 Guy Périllat France 8 - 8 - - - - Rod Hebron Canada 8 - - 8 - - - 15 Bernard Orcel France 6 6 - - - - - Kurt Huggler Switzerland 6 - - - - - 6 17 Keith Shepard Canada 5 - - 4 - 1 - 18 Hans Zingre Switzerland 4 3 - - 1 - - Gerhard Mussner Italy 4 - - - - 4 - 20 Roger Rossat-Mignod France 3 - 3 - - - - Spider Sabich United States 3 - - - 3 - - Dennis McCoy United States 3 - - - - 3 - 23 Willi Lesch West Germany 2 2 - - - - - Michele Stefani Italy 2 - - 2 - - - 25 Gerhard Nenning Austria 1 1 - - - - - Gerry Rinaldi Canada 1 - 1 - - - - Alain Penz France 1 - - 1 - - - Helmuth Schmalzl Italy 1 - - - - - 1
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1969 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Men's Downhill
Alpine skiing World Cup Men Overall | Downhill | Giant Slalom | Slalom 1969 * fis-ski.com * Official website
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Sri Tanjung (Negeri Sembilan state constituency)
Sri Tanjung is a state constituency in Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia that is currently represented in the Negeri Sembilan State Legislative Assembly in 2018. The constituency is currently under the The state constituency was created in the 2018 redistribution replacing Port Dickson state constituency The current voter composition of Sri Tanjung is 36.59% Malay, 31.02% Indian, 30.88% Chinese and 1.52% Others. Polling districts Kampong Paya, Kampong Arab, Kampong Chokra, Pekan Port Dickson History Members of the Legislative Assembly for Sri Tanjung Assembly Years Name Party Constituency created from Port Dickson 14th 2018-present Ravi Munasamy PH (PKR) Election results Negeri Sembilan state election, 2018: Sri Tanjung Party Candidate Votes % ∆% PH Ravi a/l Munusamy 7,366 62.62 BN Thinalan a/l T Rajagopalu 3,336 28.36 Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party Kamarul Ridzuan bin Mohd Zain 1,061 9.02 Total valid votes 11,763 100.00 Total rejected ballots 159 Unreturned ballots Turnout 11,952 82.87% Registered electors 14,422 Majority 4,030 PH gain from BN Swing ?
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Sergei Makarov (ice hockey)
Sergei Mikhailovich Makarov (Russian: Серге́й Миха́йлович Мака́ров; born 19 June 1958) is a Russian former ice hockey right wing and two-time Olympic gold medalist. He was voted one of six players to the International Ice Hockey Federation's (IIHF) Centennial All-Star Team in a poll conducted by a group of 56 experts from 16 countries. Career Makarov in 1979 Makarov was trained in the Russian SFSR. He won two World Junior Championships, and was named the best player during his second victory in 1978. Makarov was also on the gold-winning Soviet national ice hockey team in the World Championships in 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1986, 1989 and 1990 and in the Canada Cup in 1981. At the Winter Olympics, he won the gold medal in 1984 and 1988 and a silver in 1980 as a member of the USSR team. In the Soviet Union, Makarov played 11 championship seasons with CSKA Moscow (Red Army), winning the Soviet Player of the Year award (also known as Soviet MVP) three times, getting named to the Soviet League All-Star Team ten times, and leading the league in points nine times and goals three times.Igor Larionov and Vladimir Krutov, they formed the KLM Line, one of the most talented and feared lines ever to play hockey. He was awarded Order of the Red Banner of Labour (1984). In 1989, Makarov was allowed by the Soviet Union to join the National Hockey League and the Calgary Flames. He won the Calder Memorial Trophy as rookie of the year at the age of 31 (as a result, the rules were changed and now only players under 26 qualify for the award – the Makarov Rule). At 25.9% his shooting percentage was the highest of all NHL players. Makarov also played for the San Jose Sharks from 1993 to 1995. For the 1995–96 season Makarov was dropped from the Sharks' roster and did not play and became an assistant coach for the Russian national team during the World Cup.
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Sergei Makarov (ice hockey)
In the 1996–97 season, Makarov made two comeback attempts, first with the Dallas Stars, for whom he played four games between 15–29 November, followed by playing for HC Fribourg-Gottéron in Switzerland's Nationalliga A with former teammates Vyacheslav Bykov and Andrei Khomutov. In 2001, Makarov was inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame during the Ice Hockey World Championship in Germany. On 27 June 2016, it was announced that he would be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame on 14 November 2016 along with Eric Lindros, Rogie Vachon and Pat Quinn (posthumously). Personal life After separating from his first wife Vera (son Artie) in Calgary, he met Mary, who had worked for the San Jose Sharks in the ticket sales. They married and had two children, Nikolai and Katerina. Makarov is again divorced, and is living in Russia. His ex-wife and children, son Nik and daughter Katerina, still live in California. Makarov still works as a certified player agent who acts as a liaison for young Russians wanting to play in North America. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs
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Sergei Makarov (ice hockey)
Career statistics Regular season and playoffs Regular season Playoffs Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM 1976–77 Traktor Chelyabinsk USSR 11 1 0 1 4 — — — — — 1977–78 Traktor Chelyabinsk USSR 36 18 13 31 10 — — — — — 1978–79 CSKA Moscow USSR 44 18 21 39 12 — — — — — 1979–80 CSKA Moscow USSR 44 29 39 68 16 — — — — — 1980–81 CSKA Moscow USSR 49 42 37 79 22 — — — — — 1981–82 CSKA Moscow USSR 46 32 43 75 18 — — — — — 1982–83 CSKA Moscow USSR 30 25 17 42 6 — — — — — 1983–84 CSKA Moscow USSR 44 36 37 73 28 — — — — — 1984–85 CSKA Moscow USSR 40 26 39 65 28 — — — — — 1985–86 CSKA Moscow USSR 40 30 32 62 28 — — — — — 1986–87 CSKA Moscow USSR 40 21 32 53 26 — — — — — 1987–88 CSKA Moscow USSR 51 23 45 68 50 — — — — — 1988–89 CSKA Moscow USSR 44 21 33 54 42 — — — — — 1989–90 Calgary Flames NHL 80 24 62 86 55 6 0 6 6 0 1990–91 Calgary Flames NHL 78 30 49 79 44 3 1 0 1 0 1991–92 Calgary Flames NHL 68 22 48 70 60 — — — — — 1992–93 Calgary Flames NHL 71 18 39 57 40 — — — — — 1993–94 San Jose Sharks NHL 80 30 38 68 78 14 8 2 10 4 1994–95 San Jose Sharks NHL 43 10 14 24 40 11 3 3 6 4 1996–97 HC Fribourg–Gottéron NDA 6 3 2 5 2 1 0 0 0 0 1996–97 Dallas Stars NHL 4 0 0 0 0 — — — — — USSR totals 519 322 388 710 290 — — — — — NHL totals 424 134 250 384 317 34 12 11 23 8 International
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Sergei Makarov (ice hockey)
International Year Team Event Result GP G A Pts PIM 1977 Soviet Union WJC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 7 4 4 8 4 1978 Soviet Union WJC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 7 8 7 15 4 1978 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 10 3 2 5 5 1979 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 8 8 4 12 6 1980 Soviet Union OG [2nd place, silver medalist(s)] 7 5 6 11 2 1981 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 7 3 6 9 0 1981 Soviet Union CC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 7 3 6 9 0 1982 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 10 6 7 13 8 1983 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 10 9 9 18 18 1984 Soviet Union OG [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 7 3 3 6 6 1984 Soviet Union CC [3rd place, bronze medalist(s)] 6 6 1 7 4 1985 Soviet Union WC [3rd place, bronze medalist(s)] 10 9 5 14 8 1986 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 10 4 14 18 12 1987 Soviet Union WC [2nd place, silver medalist(s)] 10 4 10 14 8 1987 Soviet Union CC [2nd place, silver medalist(s)] 9 7 8 15 8 1988 Soviet Union OG [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 8 3 8 11 10 1989 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 10 5 3 8 8 1990 Soviet Union WC [1st place, gold medalist(s)] 7 2 1 3 8 1991 Soviet Union WC [3rd place, bronze medalist(s)] 8 3 7 10 6 Junior totals 14 12 11 23 8 Senior totals 145 83 89 172 129 * Biographical information and career statistics from NHL.com, or Eliteprospects.com, or Eurohockey.com, or Hockey-Reference.com, or Legends of Hockey, or The Internet Hockey Database * Sergey Makarov at Hockey CCCP International
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Skørping station
Skørping railway station is a Danish railway station serving the railway town of Skørping in Himmerland south of Aalborg, Denmark. The station is located on the Randers-Aalborg Line from Randers to Aalborg and is the southern terminus of the Aalborg Commuter Rail service.railway companies DSB and Nordjyske Jernbaner. History Platforms of Skørping station The station opened in 1869 with the opening of the Randers-Aalborg railway line from Randers to Aalborg.terminus of the new Aalborg Commuter Rail service.commuter rail services between Aalborg and Skørping were transferred from DSB to the local railway company Nordjyske Jernbaner. Operations The train services are operated by the railway companies DSB and Nordjyske Jernbaner. The station offers direct InterCity services to Copenhagen and Aalborg, regional train services to Aarhus and Aalborg as well as commuter train services to Aalborg. Architecture The original station building from 1869 was designed by the Danish architect N.P.C. Holsøe.1878 and 1898. The station building was listed in 1992 along with the station's water tower. In literature Danish writer Herman Bang's novel Ved Vejen was inspired by an incident in 1883 when he was passing through Skørping Station. He noticed a young woman at the window who, her pale face couched in her hands, stared after his departing train. In the introduction to Stille Eksistenser he explains: "For the rest of the journey, I could see the woman's face between the flowers. Her look was not quite one of longing — longing would have perhaps fluttered to death by breaking its wings in such tight confines — just a quite resignation, a waning sorrow. And when the train had slid by, she would be peering out with the same look over Egnens Lyng — over the dreary plain."