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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amer%20Azahar
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Mohammad Amer bin Azahar (born 22 June 1995) is a Malaysian footballer who plays as a winger for Malaysia Super League club Penang.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Penang
Malaysia Premier League: 2020
Kedah Darul Aman
Malaysia Super League runner-up: 2022
References
External links
1995 births
Footballers from Penang
Living people
UiTM United players
Kedah Darul Aman F.C. players
Penang F.C. players
Malaysian men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Malaysia Super League players
Malaysian people of Malay descent
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015%20Philippine%20census
|
The 2015 Census of Population (POPCEN 2015) is the fourteenth census in the Philippines and is the first census conducted by the Philippine Statistics Authority.
Background
The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) was formed from the merger of the National Statistics Office and three other major statistical government agencies by virtue of Republic Act 10625, or the Philippine Statistical Act of 2013. The same law obliges the PSA to conduct the national censuses in the Philippines starting with the 2015 census.
90,000 enumerators and 23,000 supervisors were employed for the conduct of the census. Enumerators made house-to-house visits and institutional surveys for the census. The census began on August 10, 2015.
The census was criticized by the National Council on Disability Affairs for excluding questions regarding disability.
Results
President Benigno Aquino III declared the results of the 2015 census as official through Proclamation No. 1269 dated May 13, 2016. The POPCEN 2015 recorded a population of 100,981,437 for the Philippines as of August 1, 2015. The 2010 census recorded a national population of 92,337,852; a 1.72% yearly increase.
Calabarzon has the largest population among the Philippines' regions with 14,414,774 people while the Cordillera Administrative Region is the smallest with 1,722,006 people. Cavite (3.68 million) has the largest population among the country's provinces, while Batanes (17.2 thousand) has the least. Quezon City has the biggest population among the country's highly urbanized cities with 2.94 million people.
Application
The population count recorded by the 2015 census, was used as basis for the creation of new legislative districts:
Caloocan (3rd district) – created from the 1st district
Rizal (3rd and 4th districts) – created from the 2nd district
Aklan (1st and 2nd districts)
Santa Rosa, Laguna
Calamba, Laguna
References
Censuses in the Philippines
2015 in the Philippines
Philippines
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tojiro%20Kubo
|
is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Nagoya Grampus.
Career
In July 2023, Kubo joined J1 League side Nagoya Grampus on a permanent deal.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
1999 births
Living people
Association football people from Aichi Prefecture
Chukyo University alumni
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J3 League players
Fujieda MYFC players
J2 League players
Nagoya Grampus players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995%E2%80%9396%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
|
The 1995–96 season saw Rochdale compete in their 22nd consecutive season in the fourth tier of the English football league, named at the time as the Football League Third Division.
Statistics
|}
Final League Table
Competitions
Football League Third Division
F.A. Cup
Football League Cup (Coca Cola Cup)
Football League Trophy (Auto Windscreens Shield)
Lancashire Cup
References
Rochdale A.F.C. seasons
Rochdale
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad%20Faudzi
|
Muhammad bin Mohd Faudzi (born 27 February 1996) is a Malaysian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Malaysia Super League club Kuala Lumpur City.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Kuala Lumpur City
AFC Cup runner-up: 2022
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Malaysian men's footballers
Footballers from Perak
Terengganu F.C. II players
Terengganu FC players
Kuala Lumpur City F.C. players
Malaysia Super League players
Malaysian people of Malay descent
Men's association football defenders
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairiey%20Hakim
|
Muhammad Hairiey Hakim bin Mamat (born 14 January 2000) is a Malaysian professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Malaysia Super League club Terengganu.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Malaysian men's footballers
Terengganu F.C. II players
Terengganu FC players
Malaysia Super League players
Malaysian people of Malay descent
Men's association football defenders
Competitors at the 2021 SEA Games
SEA Games competitors for Malaysia
Footballers from Terengganu
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie%20Johanna%20Weiss
|
Marie Johanna Weiss (September 21, 1903 – August 19, 1952) was an American mathematician, university professor and textbook author. In 1927, she became the first woman to earn a PhD in mathematics from Stanford University.
Life and work
Weiss was born in Eugene, California, the youngest of three surviving children of Alice Hedwig (Buschke) and Frederick Weiss, both German emigrants. She attended public high schools in Stockton, California, before enrolling at Stanford University in 1921. In the summer of 1924, after her junior year, she was an assistant instructor in a mathematics class there. She was accepted into the honorary society Phi Beta Kappa and graduated in 1925 with a bachelor's degree in mathematics with distinction. The following year she studied at Radcliffe College (now Harvard), where she received her master's degree in 1926. She returned to Stanford on a university scholarship and taught functional theory. There, she completed her doctorate with William Albert Manning; her dissertation was titled: Primitive Groups Which Contain Substitutions of Prime Order p and of Degree 6p or 7p. The dissertation is dated August 1927, and she received her PhD in June 1928.
She received a National Research Council Fellowship and studied at the University of Chicago in 1928 and 1929. From 1930 to 1936 she was an assistant professor in the mathematics department at the H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. In 1934 and 1935 she went on leave to do research at Bryn Mawr College as an Emmy Noether Fellow. She joined other female doctoral and postgraduate mathematicians there, Ruth Stauffer, Grace Shover Quinn and Olga Taussky-Todd, who all studied with esteemed mathematician Emmy Noether. After two years as an assistant professor at Vassar College, she returned in 1938 to H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College as a professor.
From 1950 to 1952, she served the Mathematical Association of America as governor-at-large.
Marie Weiss began suffering from an unknown illness in early 1952. As she became increasingly ill, she visited her mother and brother in Visalia, California, in the summer of 1952, but her illness worsened. She was taken to the Langley Porter Clinic in San Francisco, where she died August 19, 1952, at the age of 48, from congestive heart failure resulting from bacterial endocarditis. A lifelong Lutheran, she was buried in Stockton, California.
In her honor, the Marie J. Weiss Memorial Scholarship Fund was established at Newcomb College in 1952.
Memberships
American Mathematical Society
Phi Beta Kappa
Mathematical Association of America
Sigma Delta Epsilon
American Association of University Women
American Association of University Professors
Sigma Xi
Selected publications
Weiss's Algebra textbook became known as "an important text."
1928: "Primitive groups which contain substitutions of prime order p and of degree 6p or 7p." Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 30: 3
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eduardo%20Casas-Alvero
|
Eduardo Casas-Alvero (born 1948) is a Spanish mathematician and a professor at the University of Barcelona. His work lies in algebraic geometry and commutative algebra, especially curve theory. One of his main contributions has been the Casas-Alvero conjecture characterizing certain polynomials whose factors match their derivatives as powers of a linear polynomial.
Casas-Alvero did his PhD at the University of Barcelona under the direction of .
Bibliography
Casas-Alvero, E. and Xambo-Descamps, S. (1986). The Enumerative Theory of Conics After Halphen. Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Springer.
Casas-Alvero, E. (2000). Singularities of Plane Curves. London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series. Cambridge University Press.
Casas-Alvero, E. (2014). Analytic Projective Geometry. EMS Textbooks in Mathematics. European Mathematical Society.
Casas-Alvero, E. (2019). Algebraic Curves, the Brill and Noether Way. Universitext. Springer.
References
External links
Casas-Alvero's page from the University of Barcelona directory
1948 births
Living people
20th-century Spanish mathematicians
Algebraic geometers
21st-century Spanish mathematicians
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiexiang
|
Jiexiang (; ) is a town in Ruili, Yunnan, China. As of the 2016 statistics it had a population of 17,836 and an area of .
Etymology
The name of "Jiexiang" means gem street in Dai language.
Administrative division
As of 2021, the town is divided into four villages:
Hesai ()
Shunha ()
Nuanbo ()
Eluo ()
History
After the establishment of the Communist State, in February 1955, Jiexiang District () came under the jurisdiction of the 3rd District of Ruili County. It was renamed "Jiedong People's Commune" () in October 1958 and reverted to its former name of Jiexiang District in 1960. During the Cultural Revolution, its name was changed to "Xiangyang People's Commune" (). It was incorporated as a township in 1986. In 2021, it was recognized as "a famous tourist town" in Yunnan by the Yunnan Provincial Department of Culture and Tourism. Yunnan provincial government approve revoking Jiexiang Township and establish Jiexiang Town on 11 August 2021.
Geography
The town is located in the southeastern Ruili and borders Myanmar in the southeast.
The Shweli River flows through the town.
Economy
The town's main industries is agriculture. The main crops are vegetables, tobacco, rubber, grapefruit, and dendrobium nobile.
The Ruili Huanshan Industrial Park sits in the town.
Demographics
In 2016, the local population was 17,836, including 1,642 Han (9.2%) and 16,106 Dai (91.3%).
Tourist attractions
The main attractions are the Mangyue Temple, Denghannong Temple, and the scenic spot of "one village, two countries".
Transportation
The town is the termination of China National Highway 556.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Ruili
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huyu%20Township
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Huyu Township (; Jingpo: Hu yup or Hi yup) is a township in Ruili, Yunnan, China. As of the 2016 statistics it had a population of 8,521 and an area of .
Etymology
The name of "Huyu" means a place where wild musas grow in Dai language.
Administrative division
As of 2016, the township is divided into four villages:
Huyu ()
Nongxian ()
Banling ()
Leinong ()
History
In 1956, the Government of Ruili County set up the Huyu Production and Culture Station to maintain control of the region. During the Cultural Revolution, it was renamed "Huyu People's Commune" and then "Dongfeng People's Commune" (). It was incorporated as a township in 1986.
Geography
The township lies at the northwestern Ruili. To the northwest, the region is bounded by the Namwan River.
The highest point in the town/township is Yingpan Mountain () which stands above sea level. The lowest point is Tuanjie Groove (), which, at above sea level.
Economy
The local economy is primarily based upon agriculture. The main crops are rice, rubber, grapefruit, and dendrobium nobile.
The Ruili Huanshan Industrial Park (second-phase project) sits in the township.
Demographics
In 2016, the local population was 8,521, including 2,389 Han (28%) and 4,703 Jingpo (55.2%).
Transportation
The Longling–Ruili Expressway Nongdao Extension Road passes across the township.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Ruili
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mengxiu%20Township
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Mengxiu Township (; ) is a township in Ruili, Yunnan, China. As of the 2016 statistics it had a population of 11,786 and an area of .
Etymology
The name of "Mengxiu" means a place where wild ginger grows in Dai language.
Administrative division
As of 2016, the township is divided into seven villages:
Mengxiu ()
Huwa ()
Hulan ()
Mengdian ()
Dengzha ()
Nanjingli ()
Xiaojie ()
History
In the Qing dynasty and Republic of China, the indigenous people were Jingpo people.
On 25 February 1956, the Government of Ruili County set up the Mengxiu Production and Culture Station () to maintain control of the region. In 1965. it came under the jurisdiction of Jiele District. During the Cultural Revolution, its name was changed to "Mengxiu People's Commune" and then "Red Flag People's Commune" (). It was incorporated as a township in 1986.
Geography
It lies at the northern of Ruili, bordering Myanmar to the northwest bounded by the Namwan River.
The highest point is Yingpan Mountain (), elevation . The forest coverage rate of the township is 74%.
Economy
The township's economy is based on agriculture. The main crops are corn, rice, lemon, and walnut.
Demographics
In 2016, the local population was 11,786, including 6,190 Han (52.52%) and 4,604 Jingpo (39.06%).
Tourist attractions
The Ruili Botanical Garden sits in the township.
Transportation
The China National Highway 556 passes across the township.
The Ruili Jingcheng Heliport serves the township.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Ruili
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth%20power
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Fifth power may refer to:
Fifth power (algebra), the result of multiplying five instances of a number together
Fifth power (politics), a political term
The 5th Power, a 1978 album by Lester Bowie
The Fifth Power (film), a 1962 film by Alberto Pieralisi
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issei%20Kato
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is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a forward for Vegalta Sendai.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
Association football people from Saitama Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Vegalta Sendai players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katlego%20Mohamme
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Katlego Mohamme (born 10 March 1998) is a South African soccer player currently playing as a centre-back for Mamelodi Sundowns.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
International
References
1998 births
Living people
People from the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
South African men's soccer players
South Africa men's international soccer players
South Africa men's under-20 international soccer players
South Africa men's youth international soccer players
Men's association football defenders
South African expatriate men's soccer players
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
South African expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Campeonato de Portugal (league) players
National First Division players
SuperSport United F.C. players
Sertanense F.C. players
University of Pretoria F.C. players
Moroka Swallows F.C. players
Mamelodi Sundowns F.C. players
Footballers at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Olympic soccer players for South Africa
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mondli%20Mpoto
|
Mondli Mpoto (born 24 July 1998) is a South African soccer player currently playing as a goalkeeper for Royal AM.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
International
References
1998 births
Living people
South African men's soccer players
South Africa men's international soccer players
South Africa men's under-20 international soccer players
South Africa men's youth international soccer players
Men's association football goalkeepers
South African Premier Division players
SuperSport United F.C. players
Bloemfontein Celtic F.C. players
Royal AM F.C. players
Footballers at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Olympic soccer players for South Africa
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sifiso%20Mlungwana
|
Sifiso Mlungwana (born 27 April 1997) is a South African soccer player currently playing as a goalkeeper for Lamontville Golden Arrows.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1997 births
Living people
People from uMhlabuyalingana Local Municipality
Zulu people
South African men's soccer players
South Africa men's youth international soccer players
Men's association football goalkeepers
South African Premier Division players
Lamontville Golden Arrows F.C. players
Footballers at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Olympic soccer players for South Africa
Soccer players from KwaZulu-Natal
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Fauvel
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John Fauvel (21 July 1947 – 12 May 2001) was a British mathematician and historian of mathematics.
Education
Fauvel was from Scotland, where his father was a principal.
Ian Blair was a cousin.
John attended Trinity College, Glenalmond. He then studied mathematics at the University of Essex, where he graduated in 1970, and at the University of Warwick, where he obtained his master's degree in 1973. In 1977, he obtained his MPhil from the University of Warwick under the supervision of David Orme Tall, with a thesis entitled Fuzzy Theory.
Career
From 1974, Fauvel worked at the Open University. From 1991 to 1994, he was President of the British Society for the History of Mathematics and he also edited its newsletter. From 1992 to 1996, he directed an international study group on the relations between history and mathematics pedagogy, which is affiliated with the International Commission for Mathematical Education (ICMI), and in 2000 he co-directed a major study of ICMI. In 1998, he was invited lecturer by the New Zealand Mathematical Society. Fauvel was a visiting scholar in the Mathematics Department at Colorado College on several occasions, including one on a Fulbright Fellowship during the Winter and Spring of 1999.
Fauvel died on 12 May 2001 of complications from liver disease.
Publications
Fauvel is known as the author of books on the history of mathematics, several of which have been translated.
.
With Jeremy Gray: The history of mathematics: A reader. Macmillan, 1987,
Mathematics through history – a source book. Livres QED.
With Bengt Johansson, Frank Swetz, Otto Bekken, and Victor J. Katz: Learn from the Masters. MAA, 1994.
References
External links
.
1947 births
2001 deaths
20th-century Scottish mathematicians
People educated at Glenalmond College
Alumni of the University of Essex
Alumni of the University of Warwick
Academics of the Open University
British historians of mathematics
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxsius%20Musa
|
Maxsius Musa (born 21 May 1993) is a Malaysian professional footballer who plays as a winger for Malaysia Super League club Sabah.
Career statistics
Club
Honour
Sabah
Sukma: 2012 Gold
Malaysia Premier League: 2019
References
External links
1993 births
Living people
Malaysian men's footballers
Footballers from Sabah
Sabah F.C. (Malaysia) players
Men's association football forwards
Malaysia Super League players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Philippine%20Basketball%20Association%20career%20free%20throw%20percentage%20leaders
|
This is a list of Philippine Basketball Association players by the highest free throw percentage in their PBA career.
Statistics accurate as of December 23, 2022.
See also
List of Philippine Basketball Association players
References
Free Throw, Career
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group%20analysis%20of%20differential%20equations
|
Group analysis of differential equations is a branch of mathematics that studies the symmetry properties of differential equations with respect to various transformations of independent and dependent variables. It includes methods and applied aspects of differential geometry, Lie groups and algebras theory, calculus of variations and is, in turn, a powerful research tool in theories of ODEs, PDEs, mathematical and theoretical physics.
Motivation
References
Group theory
Differential geometry
Lie groups
Lie algebras
Differential equations
Mathematical physics
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazuma%20Kuwata
|
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for SC Sagamihara.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Association football people from Saga Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Japanese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
AD Alcorcón footballers
SC Sagamihara players
Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Philippine%20Basketball%20Association%20Imports%20career%203-point%20scoring%20leaders
|
This is a list of Philippine Basketball Association imports by the highest total number of three-point field goals made in their stint or tenure with the league.
Statistics accurate as of January 16, 2023.
See also
List of Philippine Basketball Association players
References
Lists of Philippine Basketball Association players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Family%20Dog%20Denver
|
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The Family Dog Denver (also known as The Family Dog or simply The Dog) was a concert dance hall located at 1601 West Evans Avenue in Denver, Colorado. Opened from September 1967 to July 1968, it is regarded as a seminal music venue that launched Denver on its trajectory to its current status as a major concert destination by introducing never-before-seen acts like The Doors, Van Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, Cream, Buffalo Springfield, Janis Joplin, Chuck Berry, and many others. Many acts, like The Doors and Van Morrison, for example, had yet to become famous when they played The Dog, evidenced by the poster artists having to stylize the names of their leading songs into the poster art for the shows. The Family Dog is also seen as a cultural turning point in Denver from the conservative, western-minded sensibility of the early and mid-20th century to the current, liberal-minded climate. The venue's history, surrounding drama and ultimate impact had been largely unknown and unrealized until it was unearthed and detailed for the first time in the 2021 documentary The Tale of the Dog, produced and directed by Dan Obarski & Scott Montgomery and distributed by Cinedigm. As there are no useful photos, no video and little written history remaining of the Family Dog Denver, the film's oral history format told in first person by the people who were there serves as a definitive reference for “The Dog.”
History
Pre-1967
Denver, prior to the opening of the Family Dog, was not a major music destination. There had been a modest jazz scene in the Five Points neighborhood which hosted international acts such as Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington. Beginning in the early 1960s there had also been a folk music scene, led by Harry Tuft at the Denver Folklore Center, who brought in the likes of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and Judy Collins. Otherwise, most music venues, like the Exodus, Catacombs and The Cave, featured local bands with limited, if any, national exposure.
1967: Barry Fey Meets Chet Helms
In early 1967, Barry and Cynthia Fey, who had been booking concert acts like The Association, Alice Cooper and Eric Burdon at the University of Denver, flew with his wife to San Francisco to meet with Chet Helms, co-owner (with Bob Cohen) of Family Dog Productions. At that time Helms was a primary figure in the San Francisco hippie scene, with his Family Dog Productions running the legendary Avalon Ballroom, where he cultivated acts like the Grateful Dead, the Jefferson Airplane, and Janis Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company.
The Feys brought with him a demo tape of a Denver psychedelic rock band named The Eighth Penny Matter as evidence that the music was popular in Denver and that importing the Haight-As
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantor%27s%20isomorphism%20theorem
|
In order theory and model theory, branches of mathematics, Cantor's isomorphism theorem states that every two countable dense unbounded linear orders are order-isomorphic. For instance, Minkowski's question-mark function produces an isomorphism (a one-to-one order-preserving correspondence) between the numerical ordering of the rational numbers and the numerical ordering of the dyadic rationals.
The theorem is named after Georg Cantor, who first published it in 1895, using it to characterize the (uncountable) ordering on the real numbers. It can be proved by a back-and-forth method that is also sometimes attributed to Cantor but was actually published later, by Felix Hausdorff. The same back-and-forth method also proves that countable dense unbounded orders are highly symmetric, and can be applied to other kinds of structures. However, Cantor's original proof only used the "going forth" half of this method. In terms of model theory, the isomorphism theorem can be expressed by saying that the first-order theory of unbounded dense linear orders is countably categorical, meaning that it has only one countable model, up to logical equivalence.
One application of Cantor's isomorphism theorem involves temporal logic, a method for using logic to reason about time. In this application, the theorem implies that it is sufficient to use intervals of rational numbers to model intervals of time: using irrational numbers for this purpose will not lead to any increase in logical power.
Statement and examples
Cantor's isomorphism theorem is stated using the following concepts:
A linear order or total order is defined by a set of elements and a comparison operation that gives an ordering to each pair of distinct elements and obeys the The familiar numeric orderings on the integers, rational numbers, and real numbers are all examples of linear
Unboundedness means that the ordering does not contain a minimum or maximum element. This is different from the concept of a bounded set in a metric space. For instance, the open interval (0,1) is unbounded as an ordered set, even though it is bounded as a subset of the real numbers, because neither its infimum 0 nor its supremum 1 belong to the interval. The integers, rationals, and reals are also
An ordering is dense when every pair of elements has another element between This is different from being a topologically dense set within the real The rational numbers and real numbers are dense in this sense, as the arithmetic mean of any two numbers belongs to the same set and lies between them, but the integers are not dense because is no other integer between any two consecutive
The integers and rational numbers both form countable sets, but the real numbers do not, by a different result of Cantor, his proof that the real numbers are uncountable.
Two linear orders are order-isomorphic when there exists a one-to-one correspondence between them that preserves their For instance, the integers and the even numbers are
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alen%20Kozar
|
Alen Kozar (born 7 April 1995) is a Slovenian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Singapore Premier League club Balestier Khalsa.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
NZS profile
1995 births
Living people
Slovenian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
ND Mura 05 players
NK Aluminij players
NŠ Mura players
Balestier Khalsa FC players
Slovenian PrvaLiga players
Slovenian Second League players
Singapore Premier League players
Slovenian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heino%20Eelsalu
|
Heino Eelsalu (8 May 1930 – 26 July 1998) was an Estonian astronomer and science historian.
Eelsalu was born in Tallinn in 1930. In 1954 he graduated from Tartu State University in mathematics. After graduating he worked at the Tartu Observatory.
His main fields of research were the structure of Galaxy, and stellar photometry.
He was a member of many international and local organisations, eg International Astronomical Union and Estonian Naturalists' Society.
Works
Astronoomia areng Eesti kultuuriloolise probleemina. // Teaduse ajaloo lehekülgi Eestist II (1976).
Theoretical foundations of stellar statistics. Tallinn 1982.
Johann Heinrich Mädler (1794–1874): Eine dokumentarische Biographie (with Dieter B. Herrmann). Berlin 1985.
Ajastult ajastule. Tallinn 1985.
Theory of basic galactic statistical research systems. Tallinn 1990.
Rara astronomica in Estonia I-X (one of the authors). Tallinn 1977-1990.
Astronoomialeksikon. Tallinn 1996.
References
1930 births
1998 deaths
Estonian astronomers
20th-century Estonian historians
University of Tartu alumni
Scientists from Tallinn
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhongxin%2C%20Huaping%20County
|
Zhongxin () is a town in Huaping County, Yunnan, China. As of the 2017 statistics it had a population of 47,403 and an area of . It is the political, economic and cultural center of Huaping County.
Administrative division
As of 2016, the town is divided into nine villages and five communities:
Xinglong Community ()
Zhuping Community ()
Liuxi Community ()
Huaxing Community ()
Xingmin Community ()
Hedong ()
Hexi ()
Nanmu ()
Suoluo ()
Labi ()
Longdong ()
Tianping ()
Zuocha ()
Maluliangzi ()
History
In the Song dynasty (960–1279), the Tusi government set up a government office in the region. In 1382, in the 15th year of Hongwu period of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), a Liuguan Office () was established. In 1802, in the ruling of Jiaqing Emperor of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911), the army was stationed in the region.
After the establishment of the Republic of China in 1912, in came under the jurisdiction of the Centre District of Huaping County. It was officially named "Huazhong" () in 1931 and was renamed "Zhuping" () in 1937.
In September 1950, it belonged to the 1st District. Its name was changed to "Zhongxin" () in 1953. During the Cultural Revolution, it was called "Xianfeng People's Commune" () and then "Zhongxin People's Commune" (). In February 1983, it was renamed "Zhongxin District" (). It reverted to its former name of Zhongxin in March 1988, and the name has been used till the present day. In August 2005, the Longdong Lisu Ethnic Township () was merged into the town.
Geography
The town is situated in the central Huaping County. The highest point in the town is Mogu Mountain () which stands above sea level. The lowest point is Rongjiang (), which, at above sea level.
There are a number of popular mountains located immediately adjacent to the townsite which include Jiaoding Mountain (; Baozi Rock (), Tanshanping Mountain (), and Longjin Mountain ().
The Liyu River (), Yubi River () and Zuocha River () flow through the town.
Climate
The town is in the subtropical monsoon climate zone, with an average annual temperature of , total annual rainfall of , a frost-free period of 303 days and annual average sunshine hours in 2486.9 hours. Spring, fall and winter are warm, while winter is relatively dry. The highest temperature is (1 June 1983), and the lowest temperature is (31 December 1973).
Economy
The economy of the town has a predominantly agricultural orientation, including farming and pig-breeding. Significant crops include rice, wheat and corn. The region also has an abundance of coastal, iron, copper, limestone, granite, graphite, kaolinite, and bauxite.
Demographics
In 2017, the local population was 47,403. The main ethnic groups in the town are Yi, Bai, Zhuang, Dai, Miao, Lisu, Hui and Nakhi.
Tourist attractions
The Immortal Cave () is a famous scenic spot in the town, which is also known as a summer resort.
Transportation
The town is the terminal of China National Highway 305.
The G4216 Expressway is a west
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene%20Fukui
|
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a forward for Kamatamare Sanuki as a designated special player.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
2003 births
Living people
Association football people from Osaka Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
J3 League players
Kamatamare Sanuki players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewel%20Creek
|
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}
Jewel Creek is a stream in Muskego, Wisconsin. It flows from Linnie Lac to Little Muskego Lake, and is the primary tributary of Little Muskego Lake. Despite its relative proximity to Lake Michigan, Jewel Creek is part of the Mississippi River Watershed. Jewel Creek has a drainage area of 8.16 square miles. Between the years 2000 and 2003, its average flow rate was 6.52 cubic feet per second.
Dams
Although it is only 0.75 miles long, Jewel creek is dammed twice. The first dam creates Linnie Lac and is designated as a New Berlin Landmark. The original dam at Linnie Lac was built in 1836 and used to power a sawmill, making it the first dam and sawmill in Waukesha County. There have been several dams in that location since, the newest being completed in 2000.
Roughly ½ mile downstream from Linnie Lac there is a second, unnamed dam. In 2015 the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources planned to remove the dam, but local residents objected, arguing that removal of the dam would increase silt deposits downstream, jeopardizing boat access to Little Muskego Lake for the houses along Jewel Creek. Additionally removing the dam would fill in a popular fishing hole. As of 2019, the dam remained.
References
External links
CBS 58 Clip
Rivers of Waukesha County, Wisconsin
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chile%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%281910%E2%80%931959%29
|
This page details the match results and statistics of the Chile national football team from 1910 to 1959.
Key
Key to matches
Att.=Match attendance
(H)=Home ground
(A)=Away ground
(N)=Neutral ground
Key to record by opponent
Pld=Games played
W=Games won
D=Games drawn
L=Games lost
GF=Goals for
GA=Goals against
Results
Chile's score is shown first in each case.
Notes
Record by opponent
References
Chile national football team results
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor%20Jeli%C4%8Di%C4%87
|
Igor Jeličić (; born 28 February 2000) is a Serbian professional footballer who plays as a central defender for Vojvodina.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
Living people
2000 births
Footballers from Novi Sad
Serbian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
FK Vojvodina players
FK Kabel players
Serbian SuperLiga players
Serbian First League players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vin%C3%ADcius%20Baracioli
|
Vinícius Henrique Baracioli Maciel (born 17 April 2000), known as Vinícius Baracioli is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Barra-SC, on loan of Mirassol as a right back.
Career statistics
Honours
Mirassol
Campeonato Brasileiro Série D: 2020
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players
Mirassol Futebol Clube players
Footballers from São Paulo (state)
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matheus%20Aur%C3%A9lio
|
Matheus Aurélio Palhares Guimarães (born 23 June 1999), known as Matheus Aurélio is a Brazilian footballer who plays for Hercílio Luz as a goalkeeper.
Career statistics
Honours
Náutico
Campeonato Brasileiro Série C: 2019
Mirassol
Campeonato Brasileiro Série D: 2020
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Sportspeople from São José do Rio Preto
Brazilian men's footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players
Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players
Mirassol Futebol Clube players
Clube Náutico Capibaribe players
Hercílio Luz Futebol Clube players
Footballers from São Paulo (state)
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rongjiang%2C%20Huaping%20County
|
Rongjiang () is a town in Huaping County, Yunnan, China. As of the 2017 statistics it had a population of 33,450 and an area of .
Administrative division
As of 2016, the town is divided into one community and eight villages:
Rongjiang Community ()
Gaoze ()
He'ai ()
Zheli ()
Longtou ()
Hongdi ()
Wenquan ()
Lashi ()
Hongchunjing ()
History
Rongjiang was known as "Shijia Village" () in ancient times.
In 1821, in the ruling of Daoguang Emperor of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911), a general defeated the Tusi of Surname Gao (), hence the name "Yingjiang Village" (). Later, it was mistakenly written as "Yingjiang Village" () with the similar pronunciation.
After the founding of the Republic of China in 1912, it came under the jurisdiction of the South District (). It became a town in 1931 with the name of "Huanan" (). Its name was changed to "Gaoze" () in 1937.
In 1956, it belonged to the 3rd District. It was renamed "Rongjiang People's Commune" () in 1958, "Wenquan People's Commune" () in 1961, and later "Hongwei People's Commune" () in 1966. It became a district in 1984 and was revoked in 1988, while it was split into Rongjiang () and Wenquan Yi and Lisu Ethnic Township ().
Geography
The town is situated in the central and southern part of Huaping County. The lowest altitude is and the highest is .
The town has a total of four reservoirs.
The Liyu River (), Xinzhuang River () and Zheli River () flow through the town.
Economy
The region's economy is based on agriculture, fishing, and nearby mineral resources. The main crops of the region are rice, followed by corn, potato and wheat. Mango and walnut are the economic plants of this region. The region abounds with coal and limestone.
Demographics
As of 2017, the National Bureau of Statistics of China estimates the town's population now to be 33,450. The main ethnic groups in the town are Yi, Zhuang, Dai, Miao, and Nakhi.
Transportation
The G4216 Expressway is a west–east highway in the town.
The China National Highway 353 passes across the town, heading north to the town of Zhongxin.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Huaping County
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baqiuddin%20Shamsudin
|
Muhamad Baqiuddin bin Shamsudin (born 14 December 1994) is a Malaysian footballer who plays as a winger for Malaysia Super League club Sri Pahang.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
Shahzan Muda F.C. players
Kuantan FA players
Polis Diraja Malaysia FC players
UKM F.C. players
Sri Pahang FC players
Malaysian men's footballers
Malaysian people of Malay descent
Footballers from Pahang
Malaysia Super League players
Men's association football midfielders
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope-burning%20puzzle
|
In recreational mathematics, rope-burning puzzles are a class of mathematical puzzle in which one is given lengths of rope, fuse cord, or shoelace that each burn for a given amount of time, and matches to set them on fire, and must use them to measure a non-unit amount of time. The fusible numbers are defined as the amounts of time that can be measured in this way.
As well as being of recreational interest, these puzzles are sometimes posed at job interviews as a test of candidates' problem-solving ability, and have been suggested as an activity for middle school mathematics students.
Example
A common and simple version of this problem asks to measure a time of 45 seconds using only two fuses that each burn for a minute. The assumptions of the problem are usually specified in a way that prevents measuring out 3/4 of the length of one fuse and burning it end-to-end, for instance by stating that the fuses burn unevenly along their length.
One solution to this problem is to perform the following steps:
Light one end of the first fuse, and both ends of the second fuse.
Once the second fuse has burned out, 30 seconds have elapsed, and there are 30 seconds of burn time left on the first fuse. Light the other end of the first fuse.
Once the first fuse burns out, 45 seconds have elapsed.
Many other variations are possible, in some cases using fuses that burn for different amounts of time from each other.
Fusible numbers
In common versions of the problem, each fuse lasts for a unit length of time, and the only operations used or allowed in the solution are to light one or both ends of a fuse at known times, determined either as the start of the solution or as the time that another fuse burns out. If only one end of a fuse is lit at time , it will burn out at time . If both ends of a fuse are lit at times and , it will burn out at time , because a portion of is burnt at the original rate, and the remaining portion of is burnt at twice the original rate, hence the fuse burns out at
.
A number is a fusible number if it is possible to use unit-time fuses to measure out units of time using only these operations. For instance, by the solution to the example problem, is a fusible number.
One may assume without loss of generality that every fuse is lit at both ends, by replacing a fuse that is lit only at one end at time by two fuses, the first one lit at both ends at time and the second one lit at both ends at time when the first fuse burns out.
In this way, the fusible numbers can be defined as the set of numbers that can be obtained from the number by repeated application of the operation , applied to pairs that have already been obtained and for which .
The fusible numbers include all of the non-negative integers, and are a well-ordered subset of the dyadic rational numbers, the fractions whose denominators are powers of two. Being well-ordered means that, if one chooses a decreasing sequence of fusible numbers, the sequence must always
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xingquan
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Xingquan () is a town in Huaping County, Yunnan, China. As of the 2017 statistics it had a population of 18,516 and an area of .
Administrative division
As of 2016, the town is divided into nine villages:
Xingquan ()
Xinwen ()
Ganjing ()
Nanyang ()
Wenle ()
Songzhu ()
Qinglong ()
Tangfang ()
Guantang ()
History
The town was known as "Fuquan" () in the Republic of China.
After the founding of the People's Republic of China, in 1950, it was called "Daxing District" (). In 1958, it was renamed "Daxing People's Commune" (). The town reverted to its former name of "Daxing District" in 1984. In 1988, it split into Daxing Township () and Wenle Lisu Ethnic Township (). In 2002, it was upgraded to a town. On 6 January 2006, the two townships merged to form the town of Xingquan ().
Geography
The town is situated in the northeastern Huaping County, bordering Zhongxin and Chuanfang Lisu Ethnic Township to the west, Shilongba to the south, of Yanbian County to the north, and Geliping of Xi District to the east. The highest point in the town is Leng Mountain () which stands above sea level. The lowest point is Sandong Bridge (), which, at above sea level.
The Daxing River (), Longdong River () and Nanyang River () flow through the town.
Xinwen Reservoir () is a reservoir located in the town.
Economy
Agriculture, mineral resources and building material are the major industries. Peaches, vegetables and tobacco are the economic plants of this region. The region abounds with coal, limestone, graphite, and clay.
Demographics
As of 2017, the National Bureau of Statistics of China estimates the town's population now to be 18,516. The main ethnic groups in the town are Yi, Zhuang, Dai, Miao, Lisu, Hui and Nakhi.
Tourist attractions
The Suolong Bridge () is a popular attraction in the town.
Transportation
The town is connected to two highways: the China National Highway 353 and the G4216 Expressway.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Huaping County
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weiwen%20Miao
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Weiwen Miao is a Chinese-American statistician, statistics educator, and scholar of legal statistics and nonparametric statistics. She is a professor of mathematics and statistics at Haverford College.
Education and career
Miao has a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Peking University. She went to Tufts University for graduate study in probability theory and statistics, earning a master's degree and a Ph.D. there. Her 1995 doctoral dissertation, Maximum Likelihood Estimation for Exponential Families, was supervised by Marjorie Hahn.
After teaching statistics at Mount Holyoke College and Colby College, and becoming an associate professor at Macalester College, she moved to Haverford College in 2007.
Recognition
Miao was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2021.
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
American statisticians
American women statisticians
Chinese statisticians
Chinese women mathematicians
Peking University alumni
Tufts University School of Arts and Sciences alumni
Mount Holyoke College faculty
Colby College faculty
Macalester College faculty
Haverford College faculty
Fellows of the American Statistical Association
21st-century American women
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1996%E2%80%9397%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
|
The 1996–97 season saw Rochdale compete in their 23rd consecutive season in the fourth tier of the English football league, named at the time as the Football League Third Division.
Statistics
|}
Final League Table
Competitions
Football League Third Division
F.A. Cup
Football League Cup (Coca Cola Cup)
Football League Trophy (Auto Windscreens Shield)
Lancashire Cup
References
Rochdale A.F.C. seasons
Rochdale
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moessner%27s%20theorem
|
In number theory, Moessner's theorem or Moessner's magic
is related to an arithmetical algorithm to produce an infinite sequence of the exponents of positive integers with by recursively manipulating the sequence of integers algebraically. The algorithm was first published by Alfred Moessner in 1951; the first proof of its validity was given by Oskar Perron that same year.
For example, for , one can remove every even number, resulting in , and then add each odd number to the sum of all previous elements, providing .
Construction
Write down every positive integer and remove every -th element, with a positive integer. Build a new sequence of partial sums with the remaining numbers. Continue by removing every -st element in the new sequence and producing a new sequence of partial sums. For the sequence , remove the -st elements and produce a new sequence of partial sums.
The procedure stops at the -th sequence. The remaining sequence will correspond to
Example
The initial sequence is the sequence of positive integers,
For , we remove every fourth number from the sequence of integers and add up each element to the sum of the previous elements
Now we remove every third element and continue to add up the partial sums
Remove every second element and continue to add up the partial sums
,
which recovers .
Variants
If the triangular numbers are removed instead, a similar procedure leads to the sequence of factorials
References
External links
Number theory
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morihiko%20Saito
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Morihiko Saitō (, Saitō Morihiko, born 1961) is a Japanese mathematician, specializing in algebraic analysis and algebraic geometry.
Education and career
After graduating from Aiko High School in Matsuyama, Saito completed undergraduate study in mathematics at the University of Tokyo and in 1979 completed the master's program there. In 1986 he received his D.Sc. from Kyoto University. After working as a research assistant at Kyoto University's Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, he was appointed there an associate professor.
In 1988/1990 he introduced the theory of mixed Hodge modules, based on the theory of D-modules in algebraic analysis, the theory of perverse sheaves, and the theory of variation of Hodge structures and mixed Hodge structures (introduced by Pierre Deligne) in algebraic geometry. This led, among other things, to a generalization of the fundamental decomposition theorems of Alexander Beilinson, Joseph Bernstein, Deligne, and Ofer Gabber about perverse sheaves in positive characteristic to characteristic 0. The theory of Hodge D-modules forms the starting point for the theory of the twistor D-modules developed by Claude Sabbah and Takurō Mochizuki, which lead to led to another generalization of the Beilinson–Bernstein–Deligne–Gabber theorem by Mochizuki.
In 2006 Saito, with Nero Budur and Mircea Mustață, generalized the notion of a Bernstein–Sato polynomial (aka b-function or b-polynomial) to an arbitrary variety.
Saito's research deals with "applications of the theory of mixed Hodge modules to algebraic geometry, including the theories of singularities, algebraic cycles, characteristic classes, and so on."
In 1990 he was an Invited Speaker with talk Mixed Hodge Modules and Applications at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Kyoto. In 1991 he was awarded the Spring Prize of the Mathematical Society of Japan.
Selected publications
(over 600 citations)
(over 600 citations)
References
1961 births
Living people
20th-century Japanese mathematicians
21st-century Japanese mathematicians
University of Tokyo alumni
Kyoto University alumni
Academic staff of Kyoto University
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murray%20Aitkin
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Murray Aitkin is an Australian statistician who specialises in statistical models. He attained his BSc, PhD, and DSc in Sydney University for mathematical statistics in 1961, 1966 and 1997, respectively.
Academic career
From 1961 to 1964, he was a teaching fellow at Sydney University. Then, from 1996 to 2004, he was a professor in the department of statistics at Newcastle University. He was also a director for the Statistical Consultancy Service at Newcastle University from 1996 to 2000.
Between 2000 and 2002, he went on leave from Newcastle to take on the role of chief statistician at the Education Statistics Services Institute in Washington DC.
Societal recognition
Between 1971 and 1972, he was a senior fellow for Fulbright, an American exchange scholarship program. Between 1976 and 1979, he was a professorial fellow at the Social Science Research Council, in Lancaster University. In 1982, he was named as an Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute, and in 1984 as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.
Generalised linear mixed models
Aitkin's research has been important with regards to different types of mixture models, such as generalised linear mixed models (GLMM), latent class models, and other finite mixture models. Usually, when random effects occur in GLMMs, a normal distribution of N(0,σ2) is assumed. However, Aitkin uses a nonparametric structure (a type of structure which does not involve using set distributions) instead.
In 1981, he co-authored with Darrel Bock and published a paper titled: "Marginal maximum likelihood estimation of item parameters: Application of an EM algorithm" to Psychometrika in which he discussed GLMMs. It was one of first papers to discuss this topic and has received almost 3,000 citations.
References
Living people
Australian statisticians
Academics of Newcastle University
University of Sydney alumni
People associated with Lancaster University
Elected Members of the International Statistical Institute
Fellows of the American Statistical Association
Year of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people)
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan%20Carlos%20Del%20Bello
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Juan Carlos Del Bello (5 June 1951 – 19 July 2021) was an Argentine academic. He was director of the National Institute of Statistics and Census from 2002 to 2003 and rector of National University of Río Negro since 2008.
References
1951 births
2021 deaths
Argentine politicians
Justicialist Party politicians
National University of Comahue alumni
Universidad Nacional del Sur alumni
Academic staff of the National University of Río Negro
People from Mar del Plata
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazil%20Olympic%20football%20team%20results%20%281952%E2%80%931988%29
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This page details the match results and statistics of the Brazil olympic football team during the professionalism restriction era.
1950
1960
1970
1980
Record by opponent
References
Olympic
Brazil national under-23 football team
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazil%20Olympic%20football%20team%20results%20%281991%E2%80%93present%29
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This page details the match results and statistics of the Brazil olympic football team during the age restriction (U-23) era.
1990s
2000
2010
2020
Record by opponent
References
Olympic
Brazil national under-23 football team
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yvonne%20Pothier
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Sister Yvonne Marie Pothier (born 1937) is a Canadian mathematics educator and educational psychologist known for her work in the development of numerical concepts in children, and an activist for refugees. She is a professor emerita of education at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and a Sister of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth.
Mathematics
Pothier graduated from Mount Saint Vincent University in 1966 with a Bachelor of Science, and earned a bachelor of education in 1977 from the University of New Brunswick. She earned a master's degree and Ph.D. at the University of Alberta; her dissertation, Partitioning: Construction of Rational Number in Young Children, was supervised by Daiyo Sawada. She published a condensed version of the same work as an influential journal paper with Sawada. She also coauthored the book Learning Mathematics In Elementary And Middle School: A Learner-Centered Approach (with Nadine Bezuk, W. George Cathcart, and James H. Vance, Pearson, 2003; 6th ed., 2015).
Refugee work
In later life, Pothier became active in work with refugees, coordinating the Refugee Sponsorship Program of the Catholic Archdiocese of Halifax, visiting Sudan in this connection, and assisting in the sponsorship of many refugees in Halifax. For this work she won the Elizabeth Ann Seton Award of the Sisters of Charity, and was commended by the Nova Scotia House of Assembly.
References
Living people
Canadian mathematicians
Canadian women mathematicians
Mathematics educators
Mount Saint Vincent University alumni
University of New Brunswick alumni
University of Alberta alumni
Academic staff of Mount Saint Vincent University
Daughters and Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul
1937 births
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward%20George%20Effros
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Edward George Effros (December 10, 1935, Queens, New York City – December 21, 2019, Portland, Oregon) was an American mathematician, specializing in operator algebras and representation theory. His research included
"C*-algebras theory and operator algebras, descriptive set theory, Banach space theory, and quantum information."
Biography
Edward Effros grew up in Great Neck, New York. He finished his undergraduate study in three years at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1962. His thesis On Representations of -algebras was supervised by George Mackey. Effros was a postdoc at Columbia University and then became a faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania. Effros married Rita Brickman in 1967. Their two children, Rachel and Stephen, were born in Philadelphia. In 1980 Edward Effros became a full professor at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), and in 1979 the family relocated to Los Angeles. Rita Brickman Effros received her Ph.D. in immunology from the University of Pennsylvania. Eventually, she became a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. In 2013 Edward Effros retired from UCLA as professor emeritus.
He was a Guggenheim Fellow for the academic year 1982–1983. In 1986 he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berkeley, California. He was the author or coauthor of over 80 publications and supervised the doctoral dissertations of 16 students, including Patricia Clark Kenschaft. He was elected to the 2014 Class of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society.
According to Masamichi Takesaki,
Edward's older brother, Robert Carlton Effros (born 1933), became a lawyer and member of the legal department of the International Monetary Fund. Edward's identical twin, Richard M. Effros, graduated from NYU School of Medicine and became a pulmonologist. Edward was married to Rita née Brinkman for 52 years. Their daughter Rachel Marian Effros (born 1969) became a pediatrician. Their son Stephen David Effros (born 1972) became a senior project manager for Portland Public Schools in Portland, Oregon. In June 2019 Edward and Rita relocated to Portland, but Edward died 6 months later. Upon his death he was survived by his wife, daughter, son, and two granddaughters.
Selected publications
Articles
Books
References
1935 births
2019 deaths
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
Mathematical analysts
Operator theorists
People from Queens, New York
People from Great Neck, New York
Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
Harvard University alumni
University of Pennsylvania faculty
University of California, Los Angeles faculty
American identical twins
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacopo%20Gianelli
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Jacopo Gianelli (born 4 March 2001) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for club Fermana on loan from Inter Milan.
Career statistics
Club
References
2001 births
Living people
People from Magenta, Lombardy
Italian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Serie C players
Inter Milan players
Pro Sesto 1913 players
Fermana FC players
Italy men's youth international footballers
Footballers from the Metropolitan City of Milan
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zillur%20Rahman%20%28professor%29
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Zillur Rahman is a professor of management studies at the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee in Roorkee, Uttarakhand, India.
Prof.Rahman holds a MSc in Mathematics, MBA and Ph.D in Business administration , all from Aligarh Muslim University He is a Senior Professor in the IIT Roorkee,
He has published research papers in reputed international papers including the Journal of Service Marketing, International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, Journal of Cleaner Production, Telematics and Informatics, among others.
Prof. Rahman is the recipient of Highly Commended Paper in Emerald Literati Network Awards for Excellence, 2016. Prof. Rahman is also the recipient of the Commendable Faculty Award in the domain Business, Management and Accounting, 2018. He has listed in the top three Management researcher in India in the Research.com's 2022 Top Business and Management Scientists in India
He was the Head of the Department from 2016 to 2019 at DoMS IIT Roorkee.
He has delivered research talk in many countries including USA, Switzerland, Germany, France, Italy and Turkey.
His primary research interests are in areas of Marketing, Strategic management, Services marketing and Consumer behaviour.
Publications
Books
Consumer Behavior, now in its 10th ed. (), used as a text book in consumer behavior courses in Indian Business schools.
David A. Aaker, Christine Moorman, Jamidul Islam, Zillur Rahman, Strategic Market Management, 11ed, Wiley India Pvt Ltd, 2021, ISBN Code: 978-9354243387.
GC Beri , Arun Kaushik , Zillur Rahman, Marketing Research, 6e, McGraw Hill, 2020, ISBN Code: 978-9390177530.
Most Cited Journal Articles
Joshi Y, Rahman Z. Factors affecting green purchase behaviour and future research directions. International Strategic management review. 2015 Jun 1;3(1-2):128-43. (Cited 826 times, according to Google Scholar )
Goyal P, Rahman Z, Kazmi AA. Corporate sustainability performance and firm performance research: Literature review and future research agenda. Management Decision. 2013 Mar 1. (Cited 364 times, according to Google Scholar.)
Talib F, Rahman Z, Qureshi MN. Analysis of interaction among the barriers to total quality management implementation using interpretive structural modeling approach. Benchmarking. 2011 Jul 12. (Cited 338 times, according to Google Scholar.)
Talib F, Rahman Z, Qureshi MN. An empirical investigation of relationship between total quality management practices and quality performance in Indian service companies. International journal of quality & reliability management. 2013 Mar 8. (Cited 297 times, according to Google Scholar.)
Kumar V, Rahman Z, Kazmi AA, Goyal P. Evolution of sustainability as marketing strategy: Beginning of new era. Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences. 2012 Jan 1;37:482-9. (Cited 187 times, according to Google Scholar.)
Islam JU, Hollebeek LD, Rahman Z, Khan I, Rasool A. Customer engagement in the service context: an empirical investigation of the construct,
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiromi%20Itoh
|
is a professional Japanese baseball player. He plays pitcher for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters.
References
External links
Career statistics - NPB.jp
17 伊藤 大海 選手名鑑2021 - Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters Official site
1997 births
Living people
Baseball people from Hokkaido
Nippon Professional Baseball pitchers
Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters players
Olympic baseball players for Japan
Baseball players at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Olympic medalists in baseball
Olympic gold medalists for Japan
Medalists at the 2020 Summer Olympics
2023 World Baseball Classic players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon%20Thornley
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Simon James Thornley is a New Zealand medical doctor and academic specialising in epidemiology and biostatistics, and as of 2021 is a senior lecturer at the University of Auckland.
Career
Thornley trained as a medical doctor prior to joining the University of Auckland as a public health academic specialising in epidemiology and biostatistics. He graduated from the University of Auckland with a Bachelor of Human Biology in 1997, a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery in May 2000, and Master of Public Health with First Class Honours in 2006 and a Doctor of Philosophy in Medicine in 2015. His 2014 doctoral thesis was Studies of cardiovascular disease risk estimation: how, and whether, to account for the effect of drug treatment?
Thornley is a part of 'FIZZ', a group of New Zealand health researchers aiming to eliminate sugary drinks from New Zealand by 2025. He has researched the links between scabies and other health issues in relation to health inequities.
Covid Plan B group
Thornley is a member of the Covid Plan B group, which has repeatedly criticised the New Zealand government's management of the COVID pandemic, and "Thornley [has] become the most notable critic of the Government’s Covid-19 elimination strategy". Thornley said that elimination of COVID-19 was "unrealistic and over-ambitions" but epidemiologist Rod Jackson claimed that Thornley [was] "the only dissenter in the epidemiological community." Early in the pandemic, Thornley was quoted as saying "Hanging out for a vaccine is not an option... a fantasy, in my view." The Covid Plan B group was widely criticised, but they responded by saying that their freedom of expression was being shut down and that there was 'censorship of alternate views.'
In March 2021, the anti-misinformation group Fight Against Conspiracy Theories issued an open letter to the Covid Plan B group including Thornley criticising their partnership with the anti-vaccination group Voices for Freedom (VFF). Thornley served as a keynote speaker at a VFF event in March 2021 and appeared on the group's webshow. Covid Plan B's Facebook page also shared social media posts by Voices for Freedom.
Siouxsie Wiles, a fellow University of Auckland academic, wrote that "Simon Thornley of the Plan B group, about whom I’ve written before, has given evidence in support of the group trying to halt the roll-out [of the COVID vaccine]" in an article on COVID-related misinformation. Thornley responded through a lawyer claiming the article was a "defamatory publication" and demanding his name be removed and a correction.
A 2021 paper which Thornley co-authored which linked mRNA vaccines, such as the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, to significantly higher rates of miscarriage was publicly criticized by the academic community throughout New Zealand, including the Head and other senior members of the university’s School of Population Health, for ignoring evidence that had already been published in a high-impact peer-reviewed researc
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin%20diminutive
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The Latin language has a robust diminutive-forming system. There are many diminutive suffixes: those in calculus, axilla, fistula, and areola to start. There is often more than one correct way to form a diminutive, and many more incorrect ones.
Gender
The masculine, feminine, and neuter diminutives often end in -us, -a, and -um.
later, -is (m.) > later-cul-us (m.)
mulier, -is (f.) > mulier-cul-a (f.)
tūber, -is (n.) > tūber-cul-um (n.)
There are exceptions. These masculine words end in -a:
scurr-a (m.) > scurr-ul-a (m.)
vern-a (m.) > vern-ul-a (m.)
Many have a vowel, followed by one or two ls, followed by the endings just mentioned. Here we see stem + 'ul' + ending.
The rules can be a bit involved. The diminutive depends on the gender, declination (first, second, etc.) and the root's ending.
First and second declension
Conspectus parvus
Regula Generalis
Stirpes in vocalem exeuntes
In the first declanation, -ia can become =illa or =ola. (Lucia → Lucilla, sed Tullia → Tulliola).
Roots with -ul-
Nomina quorum stirps exit in -ul- (seu principalia seu deminutiva) in deminutione (seu prima seu secunda) illud -ul- mutant in -ell- aut -ill-. Regulam tamen discernere difficile est. In tabula supposita multorum vocabulorum quorum stirps in -ul- exit deminutiva data sunt. Eis quae ipsa deminutiva sunt, principalia sunt praeposita, significatu tamen admodum differentia in parenthesibus () inclusa. Qui systema viderit, dicat!
Roots with -r-
Roots with -n-
Roots with -xill-
Exceptions
Third declension
in -es, -is & -e
More nouns, third declination
Nouns in -ēs, -is
Nouns in -is, -is (m./f.) or -ĕ, -is (n.)
Roots with -c- & -g-
Roots with -t- et -d-
Roots with -p- et -b-
Roots with -n-
Roots with -r(r)- et -l(l)-et -s-
Roots with -r- and -s-
Roots with -u- et -v-
Stirpes in duas aut plures consonantes exeuntes
Fourth declination
Fifth declination
Latin grammar
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nadine%20Bezuk
|
Nadine S. Bezuk is an American mathematics educator, and a professor emerita of teacher education at San Diego State University, where she is a former associate dean and former Qualcomm Professor of Teacher Education, the former director of the San Diego State University School of Teacher Education, and the former president and executive director of the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators.
Education and career
Bezuk is originally from Pittsburgh. She has a bachelor's degree in child development and early childhood education from the University of Pittsburgh, and a master's degree and Ph.D. in mathematics education from the University of Minnesota.
She worked as a K-12 mathematics teacher from 1981 through 1984, and joined the San Diego State University faculty in 1987.
She was president of the Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators from 1997 to 1999, and executive director from 2001 to 2014, and has also served as a director of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.
Book
Bezuk coauthored the book Learning Mathematics In Elementary And Middle School: A Learner-Centered Approach (with Yvonne Pothier, W. George Cathcart, and James H. Vance, Pearson, 2003; 6th ed., 2015).
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Mathematics educators
University of Pittsburgh alumni
University of Minnesota alumni
San Diego State University faculty
20th-century American women
21st-century American women
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian%20Wright%20%28percussionist%29
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Ian Wright was born in Aberdeen, United Kingdom. He studied mathematics at the University of Aberdeen before embarking on a career in music. His main interest outside music is travelling, especially when it involves walking and cycling.
Career
Wright was made a fellow of the Royal Northern College of Music in 1988. He was involved in the preparation of the first percussion syllabus for the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music (ABRSM), a task which included writing the pieces for the four timpani books and some of the snare drum pieces for the examinations. He is presently a diploma examiner for the ABRSM. Since 1973, Wright has coached the percussion section of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain, of which he had at one time been a member for six years.
Publications
Graded Music for Timpani Book (Book I to IV)
Graded Music for Snare Drum (Book I to IV) edited with Kevin Hathway
Graded Music for Tuned Percussion (Book I to IV) edited with Kevin Hathway
Compositions
Russian Galop (timpani)
Noble Student
Le Yu
References
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Musicians from Aberdeen
Academics of the Royal College of Music
British composers
British classical percussionists
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016%20census%20of%20Ireland
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The 2016 census of Ireland was held on Sunday, 24 April 2016. It was organised by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) and reported a total population of 4,761,865, or a 3.8% increase since the prior 2011 census. This was the lowest recorded population growth rate since the 1991 census, with the decline in population growth rates attributed to both lower birth rates and lower net migration. The census results were released gradually between April and December 2017 in a series of reports organised either as summaries or in-depth results of specific themes, like age, ethnicity, or religion.
The following census took place in April 2022, having been delayed for one year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Background
Although Irish law does not prescribe a regular interval for administering censuses, Census 2016 was held in accordance with Irish government tradition since 1951 to administer a census on a Sunday in April on years ending with the numbers '1' or '6'. This incidentally coincided with the centenary of the 1916 Easter Rising, which began on Easter Monday, 24 April 1916.
Responsibility for organising the census fell with the Central Statistics Office, which operates within the Department of the Taoiseach. The CSO hired 4,660 enumerators, supported by 430 field supervisors, who reported in turn to 44 regional supervisors. In delivering over two million census forms, enumerators were required to make personal contact with a resident at the property.
Census form
Census 2016 was the first Irish census that allowed respondents to report a marital status contracted with a person of the same sex. This followed a 2015 referendum to amend the Irish Constitution to permit same-sex marriages, which was passed into law by the Marriage Act 2015. Other than marital status, the 2016 census form copied all questions verbatim from the 2011 census form. The same is not planned for the 2022 census, which underwent a public consultation process in 2017 to formulate new questions. These changes included a revision to questions on religion, which Atheist Ireland argued skewed responses towards religiosity. The new questions were trialed in West Cork in 2018.
Although most census forms in 2016 were collected in person by returning enumerators, over 15,000 forms were returned by post, with all recipients legally required to return completed forms.
Results
The census's results on declining religiosity, the aging population, and rising homelessness all drew attention in Irish media. Affiliation with the largest religion in Ireland, Roman Catholicism, dropped to 78%, down from 84% in 2011. The census also reported the first ever recorded fall in the absolute number of Roman Catholics. A thematic report on housing found that home ownership rates reached their lowest since 1971, which Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government Simon Coveney described as a "stark story" emanating from "fundamental structural problems", which he associated with the 200
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chile%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%281960%E2%80%931979%29
|
This page details the match results and statistics of the Chile national football team from 1960 to 1979.
Key
Key to matches
Att.=Match attendance
(H)=Home ground
(A)=Away ground
(N)=Neutral ground
Key to record by opponent
Pld=Games played
W=Games won
D=Games drawn
L=Games lost
GF=Goals for
GA=Goals against
Results
Chile's score is shown first in each case.
Notes
Record by opponent
References
Chile national football team results
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandr%20Kabakov
|
Aleksandr Kabakov was a Russian writer and journalist. He was born in 1943 in Novosibirsk, where his family had been evacuated during World War II. He studied mechanics and mathematics in Dnepropetrovsk, and worked in a missile factory after graduation. Eventually, he landed at the railroad industry newspaper , where he worked for more than a decade; he also worked at Moscow News and Kommersant.
He became well known during the perestroika period for his dystopian novel No Return, which was translated into multiple languages and also adapted into a film. The English translation was done by Thomas Whitney. Other noted works include The Last Hero (1995) and Nothing's Lost (2003), which won the second jury prize from the Big Book Award and the . With Yevgeny Popov, he co-wrote a book of reminiscences about the writer Vasily Aksyonov that was shortlisted for the 2012 Big Book Award.
Kabakov expressed his admiration for writers such as Georgi Vladimov, Yuri Trifonov, Sergei Dovlatov, Asar Eppel, Valery Popov, and Ludmila Ulitskaya.
He died in Moscow in 2020.
Works
Aksyonov (co-written with Evgeny Popov) – second jury prize, Big Book Award, 2012
Nothing's Lost – Big Book Award finalist, 2006, won second jury prize; won the Apollon Grigoriev Prize, 2004
Moscow Tales – Big Book Award finalist, 2006; won Prose of the Year, 2005; won the , 2006
No Return (Невозвращенец) (William Morrow & Co., 1990, tr. Thomas Whitney)
Anthologies: “Shelter” in Read Russia! (Read Russia, 2012, tr. Daniel Jaffe) and Life Stories: Original Works by Russian Writers (Russian Life, 2009, tr. Anna Seluyanova)
A Runaway (Беглец), 2009
The Imposter (Самозванец), 1997
References
1943 births
2020 deaths
Writers from Novosibirsk
Russian male journalists
21st-century Russian male writers
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hongmei%20Zhang
|
Hongmei Zhang is a Chinese-American biostatistician at the University of Memphis, where she is Bruns Endowed Professor in the Division of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Environmental Health Sciences, director of the division, program coordinator for biostatistics, and affiliated professor in the departments of mathematical sciences and biology. Her statistical interests include feature selection, biclustering, and Bayesian networks; she is also interested in the application of statistical methods to phenotype and genetic data and to epigenetics.
Education and career
Zhang has three master's degrees: one in electronic engineering, earned in 1997 from the Nanjing Institute of Technology, a second one in mathematics in 1999 from Truman State University, and a third one in statistics in 2001 from Iowa State University. She completed her Ph.D. at Iowa State University in 2003. Her dissertation, Probability Models for Design and Analysis of Genetic Data, was supervised by Hal Stern.
She became an assistant professor of mathematics and statistics at the University of West Florida in 2003, and moved in 2007 to the University of South Carolina as an assistant professor of epidemiology and biostatistics. She was given tenure there as an associate professor in 2012. She moved to her present position at the University of Memphis in 2013, and was promoted to professor and given the Bruns Endowed Professorship in 2017.
Contributions
Zhang is the author of Analyzing High-Dimensional Gene Expression and DNA Methylation Data with R (CRC Press, 2020).
Her research has included work on the role of epigenetics in childhood asthma.
Recognition
Zhang was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2021. She was elected chair of the ASA Risk Analysis program in 2021.
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
American statisticians
American women statisticians
Chinese statisticians
Biostatisticians
Truman State University alumni
Iowa State University alumni
University of South Carolina faculty
University of Memphis faculty
Fellows of the American Statistical Association
21st-century American women
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Kafrayn%2C%20Syria
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Al-Kafrayn () is a Syrian village located in Douma District, Rif Dimashq, 23.1 kilometers (14.4 mi) southeast of Old Damascus. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Al-Kafrayn had a population of 3,842 in the 2004 census. To its North and East is Harran al-Awamid, Jdeidet al-Khass to its south and Damascus Airport to its west.
References
Populated places in Douma District
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Adiliyah
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Al-Adiliyah () is a Syrian village located in Markaz Rif Dimashq District, Rif Dimashq. It is located in Western Ghouta. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Al-Adiliyah had a population of 4,438 in the 2004 census. It is located in the Kiswah subdistrict. To its west is Al-Horjelah.
History
In 1838, Eli Smith noted el-'Adiliyeh as being located east of the Hajj road.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Markaz Rif Dimashq District
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawsh%20Sahiya
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Hawsh Sahiya () is a Syrian village located in Markaz Rif Dimashq District, Rif Dimashq. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Hawsh Sahiya had a population of 5,355 in the 2004 census. To its North are Sbeineh, Al-Buwaydah, Hujayrah, and Sayyidah Zaynab.
References
Populated places in Markaz Rif Dimashq District
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hizzah
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Hizzah () is a Syrian village located in Markaz Rif Dimashq District, Rif Dimashq. It is located in Eastern Ghouta. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Hizzah had a population of 9,293 in the 2004 census. It is located in the Kafr Batna subdistrict. Its population is composed of Sunni Arabs. To its north are Zamalka, Irbin and Hamouriyah, to its east is Saqba, to its south is Kafr Batna and to its west is Ein Tarma.
References
Populated places in Markaz Rif Dimashq District
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hujayrah
|
Hujayrah () is a Syrian village located in Markaz Rif Dimashq District, Rif Dimashq. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Hujayrah had a population of 4,584 in the 2004 census. It is located in the Babbila subdistrict. Its population is composed of Sunni Arabs. To its north are Hajar al-Aswad, to its east is Al-Buwaydah, to its south is Hawsh Sahiya and to its west is Sbeineh.
References
Populated places in Markaz Rif Dimashq District
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khirbet%20al-Ward
|
Khirbet al-Ward () is a Syrian village located in Markaz Rif Dimashq District, Rif Dimashq. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Khirbet al-Ward had a population of 7,293 in the 2004 census. To its North is Hawsh al-Sultan, and to its south is Al-Horjelah.
References
Populated places in Markaz Rif Dimashq District
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muqaylibah
|
Muqaylibah () is a Syrian village located in Markaz Rif Dimashq District, Rif Dimashq. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Muqaylibah had a population of 5,022 in the 2004 census. To its north are Marana, Kawkab, and the 100th Regiment Base, to its east is al-Kiswah, to its south is Al-Taybah and to its west are Deir Khabiyah and Zakiyah.
History
In 1838, Eli Smith noted Muqaylibah's population as being Sunni Muslims.
References
Bibliography
Populated places in Markaz Rif Dimashq District
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shilongba
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Shilongba () is a town in Huaping County, Yunnan, China. As of the 2017 statistics it had a population of 18,000 and an area of .
Etymology
Legend said that there is a Chinese dragon here, which often drowned farmland and endangered the people. The Jade Emperor sent Leigong to kill the dragon, as time goes by, its bones became the river bottom and dam, hence the name of "Shilongba".
Administrative division
As of 2016, the town is divided into six villages:
Minzhu ()
Jizuo ()
Demao ()
Longquan ()
Longjing ()
Linjiang ()
History
In 1931, the Huaping government set up the Tianma Township () in this area.
After establishment of the Communist State, in 1950, it belonged to the 3rd District. In 1958, it was renamed "Minzhu People's Commune" (). In 1988, Shilongba Yi and Dai Ethnic Township () separated from the area. On 14 August 2012, Shilongba Yi and Dai Ethnic Township was revoked and reformed as "Shilongba".
Geography
The town is situated at southeastern Huaping County. The highest point in the town is Maoshuikong () which stands above sea level. The lowest point is the river mouth in Tangba (), which, at above sea level.
The town is in the subtropical monsoon climate zone, with an average annual temperature of , total annual rainfall of , and a frost-free period of 300 days.
There are two reservoirs in the town.
There are a number of popular mountains located immediately adjacent to the townsite which include Xianling Mountain (; Maoshuikong (; and Xicaodi Mountain (.
The Xinzhuang River (), Longquan River (), Longtang River () and Longjing River () flow through the town.
Economy
The town's economy is based on nearby mineral resources and agricultural resources. The main crops are rice, wheat, corn, and sweet potato. Economic crops are mainly mango, pomegranate, citrus, pepper, bamboo, peach, and pear. The region abounds with coal, iron, gold, limestone, and quartz.
Demographics
As of 2017, the National Bureau of Statistics of China estimates the town's population now to be 18,000. There are 12 ethnic groups in the town, such as Yi, Dai, and Lisu.
Transportation
The China National Highway 353 passes across the town north to south.
The G4216 Expressway is a west–east expressway in the town.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Huaping County
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021%E2%80%9322%20Kuwaiti%20Premier%20League
|
60th edition of the tournament. Al-Arabi SC are the defending champions.
Teams
League table
Statistics
Top scorers
External links
Kuwait Premier League seasons
Premier League
Kuwaiti Premier League
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997%E2%80%9398%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
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The 1997–98 season saw Rochdale compete in their 24th consecutive season in the fourth tier of the English football league, named at the time as the Football League Third Division.
Statistics
|}
Final League Table
Competitions
Football League Third Division
F.A. Cup
Football League Cup (Coca Cola Cup)
Football League Trophy (Auto Windscreens Shield)
References
Rochdale A.F.C. seasons
Rochdale
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanna%20Haponova
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Hanna Haponova (in statistics also Ganna Gaponova, ; born 28 October 1985) is a Ukrainian table tennis player who has competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics where she was relegated in the Round 1 by Austrian Liu Jia.
Haponova won bronze medal in team competition at the 2015 European Championships (in team with Margaryta Pesotska and Tetyana Bilenko) and another bronze in doubles competition at the 2020 European Championships (together with Bilenko) which was Ukraine's first continental medal in women's doubles.
References
External links
1985 births
Living people
Ukrainian female table tennis players
Table tennis players at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Olympic table tennis players for Ukraine
Sportspeople from Kharkiv
European Games competitors for Ukraine
Table tennis players at the 2019 European Games
21st-century Ukrainian women
Table tennis players at the 2023 European Games
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order%20dual
|
In mathematics, order dual may refer to:
Converse relation of a partial order is sometimes called its order dual. Also called its dual order or its transpose, inverse, opposite, or converse.
Duality (order theory), duality principle for ordered sets
Order dual (functional analysis), set of all differences of any two positive linear functionals on an ordered vector space
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isac%20Talancha
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Isac Elías Talancha Loyola (born 9 December 2003) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Peruvian Primera División club Alianza Universidad.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2003 births
Living people
People from Huánuco
Peruvian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Alianza Universidad footballers
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mat%C3%ADas%20Lazo
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Matías Fernando Lazo Zapata (born 11 July 2003) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a defender for Peruvian Primera División club FBC Melgar.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2003 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Arequipa
Peruvian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
FBC Melgar footballers
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee%20Tae-min%20%28footballer%29
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Lee Tae-min (; born 9 May 2003) is a Korean footballer currently playing as a forward for Busan IPark.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2003 births
Living people
South Korean men's footballers
South Korea men's youth international footballers
Men's association football forwards
K League 2 players
Pohang Steelers players
Busan IPark players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank%20Ch%C3%A1vez
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Frank Andrés Chávez Viloria (born 6 January 2005) is a Venezuelan footballer who plays as a right-back for Zulia.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2005 births
Living people
Sportspeople from San Cristóbal, Táchira
Sportspeople from Táchira
Venezuelan men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Venezuelan Primera División players
Zulia F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoel%20Dabo%C3%ADn
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Yoel Alejandro Daboín Trivino (born 31 August 2004) is a Venezuelan footballer who plays as a forward for Portuguesa FC.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2004 births
Living people
Venezuelan men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Venezuelan Primera División players
Trujillanos FC players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hao%20Peng%20%28footballer%29
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Hao Peng (; born 25 December 2001) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Tai'an Tiankuan, on loan from Shanghai Port.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
2001 births
Living people
Footballers from Shanghai
Chinese men's footballers
China men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Shanghai Port F.C. players
21st-century Chinese people
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xinzhuang%20Lisu%20and%20Dai%20Ethnic%20Township
|
Xinzhuang Lisu and Dai Ethnic Township () is an ethnic township in Huaping County, Yunnan, China. As of the 2017 statistics it had a population of 17,526 and an area of .
Administrative division
As of 2016, the township is divided into seven villages:
Xinzhuang ()
Tianxing ()
Bian'ao ()
Bade ()
Liangma ()
Desheng ()
Lame ()
History
In the Daoguang period (1821–1850) of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911), there is a house named "Xinzhuang" (). Since than, more and more people settled down and formed a market.
In 1931, it belonged to the 5th District. The Xinbang Township () was set up in 1937.
After the establishment of the Communist State, in 1951, Xinabng Township and Qilian Township () merged to form the 4th District. In 1958, it was renamed "Xinzhuang People's Commune" (). Its name was changed to "Xinzhuang District" () in 1983. In 1988, Xinzhuang Township () separated from the district.
Geography
The township is situated at the western Huaping County.
The Liangma River (), Bian'ao River () and Xinzhuang River () converged in this area.
Economy
The region's economy is based on agriculture, animal husbandry, and nearby mineral resources. Vegetable, Dendrocalamus latiflorus and tobacco are the mainly economic plants of this region. Other commercial crops include citrus, walnut, zanthoxylum, mango. The region also has an abundance of coal, granite, limestone, kaolinite, feldspar, talc, gypsum, iron, and copper.
Demographics
As of 2017, the National Bureau of Statistics of China estimates the township's population now to be 17,526. There are 10 ethnic groups in the town, such as Yi, Dai, Miao, Nakhi, and Lisu.
Transportation
The township is connected to two highways: the China National Highway 353 and G4216 Expressway.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Huaping County
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang%20Dong%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201995%29
|
Wang Dong (; born 6 January 1995) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a defender for Zhuhai Qin'ao in China League Two.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
1995 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Xuzhou
Footballers from Jiangsu
Chinese men's footballers
Chinese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Jiangsu F.C. players
Changchun Yatai F.C. players
GS Loures players
Clube Oriental de Lisboa players
G.D. Tourizense players
A.R.C. Oleiros players
C.D. Cova da Piedade players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang%20Haochen
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Wang Haochen (; born 22 January 1999) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Beijing BSU.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1999 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Chinese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Tercera División players
China League Two players
China League One players
Atlético Madrid footballers
EC Granollers players
Beijing Sport University F.C. players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998%E2%80%9399%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
|
The 1998–99 season saw Rochdale compete in their 25th consecutive season in the fourth tier of the English football league, named at the time as the Football League Third Division.
Statistics
|}
Final League Table
Competitions
Football League Third Division
F.A. Cup
Football League Cup (Worthington Cup)
Football League Trophy (Auto Windscreens Shield)
Lancashire Cup
References
Rochdale A.F.C. seasons
Rochdale
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ni%20Yin
|
Ni Yin (; born 24 January 1999) is a Chinese footballer who plays for Nanjing City.
Club career
Ni joined Xi'an Wolves as a free agent in 2021.
Career statistics
.
Club
References
1999 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Yangzhou
Footballers from Jiangsu
Chinese men's footballers
China men's youth international footballers
Chinese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League One players
China League Two players
Villarreal CF players
Jiangsu F.C. players
Taizhou Yuanda F.C. players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang%20Congming
|
Wang Congming (; born 16 February 1999) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a right-back for Chinese club a Dalian LFTZ Huayi.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1999 births
Living people
Footballers from Anhui
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
China League One players
Villarreal CF players
Beijing Guoan F.C. players
Suzhou Dongwu F.C. players
Liaoning Shenyang Urban F.C. players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xu%20Anbang
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Xu Anbang (; born 14 June 1999) is a Chinese footballer.
Club career
Xu has been loaned from Shandong Taishan to lower league Chinese sides Zibo Cuju, Kunshan and Quanzhou Yassin.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Zhengzhou
Footballers from Henan
Chinese men's footballers
Chinese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League Two players
China League One players
Villarreal CF players
Shandong Taishan F.C. players
F.C. Felgueiras 1932 players
Zibo Cuju F.C. players
Kunshan F.C. players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20census%20of%20Ireland
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The 2022 census of Ireland was held on Sunday, 3 April 2022. It was organised by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) and reported a total population of 5,149,139, or an 8.1% increase since the prior 2016 census. It is the highest population recorded in a census since 1841 and the first time the population exceeded five million since 1851. The census results will be released gradually between May and December 2023 in a series of reports organised either as summaries or in-depth results of specific themes, like age, ethnicity, or religion.
A census was originally planned for 18 April 2021, but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Background
On 15 September 2020, the Irish government postponed the planned 2021 census on advice from the CSO, citing concerns for public health, the health of CSO staff, and the census response rate, all pertaining to the COVID-19 pandemic in Ireland.
The CSO hired 5,100 enumerators, supported by 466 field supervisors, who reported in turn to 46 regional supervisors.
Census form
Preparation of the 2022 census form began in 2017 with a public consultation process drawing input from various governmental departments, interest groups, and academics. The consultation was organised by the Census Advisory Group between October and November 2017, assessing over 400 submissions which informed a test survey of revised and new questions in September 2018. The consultation process led to the inclusion of 8 new questions, which covered topics like ownership of renewable energy sources, working from home, and smoking habits. Additionally, all 25 questions used in the 2016 and 2011 censuses were revised.
The 2022 form was also the first to include a 'time capsule' section, offering a space for respondents to write a voluntary message to remain sealed for 100 years due to data protection requirements.
In February 2021, the CSO confirmed it was researching possible questions to record gender identities, but that no such question would appear on the 2022 census form, which will only ask respondents for their sex with the options 'male' or 'female'. The decision was criticised by multiple LGBT groups and advocates.
Results
The preliminary results were released on 23 June 2022, showing a national population of five million for the first time since 1851. Results published on 30 May 2023 found that Roman Catholicism dropped to 69%, down from 79% in 2016. It also found the average age of the population increased by 1.4 years since 2016, people who speak the Irish language increased by 6% and approximately a third of all workers worked from home for at least some part of their week.
Population by county and region
See also
Census tract
Demographics of the Republic of Ireland
Irish population analysis
References
2022 in the Republic of Ireland
2022 censuses
Censuses in the Republic of Ireland
Demographics of Ireland
Geographic history of Ireland
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muharem%20Trako
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Muharem Trako (born 27 September 2003) is a Bosnian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Bosnian Premier League club Sarajevo.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
Footballers from Zenica
Men's association football defenders
Bosnia and Herzegovina men's footballers
Bosnia and Herzegovina men's youth international footballers
FK Sarajevo players
Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongda%20Lisu%20Ethnic%20Township
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Tongda Lisu Ethnic Township () is an ethnic township in Huaping County, Yunnan, China. As of the 2017 statistics it had a population of 8,317 and an area of .
Administrative division
As of 2016, the township is divided into five villages:
Tongda ()
Weixin ()
Shuanglong ()
Dingwang ()
Baiguhe ()
History
During the early Republic of China, it belonged to the West District. The Qilian Township () was set up in 1931.
After the establishment of the Communist State, in 1951, Xinabng Township () and Qilian Township merged to form the 4th District. In 1961, it was renamed "Xinzhuang People's Commune" (). Its name was changed to Tongda Lisu Ethnic Township in 1988.
Geography
The township is situated at the western Huaping County. The highest point in the township stands above sea level. The lowest point at above sea level.
The Baigu River (), Heitang River () and Weixing River () flow through the township.
There are two reservoirs in the township, namely the Liangjiawan Reservoir () and Heitang Reservoir ().
Climate
The township is in the mountain cold temperate climate zone, with an average annual temperature of , a frost-free period of 90 days to 120 days and annual average sunshine hours in 2500 hours.
Economy
The township's economy is based on agriculture, animal husbandry, and nearby mineral resources. The main crops are rice, wheat, corn, sweet potato and vegetable. Economic crops are mainly citrus, walnut, zanthoxylum, apple, peach, cherry, and plum. The region abounds with coal, granite, feldspar, clay, and gypsum.
Demographics
As of 2017, the National Bureau of Statistics of China estimates the township's population now to be 8,317.
Transportation
The G4216 Expressway passes across the township.
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Huaping County
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yang%20Bin%20%28footballer%29
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Yang Bin (; born 3 October 1991) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Meizhou Hakka.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1991 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League One players
China League Two players
Guangzhou F.C. players
Meizhou Hakka F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li%20Yang%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201999%29
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Li Yang (; born 7 May 1999) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Meizhou Hakka.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1999 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League One players
Dalian Professional F.C. players
Meizhou Hakka F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yongxing%20Lisu%20Ethnic%20Township
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Yongxing Lisu Ethnic Township () is an ethnic township in Huaping County, Yunnan, China. As of the 2017 statistics it had a population of 12,844 and an area of .
Administrative division
As of 2016, the township is divided into seven villages:
Yongxing ()
Xihao ()
Anke ()
Jidu ()
Bashan ()
Simu ()
Malu ()
History
During the Jiaqing period (1796–1820) of the Qing dynasty (1644–1911), there is a street named "Abili" (). The street was demolished in a peasant uprising in 1893. Later, Guo Yongxing (), a local people, founded a new street in the former village of Dagutian (). To commemorate him, the street was named "Yongxing Street" ().
During the early Republic of China, it belonged to the North District. In 1931, it came under the jurisdiction of the 6th District. The Yulu Township () was set up in 1937.
After the establishment of the Communist State, in 1950, it belonged to the 5th District. In 1961, it was split into two communes which named "Yongxing People's Commune" () and "Huarong People's Commune" (). It became a district in 1983. In 1988, the Yongxing District was revoked and split into two townships, namely the Yongxing Lisu Ethnic Township and Chuanfang Lisu and Dai Ethnic Township.
Geography
The township lies at the northwestern of Huaping County, bordering Zhanhe Town of Ninglang Yi Autonomous County to the west, Zhongxin Town and Chuanfang Lisu and Dai Ethnic Township to the south, Paomahe Township and Chanzhanhe Township of Ninglang Yi Autonomous County to the north, and Yanbian County of Sichuan to the east.
Economy
The principal industries in the area are agriculture, animal husbandry and mineral resources. Significant crops include rice, wheat, corn, and tomato. Commercial crops include tobacco, tea, Zanthoxylum, bamboo, walnut, Prinsepia utilis, Castanea mollissima, and ginger. The region abounds with coal.
Demographics
As of 2017, the National Bureau of Statistics of China estimates the township's population now to be 12,844.
Tourist attractions
The Yongxing Waterfall is a popular attraction in the township. It is also known for the Longshan Temple ().
References
Bibliography
Divisions of Huaping County
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shi%20Pengqing
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Shi Pengqing (; born 16 April 1999) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Zhejiang Professional.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1999 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League Two players
Zhejiang Professional F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang%20Qi%20%28footballer%2C%20born%20November%201993%29
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Wang Qi (; born 13 November 1993) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a goalkeeper for Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1993 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
China League One players
China League Two players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang%20Qi%20%28footballer%2C%20born%20October%201993%29
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Wang Qi (; born 17 October 1993) is a Chinese footballer playing as a midfielder for Sichuan Jiuniu.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1993 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League Two players
China League One players
Tianjin Jinmen Tiger F.C. players
Sichuan Longfor F.C. players
Sichuan Jiuniu F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Han%20Xuan%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201995%29
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Han Xuan (; born 13 January 1995) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a central defender for Chinese League One club Qingdao West Coast.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1995 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
China men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
China League One players
Chinese Super League players
Wuhan Yangtze River F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
21st-century Chinese people
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang%20Weipu
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Wang Weipu (; born 26 November 1993) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1993 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League Two players
China League One players
Liaoning F.C. players
Liaoning Shenyang Urban F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deng%20Biao
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Deng Biao (; born 12 August 1995) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a central defender for Nanjing City.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1995 births
Living people
People from Lu'an
Footballers from Anhui
Chinese men's footballers
Chinese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Tercera División players
China League Two players
China League One players
Shanghai Shenhua F.C. players
Atlético Saguntino players
Xinjiang Tianshan Leopard F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wen%20Shuo
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Wen Shuo (; born 5 January 1991) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a right winger for Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1991 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Chinese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Segunda Divisão players
China League Two players
China League One players
Shandong Taishan F.C. players
C.D. Mafra players
Guangzhou City F.C. players
Yunnan Flying Tigers F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wen%20Wubin
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Wen Wubin (; born 7 January 1997) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1997 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League One players
Beijing Guoan F.C. players
Sichuan Longfor F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Su%20Shun%20%28footballer%29
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Su Shun (; born 9 March 1994) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1994 births
Living people
Footballers from Tianjin
Chinese men's footballers
Chinese expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League Two players
Tianjin Jinmen Tiger F.C. players
Shanghai Shenhua F.C. players
F.C. Felgueiras 1932 players
Yunnan Flying Tigers F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain
Chinese expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
21st-century Chinese people
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yu%20Shuai
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Yu Shuai (; born 28 June 1989) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a central defender for Heilongjiang Ice City.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1989 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
China League One players
China League Two players
Shandong Taishan F.C. players
Shenzhen F.C. players
Inner Mongolia Zhongyou F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
21st-century Chinese people
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xu%20Zhaoji
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Xu Zhaoji (; born 9 March 1998) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic.
Career statistics
Club
.
References
1998 births
Living people
Chinese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
China League Two players
China League One players
Shenyang Dongjin F.C. players
Suzhou Dongwu F.C. players
Shaanxi Chang'an Athletic F.C. players
21st-century Chinese people
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