Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Justice Snow

BD2412: Cleanup per WP:MOSDAB using Dabfix


'''Justice Snow''' may refer to:

*[[Ernest A. Snow]] (1876–1927), Associate Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court
*[[Leslie Perkins Snow]] (1862–1934), Associate Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court



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Senator Snow

Bot1058: Task 5: remove this page from Category:Long monitored short pages


'''Senator Snow''' may refer to:

*[[John J. Snow Jr.]] (born 1945), North Carolina Senate
*[[Karl N. Snow]] (born 1930), Utah Senate
*[[Leslie Perkins Snow]] (1862–1934), New Hampshire Senate

==See also==
*[[Olympia Snowe]] (born 1947), U.S. Senator from Maine from 1995 to 2013
*[[Lois Snowe-Mello]] (1948–2016), Maine Senate



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List of Royal Australian Navy losses

Kransky:


This is a list of [[Royal Australian Navy]] vessels which were damaged or sunk causing loss of life, in warlike and non-warlike circumstances. The list includes incidents involving equipment (helicopters, [[whaleboat|whaleboats]]) attached to ships and naval establishments. Fatalities include all lives lost at each incident.
<p>

{| class="wikitable"
! Deaths
! Vessel
! Event
! Operation
! Location
! Date
! Vessel fate
!
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 645
| [[HMAS Sydney (D48)|HMAS Sydney]]
| [[Battle between HMAS Sydney and German auxiliary cruiser Kormoran|naval battle]]
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Western Australia]]
| 19 November 1941
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 353
| [[HMAS Perth (D29)|HMAS Perth]]
| [[Battle of Sundra Strait]]
| [[World War II]]
| [[Sunda Strait]], [[Dutch East Indies]]
| 28 February - 1 March 1942
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 138
| [[HMAS Parramatta (U44)|HMAS Parramatta]]
| Torpedoed by [[German submarine U-559]]
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Tobruk]], [[Libya]]
| 27 November 1941
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 138
| [[HMAS Yarra (U77)|HMAS Yarra]]
| Naval battle with Japanese fleet
| [[World War II]]
| between [[Java]] and [[Western Australia]]
| 4 March 1942
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 100
| [[HMAS Armidale (J240)|HMAS Armidale]]
| Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| [[Arafura Sea]]
| 30 November 1942
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 84
| [[HMAS Canberra (D33)|HMAS Canberra]]
| [[Battle of Savo Island]]
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Savo Island]], [[British Solomon Islands]]
| 9 August 1942
| scuttled
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 82
| [[HMAS Voyager (D04)|HMAS Voyager]]
| Collision with [[HMAS Melbourne (R21)|HMAS Melbourne]]
| Peacetime
| [[Jervis Bay]], [[Australia]]
| 10 February 1964
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 35
| [[HMAS AE1|AE1]]
| Diving accident
| [[World War I]]
| off Neulauenburg Islands ([[Duke of York Islands]]), [[German New Guinea]]
| 14 September 1914
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 31
| [[HMAS Matafele|HMAS Matafele]]
| Lost, presumed accidentally sunk
| [[World War II]]
| near [[China Strait]], [[Territory of Papua]]
| 20 June 1944
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 30
| [[HMAS Australia (D84)|HMAS Australia]]
| [[Battle of Leyte Gulf]] - possible Japanese [[Kamikaze]] attack
| [[World War II]]
| [[Leyte Gulf]], [[Philippines]]
| 21 October 1944
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 25
| [[HMAS Australia (D84)|HMAS Australia]]
| [[Invasion of Lingayen Gulf]] - [[Kamikaze]] attack
| [[World War II]]
| [[Lingayen Gulf]], [[Philippines]]
| 6 January 1945
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 24
| [[HMAS Goorangai|HMAS Goorangai]]
| Accidental collision with MV ''Duntroon''
| [[World War II]]
| [[Port Philip Bay]], [[Australia]]
| 20 November 1940
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 21
| [[HMAS Kuttabul|HMAS Kuttabul]]
| Torpedoed by Japanese submarine
| [[World War II]]
| [[Sydney Harbour]]
| 1 June 1942
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 14
| [[HMAS Australia (D84)|HMAS Australia]]
| [[Invasion of Lingayen Gulf]] - [[Kamikaze]] attack
| [[World War II]]
| [[Lingayen Gulf]], [[Philippines]]
| 6 January 1945
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 13
| [[HMAS Hobart (D63)|HMAS Hobart]]
| torpodoed by Japanese submarine
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Espirito Santo]], [[Solomon Islands]]
| 20 July 1943
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 13
| [[HMAS Perth (D29)|HMAS Perth]]
| Aerial attack from German aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Sphakia]], [[Greece]]
| 29 May 1941
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 10
| [[HMAS Nizam (G38)|HMAS Nizam]]
| Freak wave washes crew overboard
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Cape Leeuwin]], [[Western Australia]]
| 11 February 1945
| undamaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 9
| [[HMAS Vampire (D68)|HMAS Vampire]]
| [[Indian Ocean raid]] - Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Ceylon]]
| 9 April 1942
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 9
| [[817 Squadron RAN]] (helicopter)
| [[2005 Nias Island Sea King crash|helicopter crash during earthquake relief operations]]
| [[Operation Sumatra Assist]]
| [[Nias]], Indonesia
| 2 April 20005
| lost (aircraft)
|
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 8
| [[HMAS Patricia Cam|HMAS Patricia Cam]]
| Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Arnhem Land]], [[Australia]]
| 22 January 1943
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 8
| [[HMAS Tarakan (L3017)|HMAS Tarakan]]
| Accidental explosion while undergoing repairs
| Peacetime
| [[Garden Island, New South Wales]], [[Australia]]
| 25 January 1950
| scrapped
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 7
| [[HMAS Pirie (J189)|HMAS Pirie]]
| Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| [[Oro Bay]], [[Territory of New Guinea]]
| 11 April 1943
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 6
| [[HMAS Nizam (G38)|HMAS Nizam]]
| Aerial attack from German aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Tobruk]], [[Libya]]
| 21 October 1941
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 5
| [[HMAS Sydney (R17)|HMAS Sydney]] (whaleboat)
| [[Whaleboat]] capsizes during training exercise
| Peacetime
| off [[Hayman Island]], [[Australia]]
| 17 October 1963
| undamaged
|
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 4
| [[HMAS Sydney (1912)|HMAS Sydney]]
| [[Battle of Cocos|Naval battle with German raider]]
| [[World War I]]
| Cocos (Keeling) Islands
| 9 November 1914
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 4
| [[HMAS Nestor (G02)|HMAS Nestor]]
| Aerial attack from Italian aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Crete]], [[Greece]]
| 15 June 1942
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 4
| [[HMAS Warrnambool (J202)|HMAS Warrnambool]]
| Struck mine while carrying out clearance work
| Peacetime
| off northern [[Queensland
| 13 September 1947
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 4
| [[HMAS Westralia (O 195)|HMAS Westralia]]
| Onboard fire
| Peacetime
| off [[Western Australia]]
| 5 May 1998
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 4
| [[HMAS Perth (D29)|HMAS Perth]]
| Aerial attack from German aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Crete]], [[Greece]]
| 30 May 1941
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 4
| [[HMAS Tambar|HMAS Tambar]]
| Accidental attack from shore battery
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Moreton Island]], [[Queensland]]
| 4 March 1942
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 3
| [[HMAS Australia (D84)|HMAS Australia]] (plane)
| [[Operation Menace]] - HMAS Australia's spotting plane shot down by Vichy France aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Dakar]], [[French West Africa]]
| 25 September 1940
| lost (aircraft)
|
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 3
| [[HMAS Swan (U74)|HMAS Swan]]
| Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft during [[Bombing of Darwin|bombing of Darwin]]
| [[World War II]]
| [[Darwin]], Australia
| 19 February 1942
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 3
| [[HMAS Lismore (J145)|HMAS Lismore]]
| [[Whaleboat]] capsizes while transporting crew
| [[World War II]]
| [[Jervis Bay]], [[Australia]]
| 10 February 1941
| undamaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 3
| [[HMAS Wallaroo|HMAS Wallaroo]]
| Accidental collision with US Liberty Ship ''Henry Gilbert Costin''
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Fremantle]], [[Western Australia]]
| 11 June 1943
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Arrow (P 88)|HMAS Arrow]]
| Collision with wharf caused by [[Cyclone Tracy]]
| Peacetime
| [[Darwin]], [[Australia]]
| 25 December 1974
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Kanimbla (L 51)|HMAS Kanimbla]] (helicopter)
| Onboard helicopter crash
| [[Operation Quickstep]]
| off [[Fiji]]
| 29 November 2006
| lost (aircraft)
|
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Hobart (D 39)|HMAS Hobart]]
| Accidental aerial attack from US aircraft
| [[Vietnam War]]
| off [[Tiger Island|Con Co Island]], [[Democratic Republic of Vietnam]]
| 17 June 1968
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Arunta (I30)|HMAS Arunta]]
| [[Invasion of Lingayen Gulf]] - [[Kamikaze]] attack
| [[World War II]]
| [[Lingayen Gulf]], [[Philippines]]
| 6 January 1945
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Napier (G97)|HMAS Napier]]
| Freak wave washes crew overboard
| [[World War II]]
| [[Bass Strait]], [[Australia]]
| 7 March 1945
| undamaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Kara Kara|HMAS Kara Kara]]
| Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft during [[Bombing of Darwin|bombing of Darwin]]
| [[World War II]]
| [[Darwin]], Australia
| 19 February 1942
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Woomera|HMAS Woomera]]
| Accidental explosion during ammunition disposal
| Peacetime
| off [[Sydney]], [[Australia]]
| 11 October 1960
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMS Vengeance (R71)|HMAS Vengeance]] (whaleboat)
| [[Whaleboat]] capsizes while transporting crew
| Peacetime
| [[Port Philip Bay]], [[Australia]]
| 9 March 1954
| undamaged
|
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Colac|HMAS Colac]]
| Shore-based gunfire
| [[World War II]]
| [[Solomon Islands]]
| 26 May 1945
| undamaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 2
| [[HMAS Lolita|HMAS Lolita]]
| Accidental explosion
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Madang]], [[Territory of New Guinea]]
| 13 June 1945
| missing
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 1
| [[HMAS Vampire (D68)|HMAS Vampire]]
| [[Battle of Calabria]] - Aerial attack from Italian aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Punta Stilo]], [[Italy]]
| 9 July 1940
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 1
| [[HMAS Waterhen (D22)|HMAS Waterhen]]
| Aerial attack from German and Italian aircraft
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Sollum]], [[Egypt]]
| 30 June 1941
| lost
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 1
| [[HMAS Kangaroo|HMAS Kangaroo]]
| Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft during [[Bombing of Darwin|bombing of Darwin]]
| [[World War II]]
| [[Darwin]], Australia
| 19 February 1942
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 1
| [[HMAS Gunbar|HMAS Gunbar]]
| Aerial attack from Japanese aircraft during [[Bombing of Darwin|bombing of Darwin]]
| [[World War II]]
| [[Darwin]], Australia
| 22 February 1942
| damaged
| <ref></ref>
|-
|- style="vertical-align: top;"
| 1
| [[HMAS Chinampa|HMAS Chinampa]]
| Shore-based gunfire
| [[World War II]]
| off [[Saumlaki]], [[Dutch East Indies]]
| 31 August 1942
| undamaged
| <ref></ref>
|}


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Collegiate Church of Santi Maria e Lorenzo

Rococo1700:


'''Santi Maria e Lorenzo''' is a [[Baroque architecture|baroque]]-style, [[Roman Catholic]] collegiate church located at Via Giacomo Leopardi in the town of [[Rotella]], in the province of Ascoli Piceno, region of [[Marche]], Italy.

== History and Description ==
The church was built in 1767, based on a design of [[Lazzaro Giosafatti]]. The church has a single nave, but various side altars. Among the interior artwork is a 15th-century polychrome [[terracotta]] ''Pietà'', the reliquary of St Fortunato, a 17th-century organ, a 15th century God the father sculpted in marble. The sacristy is richly decorated and the ceiling is frescoed with the ''Life of St Benedict''.<ref>[https://ift.tt/2u8Q7c9 Commune of Rotella, short description of the church].</ref>

== References ==



[[Category:Baroque architecture in Marche]]
[[Category:Churches in the Province of Ascoli Piceno]]
[[Category:18th-century Roman Catholic church buildings]]



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Brian Colvin (referee)

SVS Shadow: added Category:Living people using HotCat


'''Brian Colvin''' (born 20 Sep 1978 in [[Scotland]]) is a [[United Kingdom|British]] referee for the [[Scottish Premier League]].<ref></ref>

== References ==


[[Category:1978 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]


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List of number-one Billboard Regional Mexican Songs of 2020

DanTheMusicMan2: ←Created page with ' The '''''Billboard'' Regional Mexican Songs''' chart ranks the best-performing [[Regional Mexican]...'



The '''[[Regional Mexican Airplay|''Billboard'' Regional Mexican Songs]]''' chart ranks the best-performing [[Regional Mexican]] singles in the [[United States]]. Published weekly by ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'' magazine, it ranks the "most popular regional Mexican songs, ranked by radio airplay audience impressions as measured by [[Nielsen Holdings|Nielsen Music]]."<ref></ref>

==Chart history==
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align: center;"
!Issue date
!Song
!Artist(s)
!Ref.
|-
!scope="row"|January 4
|"Escondidos"
|La Adictiva Banda San Jose de Mesillas
|<ref></ref>
|}

==References==




[[Category:2020 record charts|United States Regional Mexican Songs]]
[[Category:2020 in Mexican music]]
[[Category:Lists of number-one Latin songs in the United States|Regional Mexican 2020]]


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2020 CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament squads

Thiago89: /* References */


The '''[[2020 CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament]]''' will be an international association football tournament held in [[Colombia]] from 18 January to 9 February 2020. The ten national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 23 players; only players in these squads are eligible to take part in the tournament.

All registered players had to have been born on or after 1 January 1997.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> The age listed for each player is on 18 January 2020, the first day of the tournament.

==Group A==

=== Colombia ===
Head coach: [[Arturo Reyes]]

The 23-man squad was announced on 27 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[Independiente Santa Fe|Santa Fe]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Atlético Nacional]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Independiente Medellín]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Deportivo Cali]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Independiente Santa Fe|Santa Fe]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Atlético Junior|Junior]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Atlético Junior|Junior]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Envigado F.C.|Envigado]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Atlético Nacional]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Rionegro Águilas|Águilas Doradas]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Los Angeles FC]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[FK Mladá Boleslav|Mladá Boleslav]]|clubnat=CZE}}
|club=[[Atlético Nacional]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras|Palmeiras]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Club Tijuana|Tijuana]]|clubnat=MEX}}
|club=[[Los Angeles FC]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[Club América|América]]|clubnat=MEX}}
|club=[[Hércules CF|Hércules]]|clubnat=ESP}}
|club=[[Atlético Junior|Junior]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Atlético Junior|Junior]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Once Caldas]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Unión Magdalena]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Club Atlético River Plate|River Plate]]|clubnat=ARG}}


=== Chile ===
Head coach: [[Bernardo Redín]]

The 23-man squad was announced on 27 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[Colo-Colo]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Colo-Colo]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[O'Higgins F.C.|O'Higgins]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Universidad Católica|Universidad Católica]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[C.D. Huachipato|Huachipato]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Everton de Viña del Mar|Everton]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Audax Italiano]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[C.D. Huachipato|Huachipato]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Palestino|Palestino]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Palestino|Palestino]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Unión Española]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Colo-Colo]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Club Universidad de Chile|Universidad de Chile]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[O'Higgins F.C.|O'Higgins]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Unión Española]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Santiago Wanderers]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Sport Club Corinthians Paulista|Corinthians]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Colo-Colo]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Club Universidad de Chile|Universidad de Chile]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Universidad Católica|Universidad Católica]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Club Universidad de Chile|Universidad de Chile]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Curicó Unido]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[C.D. Cobreloa|Cobreloa]]|clubnat=CHI}}


=== Venezuela ===
Head coach: [[Amleto Bonaccorso]]

The 23-man squad was announced on 31 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[América de Cali]]|clubnat=COL}}
|club=[[Deportivo Táchira]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Caracas F.C.|Caracas]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Deportivo La Guaira]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Atlético Madrid]]|clubnat=ESP}}
|club=[[Deportivo La Guaira]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Watford F.C.|Watford]]|clubnat=ENG}}
|club=[[Deportivo La Guaira]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Estudiantes de Caracas S.C.|Estudiantes de Caracas]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Deportivo La Guaira]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Metropolitanos F.C.|Metropolitanos]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Caracas F.C.|Caracas]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Estudiantes de Mérida F.C.|Estudiantes de Mérida]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Academia Puerto Cabello]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[New York Red Bulls]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[Estudiantes de Caracas S.C.|Estudiantes de Caracas]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Caracas F.C.|Caracas]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[C.D. Huachipato|Huachipato]]|clubnat=CHI}}
|club=[[Metropolitanos F.C.|Metropolitanos]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Club de Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata|Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Trujillanos F.C.|Trujillanos]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Portuguesa F.C.|Portuguesa]]|clubnat=VEN}}
|club=[[Boca Juniors]]|clubnat=ARG}}


=== Ecuador ===
Head coach: [[Jorge Célico]]

The 23-man squad was announced on 23 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[C.D. El Nacional|El Nacional]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Delfín S.C.|Delfín]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Real Sociedad B]]|clubnat=ESP}}
|club=[[C.D. Universidad Católica del Ecuador|Universidad Católica]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[C.S.D. Independiente del Valle|Independiente del Valle]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Santos FC|Santos]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[C.S.D. Independiente del Valle|Independiente del Valle]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[C.S.D. Independiente del Valle|Independiente del Valle]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[L.D.U. Quito|LDU Quito]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Independiente Juniors]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Club Águilas]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Guayaquil City F.C.|Guayaquil City]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[C.D. Universidad Católica del Ecuador|Universidad Católica]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[C.S.D. Independiente del Valle|Independiente del Valle]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[L.D.U. Quito|LDU Quito]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[C.S.D. Macará|Macará]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Guayaquil City F.C.|Guayaquil City]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Imbabura S.C.|Imbabura]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Club Tijuana|Tijuana]]|clubnat=MEX}}
|club=[[C.S.D. Independiente del Valle|Independiente del Valle]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[S.D. Aucas|Aucas]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[C.S.D. Independiente del Valle|Independiente del Valle]]|clubnat=ECU}}
|club=[[Barcelona S.C.|Barcelona]]|clubnat=ECU}}


=== Argentina ===
Head coach: [[Fernando Batista]]

The 22-man squad was announced on 15 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> On 26 December, [[Nazareno Colombo]] was included in the squad.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[Club Atlético Banfield|Banfield]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Lanús|Lanús]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Valencia CF|Valencia]]|clubnat=ESP}}
|club=[[San Lorenzo de Almagro|San Lorenzo]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Vélez Sarsfield|Vélez Sarsfield]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Estudiantes de La Plata]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[F.C. Famalicão|Famalicão]]|clubnat=POR}}
|club=[[C.D. Nacional|Nacional]]|clubnat=POR}}
|club=[[Talleres de Córdoba]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Lanús|Lanús]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Banfield|Banfield]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Argentinos Juniors]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Racing Club de Avellaneda|Racing]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Boca Juniors]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Lanús|Lanús]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético River Plate|River Plate]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Barracas Central]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Boca Juniors]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Vélez Sarsfield|Vélez Sarsfield]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Banfield|Banfield]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Talleres de Córdoba]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[San Lorenzo de Almagro|San Lorenzo]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[New York City FC]]|clubnat=USA}}


==Group B==

=== Brazil ===
Head coach: [[André Jardine]]

The 23-man squad was announced on 16 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> On 27 December, [[Douglas Luiz]], [[Gabriel Martinelli]], [[Emerson (footballer, born 1999)|Emerson]], [[Gabriel dos Santos Magalhães|Gabriel]] and [[Wendel (footballer)|Wendel]] were replaced by [[Douglas Augusto]], [[Bruno Tabata]], [[Dodô (footballer, born 1998)|Dodô]], [[Marcilio Florencio Mota Filho|Nino]] and [[Pepê (footballer, born 1997)|Pepê]] respectively.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[Clube Atlético Mineiro|Atlético Mineiro]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Associação Atlética Ponte Preta|Ponte Preta]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense|Grêmio]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[FC Shakhtar Donetsk|Shakhtar Donetsk]]|clubnat=UKR}}
|club=[[Clube Atlético Mineiro|Atlético Mineiro]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[FC Spartak Moscow|Spartak Moscow]]|clubnat=RUS}}
|club=[[Fluminense FC|Fluminense]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Fluminense FC|Fluminense]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Atalanta B.C.|Atalanta]]|clubnat=ITA}}
|club=[[Club Athletico Paranaense|Athletico Paranaense]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[São Paulo FC|São Paulo]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Club Athletico Paranaense|Athletico Paranaense]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[PAOK FC|PAOK]]|clubnat=GRE}}
|club=[[São Paulo FC|São Paulo]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense|Grêmio]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Clube de Regatas do Flamengo|Flamengo]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense|Grêmio]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[São Paulo FC|São Paulo]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Portimonense S.C.|Portimonense]]|clubnat=POR}}
|club=[[RB Leipzig]]|clubnat=GER}}
|club=[[Bayer 04 Leverkusen|Bayer Leverkusen]]|clubnat=GER}}
|club=[[Sport Club Corinthians Paulista|Corinthians]]|clubnat=BRA}}
|club=[[Santos FC|Santos]]|clubnat=BRA}}


=== Paraguay ===
Head coach: [[Ernesto Marcucci]]

The 23-man squad was announced on 27 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[Sportivo Luqueño]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club General Díaz (Luque)|General Díaz]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Sol de América|Sol de América]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Huracán|Huracán]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Cerro Porteño]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Nacional|Nacional]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club General Díaz (Luque)|General Díaz]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Guaraní|Guaraní]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Libertad|Libertad]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club General Díaz (Luque)|General Díaz]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Guaraní|Guaraní]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Portland Timbers]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[Club Libertad|Libertad]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Vélez Sarsfield|Vélez Sarsfield]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Cerro Porteño]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Defensa y Justicia]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Cerro Porteño]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Monarcas Morelia]]|clubnat=MEX}}
|club=[[New York City FC]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[Club Libertad|Libertad]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Olimpia|Olimpia]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Sportivo Luqueño]]|clubnat=PAR}}
|club=[[Club Olimpia|Olimpia]]|clubnat=PAR}}


=== Bolivia ===
Head coach: [[César Farías]]

=== Uruguay ===
Head coach: [[Gustavo Ferreyra]]

The 23-man squad was announced on 29 December 2019.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>


|club=[[Montevideo Wanderers]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Torque|Torque]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Cerro|Cerro]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Danubio F.C.|Danubio]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Puebla|Puebla]]|clubnat=MEX}}
|club=[[Girona FC|Girona]]|clubnat=ESP}}
|club=[[Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo)|Liverpool]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[C.A. Progreso|Progreso]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Nacional de Football|Nacional]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Racing Club de Montevideo|Racing]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Racing Club de Avellaneda|Racing]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo)|Liverpool]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Independiente|Independiente]]|clubnat=ARG}}
|club=[[Los Angeles FC]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[Club Atlético River Plate (Montevideo)|River Plate]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Nacional de Football|Nacional]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Atlético Madrid]]|clubnat=ESP}}
|club=[[Club Atlético Fénix|Fénix]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Plaza Colonia de Deportes|Plaza Colonia]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Club Atlético River Plate (Montevideo)|River Plate]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo)|Liverpool]]|clubnat=URU}}
|club=[[Los Angeles FC]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[Club América|América]]|clubnat=MEX}}


=== Peru ===
Head coach: [[Nolberto Solano]]


|club=[[Club Deportivo Universidad de San Martín de Porres|Universidad San Martín]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Unión Comercio]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Sporting Cristal]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Deportivo Municipal]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Sporting Cristal]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Deportivo Municipal]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Universidad de San Martín de Porres|Universidad San Martín]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Universidad César Vallejo|Universidad César Vallejo]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Unión Huaral]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Alianza Lima]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Carlos A. Mannucci]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Universitario de Deportes|Universitario]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Alianza Lima]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[San Jose Earthquakes]]|clubnat=USA}}
|club=[[Alianza Lima]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Sporting Cristal]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Universidad de San Martín de Porres|Universidad San Martín]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Universidad Técnica de Cajamarca|UTC]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Academia Deportiva Cantolao|Cantolao]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Club Deportivo Universidad de San Martín de Porres|Universidad San Martín]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Unión Comercio]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Sporting Cristal]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Ayacucho FC|Ayacucho]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Sporting Cristal]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Sport Boys]]|clubnat=PER}}
|club=[[Sporting Cristal]]|clubnat=PER}}


==References==


[[Category:CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament]]
Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)


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Monday, December 30, 2019

Maracaibo Open Invitational

Oogglywoogly: citation for 1973 event


The '''Maracaibo Open Invitational''' was a golf tournament in Venezuela during the 1960s and 1970s. The event was played at Maracaibo Country Club in [[Maracaibo, Venezuela]].<ref name=":0"></ref> By 1972 the event was sponsored by Ford.<ref name=":1"></ref>

== Tournament Winners ==
'''Maracaibo Open Invitational<ref name=":0" />'''

*1960 [[Pete Cooper (golfer)|Pete Cooper]]
* 1961 [[Don Whitt]]
* 1962 [[George Knudson]]<ref></ref>
* 1963 [[Jim Ferree]]
* 1964 [[Art Wall Jr.]]
* 1965 Art Wall Jr.
* 1966 Art Wall Jr.
* 1967 [[Bob McCallister]]
* 1968
* 1969
* 1970 [[Florentino Molina]]
* 1971

'''Ford Maracaibo Open<ref name=":1" /><ref name=":2" />'''

* 1972
* 1973 [[Peter Oosterhuis]]<ref name=":2"></ref>
* 1974 Florentina Molina

== References ==


[[Category:Golf tournaments in Venezuela]]


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Danish Royal Enclaves

Gust Justice: Created this mostly off of the Danish article and due to a lack of any English version.


[[File:SønderjyllandKongerigskeEnklaver.png|thumb|Blue: Denmark. Green: Schleswig.]]
The '''Danish Royal Enclaves''' were the territory of the [[Kingdom of Denmark]] which was located within the [[Duchy of Schleswig]]. After the [[Second Schleswig War]], most of these areas were, like the rest of [[Duchy of Schleswig|Schleswig]], ceded to the [[Kingdom of Prussia]]. Most of these areas were returned after the [[1920 Schleswig plebiscites]].


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Anne Cathrine Juel

Aciram: Aciram moved page Anne Cathrine Juel to Anna Cathrine Juel


[[File:Norske Selskab Eilif Peterssen.jpg|thumb|400px| Painted by Eilif Peterssen in 1892: An evening at the Norwegian Society (''En aften i Det norske Selskab''). The man with the raised glass in the foreground is [[Johan Herman Wessel]]; the man with the red jacket is [[Johan Nordahl Brun]]. Behind Wessel is the hostess, [[Anne Cathrine Juel | Madam Juehl]].]]
'''Anne Cathrine Juel''' (1738-1809) was a Danish businesswoman.

She owned and managed a famous [[coffee house]] in Copenhagen, which are known as the meeting place of the [[Det norske Selskab]] from 1772 to 1792. She was a muse to many of the members of the society, and several poems are dedicated to her by its members.

In 2005, a memorial plaque is was placed on the Thomas Angell House in Trondheim, where she died.

==References==

* A. H. Winsnes: Det Norske Selskab 1772-1812. Aschehoug 1924.

Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)



[[Category:1738 births]]
[[Category:1809 deaths]]
[[Category:18th-century Danish businesspeople]]
[[Category:18th-century businesswomen]]


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Macedonian refugees in Atalanti

Angel Angel 2: ←Created page with 'Donation seal on the books donated by Bellios to the [[National Library of Greece, origin...'


[[File:Σφραγίδα δωρεών Μπέλλιου.jpg|thumb|right|Donation seal on the books donated by Bellios to the [[National Library of Greece]], originally intended for the Macedonian refugee settlement of Nea Pella<ref>''ΕΠΟΧΕΣ'', Vol. 17 (September 1964), p. 85</ref>]]
'''The Macedonian refugees in Atalanti''' are a compact population from the [[Macedonia]] region, located in the [[Phthiotis]] town of [[Atalanti]] after the establishment of the independent [[Kingdom of Greece]].

On November 5, 1826, the port of Atalanti arrived there, the Thessalomacedonians (Θεσσαλομακεδόνες), led by [[Angelis Gatsos]] (Angel Gatzo) and [[Anastasios Karatasos]], organized by the [[Philhellene]] through [[Ioannis Kolettis]]. In 1829, 545 Macedonian families or 2,436 people were accommodated in [[Skopelos]]. <ref></ref> Between February and March 1831, 150 captains with their men fled from [[Thessaloniki]] to the free southern parts of Greece and the government of [[Ioannis Kapodistrias]], principally suspicious of the armed forces, receiving and accommodating them in Atalanti. <ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 5, expected 1)</ref>

A royal decree of March 20, 1835, affirmed that 370 Macedonian refugees were granted the right to settle in Atalanti, freeing up 3.5 acres of state land for cultivation and food. Subsequently, other Macedonian refugees settled in Atalanti, and all of them were granted state-owned timber for the construction of houses.

By royal decree of April 25, old style, or May 7, 1837, Macedonians were granted the right of self-government - in this case, against the existing local Greek community. This provoked protest by the mayor and as a result the formation of two parallel self-governing communities, with no analogue in the territory of the Kingdom of Greece. Immediately after the royal decree, philanthropist [[Konstantinos Bellios]] donated 2000 books to the local ''Macedonian library''. The parallel settlement of the Greek Atalanti is called by the local Greeks the ''Turkish neighborhood'' (Τουρκομαχαλάς), officially named [[Pella]] or ''Nea Pella''.

==References==


==See also==
*[[Wallachian uprising of 1821]]
*[[Macedonian Question]]
*[[Macedonia naming dispute]]

[[Category:Modern history of Macedonia (region)]]
[[Category:Greek War of Independence]]
[[Category:History of Greece (1832–1862)]]
[[Category:History of Phthiotis]]


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Sunday, December 29, 2019

Anarcho-frontierism

Þjarkur: Requesting speedy deletion (CSD A11). (TW)



[[File:Flag of Anarcho-frontierism.png|thumb|Flag of Anarcho-frontierism]]
'''Anarcho-frontierism''' is a [[political philosophy]] and [[economic theory]] about developing technology to go to space because the belief is that true anarchist societies can only exist on the frontier.

Founder of Anarcho-frontierism
[[GunslingerAmante]]


Anarcho-frontierism is a culturally neutral or slightly [[Progressivism|progressive]], extremely pro-gun [[Transhumanism|transhumanist]] federalist anarchism with an economic system that is a combination of [[communism]] and [[capitalism]] and frontier aesthetics.


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Sorin Cotofana

Biografer: Date format


'''Sorin Cotofana''' is a Quantum & [[Computer engineering]] Professor at [[Delft University of Technology]].

==Education and career==
Cotofana got his M.Sc. degree in [[computer science]] from the [[University of Bucharest]], Romania. He then moved to the [[Netherlands]] where he studied [[electrical engineering]] at [[Delft University of Technology]], graduating from it with a Ph.D. Currently he serves on the faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science of Delft University of Technology in [[Delft]], Netherlands. From 2009 to 2011, Cotofana served as associate editor of the ''IEEE Transactions on CAS I'' and from 2008 to 2014 held the same position at the ''IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology''. Between those appointments, he also was a chair of the Giga-Nano IEEE CASS Technical Committee from 2013 to 2015 and the IEEE Nano Council CASS representative from 2013 to 2014. From 2016 to 2017, he was a member of the Senior Editorial Board of the ''IEEE Journal on Emerging and Selected Topics in Circuits and Systems'' and from 2014 to 2018 served on the Steering Committee of the ''IEEE Transactions on Multi-Scale Computing Systems''.<ref></ref>

Cotofana was named a [[Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers]] (IEEE) in 2017<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> for contributions to nanocomputing architectures and paradigms.<ref></ref>

==References==


==External links==
*


[[Category:20th-century births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Romanian computer scientists]]
[[Category:University of Bucharest alumni]]
[[Category:Delft University of Technology faculty]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Place of birth missing (living people)]]





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Ulrich von Güttingen

Srnec: start


'''Ulrich von Güttingen''' (died 14 February 1277) was the abbot of the [[Abbey of Saint Gall]] from 1272 until his death.<ref name=HDS>Werner Vogler, Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

Ulrich came from a baronial family of the [[Thurgau]]. He was a relative of the earlier abbot [[Rudolf von Güttingen]].<ref name=Duft>Johannes Duft, [https://ift.tt/2Q7wN7H Abt Ulrich von Güttingen (1272–1277)], ''Die Abtei St.Gallen'' (St. Gallen, 1986).</ref> He is not mentioned in any surviving source before his election as abbot in 1272. Ulrich was elected by only a minority of monks, the majority choosing [[Heinrich von Wartenberg]]. He did have the support, however, of the [[ministerials]] and [[Burgher (title)|burghers]] of the [[St. Gallen|town of Saint Gall]]. The disputed election was followed by armed conflict. Although Ulrich emerged victorious, the abbey was ruined.<ref name=HDS/>

Dependent on the burghers for his position, Ulrich granted them a charter that expanded their rights and privileges in 1272 or 1273. He supported the newly elected King [[Rudolf I of Germany]] after 1273, spending long periods at his court in an effort to improve the terms of the [[Reichsvogt|imperial advocacy]] (''Reichsvogtei'') over Saint Gall. To finance these stays, Ulrich had to cede abbatial lands to the crown. All of this proved futile, since Rudolf appointed one of the abbey's own ministerials, Ulrich von Ramschwag, as [[Advocatus|advocate]] over Ulrich's objections.<ref name=HDS/>

==References==


[[Category:1277 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Thurgau]]
[[Category:Abbots of Saint Gall]]


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Norfolk County House of Correction

TommyBoy: Create Redirect page


*REDIRECT [[Norfolk County Correctional Center]]


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Timeline of the war in Donbass (2016)

DagosNavy: /* January-March */ Link to type of tank widely used in this war


[[File:Map_of_the_war_in_Donbass.svg|right|thumb]]
This is a timeline of the [[War in Donbass]] for the year 2016.

==January-March==
*13 January: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported in the morning that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 70 occasions during 13 January and at least on 10 occasions during the first hours of 14 January. The militias concentrated their activities around Donetsk city and Horlivka. Ukrainian positions were the target of small arms fire, heavy machine arms fire and rocket propelled grenades at Pisky, Avdiivka, Opytne, Maryinka, Zaitseve, Novhorodske and Maiorsk. Zaitseve was also shelled with 82 mm mortars, and snipers harassed Ukrainian troops at Novhorodske and Maiorsk. In the morning, the rebels raked Ukrainian outposts at Pisky and Verhnetoretske, pounded Opytne with automatic grenade launchers, fired rocket propelled grenades on Novhorodske and heavy machine guns on Zaitseve.<ref></ref>
*22 January: The Ukrainian military reported that their positions were fired at by pro-Russian forces on 69 occasions during 21 January. Rebel militants pounded the Ukrainian strongholds of Maryinka, Opytne and Krasnohorivka, in the surroundings of Donetsk city. Zaitseve, in the area between Horlivka and Svetlodarsk, was the target of heavy machine gun fire, while rocket propelled grenades landed in Maiorsk. In the northern front, the separatists fired heavy machine guns at Troitske -on the border between Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts- and automatic grenade launchers at Zolote, east of Popasna. In the region of Mariupol, pro-Russian troops fired antitank missiles on Talakivka and 120 mm mortars on Starohnativka.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*26 January: 66 occasions. In the main inicdents, pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles engaged Ukrainian positions at Novhorodske supported by heavy machine guns and automatic grenade launchers. Marinka received fire from heavy machine guns, grenade launchers and anti-aircraft guns. Troitske and Zaitseve were hit by mortar fire.<ref></ref>
*29 January: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 71 occasions during 28 January. In the region between Horlivka and Svetlodarsk, Maiorsk and Mironivskiy, on both ends of the area, were struck by heavy machine guns and rocket propelled grenades. West of Donetsk city, Ukrainian redoubts at Krasnohorivka were harassed with small arms fire, machine gun fire, antiaircraft cannons, 82 mm mortars and banned 120 mm mortars. The rebels also fired heavy machine guns and grenade launchers at Opytne, Pisky and Butivka mining complex. In the northern front, pro-Russian forces launched antitank guided missiles on Sokolniki, in the area of Bakhmutka road. On the border between Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, Troitske was the target of heavy machine guns and grenade launchers.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*4 February: The Ukrainian military reported that their positions were fired at by pro-Russian forces on 81 occasions,<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> 12 of them using banned heavy weapons, in the worst spell of violence on the past six months. in the main incidents BTR armoured personnel carrier attacked Ukrainian positions at Novhorodske, while 82 mm and 120 mm mortar barrages landed in Marinka, Pisky and Opytne.<ref></ref>
*5 February: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported ithat pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 84 occasions, in what became the record for the year until then. In the main incidents, Talakivka, Hnutove, Avdiivka, Zaitseve, Maiorske and Butivka mining complex came under 82 mm and 120 mm mortar fire. Krasnohorivka received fire from small arms, grenade launchers and 82 mm mortars.<ref></ref>
*14 February: The Ukrainian military reported that their positions were fired at by pro-Russian forces on 71 occasions. In the main incidents, pro-Russian infantry launched an assault on Ukrainian entrenchments at Hnutove supported by mortars and anti-aircraft artillery. Zaitseve and Krasnohorivka were hit by 120 mm mortar barrages. An anti-tank guided missile was launched at Luhanske.<ref></ref>
*15 February: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 79 occasions during 15 February. In at least one occasion, the separatist targeted Ukrainian forces with self-propelled artillery. The self-propelled guns were fired on Ukrainian redoubts at Zaitseve, north of Horlivka. The same positions were shaken by 120 mm mortar volleys. Mortar rounds also landed in Maiorsk, while Novhorodske, to the west, was pounded with heavy machine gun fire and rocket propelled grenades. In the outskirts of Donetsk city, mortar barrages landed on the Ukrainian strongholds of Krasnohorivka and Maryinka. Heavy machine guns and grenade launchers were fired at Opytne, Pisky, Avdiivka and Butivka mining complex. Mortar rounds also fell into Ukrainian positions at Kominternove, Hnutove and Shyrokyne, in the region of Mariupol. Heavy machine guns and antitank rockets were fired at Ukrainian troops near Hranitne. In the northern front, the militias attacked the Ukrainian garrisons at Trokhizbenka and Sokolniki, Luhansk Oblast.<ref></ref>
*28 February: The Ukrainian military reported in the morning that their positions were fired at by pro-Russian forces on 71 occasions over the past 24 hours. in the main incidents, Zaitseve became the target of 120 mm mortars and self-propelled artillery. A Ukrainian army truck hit a [[Fougasse (weapon)|fougasse]] in Donetsk region on 25 February, as a result one serviceman was killed and another taken prisoner. <ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref></ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*11 March: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters in the morning pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 75 occasions on Ukrainian troops on 11 March&nbsp;– including on 59 occasions in Donetsk, on 15 occasions in Mariupol, and on 1 occasion in Luhansk Oblast. In the main incidents, fired mortars 12 times on the Ukrainian positions near the towns of Krasnohorivka and Avdiyivka, the villages of Opytne, Pisky, Zaitseve and Nevelske in the Donetsk sector, as well as the town of Maryinka and the village of Chermalyk in the Mariupol sector. A Ukrainian serviceman was killed in Avdiivka. Pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles engaged Ukrainian redoubts around Luhanske and Novhorodske,where a Ukrainian soldier was killed in action.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*12 March: The Ukrainian military recorded 71 attacks on their troops over the past 24 hours – including on 62 occasions in Donetsk, on 8 occasions in Mariupol, and on 1 occasion in Luhansk Oblast. Pro-Russian [[T-64|tanks]] shelled Avdiivka, which was also the target of mortars and 122 mm guns. Nearby Krasnohorivka was also the target of 122 mm artillery rounds, while Luhanske, north of Horlivka, was attacked three times by armoured fighting vehicles.<ref></ref><ref></ref>

*28 March: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 72 occasions on Ukrainian troops on 28 March, including more than 60 attacks around Donetsk city and Horlivka. In the main incidents heavy shelling from 82 mm and 120 mm mortars was reported at Avdiivka, while Mayorsk was shelled with 152 mm self-propelled artillery. Ukrainian forces returned fire ten times.<ref></ref>

*29 March: The Ukrainian operational headquarters reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 72 occasions on Ukrainian troops over the past 24 hours, using banned weapons along the entire demarcation line. in the main incidents, Zaitseve came under fire from 152 mm self-propelled artillery. Avdiivka and Zaitseve were struck by 82 mm and 120 mm mortar barrages. Ukrainian troops returned fire on 20 occasions.<ref></ref><ref></ref>

==April-June==
*9 April: The Ukrainian operational headquarters reported in the morning that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 91 occasions on 9 March. West of Donetsk, Avdiivka was shelled from three different locations – Yakolivka, Mineralne and Yasinuvata – with 82 mm and 120 mm mortars. Pro-Russian tanks fired 125 mm rounds on Ukrainian redoubts at Luhanske, north of Horlivka.<ref></ref><ref></ref>
*11 April: The Ukrainian military reported that separatist forces had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 79 occasions during the past 24 hours. Ukrainian troops fired back on 9 instances. Avdiivka was the target of small arms and mortars 19 times. The rebels fired 82&nbsp;mm and 120&nbsp;mm mortars on Ukrainian positions at Luhanske, Maiorsk, and Zaitseve, around Horlivka, and Kamyanka, west of Donetsk. Small arms fire was reported at Nevelske, Maryinka and Opytne, around Donetsk city, Zaitseve, Hranitne, north of Mariupol, and Stanytsia Luhanska, Luhansk Oblast, in the northern part of the front. Pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles attacked Ukrainian redoubts at Luhanske, north of Horlivka, Novotroitske, in the region of Mariupol, and Butivka mining complex, in the outskirts of Donetsk city.<ref></ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*12 April: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 87 occasions on 12 March. In the main incidents, pro-Russian forces fired mortars on Ukrainian positions 22 times, while armoured fighting vehicles launched 12 attacks on Ukrainian forces. Novgorodsky, Marinka, Talakovka, Shirokine, Pisky, Zaitseve, Opytne, Luhanske, Novhorodske, Mayorsk, Marinka and Novotroitske came under hostile fire.<ref></ref>
*13 April: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported in the morning that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 80 occasions on 13 April; the fire was returned on 12 occasions. Pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles attacked Ukrainian redoubts at Opytne, west of Donetsk airport, with the support of 152 mm self-propelled artillery and mortar barrages. The main target was once again the Ukrainian stronghold of Avdiivka. The rebels fired 82 mm and 120 mm mortars at Maiorsk and Zaitseve, in the outskirts of Horlivka, Pisky, southwest of Donetsk city, and Trokhizbenka, in the northern section of the demarcation line. Additional attacks took place in Maryinka, Butivka mining complex, Verkhnyotoretske, Luhanske, Svetlodarsk and Zolote.<ref></ref>
*16 May: The ATO HQ reported in the morning that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 36 occasions over the past 24 hours. A rebel assault, preceded by rocket propelled grenades, antiaircraft fire and 82 mm mortar volleys, was repelled near Opytne. Pro-Russian tanks shelled the Ukrainian stronghold of Avdiivka, supported by 120 mm mortar barrages and 122 mm artillery.<ref></ref>
*23 May: The Ukrainian military reported in the morning that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 47 occasions on 23 May, and on 9 occasions during the first 6 hours of 24 May. In the main incidents, Krasnohorivka came under the combined fire of 82 mm and 120 mm mortars. Avdiivka and Marinka were hit by 82 mm mortar volleys.<ref></ref> At least seven Ukrainian servicemen were killed and at least nine others wounded in action in the Donbass region on 23 May, the heaviest daily toll over the past year. https://ift.tt/35dCmpy The casualties were the result of either heavy shelling or improvised explosive devices. Two Aidar volunteer battalion fighters were killed during a raid on rebel positions behind the demarcation line.<ref></ref>
*25 May: The ATO HQ reported in the morning that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 33 occasions on 24 May and on 4 occasions during the first six hours of 25 May.<ref></ref> Ukrainian troops claimed the destruction of a pro-Russian BMP-1 armoured fighting vehicle during a pro-Russian attempt to break through the demarcation line at Novotroitske, in an area between Donetsk city and Mariupol. Two anti-tank guided missiles were launched at Luhanske.<ref></ref>
*28 May: The Ukrainian military reported that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 40 occasions on 27 May and on 14 occasions during the first six hours of 28 May. The violations of the ceasefire involved the use of "Grad" multiple rocket launchers to strike Ukrainian defences around Novotroitske.<ref></ref> The OSCE mission reported 405 ceasefire violations in Eastern Ukraine.The same sources said that separatist officials reported three pro-Russian soldiers killed in action. The monitors witnessed the recovery of three bodies.<ref> OSCE|website=www.osce.org|access-date=2019-12-28}}</ref>
*14 June: The ATO HQ reported in the morning that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 58 occasions on 14 June. The fighting involved the use of heavy weapons banned by the Minsk agreements. Pro-Russian tanks launched two assaults on Ukrainian redoubts at Krasnohorivka, both of them beaten off by the Ukrainian defenders. Nevelske, Pisky, Avdiivka, Verkhnyotoretske, Butivka and Luhanske (in the region of Horlivka) were the target of 152 mm howitzers. North of Mariupol, Pavlopil and Chermalik were shelled by 122 mm self-propelled guns.<ref></ref>
*24 June: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 61 occasions on 24 June. In the main incidents, pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles from Yasynuvata and Mineralne engaged Ukrainian positions at Avdiivka and Butivka mining complex. Krasnohorivka, Taramchuk, Talakivka, Vodiane, Chermalyk, Zaitseve and Mayorsk cameunder 82 mm mortar fire. Pisky was shelled with 120 mm mortars.<ref></ref>
*27 June: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 71 occasions on 27 June. In the main incidents, Novotroitske received fire from 152 mm self-propelled artillery, while Troitskey, Zaitsevoe, Mayorsk, Luhanske, Opytne, Peiky and Kirove.<ref></ref>
* 29 June: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had fired upon Ukrainian positions on 66 occasions on 27 June. In the main incidents, pro-Russian tanks launched an attack on Ukrainian redoubts at Luhanske. Novoselivka and Berezove were hit by 120 mm mortar barrages, while Troitske was shelled with 152 mm self-propelled artillery.<ref></ref> The following day, Ukrainian baritone [[Vasyl Slipak]], a volunteer in the Ukrainian army, was killed by a sniper near Luhanske.<ref></ref>

==July-September==
*10 July: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the ATO HQ there were 94 attacks on Ukrainian positions. In the main incidents, Novhorodske was hit by 152 mm artillery barrages, while Nikolaevka was shelled by 122 mm self-propelled artillery. Mayorsk, Pisky, Avdiivka, Novhorodske and Troitske received fire from 120 mm mortars.<ref></ref>
*29 July: The spokesman of the ATO HQ reported that separatist forces had opened fire on 84 occasions upon Ukrainian positions on this day. Pro-Russian tanks attacked Ukrainian redoubts at Leninske, in the area of Horlivka, Starhonativka, in the region of Mariupol, and Trokhizbenka, in the northern sector of the demarcation line. Banned heavy weapons were also used in several locations. The rebels fired 152 mm self-propelled artillery on Leninske and Yasnobrodivka. Also in Leninske, 122 mm artillery rounds landed around Ukrainian entrenchments. Krasnohorivka, Pisky and Maiorsk were the target of 120 mm mortars.<ref></ref>
*30 July: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the ATO HQ in the morning, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 105 occasions on Ukrainian positions the previous day, including on 46 occasions during the last six hours of 30 July. In the main received fire from 122 mm artillery. Pro-Russian tanks engaged Ukrainian redoubts at Marinka. pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles from Artemivsk launched an attack on Luhanske supported by 120 mm mortars and 122 mm artillery.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*31 July: According to the information provided by the ATO HQ on their Facebook page, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 85 occasions on Ukrainian troops during the last day of July. In the main incidents, pro-Russian and Ukrainian infantry trade fire in the area of Bohdanivka. Avdiivka came under 122 mm and 152 mm artillery fire. Pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles engaged Ukrainian redoubts at Vodiane and Starohnativka.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*17 August: According to the information provided by the ATO HQ on their Facebook page, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 96 occasions on Ukrainian positions on 17 August. In the main incidents, Hranitne received fire from 152 mm self-propelled artillery, while Avdiivka, Pisky, Luhanske, Novoselivka, Marinka and Travneve were hit by 122 mm artillery fire. An anti-tank guided missile landed in Novoselivka. Pro-Russian armoured personnel carriers attacked Shyrokyne, and armoured fighting vehicles fired upon Ukrainian positions at Krasnohorivka.<ref></ref>
*24 August: According to the information provided by the ATO HQ, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 85 occasions on Ukrainian positions on 24 August, including on 38 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, on 22 occasions in the region of Mariupol, and on 25 occasions in Luhansk Oblast. In the main incidents, Popasna, Novozvanivka, Semihorye, Zholobok yand Novotoshkivka were hit by 152 mm artillery fire. Troitske, Luhanske and krymske became the target of 122 mmself-propelled artillery. Pro-Russian tanks attacked Ukrainian positions around Avdiivka. BTR armoured personnel carriers launched an attack near Marinka, and BPM armoured vehicles fired upon Ukrainian forces at Luhansk.<ref></ref>
*26 August: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 88 occasions on Ukrainian positions on 26 August, including on 37 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city and on 31 occasions in the region of Mariupol. In the main incidents, Zaitseve, Krasnohorivka and Pisky received 152 mm artillery fire. Ukrainian tanks attacked Avdiivka once again. A "massive" shelling was reported at Krymske, which was hit by more than 70 artillery rounds from 122 mm guns.<ref></ref>
*29 August: According to the information provided by the ATO HQ on their Facebook, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 91 occasions on Ukrainian positions the previous day, including on 46 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, on 25 occasions in Luhansk region, and on 20 occasions in the region of Mariupol. In the main incidents, 11 artillery attacks were reported on Nevelske, Avdiivka, Keramike, Pisky, Zaitseve, Dacha and Kademe. Pro-Russian forces used 122 mm and 152 mm self-propelled artillery. BMP armoured vehicles engaged Ukrainian positions at Zhovte.<ref></ref>

*11 September: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 37 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including 8 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, 20 occasions in the region of Mariupol, and 9 occasions in Luhansk Oblast. In the main incidents, Vodiane was shelled by 122 mm self-propelled artillery, while BMP-2 armoured vehicles attacked Ukrainian positions at Shyrokyne and Hranitne.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*13 September: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 56 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including on 37 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, on 14 occasions in the region of Mariupol, and on 5 occasions in Luhansk Oblast. In the main incidents, Zaitseve and Avdiivka were shelled using 122 mm self-propelled artillery. BMP armoured vehicles fired upon Ukrainian positions near Novozvanivka and Shyrokyne.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*19 September: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported, that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 50 occasions on Ukrainian positions, including on 20 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 26 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city, and on four occasions in Luhansk region. In the main incidents, Zaitseve, Avdiivka, Kamianka and Verkhnyotoretske became the target of 122 mm and 152 mm self-propelled artillery. Pro-Russian tanks launched an attack on the industrial area of Avdiivka.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> At a press conference in Kiev German Foreign Minister [[Frank-Walter Steinmeier]] stated "We came with a promise from Moscow that effective [September 15] there will be a truce that will last at least a week."<ref></ref>
*21 September: A framework agreement on disengagement of forces was signed by the warring parties at Minsk, brokered by the Trilateral Contact Group.<ref></ref>
*26 September: The spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 40 occasions on Ukrainian positions, including on 12 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city, on 18 occasions in the region of Mariupol, and on 10 occasions in Luhansk region. In the main incidents, BMP armoured vehicles engaged Ukrainian positions at Zaitseve and Nyzhnie Lozove supported by 82 mm and 120 mm mortars. Pro-Russian artillery remained silent.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
==October-December==
* 4 October: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 68 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including on 13 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city, on 19 occasions in the region of Mariupol, and on 36 occasions in Luhansk region. The incidents involved attacks by pro-Russian armoured fighting vehicles on Ukrainian forces at Talakivka and Lebedynske, in the region of Mariupol, and at Novozvanivka and Novooleksandrivka, in the northern front. Novozvanivka and Novooleksandrivka also became the target of 82 mm mortars, 120 mm mortars and 122 mm self-propelled artillery, while 120 mm mortar volleys landed in Avdiivka, in the western outskirts of Donetsk city. BMP armoured vehicles engaged Ukrainian forces at Novozvanivka, Novooleksandrivka, Talakivka and Lebedinske.<ref></ref>
*16 October: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters , pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 61 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including on 9 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city, on 23 occasions in the region of Mariupol, and on 29 occasions in Luhansk region. Marinka, Popasna, Vodiane and Lebedinske were hit by 122 mm and 152 mm artillery barrages.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> Donetsk People's Republic prime minister, Alexander Zakharchenko, confirmed the death of Sparta Battalion commander, [[Arsen Pavlov|Arseny Pavlov]], better known as "Motorola", killed by an IED explosion in his apartment's elevator in Donetsk city. Zakharchenko said the assassination was carried out by a "Ukrainian sabotage and reconnaissance group", and that the killing was a "ceasefire violation" and a "declaration of war" by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko.<ref></ref>
*18 October: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 57 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including on 44 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 10 occasions in Luhansk region, and on 3 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city. In the main incidents, Vodiane, Shyrokyne and Lebedinske were fired upon with 122 mm and 152 mm self-propelled artillery.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> The spokesman of [[German Chancellor]] [[Angela Merkel]] said that Merkel has invited [[President of Russia|President]] [[Vladimir Putin]] of Russia, [[President of Ukraine|Ukraine’s President]] [[Petro Poroshenko]], and [[President of France|President]] [[Francois Hollande]] of France to "assess the implementation" of the Minsk agreements.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> Putin agreed to attend the 19 October meeting at [[Berlin]].<ref></ref>

*20 October: The participants of the talks on the Ukraine crisis in [[Berlin]] agreed to draw up a roadmap by the end of next month to carry out the Minsk peace agreement for eastern Ukraine.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> According to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the talks with Russian, Ukrainian and French leaders about a stalled Ukraine peace deal "didn't achieve miracles".<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> According to [[Moscow Kremlin|Kremlin]] spokesman [[Dmitry Peskov]], the talks were "as a whole, positive".<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*27 October: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 54 occasions on Ukrainian positions, including on 34 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 3 occasions in Luhansk region, and on 17 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city. In the main incidents, BMP armoured vehicles attacked Marinka, Krasnohorivka and Shyrokyne. Avdiivka was struck by 152 mm artillery volleys.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*6 November: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 52 occasions on Ukrainian positions, including on 32 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 8 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, and on 12 occasions in Luhansk region. In Mariupol, specially in the area of Shyrokyne, the rebels used 82 mm mortars, 120 mm mortars, armoured fighting vehicles, 122 mm and 152 mm self-propelled artillery. Around Donetsk city and Horlivka, Pro-Russian tanks and armoured fighting vehicles engaged Ukrainian forces at Avdiivka and Luhanske.<ref></ref>
*7 November: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 50 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including on 31 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 10 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city, and on 9 occasions in Luhansk region. In the main incidents, BMP armoured vehicles engaged Ukrainian positions at Shyrokyne and Talakivka received 120 and 82 mm mortar volleys. Anti-air craft artillery was fired at Krasnogorivka, while 122 mm self-propelled artillery fired on Vodiane and Hnutove.<ref></ref>
*8 November: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 54 occasions on Ukrainian positions, including on 32 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 6 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, and on 16 occasions in Luhansk region. In the main incidents, BMP armoured vehicles attacked Taramchuk, Krasnohorivka, Marinka, Talakivka, Novotroitske, Berezove, Lebedinske, Shirokino, Pavlopil, Stepne, Luhanske Avdiivka, Zaitseve and Novhorodske supported by 82 mm and 120 mm mortars. BTR armoured personnel carriers engaged Ukrainian positions at Stanytsia Luhanska, Yasne, Krymske, Novooleksandrivka, Kosharne and Popasna.<ref></ref>
*12 November: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 64 occasions on Ukrainian positions, including on 43 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 6 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, and on 15 occasions in Luhansk region. Novozvanivka, Troitske, Talakivka, Tonenke and Avdiivka were pounded by 122 mm self-propelled artillery, while 152 mm artillery volleys landed in Marinka and Shyrokyne. BMP armoured vehicles attacked Ukrainian positions at Lebedinske, Vodiane, Pavlopil, Shyrokyne, Taramchuk and Talakivka.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*10 December: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 70 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including on 39 occasions in the region of Mariupol. In the main incidents, Vodiane, Shyrokyne, Lebedinske, Talakivka and Novotoshkivka received fire from 122 mm and 152 mm self-propelled artillery. pro-Russian tanks engaged Ukrainian redoubts at Shyrokyne.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*11 December: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 51 occasions on Ukrainian troops, including on 35 occasions in the region of Mariupol, on 7 occasions in the surroundings of Donetsk city, and on 9 occasions in Luhansk region. In the main incidents, 122 mm self-propelled artillery fired upon Talakivka, Marinka, Krasnohorivka, Novoselivka, Chermalyk, Lebedinske and Vodiane. Pro-Russian tanks and BMP armoured vehicles launched a sustained attack on Shyrokyne, supported by 82 mm and 120 mm mortars.<ref></ref>

*16 December: The ATO HQ reported that pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 52 occasions on Ukrainian troops on this day. In the main incidents, 152 mm self-propeled artillery fired upon Troitske, Novozvanivka and Talakivka; Shyrokyne, Krasnohorivka, Lebedinske, Nevelske and Vodiane were hit by 122 mm artillery barrages. BMP armoured vehicles attacked Ukrainian positions at Shyrokyne.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*18 December: The ATO HQ published on their Facebook page information according to which five Ukrainian servicemen were killed and six others were wounded during a two-hour engagement – at a stretch between the militant-controlled town of Horlivka and Svitlodarsk dam – that started at around 5:50 am. Later in the evening it was reported that the death toll had risen to six, the number of wounded Ukrainian servicemen had risen to twenty-six.<ref></ref><ref></ref> The following day, the commander of the Luhansk People's Republic military, Colonel Oleg Anashchenko, dubbed the 18 December Ukrainian offensive "a complete failure". He later claimed that the Ukrainian army lost three armoured fighting vehicles and 12 soldiers.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref></ref><ref></ref>
*23 December: According to the information provided by the spokesman of the Ukrainian operational headquarters, pro-Russian troops had opened fire on 50 occasions on Ukrainian troops today, including on 19 occasions in the outskirts of Donetsk city, on 19 occasions in the region of Mariupol, and on 10 occasions in Luhansk region. In the main incidents, pro-Russian forces targeted Syze with BM-21 "Grad" multiple rocket launchers. Severne, Mirinivka and Krasnyi Pakhar received fire from 152 mm self-propelled artillery. BMP armoured vehicles attacked the area of Svitlodarsk and Shyrokyne supported by 122 mm artillery fire.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> A new ceasefire agreement, agreed at Minsk on 21 December, began at midnight 24 December.<ref></ref>
*26 December: Ukrainian MP and former commander of the [[Aidar Battalion|Aidar battallon]], [[Semen Semenchenko]], announced the blockade of the trade between Ukraine and the self-proclaimed republics in the Donbass region. The action would be carried out by war veterans.<ref></ref>

== References ==

2014

[[Category:War in Donbass]]
[[Category:Timelines of current events]]
[[Category:Timelines of the war in Donbass]]


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Gelatin (disambiguation)

Þjarkur: ←Created page with ''''Gelatin''' is a transclucent food ingredient. It may also refer to: * Gelatin dessert * Gelatine (airship) * Gelatin (artist group) == See a...'


'''[[Gelatin]]''' is a transclucent food ingredient. It may also refer to:

* [[Gelatin dessert]]
* [[Gelatine (airship)]]
* [[Gelatin (artist group)]]

== See also ==

* [[Starch gelatinization]]



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1989 Copa Pelé squads

Jimmygrant93: /* */


These are the squads for the national teams participated in the [[II Mundialito de Seniors]] held in Brazil, in 1989. The tournament was played in a round robin format with Brazil being the winners of this first edition.

== Group ==

======
Head coach: [[Luciano do Valle]]

|caps=3|club= Retired|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=2|club= Retired|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=32|club= [[Sport Club Corinthians Paulista|Corinthians]]|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=32|club= Retired|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=7|club= [[Santos FC]]|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=-|club= Retired|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=-|club= [[Sport Club Corinthians Paulista|Corinthians]]|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=92|club= Retired|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=-|club= Retired|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}
|caps=42|club= Retired|clubnat=Brazil|natvar=1968}}


======
Head coach:

|caps=6|club=[[SV 19 Straelen]]|clubnat=West Germany}}
|caps=104|club= Retired|clubnat=West Germany}}
|caps=-|club=[[Tennis Borussia Berlin]]|clubnat=West Germany}}
|caps=81|club= Retired|clubnat=West Germany}}


======
Head coach:

|caps=34|club= Retired|clubnat=Italy}}
|caps=11|club= Retired|clubnat=Italy}}
|caps=48|club= Retired|clubnat=Italy}}
|caps=64|club= Retired|clubnat=Italy}}


==References==


*https://ift.tt/37i369E
*https://ift.tt/2ZEsYtF
*https://ift.tt/2ZEgWke
*https://ift.tt/1h2Htwo
*https://ift.tt/2QalITs
*https://ift.tt/2e8Z9Oq




[[Category:World Cup of Masters events]]
[[Category:International association football competitions hosted by Brazil|1989]]
[[Category:1989 in Brazilian football]]


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Maacher Jhol (disambiguation)

Ravensfire: Create disambig page


'''Maacher Jhol''' may refer to:

* [[Maacher Jhol (2017 feature film)]]
* [[Maacher Jhol (2017 short film)]]


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Saturday, December 28, 2019

HPRCC

Lymoz: ←Created page with 'HPRCC may refer to: * High Plains Regional Climate Center, one of the six Regional Climate Centers in the United States * Hereditary papillary renal cell...'


HPRCC may refer to:

* [[High Plains Regional Climate Center]], one of the six Regional Climate Centers in the United States
* [[Hereditary papillary renal cell cancer]], a familial renal cancer syndrome

*



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List of psychology awards

Aymatth2: /* top */ detail


This '''list of psychology awards''' is an index to articles about awards given for work in the fields of [[psychology]], [[cognitive science]]s and [[psychiatry]].

{|class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!style="width:6em;"| Country !! Award !! Sponsor !! Given for
|-
| Canada || [[CPA Donald O. Hebb Award for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology as a Science]] || [[Canadian Psychological Association]] || Significant contribution to Canadian psychology as a scientific discipline
|-
| Canada || [[Goethe Award for Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Scholarship]] || [[Canadian Psychological Association]] || Best psychoanalytic book
|-
| Canada || [[Otto Weininger Memorial Award]] || [[Canadian Psychological Association]] || Psychoanalytic or psychodynamic psychologist who has demonstrated outstanding clinical, empirical, or theoretical contributions in the areas of psychoanalytic or psychodynamic psychology
|-
| Chile || [[National Prize for Natural Sciences (Chile)|National Prize for Natural Sciences]] || (Various categories)
|-
| Denmark || [[The Brain Prize]] || Lundbeck Foundation || Outstanding contribution to neuroscience and still active in research
|-
| France || [[Jean Nicod Prize]] || [[French National Centre for Scientific Research]] || Leading philosopher of mind or philosophically oriented cognitive scientist
|-
| Italy || [[Mind & Brain Prize]] || [[Polytechnic University of Turin]] || Outstanding achievement in advancing knowledge about mind and brain by persons whose work contributed to the growth and development of the discipline
|-
| United Kingdom || [[BPS Barbara Wilson Lifetime Achievement Award]] || [[British Psychological Society]] || Outstanding contribution to [[neuropsychology]] in the United Kingdom
|-
| United Kingdom || [[Spearman Medal]] || [[British Psychological Society]] || Outstanding published work in psychology which represents a significant body of work in terms of theoretical contributions, originality, and impact
|-
| United States || [[APA Award for Distinguished Contributions to the International Advancement of Psychology]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Distinguished and enduring lifetime contributions to the international cooperation and advancement of knowledge in psychology
|-
| United States || [[APA Award for Distinguished Professional Contributions to Applied Research]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Psychologist whose research has led to important discoveries or developments in the field of applied psychology
|-
| United States || [[APA Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Psychologists who have made distinguished theoretical or empirical contributions to basic research in psychology
|-
| United States || [[APA Award for Lifetime Contributions to Psychology]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Lifetime contributions
|-
| United States || [[APA Distinguished Scientific Award for an Early Career Contribution to Psychology]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Outstanding research psychologists who are in the early stages of their career
|-
| United States || [[APA Distinguished Scientific Award for the Applications of Psychology]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Applications of psychology
|-
| United States || [[APA International Humanitarian Award]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Extraordinary humanitarian service and activism by a psychologist or a team of psychologists, including professional and/or volunteer work conducted primarily in the field with underserved populations
|-
| United States || [[Bruno Klopfer Award]] || [[Society for Personality Assessment]] || Lifetime achievement in personality psychology
|-
| United States || [[Covey Award]] || [[International Association for Computing and Philosophy]] || (Cognitive science) Accomplished innovative research, and possibly teaching that flows from that research, in the field of computing and philosophy broadly conceived
|-
| United States || [[Donald T. Campbell Award]] || APA [[Society for Personality and Social Psychology]] || Distinguished researchers in the field of [[social psychology]]
|-
| United States || [[E. L. Thorndike Award]] || [[American Psychological Association]] || Substantial career achievements in educational psychology
|-
| United States || [[Frank Prize]] || [[University of Florida]] || Research that advances public interest communications around positive social change, including issues such as education, health, politics, and the environment
|-
| United States || [[Grawemeyer Award]] || [[University of Louisville]] || Psychology: ideas rather than lifelong or publicized personal achievement
|-
| United States || [[James McKeen Cattell Fellow Award]] || [[Association for Psychological Science]] || Lifetime of significant intellectual contributions to the basic science of psychology
|-
| United States || [[Joseph Zubin Award#Joseph Zubin Award (APPA)|Joseph Zubin Award (APPA)]] || [[American Psychopathological Association]] || Seminal contributions to psychopathology research
|-
| United States || [[Joseph Zubin Award#Joseph Zubin Award (SRP)|Joseph Zubin Award (SRP)]] || Society for Research in Psychopathology || Lifetime achievement award
|-
| United States || [[Joseph Zubin Award#Joseph Zubin Memorial Fund Award|Joseph Zubin Memorial Fund Award]] || [[New York State Psychiatric Institute]] || Investigators who are in an early stage of their career, but have already made significant contributions to research in any area of psychopathology
|-
| United States || [[Oskar Pfister Award]] || [[American Psychiatric Association]], Association of Mental Health Clergy || Significant contributions to the field of religion and psychiatry
|-
| United States || [[Rumelhart Prize]] || [[Cognitive Science Society]] || Contributions to the theoretical foundations of human cognition
|-
| United States || [[Troland Research Awards]] || [[National Academy of Sciences]] || Researchers under the age of 40 in recognition of psychological research on the relationship between consciousness and the physical world
|-
| United States || [[William James Fellow Award]] || [[Association for Psychological Science]] || APS Members for their lifetime of significant intellectual contributions to the basic science of psychology
|}

==See also==
* [[Lists of awards]]

==References==


[[Category:Psychology awards| ]]
[[Category:Lists of awards|Psychology]]


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List of films featuring the United States Space Force

Gildir: /* List of films */ : Added note


This is a list of [[film]]s featuring the [[United States Space Force]].

The United States Space Force was established on December 20, 2019,<ref name="USSF Fact Sheet"></ref> but in some cases a United States service branch of that name had been featured in popular culture decades earlier, projecting the future establishment of such a branch.

==List of films==
<!--Please read "what belongs here" and "what does not belong here" in talk page before adding a film-->
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Title !! Director !! Notable cast !! Summary !! Released !! Notes
|-
|''[[Project Moonbase]]''
|[[Richard Talmadge]]
|[[Hayden Rorke]]
|The first lunar orbital mission turns into a Moon landing when one crewmember is unmasked as an impostor. The mission commander, Col. "Bright Eyes" Briteis, was the first human in Earth orbit.<ref> |url=https://ift.tt/2EYfJum }}</ref><ref>}}</ref><ref>}}</ref><ref></ref>
|1953
|Co-written by [[Robert A. Heinlein]].
|}

==References==


==See also==


* ''[[Ad Astra (film)|Ad Astra]]'', film released on August 29, 2019 and featuring [[United States Space Command]], reestablished on the same day
* [[Anti-war film]]
* [[Cinema of the United States]]
* [[List of war films and TV specials]]
* [[Propaganda]]
* [[War film]]



[[Category:Films about the United States Space Force| ]]
[[Category:Lists of films by common content|United States Space Force]]
[[Category:Lists of films by topic|United States Space Force]]
[[Category:United States Space Force lists|Films]]


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Friday, December 27, 2019

Members of the Northern Territory Legislative Council, 1971–1974

Canley: corrected year


This is a list of '''members of the [[Northern Territory Legislative Council]]''' from 23 October 1971 until its abolition on 19 October 1974.<ref name="jaensch">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Name
! Party
! [[Electoral divisions of the Northern Territory|Electorate]]/Title
! Years in office
|-
|| [[Hedley Beare]] || Appointed || Director of Education || 1973–1974
|-
|| [[Thomas Bell (Australian politician)|Thomas Bell]] || Independent || McMillan || 1968–1974
|-
|| [[Norman Cooper (politician)|Norman Cooper]] || Independent || Nightcliff || 1970–1971
|-
|| [[William Joseph Fisher|Joe Fisher]] || Independent || Fannie Bay || 1961–1968, 1969–1974
|-
|| [[Harry C. Giese|Harry Giese]] || Appointed || Director of Welfare || 1954–1973
|-
|| [[Tony Greatorex]] || [[National Party of Australia|Country]] || Stuart || 1954–1974
|-
|| [[Charles Gurd]] || Appointed || Director of Health || 1974
|-
|| [[Barry Hart (politician)|Barry Hart]] || Appointed || Director of Primary Industries || 1970–1973
|-
|| [[Rupert Kentish]] || Country || Arnhem || 1968–1974
|-
|| [[Bernie Kilgariff]] || Country || Alice Springs || 1960–1968, 1969–1974
|-
|| [[Dawn Lawrie]] || Independent || Nightcliff || 1971–1974
|-
|| [[Goff Letts]] || Country || Victoria River || 1971–1974
|-
|| [[Creed Lovegrove]] || Appointed || Director of Aboriginal Affairs || 1974
|-
|| [[John Stuart Leslie Macfarlane|John Macfarlane]] || Country || Elsey || 1968–1974
|-
|| [[Eric Marks]] || Labor || Barkly || 1966–1974
|-
|| [[Ray McHenry]] || Appointed || Director of Welfare || 1973–1974
|-
|| [[Clem O'Sullivan]] || Appointed || Crown Law Officer || 1971–1974
|-
|| [[Charles Orr (Australian politician)|Charles Orr]] || Labor || Alice Springs || 1965–1971
|-
|| [[Henry Thorncroft Plant|Henry Plant]] || Appointed || || 1967–1974
|-
|| [[Phil Purich]] || Appointed || Director of Mines || 1970–1973
|-
|| [[Charles Terrell]] || Appointed || Director of Health || 1973–1974
|-
|| [[Des Travers]] || Appointed || || 1974
|-
|| [[Richard Ward (judge)|Richard Ward]] || Labor || Ludmilla || 1947–1949, 1957–1958, 1958–1963, 1968–1974
|-
|| [[Ron Withnall]] || Independent || Port Darwin || 1954–1966, 1966–1974
|-
|}

==See also==
*[[1971 Northern Territory general election]]

==References==




[[Category:Members of Northern Territory parliaments by term]]


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Snow squall warning

Johicks0013: ←Created page with ''''Snow Squall Warning'''–Issued when a dangerous snow squall is expected in the warned area.'


'''Snow Squall Warning'''–Issued when a dangerous snow squall is expected in the warned area.


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Pointu

DrVogel: ce


'''Pointu''' is a French surname. Notable people with this surname include:

* Germaine Pointu (1900–1943), married name [[Germaine Cernay]], French mezzo-soprano
* [[Jeannette Pointu]], Belgian comic book character
* [[Monsieur Pointu]] (1922–2006), Canadian violinist

==See also==
* [[Matadeen v Pointu]], Supreme Court of Mauritius case



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Sam H. Zakhem

Postcard Cathy: ←Created page with ''''Sam H. Zakhem''' (1935–) was a non-career appointee who served as American Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Bahrain from 1986-1989.<ref n...'


'''Sam H. Zakhem''' (1935–) was a non-career appointee who served as American Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to [[Bahrain]] from 1986-1989.<ref name="OotH"></ref> Zakhem was also a member of the Colorado State House of Representatives as well as a Colorado State Senator.<ref name="Rick"></ref>

==Biography==
Zakhem was born to a wealthy family in [[Lebanon]] but his father disinherited him when he emigrated to the United States. He came to the US after after graduating from the American University in Cairo in 1957. He went on to graduate with a masters degree in economics at the University of Detroit. Zakhem returned to Lebanon but did not stay long. In 1965, he moved to [[Denver]] and worked various jobs while studying political science at the at the University of Colorado in Boulder‘s graduate school, graduating with a Ph.D.<ref name="Dirk"></ref>

==Colorado Legislator=
Zakhem was elected twice to the Colorado House of Representatives (1974 and 1976) and was elected to the Colorado Senate in 1978.<ref name="Dirk" />

==Ambassadorship==
Zakhem’s fundraising for conservative political causes was part of the reason [[Ronald Regan]] appointed him as Ambassador in 1986. The State Department was not impressed because “ his resume lacked foreign affairs expertise, and one State Department observer labeled him an "amateur" dangerously miscast in the hot-spot of Middle East politics.” <ref name="Dirk" />

At the time of his appointment, some said he was the most dangerous person in the Middle East. Bahrain served as “the de facto headquarters for the biggest U.S. naval armada assembled since World War II.”<ref name="Straus"></ref>

Zakhem considered himself “a leading expert on Arab matters.” Deputy Secretary of State [[John C. Whitehead|John Whitehead]] recalled him once for dealing with the Bahraini Government outside of official channels. He also argued with CIA analysts over whether or not the family ruling Bahrain would be overthrown by the pro-Iranian Shiite majority in the country. It turned out Zakhem was right.<ref name="Dirk" />. He has also been criticized for his role in the sale of an advanced anti-aircraft missile, the Stinge, which are portable and shoulder-launched. <ref name="Straus" />

In 1992, Zakhem and two other men were were indicted and “charged with secretly accepting $7.7 million from the Government of Kuwait to act as undisclosed foreign agents in a "propaganda campaign" to generate support for the war against Iraq.” According to the indictment, the men failed to report the money, a violation of Federal tax laws, and while lobbying the US Congress and Administration, did not disclose their status as Kuwaiti agents, a violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act.<ref name="Dirk" /><ref name="Goshko"></ref>

In 1994, charges were dismissed except for the charges of tax fraud. In March, 1995, he and his co-defendants were acquitted on those charges.<ref name="Shore"></ref>

==References==
<references />



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