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❤️ 1933 in association football 🐴

"The following are the football (soccer) events of the year 1933 throughout the world. Events Winners club national championship * Argentina: San Lorenzo * England: Arsenal F.C. * France: FC Sète * Germany: Fortuna Düsseldorf * Hungary: Újpest FC * Italy: Juventus F.C. * Poland: Ruch Chorzów * Scotland: Rangers F.C. * Spain: Real Madrid * Turkey: Fenerbahçe International tournaments * 1933 British Home Championship (17 September 1932 - 1 April 1933) :: Births * April 5: Feridun Buğeker, Turkish international footballer (died 2014) * May 5: Hans van der Hoek, Dutch international footballer (died 2017) * May 15: Peter Broadbent, English international footballer (died 2013) * July 1: ** Radivoje Ognjanović, Serbian football player and manager ** Hamza Qasim, Iraqi football goalkeeper * July 6: Frank Austin, English footballer (died 2004) * July 9: John Devine, English footballer * August 6: Ulrich Biesinger German international footballer (died 2011) * August 18: Just Fontaine, French international footballer * September 11: Amby Fogarty, Irish international footballer (died 2016) * September 12: Len Allchurch, Welsh international footballer (died 2016) * September 22: Carmelo Simeone, Argentine international footballer (died 2014) * October 7: Henryk Szczepański, Polish international footballer (died 2015) * October 10: Giuliano Sarti, Italian international footballer (died 2017) * October 26: Raúl Sánchez, Chilean international footballer (died 2016) * November 19: Nicolae Rainea, Romanian football referee (died 2015) Deaths Association football by year "

❤️ North Carolina Highway 51 🐴

"North Carolina Highway 51 (NC 51) is a primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina entirely in Mecklenburg County. It connects the towns of Pineville, Matthews and Mint Hill. Route description Though NC 51 begins at the state line, SC 51 is a short road that connects with US 21, near Fort Mill, South Carolina. Crossing the state line, NC 51 quickly becomes a four- lane road as it goes through the town of Pineville. After its first intersection with I-485, it enters the Charlotte city limits. In Charlotte, NC 51 crosses the busy intersections of Johnston Road and Providence Road, known for rush-hour traffic during the weekdays. In Matthews, NC 51 bypasses the main downtown area, followed by a semi-controlled interchanged with US 74 (Independence Boulevard). As the NC 51 enters Mint Hill, the road narrows to two-lane. NC 51 crosses intersects I-485 again, before ending at NC 24/NC 27 (Albemarle Road). History The first NC 51 was an original state highway that traveled from NC 20, in Rockingham, to NC 74, in Wadeville. In 1928, Rockingham to Ellerbe became an extension of NC 75. In 1934, NC 51 was decommissioned in favor of NC 73, between Ellerbe and Mount Gilead, and NC 109, between Mount Gilead and Wadeville. The second and current NC 51 was established in 1934 as a renumbering of NC 276, between US 21/US 521, in Pineville, to NC 27, near Allen. In 1968, NC 51 was extended to the South Carolina state line, replacing a segment of US 21. In 1981, NC 51 was placed on new alignment in Pineville, abandoning an old routing along Lee Street and eliminating a short concurrency with US 521. In 1995, NC 51 was placed on new bypass north of downtown Matthews, marked as Matthews Township Parkway. The old alignment along Matthews-Mint Hill Road was downgraded to secondary road. =North Carolina Highway 276= North Carolina Highway 276 (NC 276) appeared in 1930 as new primary routing from NC 26, in Pineville, to NC 27, near Allen. In 1934, it was renumbered as the second NC 51. Major intersections References External links * *NCRoads.com: N.C. 51 *NCRoads.com: N.C. 276 051 Transportation in Charlotte, North Carolina Transportation in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina "

❤️ Charles Read (mathematician) 🐴

"Charles Read Charles John Read (16 February 1958 - 14 August 2015) was a British mathematician known for his work in functional analysis. In operator theory, he is best known for his work in the 1980s on the invariant subspace problem, where he constructed operators with only trivial invariant subspaces on particular Banach spaces, especially on ell_1. He won the 1985 Junior Berwick Prize for his work on the invariant subspace problem. Read has also published on Banach algebras and hypercyclicity; in particular, he constructed the first example of an amenable, commutative, radical Banach algebra. At the time of his death, Read was a Professor of Pure Mathematics at the University of Leeds after having been a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge for several years. He completed his PhD thesis entitled Some Problems in the Geometry of Banach Spaces at the University of Cambridge under the supervision of Béla Bollobás. He died in Winnipeg in August 2015 while on a research visit at the University of Manitoba. Personal life =Christianity= On his personal website, formerly at the University of Leeds, Read described himself first and foremost as a Born-Again Christian. Some biographical details may be found in what he described as his Christian Testimony on that site describing his conversion process. He described losing his father to cancer in 1970 when he was 11 years old, and that this loss prompted him to ask questions about whether, and in what form, we might continue to live after we die- and that consciousness may be independent of the body. He came to the conclusion that the conscious mind must survive after death. This also led him to believe that since we are "immortal beings" that we must always try to "do the right thing". Some time later the article described an incident where he had pushed a smaller boy out of the way in a queue at a sweet shop. He later interpreted his later sense of remorse at having done something wrong as the "Classical Christian conviction of sin", and claimed to have had a religious experience on a London Underground train where he felt a sense of joy at being forgiven, and simultaneously bursting into tears. Read also claimed to have taken part in a miracle of Christian healing at a Christian meeting run by John Wimber, organiser of the Vineyard Movement. Controversy over Read's Christian Testimony An article in The Gryphon, the Leeds University Student Union newspaper in February 2015 stated that Read had "sparked controversy" by stating that at the end of his testimony: "‘I strongly urge you to seek the truth as a researcher, not trusting anyone else to do your basic investigations for you. That’s right, Jesus is the Way. But you have to find that out for yourself. For those who seek find, but those who can’t be bothered, or who think they’re too cool, end in a very dark place. It won't be cool in Hell.’" The article was prompted by a third-year Maths student who had expressed the opinion to the paper that the university website should not be giving details of personal beliefs as they were nothing to do with the ability to learn maths. Read subsequently displayed on his website a scanned image of the original article, under which a handwritten comment notes that "Leeds Gryphon, 13-2-15 notices Christian Testimony of CJR after several years!"http:// solocavediver.com /testimony2.jpg = Cave diving = Read was also a devotee of solo cave diving and wrote extensively about it on his website. He remained single in his life; he is survived by his mother and sister. He won a scholarship in mathematics to Trinity in October 1975 and was awarded a 1st class degree in Mathematics in 1978. He spent the year 1981-82 at Louisiana State.Leed(2015) Professor Charles John Reed Obituary http://www.leeds.ac.uk/secretariat/obituaries/2015/read_charles.html References External links *Charles Read's Homepage *Charles Read at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Functional analysts Operator theorists 1958 births 2015 deaths British Christians 20th-century British mathematicians 21st-century British mathematicians Mathematical analysts Academics of the University of Leeds Alumni of the University of Cambridge "

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