Skip to content
🎉 your bitcoin🥳

❤️ Jim Lenihan 🐽

"Jim Lenihan (born 16 May 1973) is an Australian professional rugby league coach who is the assistant coach for the Gold Coast Titans in the NRL and a former professional rugby league footballer. A or er, he played for the Gold Coast Seagulls and St George Dragons in the ARL and NRL, and the Huddersfield Giants in the Super League. As head coach of the Burleigh Bears, he won two Queensland Cup premierships (2016 and 2019). Playing career Born and raised in Ipswich, Queensland, Lenihan started his career with the Ipswich Jets, playing for the club from 1991 to 1994. In 1995, he joined the Gold Coast Seagulls and made his first grade debut in round 7 of the 1995 ARL season, scoring a try in a 16–28 loss to the Eastern Suburbs. In 1996, after playing six games for the Gold Coast, he joined St. George. In three seasons with St. George, he played 40 games, scoring nine tries and was a regular in the side during the 1997 and 1998 seasons. Lenihan played in St. George's final game before they formed a joint venture with the Illawarra Steelers to become St. George Illawarra. A semi-final loss to Canterbury-Bankstown at Kogarah Oval. In 1999, he joined the Huddersfield Giants in the Super League. He spent one season at the club, playing 21 games and scoring 12 tries. In 2000, he returned to Australia, joining the Burleigh Bears, playing three seasons at the club. Coaching career From 2004 to 2005, Lenihan was the assistant coach of the Burleigh Bears' FOGS Colts side. In 2006, Lenihan was appointed as head coach of the Bears' Queensland Cup side, replacing Rick Stone, who joined the Newcastle Knights as an assistant coach. After making three straight Grand Finals under Stone, the Bears missed the finals for four straight seasons under Lenihan, with sixth being their highest finish. He resigned from the club at end of the 2009 season. In 2011, after a year away from coaching, Lenihan joined the Bilambil Jets, winning the Bycroft Cup in his first season at the club. In December 2013, he rejoined Burleigh as an assistant coach after three seasons with Bilambil. In May 2014, Lenihan became head coach of the Bears for the second time, replacing Carl Briggs. In 2016, the Bears won the Queensland Cup Grand Final, defeating the Redcliffe Dolphins 26–16 at Suncorp Stadium. In 2019, Lenihan won his second Queensland Cup Grand Final with the Bears, defeating the Wynnum Manly Seagulls 28–10 at Dolphin Stadium. On 8 October 2019, he joined the Gold Coast Titans as an assistant coach on a three-year deal. References Category:1973 births Category:Sportsmen from Queensland Category:Rugby league players from Queensland Category:Rugby league wingers Category:Rugby league centres Category:Australian rugby league coaches Category:Australian rugby league players Category:Ipswich Jets players Category:Gold Coast Chargers players Category:St. George Dragons players Category:Huddersfield Giants players Category:Burleigh Bears coaches Category:Living people "

❤️ Silas L. Brown House 🐽

"The Silas L. Brown House, at 107 S. Seminole in Wewoka, Oklahoma, was built in 1985. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. It was deemed significant for association with Silas L. Brown, the first black dentist in Wewoka, and as one of the oldest and best-preserved homes in the black community of Wewoka. It is a two-story clapboarded building, about in plan, with a hipped roof and an offset gable on its front facade. It has a one-story open porch and a one-story wing. With References Category:National Register of Historic Places in Seminole County, Oklahoma "

❤️ Walter Schevenels 🐽

"Walter Schevenels (11 November 1894 - 6 March 1966) was a Belgian trade union official. Born in Anderlecht, Schevenels' father was the secretary of the National Federation of Metal Workers, and Walter followed in his footsteps, soon becoming secretary of the union's Antwerp region. In 1929, Schevenels was selected to become deputy general secretary of the International Federation of Trade Unions (IFTU), and in 1931 he succeeded as its general secretary. He maintained a relatively low profile, opposing both fascism and communism, and focusing on ensuring the federation's survival through political and financial crises. During World War II, Schevenels ran the IFTU from London, and closely followed the policies of the British Trades Union Congress (TUC). The TUC, in response, tried to get him elected as the first general secretary of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU), but he was instead made assistant general secretary, with responsibility for industry. A few years later, the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) was formed as an anti-communist split from the WFTU, and Schevenels again hoped to be elected as general secretary, but was opposed by the American Federation of Labor on the grounds that he had co-operated with communists in the WFTU. Instead, he became the secretary of the Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD and soon also of the European Regional Organisation of the ICFTU, serving until his death in 1966. References Category:1894 births Category:1966 deaths Category:Belgian trade unionists Category:People from Anderlecht "

Released under the MIT License.

has loaded