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"Joao Gomiero Da Silva (born 20 June 1997) is a Brazilian footballer who most recently played as a midfielder for Stumptown Athletic in the NISA. Career =College & Amateur= Silva began playing college soccer at the Campbellsville University in 2015, before transferring to Coker University in 2017, spending two seasons at both colleges. Following college, Silva appeared for USL League Two sides North Carolina Fusion U23. =Professional= In September 2019, Silva signed for NISA side Stumptown Athletic ahead of the league's inaugural season. References External links * Profile at Coker University Athletics * Stumptown Athletic profile Category:1997 births Category:Living people Category:Brazilian footballers Category:Brazilian expatriate footballers Category:Association football midfielders Category:Carolina Dynamo players Category:USL League Two players Category:National Independent Soccer Association players Category:Expatriate soccer players in the United States Category:Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in the United States Category:Sportspeople from São Paulo "
"Drozdovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Kubenskoye Rural Settlement, Vologodsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 23 as of 2002.Данные переписи 2002 года: таблица 2С. М.: Федеральная служба государственной статистики, 2004. Geography The distance to Vologda is 43.5 km, to Kubenskoye is 15 km. Ilekino, Alexeyevo, Polyanki are the nearest rural localities. References Category:Rural localities in Vologodsky District "
"Frederick Albert Saunders (18 August 1875 – 9 June 1963) was a Canadian-born American physicist and academic remembered for his work in sub-infrared spectroscopy and acoustics. History Saunders was born in London, Ontario, a son of William Saunders and Sarah Agnes Saunders, née Robinson, both of whom were born in England and emigrated to Canada at an early age. His father was renowned in the fields of orchard pests and fruit hybridization, was a founding member of the Entomological Society of Ontario and published books including Insects Injurious to Fruits (1883, J. B. Lippincott & Co.) and numerous scientific papers. He was recognized with honorary degrees from several universities and by honours from King George VI. Saunders studied Physics at Johns Hopkins University and worked under Henry A. Rowland, a pioneer in use of diffraction gratings for spectroscopy, graduating PhD in 1899. He tutored in Physics at Haverford College from 1899 to 1901, then at Syracuse University where he reached the status of Professor in 1914. At Syracuse he worked with Alfred Fowler studying spectra in the far infra-red region, and during his sabbatical year 1913–14 worked with Friedrich Paschen at the University of Tübingen. Shortly after his return to America, he took a teaching position at Vassar College, and during World War I worked with Augustus Trowbridge (1870–1934), Karl Taylor Compton and Henry Norris Russell, developing methods of sound ranging. With Russell he would later develop Russell–Saunders coupling. In 1918 he worked as spectroscopist under R. A. Millikan at the National Research Council in Washington D.C., followed by a short stint at the General Electric Research Laboratory in Schenectady, New York, as the guest of Willis Whitney. After a brief return to Vassar, he was invited to Harvard University by Theodore Lyman to continue his spectrographic work, then was appointed by that institution to take over the fundamentals course from the recently deceased Wallace C. Sabine, and held that position for 22 years. His textbook, A Survey of Physics for College Students, initially given a lukewarm reception by students, went through several editions. References Category:1855 births Category:1963 deaths Category:Scientists from Ontario Category:Canadian emigrants to the United States Category:20th-century American physicists Category:Johns Hopkins University alumni Category:Syracuse University faculty Category:Vassar College faculty Category:Harvard University faculty "