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On August 14, 1966 a transport tractor trailer struck a power pole and trees along the front side of the church. |
A large marble statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus was knocked into the church, destroying part of the south wall, foundation, and interior of part of the church. |
On September 4, 1977, the parish rectory caught on fire. |
On August 27, 1979 lightning struck the church bell tower, severely damaging it. |
In May 1987 the pastoral administrative duties were granted to Sister Joanne DiGiovanni of the Sisters of Mercy until a new priest was hired in July of that year. |
In 1988 the church purchased 18.625 acres of land near West Holding Avenue for $172,212.50 in order to build a larger facility. |
In 1997, new buildings were built on the plot on West Holding, including a parochial school. |
In 1999 St. Catherine's founded its second daughter parish, Our Lady of the Rosary Catholic Church in Louisburg. |
In 2001 St. Catherine's purchased over 20 acres of land west of new property for $800,000, building a new school buildings. |
In 2009 the church hired the architect Jim O’Brien and Clancy & Theys construction company to build a 33,000 square foot church in the Romanesque style, with seating for 1,700 people. |
The new church cost $9 million to build. |
2018 Castle Point Borough Council election |
The 2018 Castle Point Borough Council election took place on 3 May 2018 to elect members of Castle Point Borough Council in England. |
No UKIP (-28.0) or Liberal Democrat (-1.4) candidates as previous. |
No UKIP candidate as previous (-34.9). |
No UKIP candidate as previous (-33.7). |
No UKIP candidate as previous (-26.6). |
No UKIP candidate as previous (-26.5). |
No UKIP candidate as previous (-27.0). |
Jakob Stegelmann |
Jakob Stegelmann (born 1957) is a Danish television presenter and producer, best known for hosting the TV show "Troldspejlet", and creating the Danish version of the "Disney Afternoon". |
He also presented the television series "Planet X" which focuses on B-movies, and voiced Stan Lee in the Danish dub of "". |
2020 Chilean Primera División |
The 2020 Campeonato Nacional, known as Campeonato Nacional AFP PlanVital 2020 for sponsorship reasons, is the 90th season of top-flight football in Chile. |
The season started on 24 January 2020. |
Universidad Católica are the defending champions, having won the previous tournament. |
For this season, and given that the previous season was declared as concluded with no relegations to the Primera B, the Asociación Nacional de Fútbol Profesional (ANFP) approved an expansion of the first tier to 18 teams, with two teams promoted from the second tier joining the 16 teams that competed in the top flight in 2019. |
The 18 teams will play each other twice (once at home and once away) for a total of 34 matches. |
Qualification for the Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana will be awarded to the top seven teams at the end of the season, as well as the Copa Chile champions who will qualify for the Copa Libertadores. |
Since there were no relegated teams in the previous season, in this season three teams will be relegated to the second tier: the last-placed team in the standings of the 2020 season, the last-placed team in a relegation table which will be elaborated considering the performance in both the 2019 and 2020 seasons, and the losers of a play-off between the teams placed second-to-last of both tables. |
Eighteen teams will take part in the league in this season: the sixteen teams from the previous season, plus the 2019 Primera B champions Santiago Wanderers and Deportes La Serena, winners of the Primera B promotion play-offs. |
For this season, a weighted table will be elaborated by computing an average of the points earned per game over this season and the previous one, with the average of points earned in the 2019 season weighted by 60% and the average of points earned in the 2020 season weighted by 40%. |
Promoted teams will only have their points in the 2020 season averaged, without weighting. |
The team placed last in this table at the end of the season will be relegated, while the team placed second-to-last will qualify for the relegation play-off. |
Erin Wysocki-Jones |
Erin Wysocki-Jones (born 5 August 1992) is a British Paralympic rower who is a double World champion in the mixed coxed four. |
Peter Danso-Mensah |
Peter Danso-Mensah is a UK-based Ghanaian footballer who has played for the academy teams of Arsenal, Watford and Tottenham Hotspur. |
He was called up to play for Black Meteors (Ghana U-23) on 3rd March 2019 after he made a call to play for the Ghana national under-20 football team. |
Peter was born in Accra, Ghana and moved to London with his parents at the age of six. |
He attended Canons High School and continued to Whitmore Sixth Form based in Harrow. |
Yummy (Justin Bieber song) |
"Yummy" is a song by Canadian singer Justin Bieber. |
It was released on January 3, 2020, along with a lyric video through Def Jam Recordings as the lead single from his upcoming fifth studio album, "Changes". |
The song is Bieber's first solo single to be released in three years. |
Bieber notably joined the video-sharing social networking service TikTok on the day of the song's release. |
The song received mixed reviews from music critics, with some praising the song's R&B sound, but dismissing the lyrics. |
Bieber received criticism for the song's "excessive promotion". |
The song debuted at number two on the US "Billboard" Hot 100, while reaching the top five in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and various other countries; and hitting number one only in New Zealand. |
The song's official music video was released on January 4, 2020. |
On December 23, 2019, Bieber teased the release by posting a picture of himself in front of a piano accompanied by two posts with the caption "tomorrow". |
On the following day, he announced the single via a trailer he uploaded to YouTube that shows him walking through an abandoned gas station. |
The trailer also serves as an announcement for his upcoming North American tour starting May 14, 2020, as well as a documentary covering "all different stories". |
About the upcoming music, Bieber stated that he feels like "this is different than the previous albums just because of where I'm at in my life". |
On the release day of "Yummy", Bieber joined the video-sharing social networking service TikTok and posted a video of himself lip-syncing to the song, and encouraged his fans to do so, as well. |
Four days later, Bieber released autographed limited editions of "Yummy", including a cassette, a seven-inch picture disc, six unique CDs and five unique seven-inch vinyl discs, available for only 24 hours. |
Bieber released five additional music videos for the song, titled: "Animated Version", "x drew house, Animated Version", "Beliebers React", "Fan Lip Sync" and "Food Fight", and launched an official "Yummy" online game. |
"Yummy" is a "straightforward R&B number" that moves along on pop-trap beats. |
The song contains a "crisp bass line and plinking keyboards". |
Bieber rap-sings the pre-chorus, while he hits his "signature falsetto" in the bridge. |
Bryan Rolli of "Forbes" magazine called the chorus "seductive", albeit "meaningless". |
The song is considered an ode to Bieber's wife, Hailey Bieber. |
In an exclusive interview with Ellen DeGeneres, Bieber admitted that Yummy is about his sex life. |
The song received mixed reviews from music critics. |
Rania Aniftos of "Billboard" magazine said "Yummy" brings back "the flirtatious Bieber we've missed and been waiting for", describing the chorus as "catchy". |
Bryan Rolli, writing for "Forbes", said that Bieber "sings his heart out" on the song and noted although "the lyrics may not invite scholarly analysis ... Bieber sure does sound good singing them". |
Rolli concluded calling the song a "win, an inevitable chart smash" and opined that it is "sure to sound even better when 50,000 fans scream it every night on his upcoming tour". |
Mikael Wood of "Los Angeles Times" described the song as "a lithe little R&B number that faintly recalls Ginuwine's mid-'90s classic 'Pony' and basically three-and-a-half minutes of PG-13 sex talk seemingly directed at Hailey Baldwin". |
He stated that "though it's very cute, 'Yummy' feels awfully lightweight for a single that has as much hanging on it as this one does" and added that the song "loses much of its flavor after only a few spins". |
Brad Callas of "Complex" magazine listed "Yummy" amongst the best new music of the week and said Bieber's "pivot back to R&B is refreshing for those who were fans of his slept-on 2013 project, "Journals"". |
Callas further remarked that the "silky vocals" is at times reminiscent of Bieber's 2016 collaboration with Post Malone, "Deja Vu". |
"NME"s Sam Moore complimented the song's R&B production, but dismissed the lyrics, which he termed as "failed expectations". |
He opined that the song's producers opted for "minimalism with their choice of instrumentation, melding airy keys with pop-trap beats with an evident view of creating something as universal as the likes of 'Hotline Bling' and Childish Gambino's 'Feels Like Summer'". |
Moore further wrote that Bieber's layered vocals and harmonies are "able to glide along rather effortlessly—it's just a shame he doesn't have more to say with them" and that Bieber's embrace of R&B "isn't a complete turn-off". |
"Pitchfork"s Eric Torres criticized the song for being "shamelessly engineered for the truncated attention span of TikTok" and "a bloodless shell of an R&B song crippled by asinine lyrics and a tired, syncopated backdrop". |
He further wrote that the song "plateaus as soon as it starts, never inching past the toddler-like repetition of 'yummy-yum' in its chorus". |
The Guardian's Alexis Petridis wrote that "Yummy" is "eager to go viral" on TikTok, comparing it to viral songs on the lip-syncing app such as Arizona Zervas's "Roxanne", Ashnikko's "Stupid" and Regard's "Ride It", and that "a generation grown on highly sophisticated, multilayered internet culture can detect bullshit a mile off: this is so nakedly eager to go viral that it almost certainly won't." |
Petridis pointed out the "shameless plug for his streetwear brand Drew House", "the cringeworthy use of trap ebonics", "use of baby talk to vaguely gesture at a world of sexual pleasure" and the "chorus seems designed purely for Gen Z-ers in yoga pants to spoon frozen acai into their mouths while miming along to the word 'yummy'". |
He concluded by stating Bieber "doesn't need the TikTok virality, but craves its pop-cultural relevance – and that desperation chafes awkwardly against the spiritually grounded marital bliss of his current image". |
The music video for "Yummy" was directed by Bardia Zeinali and premiered on January 4, 2020. |
In the video, it portrays Bieber with pink hair at a dinner party in a fancy restaurant, eating various colorful food items with the guests. |
The video garnered 8.4 million views in its first 24 hours, becoming his second biggest 24-hour debut on the platform out of his 5 lead singles. |
In the United States, "Yummy" debuted at number two on the "Billboard" Hot 100 chart, blocked from the top spot by Roddy Ricch's "The Box", becoming Bieber's second consecutive single as a lead artist to debut at the second spot, following "I Don't Care", which was blocked from the top set by "Old Town Road" by Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus.. "Yummy" proceeded to fall to number ten the following week. |
On the UK Singles Chart, the track debuted at number five, becoming his first lead single to not debut in the top 3 of the chart since "One Time" the lead single from his debut EP, My World. |
"Yummy" also debuted in the top 10 in Ireland, where it landed at number 8, as well as number 16 in Scotland. |
It also debuted in the top 20 of other European countries, going number 7 in the Netherlands, number 10 in Italy and number 15 in Germany. |
In Oceania, the song debuted at number 8 in Australia, peaking at number 4. |
In New Zealand, it topped the singles chart in its second week. |
Bieber received criticism for his "excessive" promotion of "Yummy" during the song's release week, that included release of autographed CD variants, seven different videos for the song, launching an official "Yummy" game, online fan interactions that involved Bieber asking fans to buy the song and Bieber's manager Scooter Braun encouraging fans to mass-purchase the song. |
Bieber received backlash for manipulation of streaming services, with many calling it "desperate" and "privileged" attempts at making the song debut at number one on the "Billboard" Hot 100 chart, after predictions of Roddy Ricch's "The Box" rising to the top spot. |
During an Instagram live session, Bieber asked his fans to stream and buy "Yummy" on iTunes, and reposted instructions from a fan titled "How to Get 'Yummy' to #1", detailing how to help the song hit number one on the chart. |
Those instructions included buying the song multiple times on Bieber's website and iTunes, creating a Spotify playlist consisting only of "Yummy" and streaming it on repeat at low volume, and having fans outside the US download a VPN app, and set it to the US to inflate Bieber's US streams that contribute to the chart. |
However, "Yummy" debuted only at number two on the "Billboard" Hot 100 chart, blocked from the number-one spot as "The Box" rose to the top spot. |
Credits adapted from Tidal. |
2020 Greenville Triumph SC season |
The 2020 season is Greenville Triumph SC's second of existence, and their second playing in USL League One. |
"As of December 24, 2019." |
As a USL League One club, Greenville will enter the competition in the Second Round, to be played April 7–9. |
On January 29, 2020 the Second Round schedule was announced. |
Nil Kyaw Yin |
Subsets and Splits
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