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The booster landed at Landing Zone 4 approximately eight minutes after launch.
In January 2020, the booster was used to launch 60 Starlink satellites to low Earth orbit.
This launch made B1051 the second booster (after B1046) to launch from all three launch pads of SpaceX.
Tori (name)
Tori is primarily a given name.
Notable people with the name include:
Matías Segovia
Matías Emanuel Segovia Torales (born 4 January 2003) is a Paraguayan footballer who plays as a midfielder for Club Guaraní.
The Artificial Theory for the Dramatic Beauty
The Artificial Theory for the Dramatic Beauty is the debut studio album by Japanese heavy metal band Crossfaith.
It was released on 29 April 2009 through Zestone Records and Gan-Shin.
Crossfaith
Diego Torres (footballer, born 2002)
Diego Joel Torres Garcete (born 14 October 2002) is a Paraguayan footballer who plays as a midfielder for Club Olimpia.
Jean Ducher
Jean Ducher was a French weightlifter.
He competed in the men's featherweight event at the 1920 Summer Olympics.
1965 Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands parliamentary election
Parliamentary elections were held in the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands on 19 January 1965.
Constitutional changes for the Trust Territory were made by an order from the US Secretary of the Interior on 28 September 1964.
A bicameral Congress was established, with a 12-member House of Delegates with two members from each of the six districts and a General Assembly with seats apportioned to each district based on their population – five from Truk four from the Marshall Islands and Ponape, three from Mariana Islands and Palau and two from Yap.
This replaced the previous Council of Micronesia, which had been based outside the Trust Territory in Guam.
A total of 28 candidates contested the House of Delegates elections, with six running in both Palau and Ponape, and four in the Marshalls, Marianas, Truk and Yap.
Of the 41,473 people thought to be eligible to vote, 35,506 registered to do so.
Of these, 25,079 people voted.
Following the elections, Tosiwo Nakayama was elected as the President of the House of Delegates.
Goin' Places (song)
"Goin' Places" is a song written by Gamble and Huff and recorded by The Jacksons for their twelfth album, "Goin' Places".
Released as a single a few weeks after the album was released, it peaked at #52 on the Billboard Hot 100 on November 12, 1977.
Michel Mertens
Michel Mertens (30 January 1902 – 23 December 1971) was a Luxembourgian weightlifter.
He competed at the 1920 Summer Olympics and the 1924 Summer Olympics.
Pierre Akono
Pierre Ramses Pe Akono (born 29 June 2000), is a Cameroonian footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for Belgian side K.A.S.
Eupen.
Hartwell Tavern
Hartwell Tavern is an historic American Revolutionary War site associated with the revolution's first battle, the 1775 Battle of Lexington and Concord.
It is located on Battle Road (formerly the Bay Road) in Lincoln, Massachusetts, and operated as a living museum by the National Park Service as part of the Minute Man National Historical Park.
It is staffed from Memorial Day (May) weekend to October by park rangers dressed in colonial attire who offer programs daily.
The building is in the saltbox style.
The building, whose main façade faces south, was originally constructed as a home for Ephraim Hartwell (1707–1793) and his newlywed wife, Elizabeth (1714–1808), in 1733.
It was given to them by Ephraim's father, Samuel (1666–1744), who lived in a home with his wife, Mary, about 700 feet east along Battle Road.
Built in the 1690s, only the central chimney of Samuel and Mary's house still stands, amongst a basic reconstruction of the building.
The gifted home stood on 18 acres of land.
The Hartwells raised a family and, in 1756, when they had nine children living in the house, Ephraim applied for a license to run the home as an inn.
It was run as such until the 1780s.
When Samuel died in 1744, aged 78, Ephraim inherited his portion of the family farm.
By 1749 the farm was one of the most productive in Concord and consisted of 141 acres.
The property was part of Concord until 1754, when the town of Lincoln was incorporated.
Ephraim died in 1793, aged 86.
Elizabeth survived her husband by fifteen years; she died in 1808, aged 94.
The house continued to be a residence up until its purchase by the National Park Service in 1967.
Over the years that followed, the building was modernized and changed.
In the 1980s, the Park Service restored it to its 1775 appearance, yet kept its 1783 and 1830 additions.
The main structure, the foundation, most of the walls and some of the flooring are 1733 originals.
It is estimated that about 65% of the original structure remains within the restored building.
The Battle of Lexington and Concord took form before dawn on April 19, 1775.
Soldiers passed by the tavern on their way to Concord, and again on their way back to Boston.
Three of the Hartwells' children — Samuel, John and Isaac — were in the Lincoln minutemen that fought at Old North Bridge and on the battle road.
All three later served in the Revolutionary War.
Paul Revere and William Dawes were detained by a British Army patrol nearby during the "Midnight Ride" to Concord of April 18.
Samuel Prescott, who was also riding with them, escaped by jumping his horse over a wall and into the woods.
Prescott emerged at the Hartwell Tavern, awakened Ephraim and informed him of the pending arrival of the British soldiers.
Ephraim sent his black slave, Violet, down the road to alert his parents.
Mary then relayed the message to Captain William Smith, commanding officer of the Lincoln minutemen, who lived a little to the west and whose home still stands along Battle Road.
The minutemen received the noticed in time, and arrived at Old North Bridge before their enemy.
Prescott made it to Concord.
André Delloue
André Delloue (born 1899, date of death unknown) was a French weightlifter.
He competed at the 1920 Summer Olympics and the 1924 Summer Olympics.
John Paine (weightlifter)
John Paine was a British weightlifter.
He competed in the men's featherweight event at the 1920 Summer Olympics.
Friedrich Geiger (musicologist)
Friedrich Geiger (born in 1966) is a German musicologist.
Born in Munich, Geiger studied music, historical and systematic musicology and Latin philology in Munich and Hamburg.
After gaining his PhD in 1997 with a thesis on Wladimir Rudolfowitsch Vogel, he headed the Research and Information Centre for ostracized Music at the Dresden Centre for Contemporary Music from 1997 to 2002.
He then lectured at the musicological institutes of the TU Dresden and the University of Hamburg.
After his habilitation in 2003 with a study on the persecution of composers under Hitler and Stalin, he was research assistant and lecturer at the musicological seminar of the Free University of Berlin in the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft special research area Aesthetic Experience in the Sign of the Dissolution of Artistic Limits from 2003 to 2007.
Since summer semester 2007 he has been teaching as professor for historical musicology at the University of Hamburg.
His research focuses on music history from the 18th century to the present, music of antiquity and ancient reception in music, music in dictatorships, historiography of popular music, geography of music history and music aesthetics and musical judgement.
Maria Medina
Maria Medina (born 15 July 1948) represented Puerto Rico at the 1976 Summer Olympic Games in archery.
Medina competed in the women's individual event and finished 27th with a score of 1993 points.
The Box (Roddy Ricch song)
"The Box" is a song by American rapper Roddy Ricch, released on December 6, 2019, as part of his debut studio album "Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial".
It is Roddy Ricch's highest-charting song worldwide, reaching number one on the US "Billboard" Hot 100, the "Rolling Stone" Top 100, the Canadian Hot 100 and in New Zealand, as well as peaking at number two in both the UK and Ireland and reaching the top five in Australia.
The song's popularity was attributed to its use in a series of viral videos on TikTok.
Along with the tracks "Boom Boom Room" and "Start wit Me" featuring Gunna, Darryl Robertson of "Vibe" felt that "The Box" is "further proof that the Atlantic Records-signee can pen addictive radio-friendly records".
Josh Svetz of "HipHopDX" echoed a similar sentiment, writing that "The appeal to Roddy is simple; the kid can write a hell of a hook.
Whether it's the head-bopping harmony on 'The Box' or the flute backed, Gunna-assisted single, 'Start Wit Me,' Roddy excels at producing choruses that stick and only get better with repeat listens."
Writing for "Pitchfork", Alphonse Pierre stated that on the song, which features a "hard-hitting beat that sounds like a teapot is boiling in the background, [Ricch] finds a new delivery and pitch nearly every 10 seconds.
The track is the best example of Roddy's versatility, which has been both a blessing and a curse."
Praising the song, "HotNewHipHop"s Mitch Findlay asserted that although its parent album "yielded plenty of highlights, none stood out quite so much as 'The Box'".
Findlay called the song's "EEE ERR" intro "creative and soon-to-be-iconic" and labeled Ricch's flow as confident and charismatic.
Heran Mamo of "Billboard" opined that Ricch "comes armed and ready with his verses despite the rather lighthearted 'hee-hoo' ad-libs in the background".
Mamo noted that in the song, Ricch raps about acquiring and protecting "his necessary riches".
"The Box" debuted at number 47 on the "Billboard" Hot 100 issue dated December 21, 2019, and reached number one four weeks later, becoming Ricch's first number one on the "Billboard" Hot 100 as well as the first new song to top the chart in the 2020s decade (since both "All I Want for Christmas Is You" by Mariah Carey and "Circles" by Post Malone began their runs at the top position in 2019).
During the same week, the song logged its second week at number one on "Billboard"s Streaming Songs chart (drawing 68.2 million streams) and jumped to number eight on the Digital Songs chart as well, with 11,000 downloads sold.
Additionally, the song reached the top spot on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts as well, becoming Ricch's first number-one song on both charts.