الجمعة، 5 يونيو 2020

Jake Fromm

Jake Fromm

William Jacob Fromm (born July 30, 1998) is an American football quarterback for the Buffalo Bills of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Georgia and was drafted by the Bills in the fifth round of the 2020 NFL Draft.
Fromm was born in Warner Robins, Georgia, on July 30, 1998. In his early years, Fromm played baseball with his local Warner Robins team, which came within two games of the 2011 Little League World Series championship game. During the LLWS, Fromm at times would play in front of crowds larger than 30,000. He was one of the tournament's best players, hitting three home runs and driving in eight runs. He also struck out 11 batters as a pitcher.  Fromm later attended Houston County High School in Warner Robins. During his career he had 12,745 passing yards and 116 touchdowns.  Fromm was rated as a five-star recruit by Rivals.com and Scout.com.  He originally committed to the University of Alabama to play college football but changed his commitment to the University of Georgia. Fromm's senior year was documented in the web-series QB1: Beyond the Lights, created by Peter Berg. He was one of the three quarterbacks documented, the other two being Ohio State commit Tate Martell and Tayvon Bowers who committed to Wake Forest.
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Luckin Coffee

Luckin Coffee

Luckin Coffee Inc. (Chinese: 瑞幸咖啡; pinyin: Ruìxìng Kāfēi) is a Chinese coffee company and coffeehouse chain. It was founded in Beijing in 2017. As of January 2020, it managed 4,507 stores and exceeded the number of Starbucks stores in China. Most of its stores are small "pick-up" locations in office buildings or college campuses that serve for online orders' pickup and delivery.

The stock price cratered and several executives were fired when it was discovered that it had been inflating its sales
Luckin Coffee was incorporated in October 2017, and by January 2018 had opened its first shops in Beijing and Shanghai.  The company announced the completion of Series A financing to a total of US$200 million in July 2018. 
The company continued its rapid growth—by October 2018, Luckin Coffee had opened 1300 stores, surpassing the number of Costa Coffee stores to become the second-biggest coffee brand in China.  Luckin Coffee also signed a strategic cooperation agreement with Tencent.  Much of Luckin's expansion was fueled by an aggressive marketing strategy which saw the company spend three times as much as it earned to feed its growth .In May 2018, Luckin Coffee accused Starbucks of forming a monopoly by signing exclusive contracts with suppliers and property owners. Starbucks dismissed these allegations as a marketing stunt. On 16 May 2018, the case was officially put on file by the Shenzhen Intermediate People's Court. In October 2019, Luckin Coffee unilaterally withdrew the case. 
In January 2019, Luckin Coffee announced that they planned to open 2500 new stores and surpass Starbucks to become the biggest coffee brand in China.  Luckin also gained exposure in the US stock market, applying to the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations  and starting to trade on Nasdaq at $17 a share.  After reaching $25.96 on the first day, the stock dropped to $16 on its second day of trading. By the end of September 2019, Luckin Coffee had opened 3,680 stores,  and had recorded a net loss of $75 million in the third quarter of 2019. 

On January 2019, Luckin Coffee appointed Reinout Schakel as CFO.[
On 8 January 2020, Luckin Coffee held a press conference about their self-service retail stores operations. At the conference, Luckin announced to public that they had opened 4507 stores in past two years and as such had already become the biggest coffee chain brand in China, surpassing Starbucks. Luckin Coffee also announced their unmanned retail strategy and two new technical products in the press conference—Luckin Coffee EXPRESS and Luckin popMINI. Luckin Coffee EXPRESS venues adopt the Swiss made Schaerer coffee maker and are placed in offices, campuses, airports, train stations and communities as self-service coffee makers in the future. Luckin popMINI is the vending machine with E-commerce price.
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Buffalo police

Buffalo police

The Buffalo Police Department is the second-largest city police force in the state of New York. In 2012, it had over nine hundred employees, including over seven hundred police officers.
The Buffalo Police Commissioner is Byron C. Lockwood  after Commissioner Daniel Derenda retired to the private sector.  The deputy commissioner is Joseph Gramgalia
The City of Buffalo Police Department was established in 1871, taking over for the previous Niagara Frontier Police District that oversaw not only Buffalo, but also Tonawanda and Wheatfield. The BPD appointed its first female police officer prior to World War I, and its first Black patrol officer in 1918.

Fifty-one Buffalo police officers have died in the line of duty. The first of these was George Dill who was shot and killed in 1865.

Press reports in 2019 indicated the Department had an unwritten policy since at least 1968 to not arrest Catholic priests. Although retired officers said they had never released a priest who had had sexual contact with a child, those detained for public masturbation or sexual activity with an adult were released after a phone call to the local diocese. The clergy of other faiths were not offered the same policy.

In 2018, the BPD, along with the Buffalo Fire Department, moved into a new joint headquarters building in the former Michael J. Dillon Federal Courthouse
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National Donut Day

National Donut Day

National Doughnut Day, or National Donut Day — celebrated in the United States, is on the first Friday of June of each year, succeeding the Doughnut event created by The Salvation Army in Chicago in 1938 to honor those of their members who served doughnuts to soldiers during World War I.  The holiday celebrates the doughnut. Many American doughnut stores offer free doughnuts on National Doughnut Day.
National Doughnut Day started in 1938  as a fund raiser for Chicago's The Salvation Army. Their goal was to help those in need during the Great Depression, and to honor The Salvation Army "Lassies" of World War I, who served doughnuts to soldiers.
Soon after the US entrance into World War I in 1917, The Salvation Army sent a fact-finding mission to France. The mission concluded that the needs of US enlisted men could be met by canteens/social centers termed "huts" that could serve baked goods, provide writing supplies and stamps, and provide a clothes-mending service. Typically, six staff members per hut would include four female volunteers who could "mother" the boys. These huts were established by The Salvation Army in the United States near army training centers.

About 250 Salvation Army volunteers went to France. Because of the difficulties of providing freshly baked goods from huts established in abandoned buildings near to the front lines, the two Salvation Army volunteers (Ensign Margaret Sheldon and Adjutant Helen Purviance) came up with the idea of providing doughnuts. These are reported to have been an "instant hit", and "soon many soldiers were visiting The Salvation Army huts". Margaret Sheldon wrote of one busy day: "Today I made 22 pies, 300 doughnuts, 700 cups of coffee."

Soon, the women who did this work became known by the servicemen as "Doughnut Girls". 

A misconception has taken hold that the provision of doughnuts to US enlisted men in World War I is the origin of the term "doughboy" to describe US infantry. But, the term was in use as early as the Mexican–American War of 1846–47. 

In the Second World War, Red Cross Volunteers also distributed doughnuts, and it became routine to refer to the Red Cross girls as Doughnut Dollies as well.

In Chicago and other cities, National Doughnut Day is still a fundraiser for The Salvation Army. In 2017, the organization joined with Russ's Market, Super Saver, LaMar's Donuts, Hurts Donut and Krispy Kreme in Lincoln, Nebraska and Tempe, Arizona to raise funds on National Doughnut Day. 

There are three other doughnut holidays, the origins of which are obscure. International Jelly-Filled Doughnut Day is widely recognized as June 8 (occasionally as June 9).  National Cream-Filled Doughnut Day is celebrated on September 14  although there is also a National Boston Cream Pie Day observed October 23rd.  Buy a Doughnut Day occurs on October 30. 

The birthday of the United States Marine Corps , (November 10), was once referred to as National Donut Day, in a successful ruse by American prisoners of war at Son Tay prison camp to trick the North Vietnamese into giving out donuts in honor of the occasion. A second National Donut Day is also celebrated on November 5th, which is speculated to have originated from this event
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Third Amendment

Third Amendment

The Third Amendment (Amendment III) to the United States Constitution places restrictions on the quartering of soldiers in private homes without the owner's consent, forbidding the practice in peacetime. The amendment is a response to the Quartering Acts passed by the British parliament during the buildup to the American Revolutionary War, which had allowed the British Army to lodge soldiers in private residences.

The Third Amendment was introduced in Congress in 1789 by James Madison as a part of the United States Bill of Rights, in response to Anti-Federalist objections to the new Constitution. Congress proposed the amendment to the states on September 28, 1789, and by December 15, 1791, the necessary three-quarters of the states had ratified it. Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson announced the adoption of the amendment on March 1, 1792.

The amendment is one of the least controversial of the Constitution and is rarely litigated, with Radley Balko calling it the "runt piglet" of the U.S. Constitution.  To date, it has never been the primary basis of a Supreme Court decision,  though it was the basis of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit case Engblom v. Carey.
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Choked

Choked

Choked: Paisa Bolta Hai is a 2020 Indian Hindi-language drama film directed and co-produced by Anurag Kashyap, written by Nihit Bhave, and jointly produced by Netflix and Good Bad Films (in their debut production). The film stars Saiyami Kher and Roshan Mathew, with Amruta Subhash and Rajshri Deshpande appearing in supporting roles.  Set against the backdrop of 2016 Indian banknote demonetisation, the film tells the story of a bank cashier who discovers a stash of cash hidden in her kitchen sink.  It released on Netflix on 5 June 2020.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choked_(film)

Chintu Ka Birthday

Chintu Ka Birthday

Chintu Ka Birthday is an Indian Hindi-language comedy drama film written and directed by Devanshu Kumar and Satyanshu Singh.  It is produced by comedians Tanmay Bhat, Rohan Joshi, Ashish Shakya and Gursimran Khamba of All India Bakchod under their banner First Draft. Starring Vinay Pathak, Tillotama Shome, Seema Pahwa and Vedant Chibber, the film tells the story of a 6 year old boy named Chintu, stuck in Iraq with his family during Saddam’s fall in April 2004. 
The film was screened at the 2019 Jagran Film Festival and was supposed to be screened at the 2018 MAMI Film Festival but was dropped out of it after a sexual harrasment allegation against one of its producer's Khamba during the Me Too movement.  Chintu Ka Birthday was released on ZEE5 on 5 June 2020
The film tells the story of 6 year old boy named Chintu, stuck in Iraq with family at the times of Saddam’s fall. It is April, 2004. US-led allied forces have been in Iraq for a year now. All Indians have been brought home, so says the Indian government. But there are those who migrated to Iraq illegally, still waiting to find a way out. On the day of our story, one such family prepares to celebrate the 6th birthday of their youngest member, Chintu. Their kind-hearted Iraqi landlord lends them a helping hand.
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زياد علي

زياد علي محمد