Shooting at the 2013 Mediterranean Games | |
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Venue | Erdemli Shooting Range |
Dates | 23-28 June 2013 |
The shooting competitions at the 2013 Mediterranean Games in Mersin took place between 23 June and 28 June at the Erdemli Shooting Range.
Athletes competed in 13 events. Men's 25 metre rapid fire pistol was not held because too few nations applied.
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
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10 metre air pistol | Pablo Carrera Spain | Yusuf Dikeç Turkey | Damir Mikec Serbia | |||
10 metre air rifle | Niccolò Campriani Italy | Halil Ibrahim Ozturk Turkey | Michael d'Halluin France | |||
50 metre pistol | Yusuf Dikeç Turkey | Francesco Bruno Italy | Pablo Carrera Spain | |||
50 metre rifle prone | Valérian Sauveplane France | Marco De Nicolo Italy | Bojan Đurković Croatia | |||
50 metre rifle three positions | Marco De Nicolo Italy | Valérian Sauveplane France | Rajmond Debevec Slovenia | |||
Skeet | Luigi Agostino Italy | Georgios Achilleos Cyprus | Efthimios Mitas Greece | |||
Trap | Giovanni Pellielo Italy | Massimo Fabbrizi Italy | Giovanni Cernogoraz Croatia | |||
Double trap | William Chetcuti Malta | Antonino Barillà Italy | Yavuz İlnam Turkey |
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 metre air pistol | Céline Goberville France | Zorana Arunović Serbia | Petra Dobravec Slovenia | |||
10 metre air rifle | Petra Zublasing Italy | Ivana Maksimović Serbia | Émilie Évesque France | |||
25 metre pistol | Zorana Arunović Serbia | Agathi Kassoumi Greece | Jasna Šekarić Serbia | |||
50 metre rifle three positions | Ivana Maksimović Serbia | Petra Zublasing Italy | Andrea Arsović Serbia | |||
Trap | Jessica Rossi Italy | Fátima Gálvez Spain | Alessandra Perilli San Marino |
On April 20, 1999, a school shooting and attempted bombing occurred at Columbine High School in Columbine, Colorado, United States. The perpetrators, 12th grade students Eric David Harris and Dylan Bennet Klebold, murdered 12 students and one teacher. Ten students were killed in the school library, where Harris and Klebold subsequently committed suicide. Twenty-one additional people were injured by gunshots, and gunfire was also exchanged with the police. Another three people were injured trying to escape. At the time, it was the deadliest high school shooting in U.S. history, until the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in 2018. The shooting has inspired dozens of copycat killings, dubbed the Columbine effect, including many deadlier shootings across the world. The word "Columbine" has become a byword for school shootings.
Shoot 'em ups are a sub-genre of action games. There is no consensus as to which design elements compose a shoot 'em up; some restrict the definition to games featuring spacecraft and certain types of character movement, while others allow a broader definition including characters on foot and a variety of perspectives.
Eric David Harris and Dylan Bennet Klebold were an American mass murder duo who perpetrated the Columbine High School massacre on April 20, 1999. Harris and Klebold killed 13 people and wounded 24 others at Columbine High School, where they were seniors, in Columbine, Colorado. After killing most of their victims in the school's library, they later committed suicide. At the time, it was the deadliest high school shooting in U.S. history, with the ensuing media frenzy and moral panic leading it to becoming one of the most infamous mass shootings ever perpetrated.
A penalty shoot-out is a tie-breaking method in association football to determine which team is awarded victory in a match that cannot end in a draw, when the score is tied after the normal time as well as extra time have expired. In a penalty shoot-out, each team takes turns shooting at goal from the penalty mark, with the goal defended only by the opposing team's goalkeeper. Each team has five shots which must be taken by different kickers; the team that makes more successful kicks is declared the victor. Shoot-outs finish as soon as one team has an insurmountable lead. If scores are level after five pairs of shots, the shootout progresses into additional "sudden-death" rounds. Balls successfully kicked into the goal during a shoot-out do not count as goals for the individual kickers or the team, and are tallied separately from the goals scored during normal play. Although the procedure for each individual kick in the shoot-out resembles that of a penalty kick, there are some differences. Most notably, neither the kicker nor any player other than the goalkeeper may play the ball again once it has been kicked.
Stephen Joseph Scalise is an American politician who serves as the House Majority Leader and representative for Louisiana's 1st congressional district. He served as the House Minority Whip from 2019 to 2023. Scalise is in his ninth House term, having held his seat since 2008. The district includes most of New Orleans's suburbs, such as Metairie, Kenner, and Slidell, as well as a portion of New Orleans itself. He is a member of the Republican Party and was the chair of the House Republican Study Committee.
The Virginia Tech shooting was a spree shooting that occurred on April 16, 2007, comprising two attacks on the campus of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, Virginia, United States. Seung-Hui Cho, an undergraduate student at the university and a U.S. resident who was from South Korea, killed 32 people and wounded 17 others with two semi-automatic pistols. Six others were injured jumping out of windows to escape Cho.
First-person shooter (FPS) is a sub-genre of shooter video games centered on gun and other weapon-based combat in a first-person perspective, with the player experiencing the action through the eyes of the protagonist and controlling the player character in a three-dimensional space. The genre shares common traits with other shooter games, and in turn falls under the action game genre. Since the genre's inception, advanced 3D and pseudo-3D graphics have challenged hardware development, and multiplayer gaming has been integral.
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An AR-15-style rifle is any lightweight semi-automatic rifle based on or similar to the Colt AR-15 design. The original ArmaLite AR-15, its predecessor, was a scaled-down derivative of Eugene Stoner's ArmaLite AR-10 design and featured selective fire. ArmaLite sold the patent and trademarks to Colt's Manufacturing Company in 1959, resulting in the Colt AR-15, which removed the selective fire feature. After most of the patents for the Colt AR-15 expired in 1977, many firearm manufacturers began to produce copies of the Colt AR-15 under various names. While the patents are expired, Colt retained the trademark of the AR-15 name and is the sole manufacturer able to label their firearms as AR-15.
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Dylann Storm Roof is an American white supremacist, neo-Nazi, and mass murderer convicted of perpetrating the Charleston church shooting on June 17, 2015, in the U.S. state of South Carolina. During a Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Roof killed nine people, all African Americans, including senior pastor and state senator Clementa C. Pinckney, and injured one other person. After several people identified Roof as the main suspect, he became the center of a manhunt that ended the morning after the shooting with his arrest in Shelby, North Carolina. He later confessed that he committed the shooting in hopes of igniting a race war. Roof's actions in Charleston have been widely described as domestic terrorism.
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