Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In January 2012, Weir married his partner Victor Voronov, a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center and whose family was from Russia, in a civil ceremony in New York City, five months after the state legalized same-sex marriages. [243] [244] A temporary restraining order was filed and dismissed in January 2014. Weir filed for divorce in ...
[7] [8] Weir later told USA Today that his period commentating in Sochi was a "horrible time" of his life; he was going through "a really nasty divorce" [3] from his husband Victor Voronov, with Voronov submitting a defamation suit against Weir and much of their disputes being reported in the New York tabloids and TMZ.
A year later, he was admitted to sport classes taught by Vladimir Voronov, a coach who worked with him. According to Voronov, Emelianenko did not stand out from his peers initially but would achieve future success thanks to his own perseverance and hard work for many years. [29] Voronov died in August 2020 due to complications caused by ...
Voronov, Voronoff (Russian: Воронов), or Voronova (feminine; Воронова), is a common Russian surname derived from the word voron (raven). It may refer to the following notable people: It may refer to the following notable people:
A vast majority of its players declined participating in the EuroBasket 2015, including Timofey Mozgov, Sergey Karasev, Pavel Podkolzin, Alexey Shved, Evgeny Voronov, Artem Vikhrov, Evgeny Valiev, and Sergey Tokarev. Anton Ponkrashov and Egor Vyaltsev were initially dismissed from the national team, [19] but then returned.
Valery Vladimirovich Voronov (Russian: Валерий Владимирович Воронов; born 1958), known as The Lyuban Maniac (Russian: Любанский маньяк), is a Russian serial killer and rapist who attacked predominantly women in the town of Lyuban, Leningrad Oblast between 2000 and 2007, killing at least three in the process and wounding at least four people.
Voronkov receives the Order of Friendship from Vladimir Putin in 2014.. Vladimir Ivanovich Voronkov (Russian: Влади́мир Ива́нович Воронко́в; born 21 June 1953) is a Russian foreign service officer who since 2011 has served as Russia's Permanent Representative to International Organizations in Vienna.
Nikolai Voronov was born on 5 May 1899 in Saint Petersburg [3] to Nikolai Terentyvich Voronov, a clerk, [4] [5] and Valentina Voronov. After the Revolution of 1905, Voronov's father became unemployed due to his Russian Social Democratic Labour Party sympathies. [6]