Fatima Aouam
Fatima Aouam (December 16, 1959 – December 27, 2014) was a Moroccan middle distance runner from Settat Guisser. She is best known for twice winning the gold medal at the 1987 Mediterranean Games in Latakia, Syria. Aouam set her personal best (4:05.49) in the 1,500 m in 1986. She died at the age of 55 in 2014.[1]
Achievements
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Event | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representing ![]() | |||||
1984 | African Championships | Rabat, Morocco | 1st | 1,500 m | |
1985 | African Championships | Cairo, Egypt | 1st | 800 m | |
1st | 1,500 m | ||||
1987 | Mediterranean Games | Latakia, Syria | 1st | 1,500 m | |
1st | 3,000 m | ||||
World Championships | Rome, Italy | 17th (h) | 1,500 metres | ||
1988 | African Championships | Annaba, Algeria | 1st | 1,500 m | |
1st | 3,000 metres | ||||
Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | 10th | 1500 m | 4:08.00 | |
heats | 3000 m | DNF |
gollark: https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/5penft/parallelizing_enjarify_in_go_and_rust/dcsgk7n/I think this just wonderfully encapsulates Go.
gollark: Oh, it also has that weird conditional compile thing depending on `_linux.go` suffixes or `_test.go` ones I think?
gollark: Okay, sure, you can ignore that for Go itself, if we had Go-with-an-alternate-compiler-but-identical-language-bits it would be irrelevant.
gollark: I can't easily come up with a *ton* of examples of this, but stuff like generics being special-cased in for three types (because guess what, you *do* actually need them), certain basic operations returning either one or two values depending on how you interact with them, quirks of nil/closed channel operations, the standard library secretly having a `recover` mechanism and using it like exceptions a bit, multiple return values which are not first-class at all and which are used as a horrible, horrible way to do error handling, and all of go assembly, are just inconsistent and odd.
gollark: And inconsistent.
References
External links
- Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Fatima Aouam". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2020-04-18.
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