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This Happened

This Happened - April 30: Thirty Years After The Stabbing Of Monica Seles

It was 30 years ago today that Monica Seles was stabbed by a deranged fan of her rival during a tennis match in Hamburg, Germany.

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Who was Monica Seles?

Monica Seles is a former professional tennis player who was ranked world No. 1 and won nine Grand Slam singles titles during her career. During a tennis match in Hamburg, Germany, Seles was stabbed in the back by a tennis fan who came down from the stands.

Why was Monica Seles stabbed?

The perpetrator was Günter Parche, a fan of Steffi Graf, one of Seles' main rivals at the time. Parche later admitted that he stabbed Seles in order to help Steffi Graf regain the No. 1 ranking in women's tennis. He was sentenced to two years' probation and psychiatric treatment.

How serious were Monica Seles' injuries?

Seles' injuries were serious and required immediate medical attention. She underwent surgery and did not play tennis for more than two years. She has spoken openly about the physical and emotional toll of the stabbing and has become an advocate for mental health awareness.

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Society

Location Sharing, The Latest Neurosis Of The Gen-Z Dating World

At first, Find My iPhone was a nifty feature that would help keep your cellphone safe. Now, with new location sharing technology, the app has become a new panopticon of control for Gen-Z couples, with their every move recorded by watchful eyes, nestled away in back pockets.

Photo of a person touching a map on smartphone.

A map can be seen on a smartphone.

Simonetta Sciandivasci

TURIN — The hypersensitivity to control, a neurosis that COVID-19 initially relaxed and then intensified, is an intolerance full of inconsistencies. It's a yes disguised as a no, a somewhat psychotic hypocrisy, almost a Stendhal syndrome.

We can try to detox from the internet, smartphones, social networks, dating apps, and chats — and we already do this, to some extent, as the means become obsolete (even what doesn't die, ages: Facebook is a geriatric ward; TikTok increasingly resembles an 80's video game).

But in the midst of this intermittent fasting, we become dependent on the apps that tell us where we are and, above all, where others are, with frightening, millimetric precision. "Find My iPhone," the function introduced into our smartphones to make them traceable in case of loss, two years ago became "Find My Friend," to facilitate a new methodology of affection exchange which is becoming more and more popular, especially among adolescents: geolocation.

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