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Draft:Eleodes granulata | Table of Content | one source, References |
Ibrahima Balde (memoirist) | [[File:Ibahim Blade.png | thumb|right|Balde in 2020.
Ibrahima Balde is a Guinean memoirist who detailed his journey to find his brother in a 2019 memoir, Little Brother, written with Amets Arzallus Antia. His memoir was adapted into a play by Timberlake Wertenbaker and was staged at the Jermyn Street Theatre in London in 2025.
Little Brother was published by Scribe Publications in 2019. Little Brother was one of the recipients of the PEN Translates award for the translation from the Basque language by Timberlake Wertenbaker.
Little Brother was adapted into a play by Timberlake Wertenbaker and is due to be staged at the Jermyn Street Theatre in London between 15 May and the 21 June 2025 under the direction of Stella Powell-Jones. In May 2025 Balde was denied a visa to visit the United Kingdom by the Home Office who stated that they were "not satisfied that you have demonstrated your circumstances are as declared or are as such that you intend to leave the UK at the end of your visit". The decision was reversed three days later. Balde is due to stay with Wertenbaker during his time in the UK. David Doyle, the executive producer of the Jermyn Street Theatre said that "If the UK is to remain a global leader for arts and culture, as a nation, we must take more care not to place unnecessary restrictions on artists travelling here". |
Ibrahima Balde (memoirist) | References | References
Category:21st-century Guinean people
Category:21st-century memoirists |
Ibrahima Balde (memoirist) | Table of Content | [[File:Ibahim Blade.png, References |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Short description | Alpha Omega Alpha is an honor society in the field of medicine.Robson, John, ed. (1963). Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities (17th ed.). Menasha, Wisconsin: The Collegiate Press, George Banta Company, Inc. pp. 565-566.Shepardson, Francis Wayland, ed. Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities, 12th edition. Menasha, Wisconsin: The Collegiate Press/George Banta Publishing Company, 1930. pp. 374-375. via Hathi Trust. It has 132 active chapters in the United States. In 2025, it had initiated more than 200,000 members. Following are some of its notable members. |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Academia | Academia |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Presidents and chancellors | Presidents and chancellors
Haroutune Armenian β president emeritus of American University of Armenia
Julie Story Byerley β president and dean of Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine
Michael A. Caligiuri β president of the City of Hope National Medical Center
Francisco G. Cigarroa β chancellor of the University of Texas System
Edward C. Halperin β chancellor and CEO of New York Medical College
J. Larry Jameson β president of the University of Pennsylvania
Michael M. E. Johns β chancellor of Emory University |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Vice presidents and vice chancellors | Vice presidents and vice chancellors
David A. Asch β senior vice president of the University of Pennsylvania and professor of medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine
Richard Barohn β executive vice chancellor for health affairs at the University of Missouri and dean of the University of Missouri School of Medicine
Nancy E. Gary β executive vice president of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and dean of its F. Edward HΓ©bert School of Medicine
Harry R. Jacobson β vice chancellor for health affairs and CEO of Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Steven Libutti β director of the Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, vice chancellor for cancer programs for Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences
Daniel H. Lowenstein β executive vice chancellor and provost at the University of California, San Francisco |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Professors | Professors
David H. Adams β professor and chairman of the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital
Peter Agre (1997) β physician, molecular biologist, professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and recipient of the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2003
Lihadh Al-Gazali βprofessor in clinical genetics and paediatrics at Department of Paediatrics of United Arab Emirates University
Marcia Angell β senior lecturer in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School
Erika F. Augustine β director of the Clinical Trials Unit at Kennedy Krieger Institute and associate professor of neurology and pediatrics at the University of Rochester Medical Center
Kamal Badr β professor of medicine and chair of the Department of Internal Medicine at the American University of Beirut
Rohit Bakshi β professor of neurology and radiology at Harvard Medical School and a senior neurologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital
Amin J. Barakat β clinical professor of pediatrics and pediatric nephrology at Georgetown University
Patrick D. Barnes β emeritus professor of radiology at the Stanford School of Medicine
Todd Baron β gastroenterologist and professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine
Denis Baylor β neurobiologist and professor of neurobiology at Stanford University
William Bennett Bean (University of Virginia) β professor and head of internal medicine at the University of Iowa College of Medicine; director of the Institute for Medical Humanities and professor of Internal Medicine at the University of Texas Medical Branch
Stanley Rossiter Benedict β professor of biochemistry at the Cornell University Medical School
Paul Berg (Honorary 1992) β professor at Washington University School of Medicine and Stanford University School of Medicine; director of the Beckman Center for Molecular and Genetic Medicine; and recipient of the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1980
Azra Bihorac β professor and senior associate dean of research at the University of Florida College of Medicine
Kofi Boahene β professor of facial plastic and reconstructive surgery at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and a facial plastic surgeon
Timothy J. Broderick β professor of surgery and biomedical engineering at the University of Cincinnati
Michael L. Brodman β professor and Cchairman of the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Science at Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Health System, and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Carol Brown β chair for health equity at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and a professor at Weill Cornell Medical College
David F. M. Brown β professor of emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School and chief of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital
Charles S. Bryan β professor emeritus of internal medicine at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine
Linda M. Brzustowicz β professor of genetics at Rutgers University
Lawrence H. Cohn β pioneering cardiac surgeon on the surgical staff at Harvard Medical School
William Warrick Cardozo β pediatrician and instructor at the Howard University College of Medicine
Frank A. Chervenak β chair of obstetrics and gynecology, Lenox Hill Hospital and Zucker School of Medicine
Placida Gardner Chesley β professor of pathology, toxicology, physiology, histology, and chemistry at the University of Southern California
Randolph Chitwood β cardiothoracic surgeon at the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University
James L. Cox β cardiothoracic surgeon and professor at Duke University, Georgetown University, and Washington University
Deidra Crews β nephrologist, epidemiologist, and deputy director of Johns Hopkins Center for Health Equity and a professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
James W. Curran β professor of epidemiology and dean of the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University
G. Michael Deeb β professor of surgery and Director of the Multidisciplinary Aortic Clinic at the University of Michigan
Gary Desir β vice provost for faculty development and diversity at Yale University and chair of the department of internal medicine at Yale School of Medicine
Ogobara Doumbo β global leader in malaria research and medical researcher at the University of Mali
Faith Thayer Fitzgerald β professor at the UC Davis School of Medicine
Dan Foster β chair in diabetes and metabolic research and professor of Internal Medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School at Dallas and chairman of the Department of Internal Medicine
Erica Frank β professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of British Columbia
Michael Fredericson β professor of orthopedic surgery and the director of physical medicine and rehabilitation sports medicine within the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery at Stanford University
W. Bruce Fye β cardiologist and professor of medicine and the history of medicine at the Mayo Clinic
Eric M. Genden β professor of otolaryngology, neurosurgery, and immunology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Daily Newsβ"Jaw-Droppin' Op a Success" Retrieved April 30, 2008
Daniel Geschwind β professor of human genetics, neurology, and psychiatry at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
David Gius β director of the Women's Cancer Research Program and vice chair of translational research at the Feinberg School of Medicine
Mark S. Gold β professor of neuroscience and psychiatry and chair of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Florida College of Medicine
Sherita Hill Golden β professor of endocrinology and metabolism at Johns Hopkins University
Esther Greisheimer β medical practitioner, surgeon, and professor at the University of Minnesota, the Medical College of Pennsylvania, and the Temple University School of Medicine
Blair Grubb β professor of medicine, pediatrics and neurology at the University of Toledo
Frank Harrison β president of the University of Texas at Arlington and the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Charles Brenton Huggins (Harvard Medical School 1951) β founding staff member of the University of Chicago Medical School and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1966
Henry Janowitz β professor emeritus of gastroenterology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Yo-El Ju β professor of neurology at the Washington University School of Medicine
Carl H. June β professor in immunotherapy in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine
William Kaelin Jr. (1983, Duke University School of Medicine 1983) β professor of medicine at Harvard University and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2019
Ann Marie Kimball β professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the University of Washington
James Kirklin β cardiac surgeon and professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham
Peter C. Klatsky β doctor specializing in reproductive endocrinology and infertility and an assistant professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Luella Klein β obstetrician-gynecologist and professor at Emory University School of Medicine
Nathan Kuppermann β professor in the Departments of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics at the UC Davis School of Medicine
Sandi Lam β vice chair for pediatric neurological surgery at Northwestern University
Raphael Carl Lee β biomedical engineer and professor at the University of Chicago
Rudolph Leibel β professor of at Columbia University Medical Center
I. Michael Leitman β professor and dean at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Leah Lowenstein β dean and professor of medicine and biochemistry at the Boston University School of Medicine
Constantine G. Lyketsos β professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Johns Hopkins University
Crystal Mackall β professor of pediatrics and medicine at Stanford University
Kimberly D. Manning β professor of medicine at Emory University School of Medicine
Frank I. Marcus β professor of Medicine at the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center
George M. Martin β biogerontologist and faculty member at the University of Washington |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Astronauts | Astronauts
James P. Bagian β NASA astronaut and physician
Michael Barratt β aerospace medicine physician and astronaut
Sonny Carter β astronaut and chemist
Jerry M. Linenger β astronaut |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Biology | Biology
Harvey J. Alter (University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry 2021, alumni) β virologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2020
David Baltimore (California Institute of Technology 1987, honorary) β biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1975
Sydney Brenner (University of California, Berkeley 1993, honorary) β biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2002
Maurice Brodie β virologist and polio researcher
Macfarlane Burnet (Indiana University School of Medicine 1963) β virologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1960
Lewis L. Coriell β virologist
Renato Dulbecco (California Institute of Technology 1993, honorary) β virologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1975
Gerald Edelman (Perelman School of Medicine 1953) β biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1972
Joseph Erlanger (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1909, Alumni) β physiologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1944
Herbert Spencer Gasser (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 1915) β physiologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1944
Carol W. Greider (Johns Hopkins University Medical School 2012, faculty) β molecular biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2009
Joshua Lederberg (University of California, Berkeley, 1982, honorary) β molecular biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1958
Salvadore Luria (M.I.T. 1985, honorary) β microbiologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1969
Daniel Nathans (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis 1953) β microbiologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1978
George Emil Palade (Yale University School of Medicine 1933, honorary ) β cell biologist, physicist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1974
Hamilton O. Smith (1979, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 1979, alumni) β biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1978
Thomas Huckle Weller (Harvard Medical School 1940) β virologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1954 |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Business | Business
Jeffrey Leiden β executive chairman of Vertex Pharmaceuticals |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Chemistry | Chemistry
John Paul Blass β physician, biochemist, and neurochemist
Thomas Cech (2011) β biochemist and recipient of the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1989
Stanley Cohen (Vanderbilt University School of Medicine 1987, faculty) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1986
Carl Ferdinand Cori (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis 1950) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1947
Edward Adelbert Doisy (St. Louis University School of Medicine 1930) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1943
Robert F. Furchgott (SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University 1967, faculty) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1998
Joseph L. Goldstein (University of Texas Southwestern Medical School 1965) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1985
Percy Lavon Julian β research chemist
Arthur Kornberg (University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry 1940) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1959
Edwin G. Krebs (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis 1943) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1992
Fritz Albert Lipmann (Harvard Medical School 1955) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1953
John Macleod (University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine 1916) β biochemist, physiologist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1923
Severo Ochoa (New York University School of Medicine 1947) β biochemist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1959Paul Kalanithi β bestselling non-fiction author |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Entertainment | Entertainment
Randal Haworth β plastic surgeon known for his leading role in reality TV series The Swan |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Literature and journalism | Literature and journalism
Louis Aronne β physician and author of popular diet books
Rana Awdish β physician and author of In Shock: My Journey from Death to Recovery and the Redemptive Power of Hope
T. Berry Brazelton β pediatrician and author
Miguel A. Faria Jr. β neurosurgeon, neuroscientist, and associate editor in chief in neuropsychiatry; history of medicine; and socioeconomics, politics, and world affairs of Surgical Neurology International
Jeffrey Gusky β photographer whose work appeared in National Geographic |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Medicine | Medicine
Jean R. Anderson β founder and first director of Johns Hopkins HIV Women's Health Program
Howard Apfel β rabbi and cardiologist practicing medicine at Columbia University Medical Center
Babak Azizzadeh β facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon
Brenda Banwell β chief of the Division of Neurology and co-director of the Neuroscience Center, and professor of neurology at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Baruj Benacerraf (Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine 1944) β immunologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1980
Philip Bernatz β physician and thoracic surgeon at the Mayo Clinic
Bruce Beutler (University of Texas Southwestern Medical School 2012, faculty) β immunologist, geneticist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2011
Alfred Blalock β cardiac surgeon and chief of surgery at Vanderbilt University and Johns Hopkins University
Ernst Philip Boas β hospital director and physician; a pioneer in the fields of pathology and physiology
Patricia Flint Borns β pediatric radiologist
David M. Bosworth β orthopedic surgeon
Michael Stuart Brown (Perelman School of Medicine 1965) β geneticist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1985
Alexa Canady β medical doctor specializing in pediatric neurosurgery
Warren L. Carpenter β physician and chief medical officer with the Department of Defense
Francis V. Chisari β experimental pathologist and viral immunologist at the at Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation
Lawrence H. Cohn β cardiac surgeon, researcher, and educator
Florence Comite β endocrinologist and founder of the Center for Women's Health & Midwifery at Yale
Alan DeCherney β obstetrician, gynecologist, and director of the Reproductive Endocrinology Division at the University of California, Los Angeles
Peter G. Delaney β emergency medical research and executive director of LFR International
Eugene Dibble β physician and head of the John A. Andrew Memorial Hospital at the Tuskegee Institute
Stephen Dolgin β pediatric surgeon
Lester Dragstedt β surgeon who was the first to successfully separate conjoined twins
Charles Drew β surgeon and medical researcher
Janet Gilsdorf β director of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases in the University of Michigan Health System
James Alison Glover β medical officer with the British Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Education
Dan M. Granoff β chair and was director of the Center of Immunobiology and Vaccine Development at Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute
Paul Greengard (Rockefeller University 2002, honorary) β neuroscientist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2000
Robert I. Grossman β CEO of NYU Langone Health and dean of NYU Grossman School of Medicine
Roger Guillemin (Baylor College of Medicine 1967, faculty) β neuroscientist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1977
James Hardy β surgeon who performed the world's first lung transplant
Philip Showalter Hench (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine 1925, Alumni) β head of the Department of Rheumatology at Mayo Clinic and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1950
Steven Hoefflin β plastic surgeon
Elizabeth A. Hunt β pediatric intensivist, critical-care specialist, and director of the Johns Hopkins Medicine Simulation Center
Henry van Zile Hyde β physician with the World Health Organization
M. Deborrah Hyde β neurosurgeon with the Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital
Renee Jenkins β pediatrician
Olga Jonasson β transplant surgeon
Robert J. T. Joy β physician, career Army Medical Corps officer, and commander of the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
David A. Karnofsky β clinical oncologist with Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research
Herbert E. Kaufman β ophthalmologist
Eric Keroack β obstetrician-gynecologist with the United States Department of Health and Human Services
Daniel Kopans β radiologist and founder of the Breast Imaging Division in the Department of Radiology at the Massachusetts General Hospital
Babak Larian β director of the Head and Neck Cancer Center at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Jenna Lester β dermatologist and faculty member at the University of California, San Francisco
Rita Levi-Montalcini (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis 1970, honorary) β neurologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1986
C. Walton Lillehei β pioneer of open-heart surgery
Robert Ritchie Litton β vascular surgeon
Michael D. Lockshin β professor of medicine and director of the Barbara Volcker Center for Women and Rheumatic Disease at Hospital for Special Surgery
Ruth Lubic β nurse-midwife |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | National Institutes of Health | National Institutes of Health
John E. Bennett β senior investigator in the clinical mycology section at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Marie Bernard β chief officer for scientific workforce diversity at the National Institutes of Health and the deputy director of the National Institute on Aging
Thelma Brumfield Dunn β staff pathologist and head of the Cancer Induction and Pathogenesis Section of the National Cancer Institute
Christopher Hourigan β chief of the Laboratory of Myeloid Malignancies at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and founding co-director of the Myeloid Malignancies Program at the National Institutes of Health
Ben Lawton β physician, general and thoracic surgeon with the National Institute of Medicine
Harold E. Varmus (Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons 1964) β director of the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1989 |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Non-profits | Non-profits
Senait Fisseha β vice-president of International Programs at the Susan Thompson Buffet Foundation
Steven M. Greer β ufologist and founder of the Center for the Study of Extraterrestrial Intelligence (CSETI)
Matthew C. Keifer β director of the National Farm Medicine Center
John Hilton Knowles β president of the Rockefeller Foundation and general director of the Massachusetts General Hospital |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Pharmacology | Pharmacology
Frederick Banting (University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine 1923) β pharmacologist and field surgeon who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1923
Alfred G. Gilman (Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine 1968) β pharmacologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1994
Louis Ignarro (David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles 1990, faculty) β pharmacologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1989
Ferid Murad (Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine 1963) β pharmacologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1989
Earl Wilbur Sutherland Jr. (Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis 1940) β pharmacologist, biochemist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1971
John Vane (Yale University 1989, honorary) β pharmacologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1982 |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Politics | Politics
Otis R. Bowen β Governor of Indiana and Secretary of Health and Human Services
Robert Califf β Commissioner of Food and Drugs
Ben Carson β United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and neurosurgeon
Brett Giroir β Assistant Secretary for Health and Commissioner of Food and Drugs
Beth Liston β Ohio Senate and Ohio House of Representatives
Jane Pringle β Maine House of Representatives
Dave Weldon β U.S. House of Representatives |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Surgeon Generals | Surgeon Generals
Leroy Edgar Burney (Indiana University 1960, alumnus) β Surgeon General of the United States
Richard Carmona (University of California, San Francisco 1980) β Surgeon General of the United States
Bruce L. Gillingham β Surgeon General of the United States Navy
C. Everett Koop (Weill Cornell Medical College 1989, alumnus) β Surgeon General of the United States
Antonia C. Novello (University of Puerto Rico 1987, Alumnus) β Surgeon General of the United States
Vivek Murthy (Yale University School of Medicine 2003) β Surgeon General of the United States and vice admiral in the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps
Thomas Parran (University of Columbia 1940, Honorary) β Surgeon General of the United States
Julius B. Richmond (University of Illinois 1938) β Surgeon General of the United States
David Satcher (Case Western Reserve University 1969) β Surgeon General of the United States
Leonard A. Scheele (Wayne State University 1947, Honorary) β Surgeon General of the United States
Jesse Leonard Steinfeld (Virginia Commonwealth University 1979, faculty) β Surgeon General of the United States
William H. Stewart (Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans 1972, faculty) β Surgeon General of the United States |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Psychiatry | Psychiatry
Leston Havens β psychiatrist and director psychiatry residency program at Cambridge Hospital
Eric R. Kandel (New York University School of Medicine 1969, alumnus) β neuropsychiatrist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2000 |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Sports | Sports
J. P. Darche β professional football player with the Toronto Argonauts, the Seattle Seahawks, and the Kansas City Chiefs
Loren Galler-Rabinowitz β 2004 U.S. ice dancing bronze medalist
Gail Hopkins β Major League Baseball player and coach
Everett E. Kelley β college All-American football player |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Other | Other
Annie Marie Garraway β mathematician who worked in telecommunications and electronic data transmission with AT&T Labs and Lucent Technologies
David B. Matchar β
Lloyd Mayer β
Julie McElrath β
Jock McKeen β physician, acupuncturist and co-founder of the Haven Institute (Gabriola Island, Canada)
Mary Ann McLaughlin β cardiologist
Thomas C. Merigan β
A. L. Mestel β
Aaron E. Miller β
Robert H. Miller β
George R. Minot (Harvard Medical School 1911) β medical researcher and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1934
Paul Mischel β
Joseph Molina β
J. Glenn Morris β
Emma Sadler Moss β pathologist
Emma Sadler Moss β
Dariush Mozaffarian β
Greg Murphy β
Kathleen Neuzil β
Perry Nisen β
Ogonna Nnamani β
Marcella Nunez-Smith β
Paul Nyirjesy β
Michael O'Donnell β
William K. Oh β
Jacqueline Nwando Olayiwola β
Lloyd J. Old β
Adeiyewunmi Osinubi
Marshall M. Parks β "the father of pediatric ophthalmology".Joe Holley. "D.C. Physician Illuminated The Ailments of Young Eyes." Washington Post. Sunday, August 21, 2005; Page C11.
Francis Weld Peabody β
John Hemsley Pearn β
Eliana Perrin β
William A. Petri β
Charles D. Phelps β
William S. Pierce β
Etta D. Pisano β
Hans Popper β
Stephen G. Post β
Tina Young Poussaint β
Robert Provenzano β nephrologist
Tatiana Prowell β
Stanley B. Prusiner (Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania 1968) β neurologist, chemist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1997
Charles Raison β
Megan Ranney β
Rajiv Ratan β
Stephen C. Redd β
Steven M. Reppert β
Valerie Montgomery Rice β
Dickinson W. Richards (Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons 1922) β physician, physiologist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1956
Charles C. Richardson β
Lisa C. Richardson β
Scott Rivkees β
John-Ross Rizzo β
Frederick Chapman Robbins (Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine 1967, faculty) β pediatrician, virologist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1954
Ed Roberts β
Steven T. Rosen β
Daniel Roses β Jules Leonard Whitehill Professor of Surgery and Oncology of the New York University School of Medicine
Wendy Ross β
Walton T. Roth β
Paul B. Rothman β
David T. Rubin β
Robert B. Rutherford β
David Sabiston β
Yoel Sadovsky β
Pedram Salimpour β
Jonas Salk β developer of the polio vaccine
John F. Sarwark β
Harry Schachter β biochemist
Joseph E. Scherger β
Alan L. Schiller β
Robert William Schrier β
Hermann von Wechlinger Schulte β
Robert A. Schwartz β dermatologist
Seymour I. Schwartz β
Stuart C. Sealfon β
Gregg L. Semenza (Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania 1981) β professor of genetic medicine at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2019
Sheila Sherlock β
Megumi Yamaguchi Shinoda β
George Siber β
Paul Sidhu
Bernie S. Siegel
Omega Silva
John T. Sinnott
Eve Slater
Eric. J. Small
Kendall Smith
Wendell Meredith Stanley (Honorary 1938) biochemist, virologist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1946
Patrick Staropoli
Ralph M. Steinman (Harvard Medical School 1968) β immunologist cell, biologist, and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2011
Patrick J. Stiff
Travis Stork
Cyrus W. Strickler
Brian L. Strom
George Stouffer
Michael Stuart β sports physician and orthopedic surgeon at the Mayo Clinic
Frederick Douglass Stubbs β thoracic surgeon
Louis W. Sullivan
Peter J. Taub
John McLellan Tew
Ann Tilton
Peter Tishler
Stanley M. Truhlsen
Patricia L. Turner
Charles Vacanti
Jan VilΔek
Percy Wootton
Heather Wakelee
Steven D. Waldman
Matthew Walker Sr.
Levi Watkins
Ray L. Watts
Clarence Hungerford Webb
Sharon Weiss
Paul Alan Wetter β minimally invasive and robotic surgery pioneer, University of Miami School of Medicine
George H. Whipple (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine 1909, Alumni) β biomedical researcher and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1934
John N. Whitaker
Torsten Wiesel (Rockefeller University 1992, honorary) β neuroscientist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1981
Jose Wiley
Dean Winslow
Percy Wootton β former president of the American Medical Association
Clyde Yancy
James Harvey Young
Mohamed Zaazoue
Anthony Zacchei
John Zamet |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | See also | See also
List of Alpha Omega Alpha chapters |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | References | References
Category:Lists of members of former Association of College Honor Societies members |
List of Alpha Omega Alpha members | Table of Content | Short description, Academia, Presidents and chancellors, Vice presidents and vice chancellors, Professors, Astronauts, Biology, Business, Chemistry, Entertainment, Literature and journalism, Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Non-profits, Pharmacology, Politics, Surgeon Generals, Psychiatry, Sports, Other, See also, References |
Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets of Jiwood23 | Sockpuppet category | |
Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets of Jiwood23 | Table of Content | Sockpuppet category |
File:Day & Night (Fifty Fifty EP).jpg | Summary | Summary |
File:Day & Night (Fifty Fifty EP).jpg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Day & Night (Fifty Fifty EP).jpg | Table of Content | Summary, Licensing |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | Short description | On 26 March 2011, gunmen from the al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula-linked militant group Ansar al-Sharia raided the city of Jaar in Abyan Governorate, Yemen. After security forces mounted a brief counteroffensive on 27 March, they abandoned the city and allowed the militants to capture it and its surrounding areas by the next day. |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | Background | Background
Jaar possesses significant heritage as a bastion for Islamism since the unification of Yemen in 1990. After the defeat of the southern secessionists in the 1994 civil war, Islamists were encouraged by the government to take control of the once socialist areas. Quranic centers were established as bases for radicalization with support from the Yemeni and Saudi Arabian governments. Veterans of the Afghan mujahideen used Jaar as bases for expanding local jihadist groups such as Islamic Jihad in Yemen and the Aden-Abyan Islamic Army during the 1990s. Insurgents from the Iraq War and the US-led War in Afghanistan also made their way into Jaar, while the town was being used as a training ground for Saudi militants heading to Iraq until a government crackdown in 2006. From there on, relations between the Islamists and the government deteriorated into frequent fighting, with jihadists controlling the town until a 2009 government offensive.
Beginning in January 2011, the Yemeni revolution caused widespread unrest across the country as protestors called for the resignation of longtime president Ali Abdullah Saleh. The revolution was further intensified after an incident on 18 March in which pro-government forces opened fire on protestors in the capital of Sanaa. In response to the incident, the government repositioned military units from other parts of the country into Sanaa and its surrounding areas. These areas included Abyan Governorate, with the American-trained Counter-Terrorism Unit specifically created to fight al-Qaeda being sent away along with the army. Some security forces were also pushed out their respective towns by locals who began creating committees to run their own communities.
The city of Jaar is positioned near a mountain range used as a sanctuary by al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. AQAP had previously seized control of towns in southern Yemen, but security forces were quick to counterattack and resecure the areas. As the government was primarily occupied with putting down the revolution, the militants faced little challenge in capturing territory. |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | Capture | Capture
On 26 March, Islamist militants descended from a nearby expanse of mountains into Jaar, spreading out across the city while setting up checkpoints at its entrance and seizing vacant government buildings. The raid on Jaar came with little fighting at first as local police and security forces had abandoned it weeks prior. Security forces launched a counterattack on the militants on 27 March in clashes which left one soldier dead and one militant seriously injured. Yemeni warplanes were reported to have flew over the area, though this was later denied by an official. The counteroffensive failed as the army soon withdrew from the city towards Abyan's capital Zinjibar. Later in the day, army artillery shelling was reported to have struck the town.
With security forces deserting the area, the militants took control of Jaar's government buildings, including the local police station and military barracks, as well as the Khanfar Mountain overlooking the city which held a radio station and a presidential guest house overtop it. A statement reportedly signed by the militants said that they would let soldiers in the barracks go free if they abandoned their weapons. A security official later claimed that there was little to no fighting in the city as the army had opened its barracks to the militants after negotiations.
Five checkpoints were set up at the entrance to Jaar. The militants also took control of the nearby town of al-Husn as well as the 7 October Munitions Factory and its adjoining warehouse about three miles west of Jaar in the town of Batis. An employee at the factory stated that the militants seized two armored cars, a tank, several pickup trucks mounted with machine guns and ammunition, and transported looted cases of weapons with four vehicles.
By the morning of 28 March, the militants were in firm control of Jaar as gunmen referring to themselves as Ansar al-Sharia had set up checkpoints and hung their flag across the city. The group claimed to be affiliated with al-Qaeda. Hundreds of militants were seen roaming the city's streets in captured armored vehicles, military vehicles, and machine guns. They had also left the munitions factory. |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | Munitions factory explosion | Munitions factory explosion
After the militants left the munitions factory, dozens of men, women and children, entered the factory in search of valuables they could loot, including cables, doors and vehicle fuel. While they were inside, an accidental explosion occurred in the facility, possibly caused by a lit cigarette interacting with gunpowder or a gun used to open a room full of dynamite. The explosion killed 150 people and injured 80. A government-affiliated newspaper claimed that the explosion was a trap intentionally set by the militants, whom they labeled as al-Qaeda. |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | Reactions | Reactions
Abyan deputy governor Saleh al-Zoary blamed the federal government for the factory explosion as they had ordered the withdrawal of security forces which created the disorder. The Joint Meeting Parties, a coalition of anti-Saleh opposition parties, released a statement claiming that the explosion was facilitated as "a desperate attempt of President Saleh to confirm his argument that Yemen is just a ticking time bomb." In response to US Defense Secretary Robert Gates saying that the deposition of Saleh could lead to a "real problem" for the US, JMP spokesperson Mohammed al-Sabri said "The remarks are clear indications that the U.S. administration stands by Saleh who gave al-Qaida elements a green light to create chaos in the south to scare the Americans." |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | Analysis | Analysis
Jaar became Ansar al-Sharia's de facto administrative capitol in Abyan for the next years. The city was "carefully selected" as the center of the group's Islamic emirate for multiple reasons. In terms of its strategic value, the city was located on the foot of the al-Habilayn mountains, a remote and rugged terrain to which militants had previously retreated in the face of army advances. Zinjibar, the official capital of Abyan Governorate, was located 30 kilometers south of Jaar, while Zinjibar lied upon the only road connection Abyan to Aden. The only other road to Jaar was hundreds of kilometers long and wound through the remote mountains and desert to the north. These factors gave Jaar "strategic cover from which to plan and launch attacks" such as a March 2012 raid on military units stationed near Zinjiabr.
Compared to other areas such as Shabwah Governorate, Jaar had a very weak tribal structure, which allowed Ansar al-Sharia to capture the town without confronting the local tribes. Jaar also acted as a barrier to prevent the reach of powerful anti-al-Qaeda tribes to the rest of Abyan, particularly the Southern Movement-aligned Yafa tribe which occupies territory north of Jaar. |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | See also | See also
Fall of Zinjibar and Jaar (2015)
Battle of Mukalla (2015) |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | References | References |
Battle of Jaar (2011) | Table of Content | Short description, Background, Capture, Munitions factory explosion, Reactions, Analysis, See also, References |
Niamh Regan | Use dmy dates | Niamh Regan (; born 1994) is an Irish folk singer from County Galway. |
Niamh Regan | Early life | Early life
Regan grew up in Kilreekill. In 2008, age 14, she appeared on the RTΓ children's talent show Class Act. She received a BA in Music in the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at the University of Limerick. She then qualified as a teacher through Hibernia College and was not planning a musical career until the COVID lockdowns. |
Niamh Regan | Career | Career
In 2020 Regan released her debut album Hemet, recorded during the COVID lockdowns. It was nominated for the Choice Music Prize.
Her second album Come As You Are, recorded at Attica Audio Recording in Letterkenny, was also nominated for the Choice Music Prize. |
Niamh Regan | Discography | Discography
Studio albums
Hemet (2020)
Come As You Are (2024)
EPs
In the Meantime (2022) |
Niamh Regan | Personal life | Personal life
Regan is married to Wesley Houdyshell from Hemet, California, which is the origin of the name of her first album. They live in Kilreekill, County Galway. |
Niamh Regan | References | References |
Niamh Regan | External links | External links
Official site
Category:1994 births
Category:Alumni of the University of Limerick
Category:Living people
Category:Musicians from County Galway
Category:Irish women folk singers
Category:21st-century Irish folk singers |
Niamh Regan | Table of Content | Use dmy dates, Early life, Career, Discography, Personal life, References, External links |
Draft:Bobby Kellum | AFC submission |
Bobby Joe Kellum (March 26, 1958 β May 15, 1977) was an American homicide victim whose identity remained unknown for 30 years. His body, discovered in rural Alabama, was listed as a John Doe until 2007, when advancements in forensic DNA testing and renewed media interestβespecially a televised segment by WHNT-TV βled to his identification.
thumb|1974 yearbook photo from Clements High School of murder victim Bobby Kellum
Disappearance and Discovery
On May 15, 1977, the partially burned body of a young man was found in a corner of Martling Cemetery in rural Marshall County, Alabama. The body had been doused in yellow paint and his throat had been cut. Two women walking through the cemetery came across the scene and alerted authorities.
At the time of discovery, the man had no identification, and his remains bore no immediately traceable clues to his identity. Despite a police investigation and coverage in local papers, the man remained unidentified. He was buried as a John Doe in the Arab, Alabama city cemetery in Marshall County. Law enforcement faced several challenges in identifying the victim. Due to the extensive damage to the body and lack of leads, the case grew cold. Over the years, the body remained interred under the unidentified status, with local investigators continuing to revisit the file when feasible.
Media Involvement
In May 2007, WHNT in Huntsville, Alabama aired a segment on the 30th anniversary of the case. As part of the report, they showed a forensic facial reconstruction of the unidentified man created by the county corner back in 1977. thumb|Coroner photo of reconstructed face of Bobby Kellum created after his remains were found in the Asbury Cemetery in Marshall County, Alabama.
Following the broadcast, a woman From Athens, Alabama contacted WHNT expressing concern that the image resembled someone she had known in her youth, Bobby Joe Kellum, who had disappeared decades earlier. This tip proved pivotal in reopening the case from a new angle and prompted authorities to collect DNA samples from Kellum's family and the remains buried in Arab.
Identification and DNA Testing
DNA samples were sent to a private lab and confirmed that the remains were those of Kellum, who had been 19-years-old at the time of his disappearance.
thumb|Wilma Kellum, mother of Bobby Kellum, provides a DNA sample to Marshall County investigators.
Identity of Killer
The identification of Kellum's remains reignited the investigation into his murder. Authorities focused on a suspect, a terminally ill Louisiana man named C.W. Brooks, who confessed to being an accessory after the fact. Brooks informed investigators that DeWitt Thrash, the father of a 17-year-old Anniston, Alabama girl whom Kellum had met while working at a fair in Anniston, was responsible for the murder. According to Brooks, Thrash and Brooks picked up Kellum and the girl while they were walking along Alabama Highway 21. After taking the girl home, they returned to Marshall County, where they met another man, Troy Barnes, and drove to Asbury Cemetery. There, Thrash allegedly killed Kellum by cutting his throat, poured yellow paint on his body, and set it on fire. Kellum's body was discovered three days later by two women.
Due to the statute of limitations and Brooks's terminal illness, no charges were brought against him. Thrash died two years before the break in the case. Kellum's remains were returned to his native Limestone County and buried in the Anticoh Cemetery in Elkmont, Alabama. |
Draft:Bobby Kellum | References | References |
Draft:Bobby Kellum | Table of Content | AFC submission, References |
File:Facctum Logo.png | Orphaned non-free revisions | |
File:Facctum Logo.png | Summary | Summary |
File:Facctum Logo.png | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Facctum Logo.png | Table of Content | Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Shiraro | [[:Shiraro]] | :Shiraro
β (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Unsourced stub, cannot find any sources talking about the topic of this article that are not copied from Wikipedia
(Most of the results for βShiraroβ on search engines and journal databases seem to be about places called βShiraroβ rather than any leather material. But even the places may not be notable enough for an article.) ApexParagon (talk) 21:06, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Fashion and Africa. Shellwood (talk) 21:17, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete: No SIGCOV. Couldn't find any sources at The Wikipedia Library or online. β Itzcuauhtli11 (talk) 00:15, 21 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Shiraro | Table of Content | [[:Shiraro]] |
Draft:Ambush in Vojvode MiΕ‘iΔ barracks | AfC submission | |
Draft:Ambush in Vojvode MiΕ‘iΔ barracks | Ambush | Ambush
Members of the Yugoslav Army from the Vojvode MiΕ‘iΔ barracks fired automatic weapons at a police vehicle in which policeman Zdenko Lilek and reserve policeman Robert Hvalc were patrolling, during a time when a ceasefire was supposed to be in effect. Robert Hvalc succumbed to his injuries while being transported to the hospital, while Zdenko Lilek was seriously injured and became disabled. |
Draft:Ambush in Vojvode MiΕ‘iΔ barracks | References | References |
Draft:Ambush in Vojvode MiΕ‘iΔ barracks | Table of Content | AfC submission, Ambush, References |
File:Walchandnagar Industries.svg | Orphaned non-free revisions | |
File:Walchandnagar Industries.svg | Summary | Summary |
File:Walchandnagar Industries.svg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Walchandnagar Industries.svg | Table of Content | Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | TennisEventInfo | The 2025 LibΓ©ma Open is a professional tennis tournament to be played on outdoor grass courts at Autotron Rosmalen in Rosmalen, 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands from 9 to 15 June 2025. It will be the 34th edition of the Rosmalen Grass Court Championships and is classified as an ATP 250 event on the 2025 ATP Tour and a WTA 250 event on the 2025 WTA Tour. |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Champions | Champions |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Men's singles | Men's singles
vs. |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Women's singles | Women's singles
vs. |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Men's doubles | Men's doubles
/ vs. / |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Women's doubles | Women's doubles
/ vs. / |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | ATP singles main draw entrants | ATP singles main draw entrants |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Seeds | Seeds
Country Player Rank1 SeedAlex de Minaur91Daniil Medvedev112Arthur Fils143Ugo Humbert224Sebastian Korda235Karen Khachanov246Alexei Popyrin257Hubert Hurkacz318
1 Rankings are as of 19 May 2025. |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Other entrants | Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the main draw:
The following player received entry under the ATP Next Gen programme for players aged under 20 and ranked in the top 350:
Nishesh Basavareddy
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
|
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | ATP doubles main draw entrants | ATP doubles main draw entrants |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Seeds | Seeds
Country Player Country Player Rank1 Seed 1 2 3 4
1 Rankings are as of 26 May 2025. |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Other entrants | Other entrants
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
/
/ |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | WTA singles main draw entrants | WTA singles main draw entrants |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Seeds | Seeds
Country Player Rank1 SeedLiudmila Samsonova191Ekaterina Alexandrova202Elise Mertens243Magda Linette334Olga DaniloviΔ345Anastasia Potapova366Elina Avanesyan407Wang Xinyu428
1 Rankings are as of 19 May 2024. |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Other entrants | Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the main draw:
The following players received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw:
Anastasija Sevastova
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
|
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | WTA doubles main draw entrants | WTA doubles main draw entrants |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Seeds | Seeds
Country Player Country Player Rank1 Seed 1 2 3 4
1 Rankings are as of 26 May 2025. |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Other entrants | Other entrants
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
/
/ |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | References | References |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | External links | External links
Category:2025 WTA Tour
Category:2025 ATP Tour
Category:LibΓ©ma Open
LibΓ©ma Open |
2025 LibΓ©ma Open | Table of Content | TennisEventInfo, Champions, Men's singles, Women's singles, Men's doubles, Women's doubles, ATP singles main draw entrants, Seeds, Other entrants, ATP doubles main draw entrants, Seeds, Other entrants, WTA singles main draw entrants, Seeds, Other entrants, WTA doubles main draw entrants, Seeds, Other entrants, References, External links |
Gonzalo Civila | Draft article | Gonzalo MartΓn Civila LΓ³pez (Montevideo, December 6, 1984) is a Uruguayan professor and politician who belongs to the Socialist Party of Uruguay (PS). Since March 1, 2025 he has been Minister of Social Development. |
Gonzalo Civila | Early life and education | Early life and education
Since the age of 15, he has been involved in community activities in settlements in Montevideo and in various socio-educational projects.
He graduated as a philosophy teacher from the Artigas Teachers' Institute (IPA) in 2006. He also completed advanced studies in philosophy (research option) at the Faculty of Letters and Educational Sciences of the University of the Republic. |
Gonzalo Civila | Political offices | Political offices
Gonzalo Civila was a member of the Broad Front and the Socialist Party since his adolescence
In March 2019 he was elected Secretary General of the Socialist Party of Uruguay. In 2022 he was reelected Secretary General.
In December 2024, Civila was announced by President-elect YamandΓΊ Orsi as the future Minister of Social Development. |
Gonzalo Civila | External links | External links |
Gonzalo Civila | References | References
Category:1948 births
Category:Uruguayan socialists
Category:Broad Front (Uruguay) politicians
Category:University of the Republic (Uruguay) alumni |
Gonzalo Civila | Table of Content | Draft article, Early life and education, Political offices, External links, References |
Bruce Dickson | '''Bruce Dickson''' | Bruce Dickson is the name of:
Bruce Dickson (ice hockey) (1931β2023), Canadian ice hockey player
Bruce Dickson (rower) (1932β2006), Australian rower
Bruce Dickson (Canadian football) (born 1967), Canadian Football League player (1991β1998)
Bruce Dickson, real identity of the Thin Man (comics), a Marvel Comics superhero |
Bruce Dickson | See also | See also
Bruce Dixon, CEO of Vice Media
Bruce Dixon (died 2019), African-American activist and journalist - see Black Agenda Report |
Bruce Dickson | Table of Content | '''Bruce Dickson''', See also |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Yankee Town, Indiana | [[:Yankee Town, Indiana]] | :Yankee Town, Indiana
β (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
A complete nothing-place about which I could find nothing. Note that there is also a Yankeetown, Indiana which is an actual town and which helps confuse searching. Mangoe (talk) 21:10, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Geography and Indiana. Shellwood (talk) 21:19, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete Nonexistent place apart from post-1960 USGS topo maps, which inexplicably call this a "town" despite there being no infrastructure then and certainly not now, just an intersection in the midst of farmland without even a house nearby. Absolute failure of WP:NPLACE and confusing to boot since there is a Yankeetown, Indiana. WeirdNAnnoyed (talk) 22:40, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete - Just farmland. γγγͺγ²γΉζε (talk) 19:04, 20 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Yankee Town, Indiana | Table of Content | [[:Yankee Town, Indiana]] |
Category:Children's hospitals in Florida | [[Category:Children's hospitals in the United States | Florida
Category:Hospitals in Florida |
Category:Children's hospitals in Florida | Table of Content | [[Category:Children's hospitals in the United States |
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