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Moritz (name) | Table of Content | '''Moritz''', Given name, Surname, Fictional characters, See also |
Category:Permanent representatives of São Tomé and Príncipe to the United Nations Office at Geneva | Portal | Geneva
São Tomé and Príncipe |
Category:Permanent representatives of São Tomé and Príncipe to the United Nations Office at Geneva | Table of Content | Portal |
Category:Diplomatic crises of the 1990s | Navseasoncats | This category is for diplomatic crises of the 1990s, disputes between two or more states that are not settled judicially. International incidents can arise from unanticipated actions involving citizens, government officials, or armed units of one or more states, or out of a deliberate but small provocative action by espionage agents of one state, or by terrorists, against another state.
1990s
Category:1990s in international relations
Category:1990s in politics |
Category:Diplomatic crises of the 1990s | Table of Content | Navseasoncats |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Shakalaka Baby | [[:Shakalaka Baby]] | :Shakalaka Baby
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Fails WP:NFILM. No reliable sources or reviews from Sify or Chennai Online. 1st source not reliable per the Indian cinema taskforce . 2nd source is a passing mention, 3rd source is a user generated tweet and last source is a database source. Due to the reliable cast, and save the article.
Redirect to Mudhalvan#Soundtrack, which has a song of the same name.
DareshMohan (talk) 06:14, 20 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Film and India. WCQuidditch ☎ ✎ 07:00, 20 May 2025 (UTC)
REDIRECT: To Mudhalvan#Soundtrack. I am not opposed to Shakalaka Baby (film) redirecting to Rama Narayanan. Kailash29792 (talk) 13:14, 20 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Shakalaka Baby | Table of Content | [[:Shakalaka Baby]] |
Category:Diplomatic crises of the 1980s | Navseasoncats | This category is for diplomatic crises of the 1980s, disputes between two or more states that are not settled judicially. International incidents can arise from unanticipated actions involving citizens, government officials, or armed units of one or more states, or out of a deliberate but small provocative action by espionage agents of one state, or by terrorists, against another state.
1980s
Category:1980s in international relations
Category:1980s in politics |
Category:Diplomatic crises of the 1980s | Table of Content | Navseasoncats |
Category:Fictional portrayals of the SWAT (Bangladesh) | [[Category:Bangladesh Police]] | Category:Bangladesh Police
Category:Bengali-language Bangladeshi films
Category:Bengali-language television programming in Bangladesh
Police
Category:Films set in Bangladesh
Category:Television shows set in Bangladesh
Category:Novels set in Bangladesh
Category:Films shot in Bangladesh |
Category:Fictional portrayals of the SWAT (Bangladesh) | Table of Content | [[Category:Bangladesh Police]] |
File:Cheremshanka Airport Logo.png | Summary | Summary |
File:Cheremshanka Airport Logo.png | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Cheremshanka Airport Logo.png | Table of Content | Summary, Licensing |
Category:Pakistan Air Force commands | [[category:Air Force units and formations of Pakistan]] | category:Air Force units and formations of Pakistan
Category:Air force commands |
Category:Pakistan Air Force commands | Table of Content | [[category:Air Force units and formations of Pakistan]] |
Category:User bal-3 | Category User iso-n | |
Category:User bal-3 | Table of Content | Category User iso-n |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/All India Christian Council | [[:All India Christian Council]] | :All India Christian Council
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
This page has been tagged non-notable since 2010. When I did my searching WP:BEFORE I found the All-India Christian Confederation and the All India True Christian Council which I assume are different things? The website that this page links to is dead.
Against deletion I found this article and this article but I don't think they are in depth and the former might not be independent either.
As always with pages from places that speak languages I don't I will happily change my mind if presented with non-English sources Moritoriko (talk) 06:23, 20 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Organizations, Christianity, and India. Moritoriko (talk) 06:23, 20 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/All India Christian Council | Table of Content | [[:All India Christian Council]] |
James Wallace (mathematician) | Infobox scientist
| James Wallace (died 1850) was an Irish-born American mathematician and Catholic priest. After emigrating to the United States, he taught mathematics in New York City, at Georgetown College in D.C., and finally at South Carolina College in Columbia. Whilst in New York he published A New Treatise on the Use of the Globes, and Practical Astronomy; or a Comprehensive View of the System of the World. He was an occasional correspondent of Thomas Jefferson. |
James Wallace (mathematician) | References | References
Category:1850 deaths |
James Wallace (mathematician) | Table of Content | Infobox scientist
, References |
File:Good Boy (tv series)-poster.png | Summary | Summary |
File:Good Boy (tv series)-poster.png | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Good Boy (tv series)-poster.png | Table of Content | Summary, Licensing |
Hardiya Panchayat | Multiple issues | Hardiya is a Gram Panchayat located in the Raxaul Block of East Champaran district in the Indian state of Bihar, India It lies near the India-Nepal border, close to the town of Raxaul. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Geography | Geography
Hardiya covers a total area of approximately 449 hectares. The region is part of the fertile Gangetic plains and experiences a subtropical climate. Agriculture is the primary occupation due to rich alluvial soil. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Administration | Administration
Hardiya functions under the Panchayati Raj system. The village is governed by a Gram Panchayat and administrated by an elected Mukhiya. As of the latest available data, the Mukhiya is Kabir Alam. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Demographics | Demographics
As per the 2011 Census of India, Hardiya has a total population of 11,458 living in 1,953 households. There are 5,943 males and 5,515 females, resulting in a sex ratio of 928 females per 1,000 males. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Age Distribution | Age Distribution
Children aged 0–6 years number 2,585, accounting for 22.56% of the population. The child sex ratio is 954, higher than the Bihar average of 935. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Literacy | Literacy
The literacy rate of Hardiya is 58.01%, which is below the state average of 61.80%. Male literacy is 70.43%, while female literacy is 44.51%. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Caste Composition | Caste Composition
Scheduled Castes make up 7.81% of the population (895 people), and only one individual belongs to the Scheduled Tribes. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Economy | Economy
Most residents of Hardiya are engaged in agriculture. Out of the total population, 3,389 individuals are workers. Among them, 3,280 are main workers, while 109 are marginal workers. Of the main workers, 495 are cultivators and 2,274 are agricultural labourers. |
Hardiya Panchayat | Education and Infrastructure | Education and Infrastructure
The Panchayat has several schools providing primary and upper primary education:
Ums Hardiya: Classes 1–8, 10 teachers, 503 students (249 boys, 254 girls)
Nps Kadamawa Tola: Classes 1–5, 3 teachers, 103 students (52 boys, 51 girls)
Ums Ratanpur: Classes 1–8, 8 teachers, 427 students (221 boys, 206 girls)
Hardiya is connected to Raxaul by motorable roads. Raxaul town provides access to higher education, healthcare, and transportation facilities. |
Hardiya Panchayat | See also | See also
Raxaul
East Champaran district
Panchayati raj (India) |
Hardiya Panchayat | References | References
Category:Villages in East Champaran district
Category:East Champaran district
Category:Gram panchayats in Bihar |
Hardiya Panchayat | Table of Content | Multiple issues, Geography, Administration, Demographics, Age Distribution, Literacy, Caste Composition, Economy, Education and Infrastructure, See also, References |
Mbanie Island | Short description | Mbanie Island, also spelled as Mbanié, is an island in the Gulf of Guinea administered by Equatorial Guinea. The island is the largest in an archipelago containing the smaller islands of Conga and Cocoteros. It is in area, and only sparsely populated with fishermen. Control of the island and the larger archipelago had been disputed between Equatorial Guinea and Gabon for decades, until the International Court of Justice ruled in 2025 the territory belonged to Equatorial Guinea.
Control of the island was first described in the Treaty of Paris in 1900, which supposedly gave control of the territory to Spanish Guinea. After becoming independent as Equatorial Guinea in 1968, the islands were soon after claimed by the neighboring and newly-independent Gabon, which took control of the island through military force four years later in 1972. The invasion defeated the small Equatorial Guinean force stationed on the island and replaced them with Gabonese ones, creating tension between the two nations. Before escalation continued, the Bata Convention in 1974 redrew the territory's borders in favor of Gabon, giving them the islands.
After the discovery of oil around the islands in the early 2000s, tension between the two nations started again, prompting Gabon's Minister of National Defense and the President's son Ali Bongo to visit the island and reassert Gabon's claim, much to the resentment of Equatorial Guinea. Despite diplomatic efforts made by both nations presidents afterwards, no agreements were reached for years, possibly because of outside influence from French and American multinational oil producers favoring different outcomes. In wake of the stalemate, it was decided in 2004 the United Nations would be responsible for mediating the solution, which tasked the job to the International Court of Justice in 2016. After proceedings began in 2021 and lasted until 2025, the ICJ ruled the original Treaty of Paris was valid, and the Bata Convention which had been left unsigned was legally void. |
Mbanie Island | Geography | Geography
Mbanie is the largest island of an archipelago in the Gulf of Guinea, also containing the islands Conga and Cocoteros. It is in area, and only sparsely populated with fishermen. The closest mainland point to the island is Pointe Mdombo in Gabon, about away. The archipelago is known to have commercially viable oil reserves in the waters surrounding it, with amounts totaling over "several hundred thousand barrels", according to British expert on oil and gas in Africa Nicholas Shaxson in the early 2000s. Modern-day oil estimates made by S&P Global were created by measuring the product of oil production bordering the disputed area, which amounts to 31,000 barrels of crude per day, and 743 million barrels of oil equivalent in recoverable resources. Large amounts of fish are also believed to be present in the waters surrounding the territory. |
Mbanie Island | History | History
One of the first mentions of the island was in the 27 June 1900 Treaty of Paris, which defined the territories of the French and Spanish colonies in the region, supposedly giving control of the island to Spanish Guinea. In the mid-1950s, a small French presence on the island was discovered and soon after removed by Spanish authorities without protest from France. On 12 October 1968, the colony gained independence from Spain as Equatorial Guinea, and likewise the ownership of the island were transferred to the newly-independent nation. In 1972, the Armed Forces of Gabon invaded and took control of the island from the Armed Forces of Equatorial Guinea troops stationed there, and began to administer it as their own. The short invasion, which saw the President of Gabon Omar Bongo place the flag of Gabon on the island, created "real tension" and a "very complex" situation between the two nations according to French officials, which had to be mediated by the President of Zaire Mobutu Sese Seko. In relation to the island's change in control, on 12 September 1974, the Bata Convention redrew the territories borders in Gabon's favor, giving the island to them. |
Mbanie Island | Territorial dispute | Territorial dispute
Since the 1970s, the neighboring nation of Gabon had laid claims to the island, along with its sister islands Conga and Cocoteros, and began administering them after taking control of them in the 1972 military operation. After the prospects of commercially viable oil reserves were revealed to exist around the archipelago in the 2000s, however, debate over the control of the islands restarted as both nations were also significant oil producers, and a proper exploration of the surrounding waters couldn't begin with the active dispute. In February 2003, Gabon's Minister of National Defense and the President's son Ali Bongo visited the island, asserting Gabon's claim to it while there. The declaration was immediately met with resentment by Equatorial Guinea, with Prime Minister Cándido Muatetema Rivas stating on a radio broadcast shortly afterward their "deep concerns" for Gabon's "illegal occupation".
The dispute became complicated after Gabon's claim over the islands was supported by France, as Gabon had formerly been their colony, and as such the French multinational oil producer TotalEnergies SE operated much of the oil output of the nation and would likely profit from Gabon's control of the island's oil reserves. Conversely in Equatorial Guinea, American multinational oil producers Exxon Mobil, Hess, and Marathon Oil operated much of the oil output of the nation after helping them discover oil in 1995, and likewise were more keen on supporting Equatorial Guinea's claim. After the 2003 incident, proposals were made by both nations presidents: with President Bongo of Gabon suggesting Equatorial Guinea become their counterpart in a "joint exploitation" for oil in the territory, and President Teodoro Obiang of Equatorial Guinea stating he'd consider conciliatory negotiations like the joint exploitation, but would not rule out his claim to the territory. With both nations at a stalemate after years of failing to make a diplomatic solution, both nations agreed to have Yves Fortier, a mediator from the United Nations (UN), settle the dispute on 19 January 2004. The decision to find a diplomatic solution was supported by the US in response to the growing influence of the oil trade organization OPEC in both Equatorial Guinea and Gabon, and likewise hosted the foreign ministers of both nations in New York where a communiqué agreement was signed.
This UN mediation led to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) agreeing to settle the dispute with the permission of both nations in 2016. The dispute was brought before a panel of fifteen judges in The Hague on 5 March 2021, where proceedings on the case began. Initial briefs were made by Equatorial Guinea on 5 October 2021 and Gabon on 5 May 2022. The main cases were presented by both nations in October 2024, with Equatorial Guinea led by Vice Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons Domingo Mba Esono, and neighboring nations represented by teams of lawyers, government officials, diplomats, and cartographers. The main argument presented by Equatorial Guinea was the claim the Bata Convention's agreement was void as the original agreement could not be produced by Gabon and only photocopies remained, as well as being unsigned. Conversely, President of the Constitutional Court of Gabon Marie-Madeleine Mborantsuo previously claimed the Bata Convention "resolves all sovereignty issues regarding the islands and border delimitation". On 19 May 2025, the ICJ made their final ruling asserting Equatorial Guinea had control of the archipelago containing the island, according to the 1900 Treaty of Paris. The 1974 Bata Convention was referred to by ICJ jurist Julia Sebutinde as "not a treaty having the force of law". The ruling further stated Gabon was to remove the small military presence they had on the island. |
Mbanie Island | See also | See also
List of islands of Equatorial Guinea
– Another dispute over oil-rich land in the Gulf of Guinea, between Nigeria and Cameroon |
Mbanie Island | References | References
Category:Equatorial Guinea–Gabon border
Category:Former disputed islands
Category:Islands of Equatorial Guinea
Category:Populated places in Litoral (Equatorial Guinea)
Category:Territorial disputes of Equatorial Guinea
Category:Territorial disputes of Gabon |
Mbanie Island | Table of Content | Short description, Geography, History, Territorial dispute, See also, References |
Draft:Battle of Ljubljana Airport | AfC submission | |
Draft:Battle of Ljubljana Airport | Notes | Notes |
Draft:Battle of Ljubljana Airport | References | References |
Draft:Battle of Ljubljana Airport | Table of Content | AfC submission, Notes, References |
Marlman Flying Girder | Short description | The Marlman Flying Girder was a low-cost American cropduster developed in the 1950s. |
Marlman Flying Girder | Design and development | Design and development
The Flying Girder was the project of Colorado-based William A. Marlman. Two aluminum channels, in length, were bolted together to form a single box-section beam that formed the basis of the design. A Lycoming engine, driving a tractor propeller, was fitted to the foremost point of the box beam. Positioned behind the engine was a simple slab-sided enclosed fuselage. The aircraft had a constant chord rectangular wing planform, with no dihedral. The wings featured full-span flaps, and endplates fitted to the wingtips. A conventional tailplane and tailfin were located at the aftmost point of the box beam. The Flying Girder was fitted with a fixed conventional undercarriage.
To cater to its intended function as an agricultural aircraft, it was designed to spread both dust and sprays. A hopper was incorporated into the rear of the fuselage, and tanks were built into the wings. |
Marlman Flying Girder | Operational history | Operational history
By early 1957 the aircraft had been approved by the CAA. Its operational history is not known. |
Marlman Flying Girder | Specifications | Specifications |
Marlman Flying Girder | See also | See also |
Marlman Flying Girder | References | References
Category:1950s United States agricultural aircraft
Category:Monoplanes
Category:Single-engined tractor aircraft
Category:Aircraft with fixed conventional landing gear |
Marlman Flying Girder | Table of Content | Short description, Design and development, Operational history, Specifications, See also, References |
Category:Ambassadors of Saudi Arabia to San Marino | Portal | San Marino
Saudi Arabia
Category:San Marino–Saudi Arabia relations |
Category:Ambassadors of Saudi Arabia to San Marino | Table of Content | Portal |
Category:San Marino–Saudi Arabia relations | Foo–Bar relations category | |
Category:San Marino–Saudi Arabia relations | Table of Content | Foo–Bar relations category |
Wikipedia:Automated taxobox system/map/hilite/doc | Documentation subpage | |
Wikipedia:Automated taxobox system/map/hilite/doc | Usage | Usage
This template is used to produce appropriate highlighting of transclusion counts in the tables at Wikipedia:Automated taxobox system/map#Taxobox-related modules and templates. It has no other use. |
Wikipedia:Automated taxobox system/map/hilite/doc | Table of Content | Documentation subpage, Usage |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Infobox football club season
| In the 2024–25 season, Unione Sportiva Salernitana 1919, having just been relegated from Serie A, competed in Serie B and the Coppa Italia. The club concluded the league campaign in 17th place after a difficult and inconsistent season, marked by the appointment of four different head coaches.
On 11 November 2024, head coach Giovanni Martusciello was relieved of his duties, just months after signing a two-year contract in July. The decision came in response to the team’s poor performance, having dropped to 17th place in the league table with only two points earned from five games. |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Transfers | Transfers |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | In | In
PlayerTransferred fromFeeDateSource Yayah Kallon Hellas VeronaLoan Lorenzo Amatucci FiorentinaLoan Tijs Velthuis Sparta RotterdamLoan Fabio Andrea Ruggeri LazioLoan Andrés Tello CataniaLoan Roberto SorianoUndisclosed Jeff Reine-AdélaïdeUnattached Szymon Włodarczyk Sturm GrazFree Paweł Jaroszyński CracoviaFree Ernesto Torregrossa PisaFree Petar Stojanović EmpoliLoan Gian Marco Ferrari SassuoloFree Ajdin Hrustic Hellas VeronaUndisclosed Alberto Cerri ComoLoan Antonio Pio Iervolino TarantoLoan return Antonio Raimondo BolognaLoan Tommaso Corazza BolognaLoan Stefano Girelli SampdoriaLoan Luka Lochoshvili CremoneseLoan Juan Guasone Estudiantes de La PlataLoan Fabrizio Caligara SassuoloLoan Oliver Christensen FiorentinaLoan Federico Zuccon Juve StabiaLoan |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Out | Out
PlayerTransferred toFeeDateSource Matteo Lovato SassuoloLoan Lassana Coulibaly Lecce€1,800,000 Boulaye Dia LazioLoan Kaleb Jiménez CataniaFree Flavius Daniliuc Hellas VeronaLoan Junior Sambia EmpoliLoan Antonio Pio Iervolino TarantoLoan Mamadou Coulibaly CatanzaroUndisclosed Domagoj Bradarić Hellas VeronaLoan Guillermo Ochoa AVSFree Mateusz Łęgowski Yverdon SportLoan Kostas Manolas PannaxiakosFree Gregorio Salvati Roma CityFree Andres Şfaiţ CFR ClujUndisclosed Tijs Velthuis Sparta RotterdamLoan return Nicola Dalmonte CataniaLoan Antonio Pio Iervolino Żabbar St. PatrickLoan Vincenzo Fiorillo CarrareseLoan Yayah Kallon Hellas VeronaLoan return Ernesto Torregrossa CarrareseUndisclosed Giulio Maggiore BariLoan Diego Valencia Universidad CatólicaFree |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Competitions | Competitions |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Serie B | Serie B |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Lague table | Lague table |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Results by round | Results by round |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Matches | Matches |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Relegation play-out | Relegation play-out |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Coppa Italia | Coppa Italia |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | References | References
Category:US Salernitana 1919 seasons
Category:Italian football clubs 2024–25 season |
2024–25 US Salernitana 1919 season | Table of Content | Infobox football club season
, Transfers, In, Out, Competitions, Serie B, Lague table, Results by round, Matches, Relegation play-out, Coppa Italia, References |
Mishō Nishikawa | short description | is a Japanese professional baseball outfielder for the Chiba Lotte Marines in Nippon Professional Baseball. |
Mishō Nishikawa | External links | External links |
Mishō Nishikawa | References | References
Category:2003 births
Category:Living people
Category:Aoyama Gakuin University alumni
Category:Baseball people from Wakayama Prefecture
Category:Japanese baseball players
Category:Nippon Professional Baseball outfielders
Category:Chiba Lotte Marines players |
Mishō Nishikawa | Table of Content | short description, External links, References |
Category:Senegalese women ambassadors | [[Category:Women ambassadors]] | Category:Women ambassadors
Category:Senegalese women diplomats
¥ |
Category:Senegalese women ambassadors | Table of Content | [[Category:Women ambassadors]] |
Draft:Rishikaa Singh Chandel | Infobox person
| Rishikaa Singh Chandel (born September 1, 1995) is an Indian actress working in the television industry. She is known for playing the lead role in the Nai Soch serial aired on Doordarshan. Her father Yashwant Singh is a businessman, and her mother Archana Singh is a homemaker.
Early Life
Rishikaa was born on September 1, 1995. She completed her schooling from S.D.S. Public School in Chapra, Bihar. She obtained her Master's degree in Journalism & Mass Communication from Nalanda Open University in Patna. She belongs to Chapra in the Saran district.
Career
Rishikaa Singh Chandel began her television career in 2017 with the show CID on Sony TV. She later appeared in Doordarshan's serial Dulhari. She has also acted in shows like Bhabhi Ji Ghar Par Hain (Colors TV), Savdhaan India (Life OK), Jai Santoshi Maa (&TV), and Vidya (Colors TV).
She gained popularity for her lead role as Damini in Nai Soch aired on Doordarshan.
She played a negative lead role as Sarita in the show Lovepantii, available on MX Player. |
Draft:Rishikaa Singh Chandel | Table of Content | Infobox person
|
Oleh Ishchenko | short description | Oleh Ivanovych Ishchenko (; born 10 October 1956) is a Ukrainian politician who was a People's Deputy of Ukraine from 1995 to 2002, representing the city of Chernivtsi's from 1995 to 1998 and Ukraine's 165th electoral district in Ternopil Oblast from 1998 to 2002. |
Oleh Ishchenko | Biography | Biography
Oleh Ivanovych Ishchenko was born 10 October 1956 in the city of Berezhany, in western Ukraine, to an ethnically Ukrainian family. He studied at Taras Shevchenko University of Kyiv, graduating from the law faculty in 1978, and he worked as a lawyer in the city of Chernihiv from 1978 to 1991 before serving as director of several companies.
Ishchenko was first elected to the Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian parliament) in the 1994 Ukrainian parliamentary election for the city of Chernivtsi's . At the time of his election, he was an independent and chairman of the board at a company known as the Russian-Ukrainian Petroleum Society.
During the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election Ishchenko was re-elected to the Verkhovna Rada, this time representing the newly-established 165th electoral district in Ternopil Oblast. At the time, he was a member of the People's Movement of Ukraine (abbreviated Rukh). He was involved in Rukh'''s 1999 split, after party leader Viacheslav Chornovil described him as a "gas oil shark" and claimed that he had bribed the faction of Rukh opposed to Chornovil with one million dollars to remove him from office. He left Rukh'' in October of the same year to join the Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united), which he was part of until July 2000, when he joined Petro Poroshenko's Solidarity faction. He was a member of the Finance and Banking Activities Committee.
Ishchenko did not run in the 2002 Ukrainian parliamentary election. |
Oleh Ishchenko | References | References
Category:1956 births
Category:Living people
Category:Second convocation members of the Verkhovna Rada
Category:Third convocation members of the Verkhovna Rada
Category:Independent politicians in Ukraine
Category:People from Berezhany
Category:People's Movement of Ukraine politicians
Category:Petro Poroshenko Bloc politicians
Category:Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united) politicians
Category:University of Kyiv, Law faculty alumni |
Oleh Ishchenko | Table of Content | short description, Biography, References |
Daito Yamamoto | short description | is a Japanese professional baseball outfielder for the Chiba Lotte Marines in Nippon Professional Baseball. |
Daito Yamamoto | External links | External links |
Daito Yamamoto | References | References
Category:2002 births
Category:Living people
Category:Baseball people from Tottori Prefecture
Category:Japanese baseball players
Category:Nippon Professional Baseball outfielders
Category:Chiba Lotte Marines players |
Daito Yamamoto | Table of Content | short description, External links, References |
Category:Permanent Representatives of Senegal to the United Nations Office in Vienna | Portal | *Vienna
Senegal |
Category:Permanent Representatives of Senegal to the United Nations Office in Vienna | Table of Content | Portal |
Template:Did you know nominations/Lutterodt photographers | DYKsubpage
| |
Template:Did you know nominations/Lutterodt photographers | Table of Content | DYKsubpage
|
Draft:Eleodes pedinoides | Speciesbox
| Eleodes pedinoides is a species of desert stink beetle in the family Tenebrionidae. |
Draft:Eleodes pedinoides | References | References |
Draft:Eleodes pedinoides | Table of Content | Speciesbox
, References |
Parvathi Ravi Ghantasala | Short description | Parvathi Ravi Ghantasala (born 7 April 1961) is an Indian Bharatanatyam dancer, choreographer, and teacher. She founded the Kalasri School of Performing Arts in Chennai and is known for her ballets inspired by the legacy of her father-in-law, the musician Ghantasala Venkateswara Rao, and the saint-poet Annamayya. |
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