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Edmond Jules Isidore Leburton (18 April 1915 – 15 June 1997) was a Belgian politician and former Prime Minister. He first entered Parliament representing Huy, Belgium. Prime Minister of Belgium Leburton served as the 42nd Prime Minister of Belgium from January 1973 to April 1974. A number of reforms were carried out under Leburton's government, including a law on 'prolonged minority' (June 1973) to safeguard people with mental disabilities, the introduction of annual adjustments to pensions to the level of economic prosperity (March 1973), and the passage of an Act which strengthened the rights of tenants (November 1973). In addition,Waremme, aged 82. Honours The list of all Honours is published on the carte de Deuil, 1997. : Minister of State, by Royal Decree. : Grand Cordon in the Order of Leopold, by Royal Decree of 16.04.1977. : Grand Cross in the Order of Leopold II. : Croix de Guerre. Knight Grand Cross in the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic Knight Grand Cross in the Order of Orange-Nassau. Knight Grand Cross in the Order of the Oak Crown. Knight Grand Cross in the Order of the Aztec Eagle. Knight Grand Cross in the Order of Isabella the Catholic.Knight Grand Cross in the Order of King Abdul Aziz. Grand Officer in the Legion of Honour See also Politics of Belgium References Growth to Limits. The Western European Welfare States Since World War II by Peter Flora http://aei.pitt.edu/9801/1/9801.pdf https://web.archive.org/web/20160303203621/http://www.pomonaproject.org/Annex_VIII2_Belgium_Report.pdf External links Obituary |- Category:1915 births Category:1997 deaths Category:People from Waremme Category:Belgian Socialist Party politicians Category:Prime Ministers of Belgium Category:Presidents of the Chamber of Representatives (Belgium) Category:Belgian Ministers of State Category:Recipients of the Grand Cross of the Order of Leopold II Category:Grand Crosses of the Order of the Oak Crown Category:Grand Crosses 1st class of the Order of Merit of
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"Like a Boy" is a song performed by American singer Ciara for her second album Ciara: The Evolution (2006). Written by Ciara, Candice Nelson, Balewa Muhammad, J. Que, Ezekiel Lewis, and Calvin Kenon, it is the third release in the U.S. and second single in Europe (see 2007 in music). The release was confirmed in a MTV News article and chosen before polling ended for Ciara's second single on her official myspace page, being picked over "That's Right" and "Can't Leave 'Em Alone". Although the single was a moderate hit, it failed to match the success of its North Americanpredecessor. It was solicited to mainstream urban radio on February 13, 2007. The single was released in the United Kingdom on April 2, 2007. Theme and composition "Like a Boy" which was written by Ciara, Candice Nelson, Balewa Muhammad, J. Que, Ezekiel Lewis, and Calvin Kenon,and Keri Hilson details about double standards in society of how men in relationships can do certain things like staying out late, but when women do it is seen as disrespectful. According to Ciara, "it's a record for my women" and she had "a lot of girl talks". Ciara wanted to know what it wouldbe like if "the roles were reversed". "It's a female-empowerment record". The protagonist wishes to "act like a boy". The song is notable for its mixture of synthesized orchestral strings and hard-pounding hip-hop instrumental. Ciara also co-produced the song along with The Evolution track "My Love". Critical reception and promotion "Like a Boy" was well received by critics. Bill Lamb of About.com wrote that Ciara gives a "breathlessness delivering" and says the song is "intoxicating". Jody Rosen of Entertainment Weekly wrote the song is "par excellence" and "stirring revenge fantasy". Britain's Manchester Evening News published that the song has an"epic instrumental", "gymnastic style vocals", and "photocopied lyrics", but it is "guaranteed to be a smash hit in the U.S." Chocolate Magazine published it is "one of her best tracks so far" and shows her mature side. YourSpins.com had a contest where fans had a chance to remix "Like a Boy" and meet Ciara, if the remix is saved. On April 3, 2007, Ciara made an appearance on the reality show Dancing with the Stars, where she performed "Like a Boy". She did her famous matrix in a pair of high heels. While the song was at the height ofits popularity Ciara's name was featured in a Sprint campaign along with Joss Stone and My Chemical Romance. On June 26, 2007, Ciara performed a medley of "Like a Boy" and "That's Right" at the 2007 BET Awards. Chart performance On the issue dated March 17, 2007, "Like a Boy" debuted on the US Billboard Hot 100 at number 81. On the issue dated May 5, 2007, the single reached its peak position at number nine on the chart. The song spent a total of 20 weeks on the chart. The song also peaked at number six on the USHot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, giving Ciara her sixth top-ten single on the chart. The song was ranked at number 68 on the Billboard Year End singles of 2007, and is the most successful year-end single from the album. On September 6, 2019, the single was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for sales of over a million digital copies in the United States. Internationally, the song achieved moderate success. In Sweden, the song debuted at number 19 and peaked at number 8 in its second week, becoming her first top ten in the country. The song wasMs. D), who also directed Ciara's "Promise" video. It was shot in late January, over a three-day period and edited by Paul Martinez. The video premiered on Yahoo! Music and BET's Access Granted on February 21, 2007. The video received a "First Look" on MTV's TRL on February 23, 2007 and debuted at #10 on February 26, 2007 and peaked at #4. "Like a Boy" premiered on The Box on March 9, 2007. On March 8, 2007, it debuted on BET's 106 & Park at #8 and peaked at #1. It peaked at #5 on the iTunes video charts. Thesong made number thirty-three on BET's Top 100 Video Countdown of 2007. Synopsis The black and white video begins with Ciara dressed like a boy sitting in a chair. She is sporting painted on tattoos and says, "2007. Ladies, I think it's time to switch roles." Next, Ciara confronts her boyfriend played by football player Reggie Bush throughout the video. During the first verse and chorus, Ciara dances with her male alter ego. The rest of the video, Ciara and female dancers, who are all dressed in more masculine styles, perform masculine choreography. After the bridge, there is a breakdownand Ciara performs her famous matrix as in the "Goodies" video. The video version of the song features different edits from the album version. Ciara's Video Tattoos "Need Love" - The one on the top part of her hand "Like a Boy" - The side part of her right hand "Fear No Man but God" - On her arm An angel and it says "Sucker for Love" A caricature of a tomboy and the girl has her hat to the back. It says "Princess" and symbolizes Ciara. "Rest in Peace, Baby Angel Astin" - Ciara's niece that died not longafter birth. "C" with a crown on it on her neck. "A" - On her left hand which stands for Atlanta. It has Decatur and above it says "Zone Three", which is Riverdale and where Ciara has the keys to the city. Reception "Like a Boy" was nominated for "Best Choreography in a Video" (Choreog.-Jamaica Craft) at the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards, but the award was given to Justin Timberlake's "My Love" featuring T.I. The music video was also nominated for "Video of the Year" at the 2007 BET Awards, but lost to Beyoncé Knowles' "Irreplaceable." The video became
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Matthew Joseph Jasen (December 13, 1915 – February 4, 2006) was an American lawyer and politician. Life Born in Buffalo, New York, he was the son of Joseph J. Jasen and Celine (Perlinski) Jasen. He graduated from Canisius College, and LL.B. from University at Buffalo Law School, and was admitted to the bar in 1940. He married Anastasia Gawinski (d. 1970), and they had four children. He took a special wartime course at Harvard University's Civil Affairs Training School, and during the later part of World War II, was a Military Government Officer in Europe. After the war, he waswhich to choose the new Chief Judge, but Lawrence H. Cooke was selected. He retired from the Court of Appeals at the end of 1985 when he reached the constitutional age limit of 70 years. Jasen died on February 6, 2006 in Orchard Park, New York. References The History of the New York Court of Appeals, 1932-2003 by Bernard S. Meyer, Burton C. Agata & Seth H. Agata (pages 26f) Court of Appeals judges External links Jasen law firm Bio on his official site Category:1915 births Category:2006 deaths Category:New York Court of Appeals judges Category:Canisius College alumni Category:University at Buffalo
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Summoner 2 is an action role-playing game developed by Volition and published by THQ as the sequel to Summoner. It was originally released for PlayStation 2 in 2002 and was re-released for the GameCube in 2003 with some visual changes as Summoner: A Goddess Reborn. The game features improved visuals and a more real-time, action-oriented combat system from the original. Instead of Joseph, the player now takes on the role of Maia, Queen of Halassar, who is the goddess Laharah reborn, and can transform herself into a variety of "summonable" creatures. Maia must heal the legendary Tree of Eleh, the
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Alejandro Martín Bordonaro (born April 20, 1988 in Córdoba, Argentina) is an Argentine football player currently playing for Unión La Calera of the Primera División in Chile. Teams Universitario de Córdoba 1999-2002 General Paz Juniors 2003-2006 Cádiz B 2006-2007 Banco de Córdoba 2008-2009 José Gálvez 2010 Central Norte 2011-2012 San Lorenzo de Alem 2012-2014 Villa San Carlos 2014 Ferro Carril Oeste 2015 Unión La Calera 2015–present References Profile at BDFA Category:1988 births Category:Living people Category:Argentine footballers Category:Argentine expatriate footballers Category:Cádiz CF B players Category:General Paz Juniors footballers Category:Ferro Carril Oeste footballers Category:Villa San Carlos footballers Category:José Gálvez FBC footballers Category:Central
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is a railway station on the Ryōmō Line in Maebashi, Gunma Prefecture, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). It is one of two main railway stations of Maebashi; the other is Chūō Maebashi Station of the private railway operator Jōmō Electric Railway. Lines Maebashi Station is served by the Ryōmō Line, and is located 81.9 kilometers from the starting point of the line at Oyama Station. Some Shōnan Shinjuku Line and the Ueno-Tokyo Line services also originate at this station. Station layout Maebashi Station has two elevated island platforms serving three tracks, with the station building underneath.The station has a Midori no Madoguchi ticket office. Platforms Platform 1 mainly serves Oyama-bound trains, while Platforms 2,3 mainly serve Takasaki-bound trains. Adjacent stations History Maebashi Station was opened by Ryōmō Railway on November 20, 1889. From August 20, 1884, Nippon Railway operated another Maebashi Station on the other side of the Tone River, but this station was closed on December 26, 1889 when a bridge across the river was completed and Nippon Railway trains began sharing the Ryōmō Railway station. Ryōmō Railway was merged into Nippon Railway on January 1, 1897 and Nippon Railway was nationalized on November
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Drumsite is a settlement on Christmas Island, Australia. Is located on the northeast coast, near the capital, Flying Fish Cove. The ethnic composition of the population is Chinese and European. In the area there are migration routes of red crabs that are protected. The Drumsite Village project, a new housing development, was approved by the Gillard administration amid concerns about the growing number of asylum seekers on the island, and is administered by a Queensland company. Two historic sites within the settlement, Bungalow 702 and the Drumsite Industrial Area, are listed on the Australian Commonwealth Heritage List. References Category:Populated places
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Sandra Borgmann (born 25 April 1974) is a German actress. Biography Borgmann is originally from Mülheim and studied German, philosophy and history. She attended the Folkwang School in Essen and joined a theater troupe. She became known for early roles in Oi! Warning and Hotel Elfie. Borgmann frequently portrays the villain in TV roles such as Tatort and Polizeiruf 110. In 2018, she played police investigator Julia Durant in Julia Durant ermittelt. In 2019, she played the deaf leader Elisabeth Doppler in future Germany in the second season of Dark. Borgmann lives in Hamburg and has a son. Selected filmography
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Nora Gordon (29 November 1893, West Hartlepool, County Durham – 11 May 1970, London) was a British film and television actress. She was married to Leonard Sharp. Her daughter was the actress Dorothy Gordon. Selected filmography Facing the Music (1941) Danny Boy (1941) - Mrs. Maloney Old Mother Riley's Circus (1941) - 1st Charwoman Sheepdog of the Hills (1941) - Mrs. Weeks, Varney's housekeeper (uncredited) Somewhere in Camp (1942) - Matron (uncredited) Front Line Kids (1942) - Evacuee organiser Green Fingers (1947) - Mrs. Green (uncredited) Death in High Heels (1947) - Miss Arris The Mark of Cain (1947) -
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Resident Evil: Degeneration, known in Japan as , is an adult animated biopunk action horror film directed by Makoto Kamiya. It is the first full-length motion capture CG animation feature in Capcom's Resident Evil franchise. The film was made by Capcom in cooperation with Sony Pictures Entertainment Japan. Degeneration made its premiere at the 2008 Tokyo Game Show and was released theatrically on October 17, 2008. Unlike the Resident Evil live-action film series, Degeneration is set within the same universe as the original video game series. The main characters are Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield, who appear together forthe first time since the 1998 game Resident Evil 2. Plot In November 2005, Harvardville Airport falls victim to a T-virus attack both from inside the terminal and a crashlanded airline plane. TerraSave worker Claire Redfield coincidentally runs into Senator Ron Davis, a vocal opponent of TerraSave, and they are forced to hide in the VIP lounge with Rani, niece of a TerraSave employee. By nightfall, the airport has been locked down by the local Special Response Team and the United States Marine Corps, aiding evacuated survivors. Officers Angela Miller and Greg Glenn are joined by federal agent Leon S.with the company deleting all of Davis's computer files on WilPharma and recovering G-Virus samples from Curtis's corpse. Cast Paul Mercier as Leon S. Kennedy Alyson Court as Claire Redfield Laura Bailey as Angela Miller Roger Craig Smith as Curtis Miller Crispin Freeman as Frederic Downing Mary Elizabeth McGlynn as Rani's aunt Michelle Ruff as Rani Chawla Michael Sorich as Senator Ron Davis Steven Blum as Greg Glenn Salli Saffioti as Ingrid Hunnigan Production Sony Pictures Entertainment, the distributor of previous Resident Evil films, wanted to create a full CG film version of Biohazard. In 2006, Capcom joined, but theproduction process did not start until a year later, after director Makoto Kamiya, screenwriter Shotaro Suga and Digital Frontier joined the project. In late 2007, seven actors flew to Japan for the shoot. During the ten days stay in Tokyo, the crew benefited from two studios for body and facial capture, then used 50 PCs, total of 200CPUs to do the rendering for 1300 cuts. The Japanese singer and lyricist Anna Tsuchiya sang the ending theme for the film, titled "GUILTY". Release Degeneration made its premiere in Japan on October 10, 2008 at the Tokyo Game Show. It received alimited theatrical release in Japan starting on October 17, 2008 in Shinjuku. The next day, the film opened in Nagoya and Osaka. It also had a limited theatrical release in the United States, opening on November 13 in New York City and November 18 in Los Angeles. A sneak-peek trailer of the first eight minutes of the film was also shown in the North American Home Theater of PlayStation Home. Resident Evil: Degeneration was released on UMD, DVD, and Blu-ray formats in December 2008 (on December 26 in Japan and December 27 in North America). It was later released inthe European Union in January–February 2009. More than 1.6 million home video copies were shipped as of September 2010. The special features include the "Generation of Degeneration" featurette, character profiles, voice bloopers, a mock-up Leon interview, five trailers, two Resident Evil 5 trailers and previews. In the "Generation of Degeneration" special feature, the filmmakers explain that this film is in effect "Resident Evil 4.5", i.e. showing what happens after Resident Evil 4. Mobile game Nokia and Capcom created a game loosely based on the film for the N-Gage mobile gaming service. This game was released on December 18, 2008, whilethe iPhone version was released on May 10, 2009. Despite being a main character in the film, Claire is not playable, with Leon being the sole protagonist and playable character in the game. The game takes place in the airport from the early scenes of the film and also contains enemies not seen in the actual film but seen in previous games, such as Cerberuses and the three Tyrants from Resident Evil, Resident Evil 2, and Resident Evil Code: Veronica. Reception Even though the film had only a limited 2-week / 3-screen theatrical release in Japan, box office sales surpassedfilm was nominated for Best DVD Release. The Blu-ray version has received a high reputation in terms of functionality, such as receiving the "Best in Interactivity Award" at the 1st DEG Japan Awards hosted by Digital Entertainment Group Japan. Sequel On September 14, 2010, Capcom and Sony Pictures Entertainment announced a sequel to the film titled Resident Evil: Damnation, released in 2012. The film features Leon S. Kennedy as its main character and was theatrically released in 3D in Japan. See also References External links Official Sony Pictures Resident Evil Degeneration website Official Capcom Biohazard Degeneration Category:2008 films Category:2000s science
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James David "Buddy" Ryan (February 17, 1931 – June 28, 2016) was an American football coach in the National Football League (NFL) and American Football League (AFL). During his 35-season coaching career, Ryan served as the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles and Arizona Cardinals, as well as the defensive coordinator of the Chicago Bears and Houston Oilers of the NFL. Ryan began his professional coaching career as the defensive line coach for the New York Jets of the AFL for the team's Super Bowl III victory. He became the defensive line coach for the Minnesota Vikings, overseeing the PurplePeople Eaters. He then became the defensive coordinator of the Chicago Bears, who won Super Bowl XX. As defensive coordinator of the Bears, he is credited with creating the 46 defense, and the 1985 team led the league in nearly all defensive statistical categories. Ryan then coached the Eagles, served as defensive coordinator of the Oilers, and coached the Cardinals. He was the father of NFL coaches Rex Ryan and Rob Ryan. Early years Ryan was born on February 17, 1931, and raised in a "small, agricultural-based community" outside of Frederick, Oklahoma. His obituary in The New York Times referencesthe confusion about the year Ryan was born: "His birth year was often listed as 1934; as Rex Ryan said in his memoir, his father had subtracted a few years from his true age to come off as more youthful when first looking for an NFL job." Ryan played college football for Oklahoma A&M University (now Oklahoma State) where he earned four letters as a guard between 1952 and 1955. He served as a sergeant in the United States Army during the Korean War. Coaching High school Ryan began his coaching career at Gainesville High School in Gainesville, Texas, in1957 as an assistant coach under Dub Wooten. When Wooten became head coach at Marshall High School in 1959, Ryan was promoted to head coach at Gainesville where he was also the Athletic Director. After one season at Gainesville, he spent one year as an assistant coach in Marshall, Texas. College In 1961, after completing service in the military, (which included playing on the Fourth Army championship football team in Japan) Ryan was determined to continue coaching football when he returned, and not at the high school ranks. However, with so many great coaches already in Texas, college jobs werehard to find. Carl Speegle, a former coach of Ryan's, contacted Dick Offenhamer, the head coach of the Buffalo Bulls of the University at Buffalo (UB), who needed a defensive line coach and was also preparing for the program's first season at the NCAA Division I level. From 1962 through 1965, the Bulls defense ranked among the national leaders, posting 12 shutouts in that span as well as producing Gerry Philbin. In 1964, Lou Saban, the head coach of the Buffalo Bills of the American Football League (AFL), reportedly offered Ryan a similar job with the Bills, but he receivedto disrupt the passing game. That formed the early basis of the 46 defense. Chicago Bears In 1978, George Halas brought in Ryan as defensive coordinator. With the Bears, Ryan created the 46 defense, named after then Bears safety Doug Plank, but it wasn't until 1981 that the scheme was perfected. This was due in large part to Mike Singletary's ability to single-handedly dominate the middle of the field. The defensive players were so loyal to Ryan that when Bears head coach Neill Armstrong was fired in 1982, the defensive players urged owner George Halas to name Ryan head coachor at least have the new coach keep Ryan as defensive coordinator. Ultimately, Mike Ditka was hired as the head coach. Ryan and Ditka "feuded openly", though Ditka mostly left the defense in Ryan's hands "Ditka challenged Ryan to a fight during halftime" of the Bears' 1985 matchup versus the Miami Dolphins, with the team at 12–0 and trailing 31–10 in a nationally televised Monday Night Football broadcast. "The guys on the team had to separate them—the offense getting Ditka away from Ryan and defensive guys holding Buddy." The Bears went on to lose the game 38–24, which was theiras their head coach. Ryan released running back Earnest Jackson, who had rushed for more than 1,000 yards in both of the previous two seasons, and limited the playing time of veteran quarterback Ron Jaworski. Ryan coached players such as Randall Cunningham, Reggie White, and Andre Waters and drafted Pro Bowlers Seth Joyner, Clyde Simmons, Jerome Brown, Eric Allen, Cris Carter, Fred Barnett, and Keith Jackson. The Eagles made the playoffs in 1988, 1989, and 1990. On October 25, 1987, he came under fire after a game against the Dallas Cowboys by scoring a touchdown in the final seconds, whenthe outcome was no longer in doubt. This was apparently Ryan's revenge against Dallas head coach Tom Landry, who Ryan felt had run up the score against the Eagles' replacement players during the 1987 players' strike, using many of the Cowboys players that had crossed the picket line. On November 22, 1989, Ryan found himself at the center of another scandal, when Cowboys head coach Jimmy Johnson alleged Ryan had taken out a "bounty" on two Cowboys players—then-current Dallas (and former Philadelphia) placekicker Luis Zendejas and quarterback Troy Aikman in a game dubbed "Bounty Bowl" played on Thanksgiving Day atthe jaw" before linebacker Keith McCants and several other Oilers players separated them. Arizona Cardinals After being given a large share of the credit for the success in Houston in 1993, he was named head coach of the Arizona Cardinals in 1994. On arriving in Phoenix, Ryan announced, "You've got a winner in town." Ryan, who also was named general manager of the Cardinals, went 8–8 his first year but had a 4–12 record the following season. He spent two seasons in Arizona and compiled a record of 12–20. Legacy Ryan was an assistant on three different teams to makethe Super Bowl (New York Jets, Chicago Bears, and Minnesota Vikings). He built his reputation as a defensive specialist and was largely credited with implementing and perfecting the 46 defense. Ryan's twin sons have been coaches in the NFL. Rex Ryan was head coach of the Buffalo Bills and New York Jets, and Rob Ryan was an assistant head coach and defensive coordinator for a number of teams. Personal life Ryan was previously married to Doris Ryan, and had three sons: Jim and fraternal twins, Rex and Rob. They divorced after 11 years of marriage, eight months after Rex andRob were born. Ryan met his second wife, Joanie Ryan, in 1968 when the two lived in the same apartment building in the Bayside neighborhood of Queens, while he was an assistant coach with the New York Jets. The two married in 1970. She died in September 2013 after a long battle with Alzheimer's disease. Ryan died on June 28, 2016, on his ranch in Shelbyville, Kentucky, at the age of 85, after a lengthy illness. He was buried at Lawrenceburg Cemetery in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, where he also had a farm. Ryan had battled cancer and suffered a major stroke
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Robert Davis Wooten (born July 21, 1985) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. He was called up to Major League Baseball (MLB) by the Milwaukee Brewers for the first time on July 25, 2013 and made his major league debut the following day against the Colorado Rockies. College career Wooten earned a bachelor's degree in exercise and sport science from the University of North Carolina. During his playing days at North Carolina, the team advanced to three straight College World Series appearances from 2006 to 2008. In 2007, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Chatham A's of theCape Cod Baseball League. Professional career Milwaukee Brewers Wooten made his major league debut for the Brewers against the Colorado Rockies, pitching a scoreless inning. He emerged as a second setup man to closer Jim Henderson, along with Brandon Kintzler. Wooten usually pitched in the 7th inning, Kintzler in the 8th, and Henderson closed it out in the 9th. Wooten didn't make the team out of spring training, but was recalled after Henderson (who was no longer the closer, but a setup man to Francisco Rodriguez) was placed on the DL with right shoulder inflammation. Wooten was outrighted off theBrewers roster on May 28, 2015. Atlanta Braves Wooten was signed by the Braves in January 2016. On May 3, Wooten was released by the Braves. He resigned a minor league deal on May 22. He became a free agent after the season. Cincinnati Reds On December 20, 2016, Wooten signed a minor league contract with the Cincinnati Reds. He elected free agency on November 3, 2018. On January 4, 2019, he re-signed to a minor league deal with the Reds. Wooten announced his retirement from professional baseball on April 18, 2020. Personal life Wooten is a Christian. References External
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Lithospermum parviflorum, commonly called Eastern Prairie Marbleseed, is a species of flowering plant in the forget-me-not family. It is native to the eastern North America. This species is a robust perennial. It produces a cyme of cream colored flowers in late spring and early summer. Although widespread, this species is spotty and uncommon throughout much of its range. Its preferred habitat, somewhat dry calcareous woodlands, barrens, and glades, has been heavily impacted by agriculture and other land-use changes. The only area this species is considered secure in is the Ridge and Valley region of Virginia and West Virginia. In Kentucky,
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Lithospermum parviflorum", {"description":'species of plant'}], ["Species", {}], ["Lithospermum", {}]]
Relations:[["Lithospermum parviflorum", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Lithospermum parviflorum", "parent taxon", "Lithospermum"]] |
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Skúvoy or Skúgvoy () is an island in the central Faroe Islands, located to the south of Sandoy. It is named after the large number of great skua present on the island (who have a habit of attacking intruders). There is only one settlement on the island: Skúvoy on the east coast. There are two mountains: Knúkur (392 m) and Heyggjurin Mikli (391 m). History The Black Death in the 14th century killed all the inhabitants except one woman; her cottage can still be seen. Skúvoy was also the home of Sigmundur Brestisson, the hero of the Færeyinga saga (Saga
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| Nodes:[["Skúvoy", {"description":'village on the Skúvoy island', "alias":['Skuvoy']}], ["Faroe Islands", {}], ["Skúvoy", {}]]
Relations:[["Skúvoy", "country", "Faroe Islands"], ["Skúvoy", "located on terrain feature", "Skúvoy"]] |
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Cris Williamson is an American feminist singer-songwriter and recording artist. She was a visible lesbian political activist, during an era when few who were unconnected to the lesbian community were aware of Gay and Lesbian issues. Williamson's music and insight have served as a catalyst for change in the creation of women-owned record companies in the 1970s. Using her musical talents, networking with other artists working in Women's music, and her willingness to represent those who did not yet feel safe in speaking for themselves, Williamson is credited by many in the LGBT community for her contributions, both artistically, andpolitically, and continues to be a role model for a younger generation hoping to address concerns and obtain recognition for achievements specific to people who have historically been ignored. Biography Early years Williamson was born in 1947 in Deadwood, South Dakota, although her family moved to Colorado and Wyoming when she was still young. Her musical idol at the time was Judy Collins, and Williamson developed a musical style and sound that was similar to that of Collins. She released her first album, The Artistry of Cris Williamson in 1964, when she was sixteen. She became a local musical sensationin Sheridan, Wyoming, releasing two following LPs afterward. Williamson graduated from the University of Denver. She supported herself initially as a school teacher, while at the same time collaborating with other women who were also singer-songwriters and performing artists, and began to network with Holly Near, Meg Christian, and Margie Adam, all musicians who became women artists of stature, forming an entirely new genre of music, primarily about and for women. Career Olivia Records During a radio interview in Washington, D.C. in 1973, Williamson suggested that a record label aimed at gay women would be a good idea. The independent2007 Fringe 2008 Winter Hearts 2010 Gifthorse 2013 Pray Tell References External links Some of Cris' biographical and professional information Category:1947 births Category:Living people Category:American female singer-songwriters Category:American female guitarists Category:American feminists Category:American folk singers Category:American singer-songwriters Category:Feminist musicians Category:LGBT musicians from the United States Category:LGBT people from South Dakota Category:Lesbian artists Category:Lesbian feminists Category:Lesbian musicians Category:Songwriters from South Dakota Category:20th-century American singers Category:21st-century American singers Category:Songwriters from Wyoming Category:People from Deadwood, South Dakota Category:People from Sheridan, Wyoming Category:Women's music Category:Guitarists from Wyoming Category:Guitarists from South Dakota Category:20th-century American women singers Category:21st-century American women singers Category:20th-century American women guitarists Category:20th-century
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| Nodes:[["Cris Williamson", {"description":'American musician'}], ["Singer", {}], ["Singer-songwriter", {}], ["1947", {}], ["South Dakota", {}], ["United States", {}]]
Relations:[["Cris Williamson", "occupation", "Singer"], ["Cris Williamson", "occupation", "Singer-songwriter"], ["Cris Williamson", "date of birth", "1947"], ["Cris Williamson", "place of birth", "South Dakota"], ["Cris Williamson", "country of citizenship", "United States"]] |
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7 and 8 Related to Braille pattern dots-1256 are Braille patterns 12567, 12568, and 125678, which are used in 8-dot braille systems, such as Gardner-Salinas and Luxembourgish Braille. related 8-dot kantenji patterns In the Japanese kantenji braille, the standard 8-dot Braille patterns 2368, 12368, 23468, and 123468 are the patterns related to Braille pattern dots-1256, since the two additional dots of kantenji patterns 01256, 12567, and 012567 are placed above the base 6-dot cell, instead of below, as in standard 8-dot braille. Kantenji using braille patterns 2368, 12368, 23468, or 123468 This listing includes kantenji using Braille pattern dots-1256 for
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| Nodes:[["Braille pattern dots-1256", {"description":'braille pattern', "alias":['⠳']}], ["Braille Patterns", {}]]
Relations:[["Braille pattern dots-1256", "Unicode block", "Braille Patterns"]] |
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The Charlotte Museum of History is a history museum located in Charlotte, North Carolina. Originally founded to be the steward of the 1774 Alexander Rock House, the museum has since expanded its scope to cover all periods of Charlotte's history with exhibits covering everything from the history of music in the city to the experiences of soldiers from Charlotte during the 1st World War. History In 1943, then owner of the 1774 Rock House Mr. Eugene M. Cole donated the structure and surrounding farm to the Western North Carolina Annual Conference of the Methodist Church for a planned retirement communitybeen made, the foundation could not complete a planned nearby reception center on its own. In 1975, the Charlotte city council put the home under the Mint Museum. The home site was called Mint Museum of History until November 1985, when the Mint Museum finished work on expansion that would allow all operations to move to Randolph Road. On October 13, 1986, the Mint Museum voted to go along with the city council's plan to move the museum to the city's parks and recreation department. This resulted from complaints that the Mint Museum lacked interest in history, but the changealso would allow the Mint Museum to focus on fine arts rather than history. The foundation took over administration of the house and museum in 1990. The city required that $2 million be raised, and the foundation exceeded that amount by more than $1 million. Late in 1993, the Charlotte Museum of History moved its archives and a 5000-piece historical collection, divided among many locations, into a 1500-square-foot addition to its 5000-square-foot building. In 1996, the foundation began work on a 36,000-square-foot building. With $7 million raised, the building officially opened October 24, 1999. In 2002, the foundation changed itsname to Charlotte Museum of History, Inc. Exhibits Alexander Homesite The Museum is home to the 1774 Alexander Rock House along with several outbuildings which are a five minute walk from the rear of the main building with tours of the House's interior given on the hour. Completed in 1774, the Rock House is the oldest building in Mecklenburg County and was named to the National Register of Historic Places in 1970. The home is notable not only for its age, but also because it was home to supposed signer of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, Hezekiah Alexander. Siloam School
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| Nodes:[["Charlotte Museum of History", {"description":'history museum in North Carolina, United States'}], ["Museum", {}]]
Relations:[["Charlotte Museum of History", "instance of", "Museum"]] |
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The John W. H. Bassett Theatre is a multi-purpose theatre located in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada on Front Street, in the Metro Toronto Convention Centre. The theatre is regularly used by the CTV Television Network for television shows such as Canadian Idol and Canada's Got Talent. The 1,232 seat, multi-purpose theatre is a self-contained venue within the Metro Toronto Convention Centre's North Building. The adjacent rooms host pre-and post-performance receptions. The theatre also hosts corporate events, a number of nationally televised award shows, community events and national and international TV specials. The theatre was named for John Bassett, the founder
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| Nodes:[["John Bassett Theatre", {"description":'theatre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada'}], ["Toronto", {}], ["Canada", {}]]
Relations:[["John Bassett Theatre", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Toronto"], ["John Bassett Theatre", "country", "Canada"]] |
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Farzana Raja is a Pakistani politician who served as chair of the Benazir Income Support Programme and has been a Member of the National Assembly of Pakistan. Early life and education She was born on 2 January 1970. She received her early education from Government High School in Chaklala, Rawalpindi and completed her college education from Viqar-u-Nisa College in Rawalpindi before obtaining a bachelor's degree from Punjab University in 1989. She is granddaughter of Pir Ilahi Bux. Political career She was elected to the Provincial Assembly of Punjab as a candidate of Pakistan Peoples Party on a reserved seat forwomen in 2002 Pakistani general election. She was elected to the National Assembly of Pakistan as a candidate of Pakistan Peoples Party on a reserved seat for women from Punjab in 2008 Pakistani general election. She became chairwoman of the Benazir Income Support Programme in 2008. In 2012, she was inducted into the federal cabinet of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani without portfolio and was give the status of a federal minister. She was retained in the federal cabinet of incoming Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf. References Category:Pakistan Peoples Party MNAs Category:1970 births Category:Living people Category:University of the Punjab alumni
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| Nodes:[["Farzana Raja", {"description":'pakistani politician'}], ["Pakistan Peoples Party", {}], ["Politician", {}], ["Pakistan", {}], ["University of the Punjab", {}]]
Relations:[["Farzana Raja", "member of political party", "Pakistan Peoples Party"], ["Farzana Raja", "occupation", "Politician"], ["Farzana Raja", "country of citizenship", "Pakistan"], ["Farzana Raja", "educated at", "University of the Punjab"]] |
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A Marriage Has Been Arranged (1904) is a one-act play by British author and dramatist Alfred Sutro. The play premiered at the Garrick Theatre, in London, on March 27, 1904, with Arthur Bourchier playing the role of Mr. Harrisson Crockstead and Violet Vanbrugh as Lady Aline de Vaux. The play presents a single scene in which Mr. Crockstead, a self-made millionaire, proposes marriage to the noble but pennyless young Lady Aline de Vaux, who refuses to marry him but eventually changes her mind after Crockstead makes the girl a strange, unusual offer. It is classified as a comedy of society.
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| Nodes:[["A Marriage Has Been Arranged", {"description":'one-act play'}], ["One-act play", {}]]
Relations:[["A Marriage Has Been Arranged", "instance of", "One-act play"]] |
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Tridrepana bicuspidata is a moth in the family Drepanidae. It was first described by Song, Xue and Han in 2011. It is found in Hainan, China. The length of the forewings is 14–16 mm. The forewings and hindwings are yellow, the forewings with a brown crescent patch below the apex, and indistinct antemedial line and a brown, wavy postmedial line which does not reach the costa. It is bounded exteriorly by an indistinct pale brown line. The submarginal line is composed of a series of blackish spots. The mid-cell, cell and posterodistal spots are white, surrounded with reddish brown. The
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| Nodes:[["Tridrepana bicuspidata", {"description":'species of moth'}], ["Tridrepana", {}]]
Relations:[["Tridrepana bicuspidata", "parent taxon", "Tridrepana"]] |
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Körmend ( Prekmurje Slovene: Karmadén, ) is a town in Vas county (megye), Western Hungary. Places of interest The town is especially well known for its castle which used to belong to the Batthyány family, one of the most important aristocrat families of Hungary. Blessed Ladislaus Batthyány-Strattmann (1870–1931), a famous ophthalmologist who was beatified by the Catholic Church, lived in the castle with his family for nearly 10 years. He turned one of the wings of the castle into an ophthalmology clinic where he treated poor patients for free. Today, the castle belongs to the Hungarian state. Clubs Alternative Student
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| Nodes:[["Körmend", {"description":'town in Hungary', "alias":['Kormend']}], ["Hungary", {}]]
Relations:[["Körmend", "country", "Hungary"]] |
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David Alan Otto (born November 12, 1964) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1987 to 1994 for the Oakland Athletics, Cleveland Indians, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Chicago Cubs. Amateur career Otto is a 1982 graduate of Elk Grove High School. He was also a basketball standout in high school. Otto was originally selected by the Baltimore Orioles in the second round (52nd overall) of the 1982 MLB Draft, but elected to attend the University of Missouri instead. He played DH as well as pitched for the Missouri Tigers from 1983 to 1985.In 1983 and 1984, he played collegiate summer baseball with the Orleans Cardinals of the Cape Cod Baseball League. He was picked in the second round of the 1985 Major League Baseball Draft (39th overall) by the Oakland Athletics, with whom he would sign. Professional career After three years in the minor leagues, he made his debut on September 8, 1987. He spent four seasons with the Athletics, spending most of the year with the minor league Tacoma Tigers each time; in four seasons with the Athletics he played in nine total games at the major league level. He signedwith the Cleveland Indians in 1991, and after two full seasons with them as a starting pitcher, spent a year each as a relief pitcher with the Pittsburgh Pirates and Chicago Cubs, retiring after the 1994 season. Broadcasting career Dave Otto often filled in for Ron Santo on the Chicago Cubs radio broadcasts on WGN Radio. He worked alongside Chip Caray on Fox Sports Net during Steve Stone's two-year absence in 2001-2002 and has worked for Comcast SportsNet Chicago. Personal Otto was a 2000 inductee to the University of Missouri Sports Hall of Fame. References External links Category:1964 births Category:Living
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| Nodes:[["Dave Otto", {"description":'American baseball player', "alias":['David Alan Otto']}], ["Pittsburgh Pirates", {}], ["Chicago Cubs", {}], ["Cleveland Indians", {}], ["Oakland Athletics", {}], ["Chicago", {}], ["Pitcher", {}], ["Baseball", {}]]
Relations:[["Dave Otto", "member of sports team", "Pittsburgh Pirates"], ["Dave Otto", "member of sports team", "Chicago Cubs"], ["Dave Otto", "member of sports team", "Cleveland Indians"], ["Dave Otto", "member of sports team", "Oakland Athletics"], ["Dave Otto", "place of birth", "Chicago"], ["Dave Otto", "position played on team / speciality", "Pitcher"], ["Dave Otto", "sport", "Baseball"]] |
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officer of Seattle-Northwest Securities Corporation, deputy mayor of Seattle, and chief financial officer of the Port of Seattle. Daudon is active in several Seattle-based civic and community organizations including chairing the Washington Student Achievement Council and sitting on the boards of the Bullitt Foundation, the King County Economic Development Council, the Trade Development Alliance, and the Alliance for Education and Leadership Tomorrow Early life and family Daudon was born in Lake Forest, Illinois, just outside Chicago. She began participating in political and community programs at an early age, working alongside her parents who were heavily involved in organizations and campaignsincluding the United Way of Chicago and Planned Parenthood of Chicago. Daudon graduated from Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts, with a bachelor of arts. After receiving her undergraduate degree, she began working on a campaign to rezone downtown Corvallis, Oregon against the threat of an outside shopping center decreasing the neighborhood’s economic viability. The commission wanted to preserve the neighborhood’s economic viability against the proposal of a new shopping center. After the commission secured rezoning, the active commission chairman and Daudon’s mentor at the time prompted her to pursue economics and finance. Daudon listened and pursued a Master of Public
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| Nodes:[["Maud Daudon", {"description":'American businesswoman'}], ["Illinois", {}], ["Hampshire College", {}]]
Relations:[["Maud Daudon", "place of birth", "Illinois"], ["Maud Daudon", "educated at", "Hampshire College"]] |
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Olfactory receptor 4X2 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the OR4X2 gene. Olfactory receptors interact with odorant molecules in the nose, to initiate a neuronal response that triggers the perception of a smell. The olfactory receptor proteins are members of a large family of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) arising from single coding-exon genes. Olfactory receptors share a 7-transmembrane domain structure with many neurotransmitter and hormone receptors and are responsible for the recognition and G protein-mediated transduction of odorant signals. The olfactory receptor gene family is the largest in the genome. The nomenclature assigned to the olfactory receptor genes
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| Nodes:[["OR4X2", {"description":'protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens', "alias":['OR11-105', 'olfactory receptor family 4 subfamily X member 2 (gene/pseudogene)', 'olfactory receptor family 4 subfamily X member 2']}], ["Gene", {}]]
Relations:[["OR4X2", "instance of", "Gene"]] |
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Galib Ran Singh is a village in Jagraon in Ludhiana district of Punjab State, India. It is located from Moga, from Nakodar, from district headquarter Ludhiana and from state capital Chandigarh. The village is administrated by Sarpanch an elected representative of the village. Demography , The village has a total number of 225 houses and the population of 1235 of which 682 are males while 553 are females according to the report published by Census India in 2011. The literacy rate of the village is 78.39%, lower than the state average of 75.84%. The population of children under the age
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| Nodes:[["Galib Ran Singh", {"description":'village in Punjab, India'}], ["Ludhiana district", {}], ["India", {}]]
Relations:[["Galib Ran Singh", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Ludhiana district"], ["Galib Ran Singh", "country", "India"]] |
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Di Nü Hua is a fictional Chinese story about Princess Changping of the Ming Dynasty and her husband/lover, Zhou Shixian. The first known story was a Kunqu script written in the Qing Dynasty, while the second version was a Cantonese opera from the early 1900s later found in Japan and Shanghai. Little information is available from this early 1900s version. The contemporary prevailing version, not meant to be historically accurate, comes from the second Cantonese opera script. The story unfolds as Princess Changping and Zhou Shixian are introduced to each other, participating in an arranged marriage. They meet and get
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| Nodes:[["Di Nü Hua", {"description":'short story'}], ["Princess Changping", {}]]
Relations:[["Di Nü Hua", "characters", "Princess Changping"]] |
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Aegires evorae is a species of sea slug, a nudibranch, a marine, opisthobranch gastropod mollusc in the family Aegiridae. The specific name evorae is in honour of Cesária Évora, a Cape Verdean popular singer. Distribution This species was described from Calhetinha, in the northeast of the island of Sal, Cape Verde Islands. Description Aegires evorae has a cream-white body with a patchy brown overlay which is broken by regularly spaced, circular patches of darker brown dots. The rhinophores have a distinctive narrow band of brown below the tip. Ecology This nudibranch probably feeds on the calcareous sponge, Clathrina coriacea. References
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| Nodes:[["Aegires evorae", {"description":'species of mollusc'}], ["Species", {}], ["Aegires", {}]]
Relations:[["Aegires evorae", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Aegires evorae", "parent taxon", "Aegires"]] |
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Corso Salani (9 September 1961, Florence – 16 June 2010, Ostia) was an Italian director, screenwriter and actor. The cause of his death was a sudden illness while walking along the seafront in Ostia with his wife Margaret. Filmography As Actor The Week of the Sphinx (1990) The Invisible Wall (1991) Nel Continente nero (1992) The End is Known (1992) The Wind, in the Evening (2004) Piano, solo (2007) The Rage (2008) Il mostro di Firenze (2009) Dark Love (2010) As Director Mirna (2009) Il peggio di noi (2006) Corrispondenze private(2003) Occidente (2000) Gli occhi stanchi (1995) Gli ultimi giorni
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| Nodes:[["Corso Salani", {"description":'Italian actor and screenwriter'}], ["Florence", {}], ["Screenwriter", {}], ["Actor", {}]]
Relations:[["Corso Salani", "place of birth", "Florence"], ["Corso Salani", "occupation", "Screenwriter"], ["Corso Salani", "occupation", "Actor"]] |
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{{speciesbox | name = Uropeltis rubrolineata | status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1 | status_ref = | genus = Uropeltis | species = rubrolineata | authority = (Günther, 1875) | synonyms = * S[ilybura]. rubrolineata Günther, 1875 Silybura rubrolineata - Boulenger, 1893 Uropeltis rubrolineatus - M.A. Smith, 1943 Uropeltis (Siluboura) rubrolineatus - Mahendra, 1984 Uropeltis rubrolineata - Das, 1996 }}Common names: red-lined earth snake, red-lined shieldtail, Travancore uropeltis.Uropeltis rubrolineata is a nonvenomous shield tail snake species endemic to southern India. No subspecies are currently recognized. Geographic range It is found in southern India in the Western Ghats: south of
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| Nodes:[["Uropeltis rubrolineata", {"description":'species of reptile'}], ["Species", {}], ["Uropeltis", {}]]
Relations:[["Uropeltis rubrolineata", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Uropeltis rubrolineata", "parent taxon", "Uropeltis"]] |
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Nitin Agrawal is an Indian politician and a member of the 16th Legislative Assembly in India. He represents the Hardoi constituency of Uttar Pradesh and is a member of the Samajwadi Party political party. Early life and education Nitin Agrawal was born in Hardoi district. He attended the Symbiosis International Education Centre and University of Delhi and attained B.Com & MBA degrees. His father is Naresh Chandra Agrawal who was MLA from Hardoi constituency for seven terms and is currently a member of the Rajya Sabha. Political career Nitin Agrawal has been an MLA for two terms. He represented the
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| Nodes:[["Nitin Agrawal", {"description":'Indian politician'}], ["Hardoi district", {}], ["India", {}], ["Politician", {}], ["Nitin", {}]]
Relations:[["Nitin Agrawal", "place of birth", "Hardoi district"], ["Nitin Agrawal", "country of citizenship", "India"], ["Nitin Agrawal", "occupation", "Politician"], ["Nitin Agrawal", "given name", "Nitin"]] |
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Chime is the fourth studio album by Dessa, a member of Minneapolis indie hip hop collective Doomtree. It was released by Doomtree Records on February 23, 2018. Reception Chime peaked at 139 on the Billboard 200 chart. Track listing Credits adapted from liner notes. All lyrics written by Dessa. Personnel Credits adapted from liner notes. Dessa – vocals, lyrics, recording on "Half of You" Andy Thompson – engineer, recording on all tracks except "Half of You", executive production Lazerbeak – executive production Bruce Templeton – mastering Joe Mabbott – mixing on all tracks except "Good Grief" Lance Conrad – mixing
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| Nodes:[["Chime (Dessa album)", {"description":'album by Dessa'}], ["Album", {}], ["Dessa", {}]]
Relations:[["Chime (Dessa album)", "instance of", "Album"], ["Chime (Dessa album)", "performer", "Dessa"]] |
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The government of Tamil Nadu established the Tamil Virtual University (TVU) on 17 February 2001 as a Society.The announcement was made at the closing ceremony of the Second Tamil Internet Conference in 1999 by Dr.M. Karunanidhi. The university provides internet-based educational resources and opportunities for the Tamil diaspora as well as for others interested in learning the Tamil language and acquiring knowledge of the history, art, literature and culture of the Tamils. Tamil Virtual University offers certificate courses at three levels (Basic, Intermediate and Advance) and B.A. Programme in Tamil. The postgraduate Programme M.A. (Tamil) has been approved by Tamil
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| Nodes:[["Tamil Virtual Academy", {"description":'Indian university', "alias":['tamilvu.org']}], ["University", {}]]
Relations:[["Tamil Virtual Academy", "instance of", "University"]] |
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YooHoo to the Rescue is an Italian-Korean computer animated children's television series produced by Aurora World and Mondo TV. It is the third TV series based on the YooHoo & Friends franchise, and serves as a revival of the franchise. The show is the first Netflix original series for children from South Korea. In a series of magical missions, quick-witted YooHoo and his can-do crew travel the globe to help animals in need. It was released March 15, 2019 on Netflix. Plot YooHoo to the Rescue follows the adventures of five animal friends who live in the magical land ofSlo (voiced by Kyle Hebert; David Rintoul in the UK dub) is a male sloth. He is the caretaker of the Sparkling Tree. Lora (voiced by Erica Mendez; Tamsin Heatley in the UK dub) is a female scarlet macaw. She is YooTopia's messenger. Production YooHoo to the Rescue is produced by Aurora World in South Korea and Mondo TV in Italy. Unlike the previous TV series based on the YooHoo & Friends toy franchise, this series is computer animated. The series is recorded at Bang Zoom! Studios. A British dub by VSI Studios was produced and released to Netflix. EpisodesSeason 1 (2019) Season 2 (2019) Release YooHoo to the Rescue was released on March 15, 2019 on Netflix with the first 26 episodes. Media information Mondo TV secured a global licensing and merchandising deal with Panini that will market a line of products that include stickers, trading cards and photocards, set to launch in early 2018. References External links YooHoo to the Rescue on Mondo TV Iberoamerica to the Rescue'' on Netflix Category:Italian animated television series Category:2010s South Korean animated television series Category:Italian comedy television series Category:South Korean comedy television series Category:Italian fantasy television series Category:South Korean fantasy television
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| Nodes:[["YooHoo to the Rescue", {"description":'2019 computer animated children's television series'}], ["Television series", {}], ["Children's television series", {}], ["Netflix", {}]]
Relations:[["YooHoo to the Rescue", "instance of", "Television series"], ["YooHoo to the Rescue", "genre", "Children's television series"], ["YooHoo to the Rescue", "distributed by", "Netflix"]] |
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The Campo del Cielo refers to a group of iron meteorites or to the area where they were found. This area is situated on the border between the provinces of Chaco and Santiago del Estero, northwest of Buenos Aires, Argentina. The crater field covers an area of and contains at least 26 craters, the largest being . The craters' age is estimated as 4,000–5,000 years. The craters, containing iron masses, were reported in 1576, but were already well known to the aboriginal inhabitants of the area. The craters and the area around contain numerous fragments of an iron meteorite. Thetotal weight of the pieces so far recovered is about 100 tonnes, making the meteorite possibly the heaviest one ever recovered on Earth. The largest two fragments, the 30.8-ton Gancedo and 28.8-ton El Chaco, are among the heaviest single-piece meteorite masses recovered on Earth, along with the 60-ton Hoba and a 31-ton fragment of the Cape York meteorite. History In 1576, the governor of a province in Northern Argentina commissioned the military to search for a huge mass of iron, which he had heard that Natives used for their weapons. The Natives claimed that the mass had fallen from thein the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Those samples were later analyzed and found to contain 90% iron and 10% nickel and assigned to a meteoritic origin. Later, many iron pieces were found in the area weighing from a few milligrams to 34 tonnes. A mass of about 1 tonne known as Otumpa was located in 1803. A portion of this mass was taken to Buenos Aires in 1813 and later donated to the British Museum. Other large fragments are summarized in the table below. The mass called el Taco was originally , but the largest remaining fragment weighsalready been moved out of the country, but was returned to Campo del Cielo and is now protected by a provincial law. In 2015, police arrested four alleged smugglers trying to steal more than a ton of protected meteorites. In 2016, the largest single piece of the Campo del Cielo meteorite was unearthed. Named the Gancedo meteorite after the nearby town of Gancedo which lent equipment to aid in the extraction, this nickel-iron meteorite has a mass of 30,800 kg. Originally, it was thought to weigh less than "El Chaco". Due to a suspected lack of precision when "El Chaco"into pieces which fell to the ground. The size of the main body is estimated as larger than 4 meters in diameter. The fragments contain an unusually high density of inclusions for an iron meteorite, which might have facilitated the disintegration of the original meteorite. Samples of charred wood were taken from beneath the meteorite fragments and analyzed for carbon-14 composition. The results indicate the date of the fall to be around 4,200–4,700 years ago, or 2,200–2,700 years BC. The age is estimated to be 4.5 billion years old, formed as part of the development of our solar system. The
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Campo del Cielo", {"description":'group of iron meteorites in Argentina'}], ["Iron meteorite", {}], ["Argentina", {}], ["Museum", {}]]
Relations:[["Campo del Cielo", "instance of", "Iron meteorite"], ["Campo del Cielo", "country", "Argentina"], ["Campo del Cielo", "instance of", "Museum"]] |
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Ronald "Roly" Crichton is a New Zealand para-swimmer and coach. At the 1984 Summer Paralympics, he won a gold medal in the 50m Freestyle 2; silver medals in the 200m Freestyle 2 and 25m Butterfly 2; and a bronze medal in the 100m Individual Medley 2. At the 1988 Summer Paralympics, he won a silver medal in the 200m Freestyle 2, and a bronze medal in the 50m Freestyle 2. Crichton is the coach of para-swimmer Sophie Pascoe, and in the 2019 New Year Honours, he was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to
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| Nodes:[["Roly Crichton", {"description":'New Zealand Paralympian', "alias":['Ronald Crichton']}], ["New Zealand", {}]]
Relations:[["Roly Crichton", "country of citizenship", "New Zealand"]] |
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Meitatsu Yagi (born July 7, 1944) is the eldest son of Meitoku Yagi and followed after him as a teacher and practitioner of Karate. Meitatsu was tutored directly by his father, grand master Meitoku Yagi himself. By training under his father for over fifty years, he was groomed and trained to carry on the legacy of Meibukan Goju-Ryu (hard-soft style) Karate. One of Yagi’s goals has been to spread Meibukan Goju-Ryu Karate throughout the world. Yagi has lived, worked, initiated new dojos and taught Meibukan in several places outside of Okinawa and around the world. Yagi lived in the USfrom 1964 to 1970; in Guam 1971 to 1975; in Saipan 1995 to 1997 and in the Philippines 1997 to 1998. After returning from Guam in 1975, Yagi was given the title of Renshi 6th Dan and became a Director of All Okinawan Karate-Do Association in 1976. Also in 1976, he was given the teaching responsibilities at the Hombu Dojo in Okinawa as President of Goju-Ryu Meibu-kai with Meitetsu Yagi (his younger brother) as Vice-President and Meitoku Yagi as Chairman / Consultant. Meitoku Yagi chose his eldest son Meitatsu to be the first to learn all facets of Meibukan Goju-Ryu.He helped develop and teach all the kata, Renzoku Kumite, Kakomi Kumite, Meibukan Bo, Meibukan Sai, Nihon Kumite, Renzoku form and Kakomi forms. Although many profess to be Meibukan practitioners, many have not learned or practiced the forms developed by him for his style. These forms are an integral part of Meibukan Goju-Ryu. Meitatsu was a director of the All Okinawa Karate-Do Gojyu-Kai for 20 years. He also served a two-year term as President of the Okinawan Karate-Do Goju-Kai in 1987 as well as President of the Hombu Dojo in Kume. In 1995 Meitatsu worked in Saipan and the Philippines,returning in 1998 to help care for his father who was ailing at the time. Meitoku Yagi gave Meitatsu Yagi the title of Hanshi Judan, Okinawa Karate-Do Goju-Kai in 1997. Meitoku Yagi presented only one Hanshi Judan. Meitatsu Yagi travels the world meeting and teaching hundreds of people each year in seminars in India, Canada, Israel, Italy, the USA, England and France as well as South America. Meitatsu has also been very active in promoting the Okinawa Traditional Karatedo Kobudo International Studying Center in Yomitan Village, Okinawa. He is working with Kenyu CHINEN of Shorin-Ryu and Yasuo SHIMOJI of Uechi
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| Nodes:[["Meitatsu Yagi", {"description":'Japanese karateka'}], ["Karate", {}]]
Relations:[["Meitatsu Yagi", "sport", "Karate"]] |
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All-Union Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the Russian SFSR. It became the first national autonomous unit in the Soviet Union after the Donetsk-Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic. It occupied the area of compact settlement of the large Volga German minority in Russia, which numbered almost 1.8 million by 1897. The republic was declared on January 6, 1924. At the moment of declaration of autonomy, an amnesty was announced. However, it eventually was applied to a small number of people. According to the policy of korenizatsiya, carried out in the 1920s in the Soviet Union, usage ofthe German language was promoted in official documents and Germans were encouraged to occupy management positions. According to the 1939 census, there were 366,685 Germans in the autonomy. By January 1, 1941, the Volga Germans Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic included the city of Engels and 22 cantons: Baltsersky, Gmelinsky, Gnadenflyursky, Dobrinsky, Zelmansky, Zolotovsky, Ilovatsky, Kamensky, Krasnoyarsky, Krasnokutsky, Kukkussky, Lizandergeysky, Marientalsky, Marxshtadtsky, Pallasovsky, Staro-Poltavsky, Ternovsky, Untervaldsky, Fedorovsky, Franksky, Ekgeimsky and Erlenbakhsky. The German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 marked the end of the Volga German ASSR. On August 28, 1941, Joseph Stalin issued a formal Decree of Banishment abolishingnow a reality of the post-war world, the Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was never reestablished. The land area is now mostly part of Saratov Oblast, except for a small area in northern Volgograd Oblast. Beginning in the early 1980s and accelerating after the fall of the Soviet Union, many Volga Germans have emigrated to Germany by taking advantage of the German law of return, a policy which grants citizenship to all those who can prove to be a refugee or expellee of German ethnic origin or as the spouse or descendant of such a person. Population The following(World War I participant, chekist, regional party leader, Russian statesman, shot) 1936-1937 Heinrich Lüft (1899–1937) (Russian statesman, shot) 1937-1938 Wladimir Dalinger (1902-1965+) (Russian Civil War participant, security forces officer, Russian statesman, entrepreneur) 1938-1941 Alexander Heckman (1908–1994) (engineer, Russian statesman, GULAG survivor) See also Gustav Klinger Republics of the Soviet Union East Germany Volga German Ethnic German Ethnic cleansing German Quarter References External links Native Volga-German - researcher of his heritage German Villages in the Volga Valley of Russia High resolution map of VGASSR City of Pallasowka, Canton of the Volga-German ASSR Guide to the history of the Communist Party and
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| Nodes:[["Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic", {"description":'autonomous soviet socialist republic of a union republic of the Soviet Union', "alias":['Volga-German Republic']}], ["Soviet Union", {}], ["Saratov Oblast", {}]]
Relations:[["Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic", "country", "Soviet Union"], ["Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic", "replaced by", "Saratov Oblast"]] |
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La Ferté-Saint-Samson is a commune in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region in northern France. Geography A forestry and farming village situated in the Pays de Bray, some southeast of Dieppe at the junction of the D61, the D21 and the D921 roads. Population Places of interest The motte and ruins of a feudal castle. An old house dating from the sixteenth century. A nineteenth-century château. The thirteenth-century chapel of St.Samson. The church of St.Pierre, dating from the tenth century. See also Communes of the Seine-Maritime department Seine-Maritime Normandy References INSEE External links La Ferté-Saint-Samson on the Quid website
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| Nodes:[["La Ferté-Saint-Samson", {"description":'commune in Seine-Maritime, France'}], ["France", {}], ["Seine-Maritime", {}]]
Relations:[["La Ferté-Saint-Samson", "country", "France"], ["La Ferté-Saint-Samson", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Seine-Maritime"]] |
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The Media Project is a weekly radio program that provides an inside look at media coverage of current events. Panelists on the discussion-based show include Times Union Editor Rex Smith, WAMC CEO Alan S. Chartock, and Daily Freeman Publisher Ira Fusfeld. The half-hour program is recorded at WAMC's studios in Albany, New York and distributed by National Productions. During the show, the panelists engage in spirited debate on timely media issues. Print, television, radio, and internet media are covered. In addition, mail from listeners is sometimes read and discussed. The theme song of The Media Project is "Newspapermen Meet SuchInteresting People", composed by Vern Partlow and sung by Pete Seeger. Produced and distributed by WAMC's National Productions, The Media Project airs on WAMC on Sunday at 6:00 p.m. and on Monday at 3:00 p.m., and on several other stations throughout the United States. Panelists Three panelists appear on each show. Chartock and Smith are on nearly every week, but Fusfeld can be heard on a rotational basis. Chartock served as host of the program in its early years, but that duty was eventually taken up by Smith. Current Alan S. Chartock: President and CEO of WAMC (Northeast Public Radio),
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| Nodes:[["The Media Project", {"description":'American weekly radio program'}], ["Radio program", {}], ["United States", {}]]
Relations:[["The Media Project", "instance of", "Radio program"], ["The Media Project", "country of origin", "United States"]] |
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DXKX (91.5 FM), also known as 91.5 Brigada News FM Metro Davao, is a 24-hour news and music FM station owned by Primax Broadcasting Network and operated by Brigada Mass Media Corporation in the Philippines. The station's studio is located at the 3rd floor of Gabucan Building, Ulas, Brgy. Talomo, Davao City with transmitter located at Broadcast Ave., Shrine Hills, Matina, Davao City. History As K-Lite 91.5, K91 FM and Smooth FM (1995–2013) From 1995 to 2013, it was under Primax Broadcasting Network. It used to be a pop/rock masa radio station, with main concentration on OPM alternative and rockartists. By 1998, the station switch to mainstream Top 40 programming under the K91 brand, playing the most popular songs in Billboard Hot 100 and UK Top 40. By 2001, to differ from other pop stations, the radio station shifted to Adult Top 40 programming by adding music of the 80s and 90s to their playlist. By 2003, the station affiliated with Raven Broadcasting Corporation in Manila. It was known then as Citylite 91.5. After a year, the station ceased to be an affiliate with Raven Broadcasting Corporation as, Raven changed management. Citylite changed name to Smooth FM 91.5 butcontinued playing the smooth jazz format. It went off the air sometime in 2013. As Brigada News FM Davao (2015–present) In early 2015, Brigada Mass Media Corporation (which also owns Brigada News Davao tabloid newspaper) acquired the station's airtime lease from Primax Broadcasting Network, in favor of Brigada News FM. The station's old transmitter was replaced with a new transmitter bought from Quark Electronics of Italy. Regular programming were first aired on August 10, 2015. In time for the 30th Kadayawan Festival, on August 23, 2015, Brigada News FM was formally launched. Former Mayor Inday Sara Duterte, Brigada Group of
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| Nodes:[["DXKX", {"description":'radio station in Davao City'}], ["Radio station", {}], ["Davao City", {}], ["Brigada Mass Media Corporation", {}], ["Philippines", {}]]
Relations:[["DXKX", "instance of", "Radio station"], ["DXKX", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Davao City"], ["DXKX", "owned by", "Brigada Mass Media Corporation"], ["DXKX", "country", "Philippines"]] |
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Choerophryne microps is a species of frogs in the family Microhylidae. It is endemic to Western New Guinea and known from the Wondiwoi Mountains, at the base of the Wandammen Peninsula. Common name small-eyed choerophryne has been suggested for it. Description Adult males measure and females in snout–urostyle length. The snout is very long (21–25% of the body length) and pointed. The eyes are relatively small (hence the specific name microps, or "small-eyed", derived from Greek). The tympanum is small and partly covered by the supra-tympanic fold. The fingers and toes bear discs. Both dorsal and ventral surfaces have lightto dark grey ground color, with dark brown markings. There is an hour-glass marking on the dorsum. The male advertisement call is a series of distinctly pulsed notes, typically with 5–9 notes. Each note consists of 9 to 29 pulses, with dominant frequency at 4 kHz. Habitat and ecology Choerophryne microps inhabits primary rain forest at elevations of above sea level. It was found to be locally very common, with highest abundance at intermediate altitudes (500–700 m). Males call from on or in leaf litter or rotting logs, sometimes higher from the ground (to 1 m) in the hollows of
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Relations:[["Choerophryne microps", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Choerophryne microps", "parent taxon", "Choerophryne"]] |
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The Ideographic Research Group (IRG), formerly called the Ideographic Rapporteur Group, is a subgroup of Working Group 2 (WG2) of ISO/IEC JTC1 SC2 (SC2), the subcommittee of the Joint Technical Committee of ISO and IEC which is responsible for developing standards within the field of coded character sets. IRG is composed of experts from China, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam and other countries and regions that use Han characters, as well as experts representing the Unicode Consortium. The group is responsible for coordinating the addition of new CJK unified ideographs to the Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (ISO/IEC 10646) and the1990 to 1993. Since 2004 the rapporteur has been Professor Lu Qin (陸勤) of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. In June 2018 the title of "Rapporteur" was changed to "Convenor". Overview IRG is responsible for reviewing proposals for adding new CJK unified ideographs to the Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (ISO/IEC 10646) and the Unicode Standard, and submitting consolidated proposals for sets of CJK unified ideographs to WG2, which are then processed for encoding in the ISO/IEC 10646 and Unicode standards by SC2 and the Unicode Technical Committee respectively. National and liaison bodies of SC2 that participate in IRG includeChina, Hong Kong, Japan, North Korea, South Korea, Macau, Singapore, Taipei Computer Association, Unicode Consortium, United Kingdom, and Vietnam. As of Unicode version 13.0, the IRG has been responsible for submitting several blocks of CJK unified ideographs and compatibility ideographs for encoding: CJK Unified Ideographs (added in Unicode 1.0) CJK Unified Ideographs Extension A (added in Unicode 3.0) CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B (added in Unicode 3.1) CJK Unified Ideographs Extension C (added in Unicode 5.2) CJK Unified Ideographs Extension D (added in Unicode 6.0) CJK Unified Ideographs Extension E (added in Unicode 8.0) CJK Unified Ideographs Extension F (added
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| Nodes:[["Ideographic Research Group", {"description":'committee, affiliated to ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2 WG2, working on CJKV-related matters for the Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (ISO/IEC 10646)', "alias":['IRG', 'Ideographic Rapporteur Group', 'Chinese/Japanese/Korean Joint Research Group', 'CJK-JRG']}], ["CJK Unified Ideographs", {}]]
Relations:[["Ideographic Research Group", "notable work", "CJK Unified Ideographs"]] |
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Edgar Otto Conrad von Gierke (9 February 1877, Breslau – 21 October 1945, Karlsruhe) was a German Jewish pathologist who specialized in glycogenesis and discovered glycogen storage disease type I (formerly known as von Gierke disease) in 1929. Early life Edgar was born in 1877 the Prussian province of Silesia in Breslau to a famous Pomeranian German family. He was the son of the noted legal scholar Otto von Gierke and Marie Caecilie Elise (Lili) née Loening (1850–1936). Edgar had a sister named Anna von Gierke and a brother named Julius. Marie was an Evangelical Christian but her parents hadconverted from Judaism to Christianity in the 1840s prior to her birth. Thus, under the racial laws of German Nazi rule, she was considered to be Jewish as was Edgar, who identified as a Protestant. As a result, Edgar was labeled “Mischling 1. Grades” (“half-breed 1st degree”) by the Nazi party. In 1896, von Gierke served one year as a military volunteer in the Silesian Field Artillery Regiment and subsequently served as a staff surgeon of the reserve during World War I. He participated in the Battle of Lorraine. Education and career He received his medical doctorate at Heidelberg Universityin 1901 and became a lecturer at the University of Freiburg in 1904. Several years later he became a prosector at the municipal hospital in Karlsruhe. In 1908, von Gierke took over the managing position of the Pathological-Bacteriological Institute of the Karlsruhe Municipal Hospitals for his colleague Ernst Schwalbe and retained this position for nearly 30 years. In 1911, von Gierke also became an associate professor of bacteriology at the Technische Hochschule in Karlsruhe. During his career, he published the highly regarded on anatomy book Taschenbuch der pathologischen Anatomie (Pocketbook of Pathological Anatomy). von Gierke disease von Gierke published aseminal article in 1929 detailing his discovery of a newly described glycogen storage disease that affected the liver and kidneys that he discovered on an autopsy of an affected child. He originally termed the disease "Hepato-Nephromegalia glykogenica". von Gierke's accomplishment was later rewarded and the disease was later given the eponymous distinction of being known as von Gierke disease, which was subsequently renamed to glycogen storage disease type I. Nazi Germany von Gierke was forced to prematurely retire by the Nazi's Third Reich in September 1937 and subsequently forced to come out of retirement and manage the pathology department atthe Karlsruhe municipal hospital due to a lack of personnel. He was again forcibly retired in 1940 when Richard Böhmig, whom he temporarily replaced while Böhmig served in World War II, returned to his service at the municipal hospital after being discharged from his military service. von Gierke's views on the Nazi party are poorly understood due to a lack of information. A few letters that von Gierke signed "Heil Hitler" have been recovered and on a Nazi party-administered political questionnaire he stated that he was a member of the Nazi groups known as the German Labor Front, the Reichsbund
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| Nodes:[["Edgar von Gierke", {"description":'German physician', "alias":['Edgar Otto Conrad von Gierke']}], ["Karlsruhe", {}], ["Otto von Gierke", {}], ["Anna von Gierke", {}], ["Heidelberg University", {}], ["Germany", {}]]
Relations:[["Edgar von Gierke", "place of death", "Karlsruhe"], ["Edgar von Gierke", "father", "Otto von Gierke"], ["Edgar von Gierke", "sibling", "Anna von Gierke"], ["Edgar von Gierke", "educated at", "Heidelberg University"], ["Edgar von Gierke", "country of citizenship", "Germany"]] |
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Abu'l-Fath Ali ibn Muhammad ibn al-Hussain ibn Yusuf ibn Muhammad ibn Abd al-Aziz al-Busti (Arabic: أبو الفتح علي بن محمد بن الحسين بن يوسف بن محمد بن عَبْد العَزِيز البستي, Persian: ابوالفتح علی بن محمد بن حسین بن یوسف بن محمد بن عبدالعزیز بُستی), more commonly known as Abu'l-Fath al-Busti (Arabic: أبو الفتح البُستي, Persian: ابوالفتح بُستی) was a Ghaznavid secretary and famous poet of the Arabic and Persian language. Born in the ancient city Bost (today Lashkargah, Afghanistan) in Sistan, he served in the chancery of the Ghaznavid Amirs Sebuktigin and his son and successor Mahmud. Abu al-Fath was,period when most of his official records of the Ghaznavid conquests were made, known as "Kutub al Futuh" (Books of victories), of which only fragments survived. At the end of his life he experienced many vicissitudes and was exiled to Transoxiana where he died in the city of Bukhara (today part of Uzbekistan). Works Qasidah an-Nuniyyah (“Poem in Nun”) The poem is also known under the title of "Unwan al-Hikam" ("The Title for Wisdoms") and "Ziyadat ul-Mar’i fi-Dunyahi Nuqsan" ("To Rise in One's World Is to Decline"). It is a Qasida which relates to moral aphorisms and akhlaq (good character).
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| Nodes:[["Abu Al-Fath Al-Busti", {"description":'Ghaznavid poet'}], ["Lashkargah", {}], ["Poet", {}], ["Bukhara", {}]]
Relations:[["Abu Al-Fath Al-Busti", "place of birth", "Lashkargah"], ["Abu Al-Fath Al-Busti", "occupation", "Poet"], ["Abu Al-Fath Al-Busti", "place of death", "Bukhara"]] |
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Eli Yablonovitch (born 15 December 1946) is an American physicist and engineer who, along with Sajeev John founded the field of photonic crystals in 1987. He and his team were the first to create a 3-dimensional structure that exhibited a full photonic bandgap, which has been named Yablonovite. In addition to pioneering photonic crystals, he was the first to recognize that a strained quantum-well laser has a significantly reduced threshold current compared to its unstrained counterpart. This is now employed in the majority of semiconductor lasers fabricated throughout the world. His seminal paper reporting inhibited spontaneous emission in photonic crystalsis among the most highly cited papers in physics and engineering. Education Yablonovitch received his B.Sc. in physics from McGill University in 1967. He went on to receive his A.M. degree in applied physics from Harvard University in 1969, and his Ph.D. from Harvard in 1972. During his post-graduate studies, Yablonovitch worked on nonlinear optics with carbon dioxide lasers. Career After receiving his Ph.D., Yablonovitch worked at Bell Laboratories. He then became a professor of applied physics at Harvard in 1974. In 1979, he joined Exxon research center to work on photovoltaic research for solar energy. While working at Exxon,Luminescent provided sophisticated mathematical optimization for use in photolithography masks. Luminescent was acquired by Synopsys in 2012. In 2008, Yablonovitch founded Alta Devices Inc. Alta Devices produces thin-film gallium arsenide photovoltaic cells for solar energy. Alta Devices currently holds the efficiency world record for single junction solar cells at 29.1% and dual junction solar cells at 31.6%, both at 1 sun illumination. He is a Fellow of the IEEE, the OSA, and the APS. He was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Inventors, the American Academy of Artsand Sciences, and a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London. He is a recipient of the Benjamin Franklin medal; the Frederic Ives Medal / Jarus W. Quinn Prize -- the Optical Society's highest award; the IEEE Edison Medal; the Isaac Newton Medal; the IEEE "William R. Cherry Award" -- the IEEE's highest award in solar cells; the Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Prize; the Rank Prize; the Harvey Prize; the IEEE Photonics Award; the Mountbatten Medal of the British IET; the R. W. Wood Prize; the W. Streifer Scientific Achievement Award; the Julius Springer Prize; and the AdolphLomb Medal. See also Alf Adams. Introduced the idea of the Strained Laser at nearly the same time as Yablonovitch. References External links Eli Yablonovitch's Research Group Website at UC Berkeley Faculty Web Page at UC Berkeley Researcher Bio Page at CITRIS Energy Efficiency Electronics Science NSF Center Category:1946 births Category:Living people Category:21st-century American physicists Category:Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences Category:UC Berkeley College of Engineering faculty Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Category:Members of the United States National Academy of Engineering Category:Foreign Members of the Royal Society Category:Harvard School of Engineering and Applied
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André Couto (born 14 December 1976) is a Macanese motor racing driver who is best known for winning his home F3 Grand Prix in 2000 and Japan's Super GT GT300 Championship in 2015. Career Early years André Couto was born in Lisbon but moved to Macau with his family when he was four. He started his career in Karting in Macau influenced by the popular Macau Grand Prix and friends who competed in the local Karting championship. He rapidly enjoyed success and started competing and winning in international level. He moved to racing cars in 1995 where he competed inwas the one race Andre always wanted to win," he said. "He was born in Lisbon but we moved back to Macau when he was four. My wife Isabel and I have now lived in Macau for many years. Isabel was born here and all her family is from here. This will always be Andre's home. He speaks fluent Cantonese like most Portuguese people living here. He is a Macau citizen; it is what he wanted. We've lived here happily for many years. Today is a special day for everyone in Macau." Formula 3000 Couto graduated to Formula 3000 inGuia Race of Macau as part of the European Touring Car Championship (ETCC) and later the World Touring Car Championship. He has competed at the race on different cars and teams: Alfa Romeo 156 and Honda Accord (for N.Technology), and SEAT León (for SEAT Sport and Sunred), Since 2005, Couto has competed in the Super GT Championship in the GT500-class Lexus SC430, initially for SARD and in 2011 for Kraft. In November 2015, racing alongside his teammate Katsumasa Chiyo, André Couto was crowned the GT 300 champion with one round to go into the Super GT championship. He dedicated thevictory to a “special one”, his late son Afonso, who succumbed to leukemia in 2010. Couto's GT300 title victory in 2015 remains the only instance in Super GT where a non-Japanese driver won the GT300 drivers championship title. On 8 July 2017, André Couto was seriously hurt after crashing his Nissan GT-R GT3 in the China GT Championship race at Zhuhai International Circuit. He was taken to Sun Yat-sen University No.5 Hospital in Zhuhai for a CT scan that revealed a fracture to his L1 vertebra. He was then air lifted to Canossa Hospital in Hong Kong for an operation.World Touring Car Cup results (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) References André Couto career statistics at driverdb.com, retrieved 11 November 2006. External links Official website (under construction) Fan Site (Japanese) (Archived 2009-10-25) Save Afonso (Couto's son) (News of Afonso's death) Category:Living people Category:1976 births Category:Portuguese racing drivers Category:Macau racing drivers Category:Macau people of Portuguese descent Category:International Formula 3000 drivers Category:Formula Nippon drivers Category:German Formula Three Championship drivers Category:Italian Formula Three Championship drivers Category:World Touring Car Championship drivers Category:Super GT drivers Category:Karting World Championship drivers Category:Blancpain Endurance Series drivers Category:European Touring Car Championship
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Relations:[["André Couto", "place of birth", "Lisbon"], ["André Couto", "given name", "André"]] |
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Tiszaszalka is a village in Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg county, in the Northern Great Plain region of eastern Hungary. Geography It covers an area of and has a population of 870 people (2015). The village is centred on a Reformed Church and school building, both rebuilt in recent years following Flooding. Recent improvements to the flood defence system (raised earth berm) separating the village from the river Tisza, has allowed the emergency services and local population to use the berm as a vehicle and bicycle route. Recent improvements in road infrastructure, namely the construction of the M3 motorway, has made the region more
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| Nodes:[["Tiszaszalka", {"description":'village in Hungary'}], ["Hungary", {}]]
Relations:[["Tiszaszalka", "country", "Hungary"]] |
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Fryeria is a genus of sea slugs, dorid nudibranchs, shell-less marine gastropod molluscs in the family Phyllidiidae. Fryeria has become a synonym of Phyllidia Cuvier, 1797 Species Species in the genus Fryeria used to include: Fryeria bayi Bouchet, 1983: synonym of Phyllidiopsis bayi (Bouchet, 1983) Fryeria guamensis Brunckhorst, 1993: synonym of Phyllidia guamensis (Brunckhorst, 1993) Fryeria haegeli Fahrner & Beck, 2000: synonym of Phyllidia haegeli (Fahrner & Beck, 2000) Fryeria larryi Brunckhorst, 1993: synonym of Phyllidia larryi (Brunckhorst, 1993) Fryeria marindica (Yonow & Hayward, 1991): synonym of Phyllidia marindica (Yonow & Hayward, 1991) Fryeria menindie (Brunckhorst, 1993) : synonym ofPhyllidia picta Pruvot-Fol, 1957 Fryeria picta (Pruvot-Fol, 1957) : synonym of Phyllidia picta Pruvot-Fol, 1957 Fryeria pustulosa Gray, 1853: synonym of Fryeria rueppelii Bergh, 1869: synonym of Phyllidia rueppelii (Bergh, 1869) Fryeria rueppelii Bergh, 1869: synonym of Phyllidia rueppelii (Bergh, 1869) Fryeria variabilis Collingwood, 1881: synonym of Phyllidiella pustulosa (Cuvier, 1804) References Valdés Á. & Gosliner T.M. (1999). Phylogeny of the radula-less dorids (Mollusca, Nudibranchia), with the description of a new genus and a new family. Zoologica Scripta 28: 315-360. Gofas, S.; Le Renard, J.; Bouchet, P. (2001). Mollusca, in: Costello, M.J. et al. (Ed.) (2001). European register of marine
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Relations:[["Fryeria", "parent taxon", "Phyllidiidae"], ["Fryeria", "taxon rank", "Genus"]] |
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The Egg Islands are a small group of low-lying estuarine islands in the tidal lower reaches of the Huon River of south-east Tasmania, Australia. They face the town of Franklin which lies on the western bank of the river. Birds The islands have been identified as a 317 ha Important Bird Area because they support a small population of the Australasian bittern, one of the last refuges for this endangered species in the state. Swift parrots occasionally visit the islands which are also home to large numbers of the endemic Tasmanian nativehens and yellow wattlebirds. References Category:Important Bird Areas of
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| Nodes:[["Egg Islands", {"description":'Group of isles in river Huon, South Tasmania'}], ["Australia", {}], ["Tasmania", {}]]
Relations:[["Egg Islands", "country", "Australia"], ["Egg Islands", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Tasmania"]] |
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Magdalene of Brandenburg (1460 in Tangermünde – 17 June 1496 at Hohenzollern Castle) was a German noblewoman. She was a princess of Brandenburg by birth and by marriage a Duchess of Hohenzollern. Life Magdalena was the only child of Margrave Frederick III of Brandenburg-Altmark (1424–1463) from his marriage to Agnes (1436–1512), daughter of the Duke Barnim VIII of Pomerania. She married on 17 June 1482 in the Berlin City Palace to Count Eitel Friedrich II of Hohenzollern (1452–1512). This marriage formed an important connection for the House of Hohenzollern, as it strengthened the bond between the Swabian and Brandenburg branches
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Santa Ifigenia Cemetery (Spanish: Cementerio Santa Ifigenia) is a cemetery in Santiago de Cuba and resting place of a few notable Cubans. The cemetery opened in 1868 to replace smaller Cemetery of Santa Ana. The signature resting place is that of José Martí, whose mausoleum is guarded by three Cuban soldiers at the entrance. Cuban leader Fidel Castro's ashes are also buried at the cemetery. The cemetery is reached by public transit from bus stops across Avenida Capitán Raúl Perozo. Parking is available for buses at the entrance of the cemetery. Notable burials and memorials José Martí (d. 1895) -
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Hugh Hewitt (born February 22, 1956) is an American radio talk show host with the Salem Radio Network and an attorney, academic, and author. Generally a conservative, he writes about law, society, politics, and media bias in the United States. Hewitt is president and CEO of the Richard Nixon Foundation, a law professor at Chapman University School of Law, a columnist for the Washington Post, and a regular political commentator on NBC News and MSNBC. Early life Hewitt is the son of Marguerite (née Rohl) and William Robert Hewitt. He describes himself as "a descendant of both Ulster and theRepublic through a green-orange marriage of immigrants from County Down and County Clare". He attended John F. Kennedy Catholic High School in Warren, Ohio, and Harvard University, and graduated cum laude with a B.A. in government in 1978. After leaving Harvard, he worked as a ghostwriter for Richard Nixon in California and New York, before studying at the University of Michigan Law School, where he was inducted into the Order of the Coif. Hewitt received his J.D. degree in 1983, then moved to Washington D.C. to clerk for Judges Roger Robb and George MacKinnon on the U.S. Court of Appealsdeemed "unfriendly" – specifically Bob Woodward, whom he characterized as "not a responsible journalist." John Taylor, a spokesman for Nixon, overturned Hewitt's decision after two days. It became the subject of editorial rebuke in The New York Times. Hewitt left the Nixon Library in 1990 to practice law, and began a weekend radio talk show for the Los Angeles radio station KFI, where he broadcast until 1995. In the spring of 1992, he began co-hosting L.A. PBS member station KCET's nightly news and public affairs program, Life & Times, and remained with the program until the fall of 2001, whenHewitt has been criticized by Andrew Sullivan, who calls him a "Christianist." When Sullivan appeared on Hewitt's radio show to promote his book The Conservative Soul, a lively exchange ensued and Hewitt criticized Sullivan's book as intellectually messy. Hewitt also became a Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law during that time. He currently teaches constitutional law. In addition to his contributions as a professor, Hewitt founded and continues to guide the legal scholarship of the Nexus Journal of Law and Policy. In 2019, Hewitt returned to the Nixon Library as president and CEO of the Richard NixonAlthough Hewitt's background is in law, government, and politics, he also covers American cultural trends and the entertainment industry. He frequently critiques the mainstream media on air, often inviting journalists to defend their work on the show. His regular contributors include law professors John C. Eastman, former Dean of Chapman University School of Law, and Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of UC Irvine Law School (whom Hewitt calls "The Smart Guys"), James Lileks, Mark Steyn, United States Naval Academy English professor David Allen White (who does a monthly Shakespeare showcase), and Congressman David Dreier (R-CA), as well as frequent callers from aroundPolitico described Hewitt as an "ardent Reaganite". Defense Spending Hewitt has advocated for increasing the defense budget in the United States, stating that "any Republicans who vote against higher defense spending should be fired." War In an interview on CNN with Anderson Cooper, Hewitt said that in regards to George W. Bush's decisions while President, the War in Iraq would go down as "one of the wisest he has made." In regards to the Syrian Civil War, Hewitt stated that President Donald J. Trump was making a "major error" in deciding to draw down the number of U.S. troops inby the law firm. After the meeting, Hewitt would frequently defend Pruitt amid a number of ethics scandals. Fred Hiatt, the editorial page editor at the Washington Post, where Hewitt is a contributing columnist, said that he was "disturbed" by the reports of Hewitt's undisclosed ties, and that Hewitt would not write on issues related to the EPA again. MSNBC gave Hewitt a verbal warning after he failed to disclose the EPA meeting to viewers of his MSNBC show. Controversies CNN Debate Hewitt was booed during a CNN debate in 2015 for his controversial questioning of presidential candidate Ben Carson.Democrats in Every Election and Why Your Life Depends on It (2004, ) In, But Not Of: A Guide to Christian Ambition (2003, ) The Embarrassed Believer (1998, ) Searching for God in America: The Companion Volume to the Acclaimed TV Series (1996, ) First Principles: A Primer of Ideas for the College-Bound Student (1987, ) References External links Hewitt's columns at Townhall.com Category:1956 births Category:Living people Category:American alternative journalists Category:American male bloggers Category:American bloggers Category:American political commentators Category:American conservative talk radio hosts Category:American television journalists Category:Chapman University School of Law faculty Category:Harvard University alumni Category:People from Irvine, California Category:People
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Dangerous Liaisons is a 1988 American period romantic drama film directed by Stephen Frears from a screenplay by Christopher Hampton, based on his play Les liaisons dangereuses, which was itself adapted from the 18th-century French novel of the same name by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos. It stars Glenn Close, John Malkovich, Michelle Pfeiffer, Swoosie Kurtz, Mildred Natwick, Peter Capaldi, Keanu Reeves and Uma Thurman. Dangerous Liaisons was released theatrically on December 16, 1988, by Warner Bros. It received generally positive reviews from critics with praise for Close's and Pfeiffer's performances and the screenplay, production values and costumes. Although it wasa moderate commercial success grossing $34.7 million against its $14 million budget, it was cited as a box office disappointment. The film received seven nominations at the 61st Academy Awards, including for Best Picture and won three: Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Costume Design, and Best Production Design. Plot In pre-Revolution Paris, the Marquise de Merteuil plots revenge against her ex-lover, the Comte de Bastide, who has recently ended their relationship. To soothe her wounded pride and embarrass Bastide, she seeks to arrange the seduction and disgrace of his young virgin fiancée, Cécile de Volanges, who has only recently been presentedrefuse a challenge, Valmont accepts. Tourvel rebuffs all of Valmont's advances. Searching for leverage, he instructs his page Azolan to seduce Tourvel's maid Julie to gain access to Tourvel's private correspondence. One of the letters he intercepts is from Cécile's mother and Merteuil's cousin, Madame de Volanges, warning Tourvel that Valmont is a nefarious and untrustworthy individual. Valmont resolves to seduce Cécile after all, as revenge for her mother's accurate denunciation of him. Meanwhile, in Paris, Cécile meets the charming and handsome Chevalier Raphael Danceny, who becomes her music teacher. They fall in love, with coaxing from Merteuil (who knowspublishes them. All of Paris learns the full range of her schemes and depredations. Humiliated at the opéra by her former friends and sycophants, Merteuil flees Paris in disgrace. Cast Glenn Close as Marquise Isabelle de Merteuil John Malkovich as Vicomte Sébastien de Valmont Michelle Pfeiffer as Madame Marie de Tourvel Uma Thurman as Cécile de Volanges Swoosie Kurtz as Madame de Volanges, mother of Cécile and cousin to Merteuil Keanu Reeves as Le Chevalier Raphael Danceny, courtier to Cécile Mildred Natwick as Madame de Rosemonde, Valmont's aunt Peter Capaldi as Azolan, Valmont's valet Valerie Gogan as Julie, Madame deTourvel's chambermaid Laura Benson as Émilie, a courtesan Joe Sheridan as Georges, Madame de Tourvel's footman Joanna Pavlis as Adèle, Madame de Rosemonde's maid Harry Jones as Monsieur Armand François Montagut as Belleroche, Merteuil's lover Production Dangerous Liaisons was the first English-language film adaptation of Laclos's novel. The screenplay was based on Christopher Hampton's Olivier Award-winning and Tony Award-nominated theatrical adaptation for the Royal Shakespeare Company, directed by Howard Davies and featuring Lindsay Duncan, Alan Rickman and Juliet Stevenson. The film was shot entirely on location in the Île-de-France region of northern France, and featured historical buildings such as theChâteau de Vincennes in Val-de-Marne, the Château de Champs-sur-Marne, the Château de Guermantes in Seine-et-Marne, the Château du Saussay in Essonne, and the Théâtre Montansier in Versailles. Liaisons was the final film appearance of Academy Award and Tony Award-nominated actress Mildred Natwick. Drew Barrymore auditioned for the role of Cécile, and Sarah Jessica Parker turned it down before it was offered to Thurman. Annette Bening went through several auditions for the role of the courtesan Émilie, but in the end the role went to Laura Benson. Bening was auditioning for Milos Forman's adaptation of Les Liaisons Dangereuses at the sametime, Valmont, in which she would play the role of the Marquise de Merteuil. During production Malkovich had an affair with Pfeiffer. His six-year marriage to actress Glenne Headly ended shortly thereafter. Soundtrack The score of Dangerous Liaisons was written by the British film music composer George Fenton. The soundtrack also includes works by a number of baroque and classical composers, reflecting the story's 18th-Century-French setting; pieces by Antonio Vivaldi, Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frideric Handel and Christoph Willibald Gluck feature prominently, although no French composers are included. Reception Critical response Dangerous Liaisons holds a score of 93% on RottenTomatoes based on 30 reviews. On Metacritic it has a score of 74 based on 17 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B+ on scale of A to F. Pauline Kael in The New Yorker described it as "heaven – alive in a way that movies rarely are." Hal Hinson in The Washington Post wrote that the film's "wit and immediacy is extraordinarily rare in a period film. Instead of making the action seem far off, the filmmakers put the audience in the room with their characters." Roger Ebert called it "anabsorbing and seductive movie, but not compelling." Variety considered it an "incisive study of sex as an arena for manipulative power games." Vincent Canby in The New York Times hailed it as a "kind of lethal drawing-room comedy." The Time Out reviewer wrote of Christopher Hampton's screenplay that "one of the film's enormous strengths is scriptwriter Christopher Hampton's decision to go back to the novel, and save only the best from his play". James Acheson and Stuart Craig were also praised for their work, with Sheila Benson of the Los Angeles Times stating that "the film's details of costuming (byThe Last Emperor'''s James Acheson) and production design (by Stuart Craig of Gandhi and The Mission) are ravishing". All three would go on to win Academy Awards for their work on this film. Glenn Close received considerable praise for her performance; she was lauded by The New York Times for her "richness and comic delicacy," while Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that, once she "finally lets loose and gives way to complete animal despair, Close is horrifying." Roger Ebert thought the two lead roles were "played to perfection by Close and Malkovich... their arch dialogues together turninto exhausting conversational games, tennis matches of the soul." Michelle Pfeiffer was also widely acclaimed for her portrayal, despite playing, in the opinion of The Washington Post, "the least obvious and the most difficult" role. "Nothing is harder to play than virtue, and Pfeiffer is smart enough not to try. Instead, she embodies it." The New York Times called her performance a "happy surprise." Roger Ebert, considering the trajectory of her career, wrote that "in a year that has seen her in varied assignments such as Married to the Mob and Tequila Sunrise, the movie is more evidence of herversatility. She is good when she is innocent and superb when she is guilty." Pfeiffer would later win a British Academy Film Award for her performance. The casting of John Malkovich proved to be a controversial decision that divided critics. The New York Times, while admitting there was the "shock of seeing him in powdered wigs", concluded that he was "unexpectedly fine. The intelligence and strength of the actor shape the audience's response to him". The Washington Post was similarly impressed with Malkovich's performance: "There's a sublime perversity in Frears' casting, especially that of Malkovich... [he] brings a fascinating dimensionto his character that would be missing with a more conventionally handsome leading man." Variety was less impressed, stating that while the "sly actor conveys the character's snaky, premeditated Don Juanism... he lacks the devilish charm and seductiveness one senses Valmont would need to carry off all his conquests". Accolades At the 61st Academy Awards, Dangerous Liaisons won three Oscars out of seven nominations, for Best Adapted Screenplay (Christopher Hampton), Best Costume Design (James Acheson), and Best Art Direction (Stuart Craig and Gérard James). Its four unsuccessful nominations were for Best Actress (Glenn Close), Best Supporting Actress (Michelle Pfeiffer), BestOriginal Score (George Fenton), and the Academy Award for Best Picture. Director Stephen Frears and lead actor John Malkovich were not nominated. At the 43rd British Academy Film Awards, Michelle Pfeiffer won for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, and Christopher Hampton won for Best Screenplay. The film received a further eight nominations, in the categories of Best Direction (Stephen Frears), Best Actress in a Leading Role (Close), Best Cinematography (Philippe Rousselot), Best Costume Design (Acheson), Best Original Film Score (Fenton), Best Editing (Mick Audsley), Best Make Up Artist (Jean-Luc Russier) and Best Production Design (Craig). In addition to hisOscar and BAFTA awards, Christopher Hampton also won the London Film Critics' Circle Award for Screenwriter of the Year, and the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium. Stephen Frears won the César Award for Best Foreign Film and Best Director from the Boston Society of Film Critics. The film was second only to Mississippi Burning'' in the National Board of Review's Top 10 films. Philippe Rousselot was nominated for both the American Society of Cinematographers Award and the British Society of Cinematographers Award. Related adaptations Almost 25 years after he played Valmont,John Malkovich directed a French-language version of Hampton's play in Paris, which ran at the Théâtre de l'Atelier. In December 2012, the production was brought to Lansburgh Theatre by the Shakespeare Theatre Company for a limited run in Washington, D.C. References External links Category:1988 films Category:1980s erotic drama films Category:1980s historical romance films Category:1980s romantic drama films Category:Adultery in films Category:American erotic drama films Category:American films Category:American films based on plays Category:American historical romance films Category:American romantic drama films Category:Best Foreign Film César Award winners Category:American erotic romance films Category:Films based on adaptations Category:Films based on French novels Category:Films based
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Calvin Maples Cureton (September 1, 1874–April 8, 1940) was the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court from 1921 until 1940. Born near Walnut Springs in Bosque County, Texas, Cureton's father was a rancher and his grandfather was a pioneer soldier. After the death of his mother when he was five years old, Cureton was raised by his father and grandparents. He studied at the University of Virginia from 1892 to 1893, but a faltering economy forced his return to Texas, where he read law to gain admission to the bar in 1897. He served in the Texas voluntary infantry
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Sir John Fastolf (6 November 1380 – 5 November 1459) was a late medieval English landowner and knight who fought in the Hundred Years' War. He has enjoyed a more lasting reputation as the prototype, in some part, of Shakespeare's character Sir John Falstaff. Many historians consider, however, that he deserves to be famous in his own right, not only as a soldier, but as a patron of literature, a writer on strategy and perhaps as an early industrialist. Lineage and family Coming from a minor gentry family in Norfolk, John Fastolf was born on 6 November 1380 at themanor house of Caister Hall, a family possession which he later turned into Caister Castle, but of which little now remains aside from the water-filled moat. The son of Sir John Fastolf (died 1383) and Mary Park (died 2 May 1406), he belonged to an ancient Norfolk family originally seated at Great Yarmouth, where it is recorded from the thirteenth century. Notable members of the family in earlier generations included Thomas Fastolf, Bishop of St David's, and his brother, Nicholas Fastolf, Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. Many of the name had been bailiffs of Great Yarmouth since the time ofEdward I, and a certain Hugh Fastolf was sheriff of Norfolk in 1390. On 13 January 1409, in Ireland, Fastolf married Millicent Tibetot (1368–1446), daughter and co-heiress of Robert, Lord Tiptoft, and widow of Sir Stephen Scrope (son of Richard, Lord Scrope). This marriage brought him significant amounts of land, including the manors of Castle Combe and Bathampton in Wiltshire, Oxenton in Gloucestershire, and several properties in Somerset and Yorkshire. These lands brought him an income of £240 per annum, a considerable sum which amounted to five times the revenue Fastolf gained from his own estates. He settled an amountcompany of Henry Bolingbroke, later Henry IV. Fastolf is said to have been squire to Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, before the latter was banished in 1398. Fastolf's whereabouts during the Lancastrian coup of 1399 (when Henry IV seized the crown from Richard II) are unknown, but in 1401 he entered the retinue of King Henry IV's second son, Thomas of Lancaster (later Duke of Clarence), under whose service he would remain until 1415. Thomas had been appointed by his father to keep order in Ireland, and it was here that Fastolf first saw military action. Fastolf's commanding officer wasSir Stephen Scrope, whose widow he married after his death in 1408. Hundred Years' War Early service in France From 1415 to 1439, he was in northern France, where he served under Henry V and the king's brother, the Duke of Bedford. He took part in the siege of Harfleur in 1415, but was invalided home and so missed Agincourt, though he returned to defend Harfleur against the French attempt to recapture it in the winter of 1415–1416. He was Bedford's Master of the Household, and was Governor of the province of Maine and Anjou, and on 25 February 1426,created a Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. Later in this year he was superseded in his command by John Talbot; and he became a somewhat controversial figure after the Siege of Orléans. In 1421, during the English occupation of Paris, he became "governor" (effectively, the warden) of the Bastille, probably for a year. After a visit to England in 1428, he returned to the war, and on 12 February 1429, when in charge of the convoy for the English army before Orléans defeated the French and Scots at the Battle of the Herrings. In hisand Fastolf's reputation Patay was a serious defeat for the English. 200–300 men were killed and over 2000 captured, including Talbot. Fastolf had, however, escaped. According to the French historian Jehan de Waurin, who was present, the disaster was due to Talbot's rashness, and Fastolf only fled when resistance was hopeless. Other accounts charge him with cowardice, and it is true that John, Duke of Bedford suspended him from the Order of the Garter and he was subject of accusations of cowardice from Talbot. Eventually, in 1442, an inquiry was convened by the Order of the Garter, probably at Fastolf's"cruel and vengible he hath been ever, and for the most part without pity and mercy" (Paston Letters, i. 389); and this remark has become famous because it was recorded in the letter. Besides his share in his wife's property he had large estates in Norfolk and Suffolk, a house at Southwark in London and where he also owned the Boar's Head Inn. The site of his house at Southwark, known as Fastolf Place or Palace, was excavated in the 1990s, but only a few pieces of revetment were found. From 1435, and more so in retirement, he was theto have been a somewhat lonely figure, and made several attempts to draft a will, establishing a Chantry College at Caister Castle. Death and burial He died at Caister on 5 November 1459. He was buried next to his wife Millicent in St Benet's Abbey in an aisle specially built at his expense on the south side of the abbey church, of which he had been a generous benefactor. During the last decade of his life he was a close political ally and friend of John Paston, who came to fame through the Paston Letters, a collection of over 1,000items of correspondence between members of the Paston family. Fastolf's deathbed testament naming John Paston as his executor and heir led to many years of litigation. The ruins of St Benet's Abbey may still be visited, as may the ruins of Caister Castle. The Castle never became home to a chantry, as Fastolf intended. Instead, it passed to the Paston family. The bulk of Sir John's fortune passed to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he is remembered as a benefactor, and where there is a Fastolf Society. Cultural portrayals Shakespeare Fastolf appears in Shakespeare's early play Henry VI, part 1 asa cowardly knight who abandons the heroic Lord Talbot. In the first two folios the name of the character is given as 'Falstaffe' not Fastolf. When Shakespeare came to write Henry IV, part 1, set in the early years of Fastolf's career, he created a disreputable boon companion for the young Prince Hal called Sir John Oldcastle. The descendants of the real Oldcastle complained, so the name was changed to Sir John Falstaff, under which name he is identified in three later plays. The tradition of Fastolf's braggart cowardice may have suggested the use of his name. Some writers haveof a few real personages with a dash of creative licence. Indeed, the aged Falstaff dies early in the reign of Henry V, when Fastolf was midway through his career. Later portrayals Fastolf appears as a featured character in Koei's video game known as Bladestorm: The Hundred Years' War, in which he is seen as a contributor to the cause of England, wielding a longsword as his primary weapon. He is the subject of a novel by Robert Nye entitled Falstaff (Publisher: Allison & Busby; New Ed edition (1 Oct 2001)) Fastolf is also an opponent in Ensemble Studios' Ageof Empires II: The Age of Kings, in the game's Joan of Arc campaign. Fastolf fights on England's side and his unit is a lance-wielding knight. Most recently he appears under his Shakespearian surname Falstaff in the 2019 Netflix film The King, acting as both the young Prince Henry's companion in tavern debaucheries and later the battle-seasoned veteran responsible for strategizing Henry V's victory at Agincourt. Footnotes References Further reading . . . . , enlarged by Gough in Kippis's edition. . . [ 1st ed.], [ 2nd ed.] . External links Caister Castle Fastolf not 'Falstaff': the soldier behind
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Leopold I of Lippe (2 December 1767 – 5 November 1802) was a Prince of Lippe. Biography Leopold I was born in Detmold the son of Simon August, Count of Lippe-Detmold (1727–1782), and his second wife, Princess Leopoldine of Anhalt-Dessau (1746–1769). He received his education in Dessau, and when he reached 18 he went to study at the University of Leipzig. He succeeded his father as Count of Lippe-Detmold on his death on 1 May 1782, and remained Count until Lippe was raised to a Principality in 1789. He died in Detmold and was succeeded as Prince by his eldestson, who became Leopold II. Marriage and children He was married to Pauline Christine of Anhalt-Bernburg (23 February 1769 – 29 December 1820), daughter of Frederick Albert, Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg, and Louise Albertine of Schleswig-Holstein, on 2 January 1796 in Ballenstedt. From the marriage he had two sons: Leopold II, Prince of Lippe (1796–1851) Prince Friedrich (1797–1854) Ancestry References Wilhelm van Kempen: Die Korrespondenz des Detmolder Generalsuperintendenten Ewald mit dem Fürsten Leopold Friedrich Franz von Anhalt-Dessau 1790–1794/1798. In: Lippesche Mitteilungen. 33. 1964, p. 135–177. Mächtige Stimme der Gerechtigkeit an die hohe Reichsversammlung in Regensburg die gegen den regierenden Fürsten von
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Christine Trujillo is an American politician and a Democratic member of the New Mexico House of Representatives representing District 25 since January 15, 2013. Education Trujillo earned her BA in Education from New Mexico Highlands University and her MA in education from the University of New Mexico. Elections 2012 When District 25 incumbent Democratic Representative Danice Picraux retired and left the seat open, Trujillo ran in the three-way June 5, 2012 Democratic Primary and won with 1,652 votes (62.2%) and won the November 6, 2012 General election with 8,383 votes (63.1%) against Republican nominee Elisabeth Keen. 2002 Trujillo was unopposedfor the District 3 New Mexico Board of Education Democratic Primary and won a four-year term in the November 5, 2002 General election against Republican nominee Mary Gilbert. References External links Official page at the New Mexico Legislature Christine Trujillo at Ballotpedia Christine Trujillo at the National Institute on Money in State Politics Category:Place of birth missing (living people) Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people Category:American schoolteachers Category:Members of the New Mexico House of Representatives Category:Politicians from Albuquerque, New Mexico Category:New Mexico Democrats Category:New Mexico Highlands University alumni Category:University of New Mexico alumni Category:Women state legislators in New
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Lara M. Brown is an American political scientist and the director of the Graduate School of Political Management (GSPM) at the George Washington University since 2016. Early life and education Brown was born and grew up in California. She obtained a B.A., M.A. and Ph. D. in political sciences from the University of California, Los Angeles. Subsequently she also obtained an M.A. in American politics and public policy from the University of Arizona. Career Brown started her career in academics and eventually served as an assistant professor at Villanova University. She then served as an education policy and public affairs
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Neelkantheshwar is a famous Hindu temple dedicated to Lord Shiva in the Green Mountainous region of Northern India. The idol of Lord Shiva is unique in that it has three heads, and is considered to be one of the Avatar of Lord Shiva. The temple is located in the town of Pali, Lalitpur in Lalitpur district of Uttar Pradesh, India. People living in surrounding area believe that the idol came out its own from the mountain and the temple was built around it. There is a very huge fair (Mela) every year during the Maha Shivaratri festival. This day is
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PAF Base Masroor is the largest airbase operated by the Pakistan Air Force. It is located in the Mauripur area of Karachi, in the Sindh province. The base was originally known as RPAF Station Mauripur and after 1956, as PAF Station Mauripur. PAF Base Faisal is the other Pakistan Air Force base in Karachi. The new PAF Base Bholari near Karachi was inaugurated in January 2018. History The airbase at Mauripur was established by Britain (Royal Indian Air Force, RIAF) during World War II in 1940–1941. On establishment of the Royal Pakistan Air Force (RPAF) the base became RPAF StationMauripur. PAF Base Mauripur was renamed PAF Base Masroor in honour of former Base Commander, Air Commodore Masroor Hussain, who died in June 1967 due to a bird strike on his aircraft. He managed to direct the burning aircraft away from a populated area before crashing. Features Masroor base has the distinction of not only being the largest base, area wise, in Pakistan but also in Asia. Before Karachi Airport, this airport had been used for domestic flights and also by Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan. It is of immense strategic importance considering it has been entrusted
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The 1920–21 Washington Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Washington for the college basketball season. Led by first-year head coach Hec Edmundson, the Huskies were members of the Pacific Coast Conference and played their home games on campus in Seattle, Washington. The Huskies were overall in the regular season and in conference play; fourth in the standings. Washington ended the season with eight consecutive wins, six in conference. Edmundson joined the UW athletic staff in 1920 as track coach, and also led the Husky basketball program for 27 years; he continued as track coach for seven more, retiring
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saying: "[DeVita] has an incredibly wide range, going from angry howling to soulful and evocative crooning, sometimes within the same line." Carmel Lewis from Blank Gold Coast gave it a positive review, saying: "Waax and Holy Sick are an absolute pleasure, in a warped way, to see, hear, dance, laugh, cry and tear your teeth out to." Track listing Personnel Adapted from SoundCloud. Waax Marie DeVita – vocals, album artwork Elijah Gall – lead guitar (only on track 4) Chris Antolak – lead guitar Ewan Birtwell – rhythm guitar Ariana Pelser – bass (only on track 4) Tom Griffin –
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Frontier Circus is an American Western television series about a traveling circus roaming the American West in the 1880s. Filmed by Revue Productions, the program originally aired on CBS from October 5, 1961 until September 6, 1962. Overview The show featured such veteran Western television and film performers as Chill Wills as "Colonel Kasey Thompson," John Derek as "Ben Travis," Richard Jaeckel as "Scout Tony Gentry," and J. Pat O'Malley as "Duffy". Characters Thompson and Travis were the owners of the Thompson/Travis traveling circus. Guest stars Claude Akins Chris Alcaide John Anderson Edward Andrews R. G. Armstrong Eddie Albert Parley
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Denmark–Netherlands relations are foreign relations between Denmark and the Netherlands. Denmark has an embassy in The Hague and the Netherlands has an embassy in Copenhagen. Both countries are full members of NATO and the European Union. Princess Beatrix is a Dame of the Order of the Elephant since 29 October 1975. On 31 January 1998, King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands also received the Order of the Elephant. History In 1521, king Christian II of Denmark invited 184 Dutch farmers to settle on the island of Amager in exchange for supplying the Palace of Copenhagen with vegetables. The Dutch immigrants wereexempt from Danish taxation and were given privileges such as being allowed to hunt most wild animals and having their own judicial system until 1823. Several names in the area and some surnames in Denmark give away the Dutch influences. The first diplomatic ties between Denmark and the Netherlands were established March 31, 1605 when Isaac Pieterszoon van Amsterdan was appointed 'commissioner of the Sound', to ensure that Dutch trade ships would return to the Netherlands. 20 years before this, in 1584, Bartholomeüs Buijs was appointed as 'agent for Holland'. War against the Netherlands 1542–1543 In 1542, war broke outbetween France and the Holy Roman Empire. Emperor Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire supported Frederick II, Elector Palatine for the Danish crown, and Denmark participated in the war on the side of France. A year later, Denmark declared war on the Netherlands, at that time under Charles's rule. On 23 May 1544 the Treaty of Speyer was signed between Denmark and the Holy Roman Empire. Torstenson War The Torstenson War was a short period of conflict between Sweden and Denmark-Norway which occurred in 1643 to 1645 during the waning days of the Thirty Years' War. The Dutch Empirewere allies with Sweden. When the Torstenson War ended in 1645, Denmark and the Dutch Empire signed a treaty, which made Denmark and Netherlands allies. Second Northern War In 1657, during the Second Northern War, Denmark launched a war of revenge against Sweden which turned into a complete disaster. The war became a disaster for two reasons: Primarily, because Denmark's new powerful ally, the Netherlands, remained neutral as Denmark was the aggressor and Sweden the defender. Secondly, the Belts froze over in a rare occurrence during the winter of 1657-1658, allowing Charles X Gustav of Sweden to lead his armiesacross the ice to invade Zealand. In the Treaty of Roskilde, Denmark-Norway capitulated and in panic gave up all of Eastern Denmark in addition to the counties of Bahusia and Trøndelag in Norway. Holstein-Gottorp was also tied to Sweden, providing a gateway for future invasions from the south. But the Second Northern War was not yet over. Three months after the peace treaty was signed, Charles X Gustav of Sweden held a council of war where he decided to simply wipe Denmark from the map and unite all of Scandinavia under his rule. Once again the Swedish army arrived outsideCopenhagen. However, this time the Danes did not panic nor surrender, instead they decided to fight and prepared to defend Copenhagen. Frederick III of Denmark had stayed in his capital and now encouraged the citizens of Copenhagen to resist the Swedes, by saying he would die in his nest. Furthermore, this unprovoked declaration of war by Sweden finally triggered the alliance that Denmark-Norway had with the Netherlands. A powerful Dutch fleet was sent to Copenhagen with vital supplies and reinforcements, which saved the city from being captured during the Swedish attack. Furthermore, Brandenburg-Prussia, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Habsburg monarchyhad gathered large forces to aid Denmark-Norway and fighting continued into 1659. Charles X Gustav of Sweden suddenly died of an illness in early 1660, while planning an invasion of Norway. Following his death, Sweden made peace in the Treaty of Copenhagen, returning only Trøndelag to Norway and Bornholm to Denmark, but keeping both Bahusia and Terra Scania, mainly because the Netherlands and other European powers didn't want both sides of the Sound controlled by the Danish King again. Thus establishing the boundaries between Norway, Denmark, and Sweden that still exist today. Second Anglo-Dutch War In the Second Anglo-Dutch War,Denmark participated side by side with the Dutch Empire against the Kingdom of England, from 4 March 1665 until 31 July 1667. The war ended in a Dutch victory, and the Treaty of Breda was signed. Third Anglo-Dutch War The Third Anglo–Dutch War was a military conflict between England and the Dutch Republic lasting from 1672 to 1674. Denmark was allied with the Dutch Republic. It was part of the larger Franco-Dutch War. England's Royal Navy joined France in its attack on the Republic, but was frustrated in its attempts to blockade the Dutch coast by four strategic victories byLieutenant-Admiral Michiel de Ruyter. An attempt to make the province of Holland an English protectorate rump state likewise failed. Parliament, fearful that the alliance with France was part of a plot to make England Roman Catholic, forced the king to abandon the costly and fruitless war. Scanian War The Scanian War (1675–1679) was a part of the Northern Wars involving the union of Denmark-Norway, Brandenburg and Swedish Empire. The war was prompted by the Swedish involvement in the Franco-Dutch War. Sweden had allied with France against several European countries. The Dutch Republic, under attack by France, sought support from Denmark-Norway.of Sweden nullified much of the gain. It was a war with no definite victor; the Swedish navy lost at sea, the Danish army was defeated in Scania by the Swedes, who in turn were defeated in Northern Germany by the Brandenburgers. The war and the hostilities ended when Denmark's ally the Dutch Republic settled with Sweden's stronger ally France and the Swedish king Charles XI married Danish princess Ulrike Eleonora, sister of Christian V. Peace was made on behalf of France with the treaties of Fontainebleau and Lund and Saint Germain, restoring most of the lost territories to Sweden.1900s In the 1900s, many agreements were signed between both countries. World War II Both Denmark and the Netherlands were invaded by Nazi Germany, Denmark on 9 April 1940, and the Netherlands on 10 May 1940. After the German attack on Denmark, when the Germans used large numbers of airborne troops, the Dutch command became worried about the possibility they too could become the victim of such a strategic assault. To repulse an attack, five infantry battalions were positioned at the main ports and airbases, such as The Hague airfield of Ypenburg and the Rotterdam airfield of Waalhaven. These werereinforced by additional AA-guns, two tankettes and twelve of the 24 operational armoured cars. These specially directed measures were accompanied by more general ones: the Dutch had posted no less than 32 hospital ships throughout the country and fifteen trains to help make troop movements easier. International conflicts Denmark had about 700 soldiers, and the Netherlands had 1,400 soldiers in Afghanistan. Both Denmark and the Netherlands sent troops to Iraq, as part of the Multi-National Force, in 2003. After the Gaza War, on 18 January 2009, both the Danish and the Dutch ministers of foreign affairs contributed to control theborder between Egypt and Gaza. Trade Since the Middle Ages, the trade between Denmark and the Netherlands with cattle was a great contributor to the economies of Denmark and the Netherlands. This trade peaked in the middle of the 17th century. In 2000, more than 65,000 dairy calves were exported to the Netherlands. As of 2014 export from Denmark to the Netherlands amounted to €3.4 billion, while exports to Denmark from the Netherlands amounted to €5.5 billion. The Netherlands are Denmark's third largest import partner at 8% of imports, and its sixth largest export partner at 4.4% (2014). Business deals10 Danish Vestas V90-3MW wind turbines were sold to Aruba and Netherlands Antilles in 2008. APM Terminals operates a terminal - which opened in 2015 - at Rotterdam's Maasvlakte 2. TenneT and Energinet.dk signed for the construction of a 300 km electricity cable between the Netherlands and Denmark. Qutech (a cooperation of TNO and TU Delft) and Qdev have signed a memorandum of understanding for research in quantum technologies. Royal BAM Group was involved in the construction of the Great Belt Bridge and opened a division in Denmark in 2014. In 2015, the company won a bid worth €27 million
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Ulytau (, Ulytaý), literally meaning "the great mountain", is a popular Turkic neopagan instrumental folk metal trio from Kazakhstan. Their music combines the sound of the violin and electric guitar with the dombra, a traditional two stringed instrument from their country. The band is named after the district of Ulytau in Central Kazakhstan, the mythical birthplace of the nation. Biography Ulytau was conceived as a project by producer Kydyrali Bolmanov in 2001 to merge Western and Eastern music with arrangements of classical music from such composers as Kurmangazy Sagyrbayuly, Antonio Vivaldi, Niccolò Paganini and Johann Sebastian Bach. They have since
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Larsen & Toubro Infotech Limited (LTI) is a global IT solutions and services company based in Mumbai, India. In 2017, NASSCOM ranked LTI as the sixth-largest Indian IT services company in terms of export revenues. It was amongst the top 15 IT service providers globally in 2017, according to the Everest Group's PEAK Matrix for IT service providers. It employs standards of the Software Engineering Institute's (SEI) Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) and is a Maturity Level 5 assessed organisation. History Founded as L&T Information Technology Ltd in December 1996, LTI is a wholly owned subsidiary of Larsen & ToubroLtd (L&T). During 2001–2002 the company's name was changed from L&T Information Technology Limited to Larsen & Toubro Infotech Limited and in the same year the company achieved the assessed level of SEI Level 5. L&T Infotech dropped the word ‘Infotech’ from its name to reflect the changed business environment and rebranded itself as 'LTI' with a tag line of 'Let's Solve' in May 2017. Global presence LTI has its presence across the following regions: India: Mumbai – (Powai, Airoli, Mahape) Pune – (Shivajinagar, Hinjawadi) Bangalore/Bengaluru – (Whitefield) Chennai – (Manapakkam) Hyderabad – (Kokapet) North America: Canada, Mexico, United States.Year in the French IT outsourcing study conducted by Whitelane Research In 2019, LTI won CMO Asia Awards in two categories – Brand Excellence in IT/ITES 2019 and Marketing Campaign of the Year LTI ranked number 5 in HFS Top 10 Energy Service Providers 2019 In 2019, LTI was named the ‘Most Admired Company of the year’ by BTVI Business Leader of the Year Awards In January 2019, LTI and ACORD announced collaboration to drive digital adoption in the insurance industry In November 2018, Inclusive Tech Alliance recognized LTI President Sales Sudhir Chaturvedi among the top 100 most influential leadersin UK Tech Sector In January 2018, LTI CEO and MD Sanjay Jalona chosen as Exemplary CEO of the Year by BW Business World In March 2017, LTI Ranked Amongst 'Super 50' in Dalal Street Investment Journal (DSIJ) 150 Wealth-Creators List. In March 2017, LTI Named a Top 15 Sourcing Service Provider by Information Services Group (ISG). In March 2016, LTI positioned among Everest Group's Top 20 IT Services Providers. In February 2016, L&T Group Executive Chairman A.M. Naik was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Letters Degree from the Veer Narmad South Gujarat University. The doctorate is in recognition of
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I Will Cure You is the only album by the comedian Vic Reeves. It was released in 1991 by Island Records, produced by Steve Beresford, Andy Metcalfe and Philip Oakey and re-released in 1999 by Universal Music's Spectrum label. The album peaked at No. 16 in the UK Albums Chart and featured the Number One single "Dizzy" which was a collaboration with The Wonder Stuff. It included a mixture of covers and original songs in a variety of musical styles, many of which were originally introduced in Reeves' debut Channel 4 comedy show Vic Reeves Big Night Out. Reeves' comedypartner Bob Mortimer sings alongside Reeves on "Summer of '75", with Jonathan Ross providing whistling on "I Remember Punk Rock". Reeves has said that he did not want to make a novelty or comedy album but something more serious, and that for him being a singer is secondary as his comedy will always come first. The sleeve and insert of the album featured artwork and text created and written by Reeves. The sleeve notes also contained reproductions of 3 Polaroid type Instant Photographs with the legend "Where are Vic's boots?". Along with accompanying 6 figure Ordnance Survey Grid references theyshow interview that they had at that time been undiscovered, despite the October release date of the Album. Singles Three singles were released from the album: "Born Free", "Dizzy" and "Abide With Me", with various bonus tracks on each. The three singles were released on cassette, CD and 7", 10" and 12" records, with "Born Free" also being released as a picture disc. "Born Free" was the debut single of the album, billed as Vic Reeves and The Roman Numerals and reached #6 in the UK Singles Chart. It is a cover of the Matt Monro song written by JohnBarry, which Reeves directly mentions in the song via a spoken-word section in the middle of the track. The single's bonus track was a reworking of "Oh! Mr Songwriter", an original song by Reeves and Steve McGuire, with which Reeves ended each episode of Vic Reeves Big Night Out. The second single to be released was "Dizzy", a collaboration with The Wonder Stuff which reached Number One in the UK Singles Charts and remained there for two weeks. As the song is a cover, neither Reeves nor The Wonder Stuff received any publishing royalties. The final track to be releasedas a single was "Abide With Me", a dance reworking of a Christian hymn. It was the least successful of the album's singles, reaching number 47 in the UK Singles Chart. The single's bonus track was a cover of Black Night by Deep Purple, produced by Philip Oakey of The Human League. Oakey went on to appear in Reeves and Mortimer's television pilot The Weekenders. The sleeve of the single features an oil self-portrait by Reeves entitled "Bishop", which was later exhibited at the Britart Gallery, London. Music videos The music video for "Born Free" shows Reeves singing on stagevideo was directed by Peter Christopherson who allowed Reeves to choose what he'd like to do in the video. Reeves requested "a lectern, and a horse. I intend to ride a horse." Four Golden Memories, a VHS containing the music videos to I Will Cure You'''s three singles, was released by Island Records in 1991. It also contained a live performance of "Meals on Wheels" and "Dizzy", as part of Vic Reeves Big Night Out On Tour'', the latter of which featured The Wonder Stuff. Track listing "Big Night Out Theme" (Steve McGuire/Vic Reeves) – 0:34 "Dizzy" (Featuring The Wonder
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Blue Sky Mining is the seventh studio album by Australian alternative rock band Midnight Oil, released on 9 February 1990 under the Columbia Records label. It received high ratings from critics. In March of that year, the album peaked at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart for two weeks. A limited release of the record featured clear blue vinyl. Background Blue Sky Mining, produced by Warne Livesey, was released by CBS/Columbia on 9 February 1990. It peaked at number one on the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) albums chart. It stayed at number one for two weeks in Australiaand had Top 5 chart success in Sweden, Switzerland and Norway. It peaked at number 20 on the Billboard 200 and number 28 on the UK charts. The album was "more defiant and outspoken" than their previous work; the single "Blue Sky Mine" describes asbestos exposure in the Wittenoom mine tragedy. The lead single peaked at number eight on the ARIA singles charts, top 15 in Norway and Switzerland, number 47 on Billboard Hot 100 and number one on both their Mainstream and Modern Rock Tracks charts, and appeared on the UK charts. The second single, "Forgotten Years," was moremoderately successful, reaching number 26 on the ARIA singles chart, number 97 in the UK, number 11 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks, and number one on the Modern Rock Tracks. At the ARIA Music Awards of 1991, Midnight Oil won 'Best Group' and an 'Outstanding Achievement Award', and were awarded 'Best Cover Art', 'Best Video' and 'Album of the Year' for Blue Sky Mining. Manager Gary Morris, accepting awards for Midnight Oil, was criticised for a speech lasting 20 minutes. Track listing Some early Australian copies included the track "You May Not Be Released" - it was the B-side toa 12-inch issue of "Forgotten Years," and it is believed that this only appeared on the first 1,000 LP copies. Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications Personnel Midnight Oil Peter Garrett - lead vocals, harmonica Bones Hillman - bass, vocals Robert Hirst - drums, vocals Jim Moginie - guitars, keyboards, vocals Martin Rotsey - guitars, vocals Additional personnel Warne Livesey - additional keyboards Jeremy Smith - French horn Phillip Hartl - String Leader Glad and Carl - Horn Swells References External links Midnight Oil Category:1990 albums Category:Midnight Oil albums Category:Columbia Records albums Category:Albums produced by Warne Livesey Category:ARIA Award-winning albums
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Osman Danilo Chávez Güity (; born 29 July 1984 in Santa Fé) is a Honduran footballer who plays as a center back for Honduran club CD Vida. Club career Chávez began his career at Platense Junior before moving to Platense. He made his professional debut on 7 October 2004 against Municipal Valencia. In 2007–08 he was loaned to F.C. Motagua and after a successful season he returned to Platese after the clubs failed to reach an agreement on a transfer fee. In 2009 Chávez had been on trial with English Premier League outfit Tottenham Hotspur and Scottish Premier League sideCeltic. On 8 August 2010, Chávez joined Polish team Wisła Kraków. He won the Ekstraklasa championship in his debut season. He was also selected to the Ekstraklasa team of the season by both Canal+ Sport as well as Przegląd Sportowy. After the season Chávez signed a new five-year contract with Wisła. International career He made his debut for the national side on 6 February 2008 in a friendly against Paraguay. He has represented his country at the 2009 and 2011 UNCAF Nations Cups as well as at the 2009 and 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cups. Chávez was a key figure inHonduras's successful push for qualification to the 2010 FIFA World Cup, playing in eleven matches. At the World Cup he played in all three group stage games. At the 2014 FIFA World cup in Brazil he played one match as a second-half substitute against France national team. Personal life He is nicknamed "El Tierno" (The Tender or The newborn). Honours and awards Club F.C. Motagua Copa Interclubes UNCAF (1): 2007 Wisła Kraków Ekstraklasa (1): 2010–11 Country Honduras Copa Centroamericana (1): 2011 Statistics (correct as of 11 November 2014) References External links Category:1984 births Category:Living people Category:People from Colón Department (Honduras)
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two from his team – Contestant saved by the public vote – Contestant saved by coach – Contestant eliminated List of songs outside competition Episode 14 - Prime 4 - Quarter-finals: 4 May 2013 Top 12, with three remaining contestants per team perform with one each saved by the public vote, one saved by coach and one eliminated per team. Eight contestants will remain in competition at the end of the quarter-finals and will tour France at the end of the season. – Contestant saved by the public vote – Contestant saved by coach – Contestant eliminated *Presence of Fauve
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Sophie Megan Hahn, (born 23 January 1997) is a parasport athlete from England competing mainly in T38 sprint events. In 2013, she qualified for the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships, selected for the T38 100m and 200m. She took the gold in the 100m sprint, setting a new world record. In 2018, she won the gold medal in the T38 100 metres for women at the Commonwealth Games; in doing so she became the first female track and field athlete to hold gold medals in the same event from the World Championships, Paralympic Games, European Championships and Commonwealth Games, mirroring
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Shelagh Stephenson is an English playwright and actress. Background and education Stephenson was born in Tynemouth, Northumberland in 1955. She read drama at Manchester University. Career Acting Stephenson worked as an actress with the Royal Shakespeare Company and in bit parts in television. She appeared in Coronation Street in 1981 as the minor character Sandra Webb. She has subsequently had parts in Rumpole's Return, Sapphire & Steel, The Gentle Touch, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Boon, Paradise Postponed and Big Deal. Plays Stephenson's stage plays include The Memory of Water (1997), An Experiment with an Air Pump, Ancient Lights, FiveKinds of Silence (radio play 1996; stage play 2000), Mappa Mundi (2002), Harriet Martineau and The Long Road (2008) which was written in collaboration with the UK-based charity, The Forgiveness Project, to critical acclaim. Her plays frequently deal with new advances in science, such as the concept in the title of her first stage play, and include commentary on pseudoscientific fads such as urine therapy or phrenology as in her play on Harriet Martineau. Methuen Publishing Ltd published a collected edition of all four of these Stephenson plays in 2003. An Experiment with an Air Pump was revived in 2009at Hampstead Theatre, where the original production appeared in 1998 after premiering at the Royal Exchange, Manchester; the play has been since been revived at the universities of San Diego and New Orleans, the English Theatre, Berlin, the University of Waterloo and the Giant Olive Theatre Company, in London. Harriet Martineau was performed by Live Theatre in November 2016. Radio In the late 1980s, Stephenson was a scriptwriter on BBC Radio 4's drama series Citizens. Her original plays for BBC Radio include Lethal Cocktails, 1989; Darling Peidi, 1993; The Anatomical Venus, 1994; Five Kinds of Silence, 1996, which received theWriters Guild Award for Best Original Drama; Baby Blue, 1998; Through a Glass, Darkly, 2004; Life is a Dream, 2004; Nemesis, 2005; and The People’s Princess, 2008. She is also the writer of an occasional therapy comedy series on Woman's Hour called How Does That Make You Feel?, which began in 2010 and reached its 10th season in 2018. A radio version of her stage play An Experiment with an Air Pump was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in 2001. In 2002, she adapted Françoise Sagan's Bonjour Tristesse for Radio 4. Film The Memory of Water was made into a
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Charlotte de Rothschild (6 May 1825 – 20 July 1899) was a French socialite, painter, and a member of the prominent Rothschild banking family of France. Early Years She was born in Paris, the daughter of Betty von Rothschild (1805–1886) and James Mayer de Rothschild (1792–1868). Charlotte de Rothschild was raised by very wealthy parents who were at the center of Parisian culture. They patronized a number of major figures in the arts community including Gioacchino Rossini, Frédéric Chopin, Honoré de Balzac, Eugène Delacroix, and Heinrich Heine. Chopin had become Charlotte's piano teacher in 1841, and as a tacit acknowledgmentof the many years of support extended by Baron James and his wife Betty, dedicated to her (almost certainly as an 1843 wedding present) his celebrated Ballade No. 4 in F minor, Op. 52, and four years later another work, his Waltz in C-sharp minor, Op. 64, No. 2. Married Life In 1842, Charlotte married her English-born cousin Nathaniel de Rothschild (1812–1870) and in 1850 they moved to Paris, where he went to work at her father's bank, de Rothschild Frères. They were the parents of: Nathalie de Rothschild (1843–1843) Nathan James Eduard de Rothschild (1844–1881) Mayer Albert de Rothschild(1846–1850) Arthur de Rothschild (1851–1903) While Charlotte de Rothschild and her husband would always live in Paris, in 1853 they purchased the Château Brane-Mouton vineyard that they renamed Château Mouton Rothschild. In 1878, Charlotte bought the Abbaye des Vaux de Cernay in Cernay-la-Ville in the Vallée de Chevreuse, at the time only a ruins of a Cistercian abbey built in 1118. She undertook extensive restoration work and new construction to make the lakeside property into a country home. The property remained in family hands until 1945 when it was by sold by her grandson Henri James de Rothschild to aircraftso that she is recognized in the Benezit Dictionary of Artists. She exhibited in 1872 at the Paris Salon as well as at an 1879 exhibition in London, and from 1879 showed work at the annual salon of the Société des aquarellistes français. Although a minor artist, her work has been on display at the Musée du Luxembourg in Paris and other museums around France. Her illuminated Haggadah of Pesach is in the Braginsky Collection. Charlotte de Rothschild's interest extended to music, entertaining musician friends such as Georges Bizet and Camille Saint-Saëns. Charlotte de Rothschild's lifetime of involvement in artand music would greatly influence her offspring, producing writers, actors and playwrights. Later Years Tragedy struck her family in 1881 when she lost her eldest surviving child, thirty-seven-year-old James-Edouard. An attorney in the Rothschild bank in Paris, James-Edouard de Rothschild had served in the Garde Mobile during the Franco-Prussian War and suffered from a number of illnesses, including depression that led to his suicide. See also Rothschild banking family of France References Category:French socialites Category:French Jews Category:French people of German-Jewish descent Charlotte de Rothschild Category:1825 births Category:1899 deaths Category:Musicians from Paris Category:French women painters Category:French women classical pianists Category:French classical
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Percik Pesona (Stain of Enchantment) is a 1979 album by Indonesian singer Chrisye and is his third album and the second with Musica Studios. The album was received poorly, with Chrisye later reflecting that he had undergone second album syndrome. Production Percik Pesona was Chrisye's second solo album and fifth album overall. It was produced after the massive success of Chrisye's debut solo album Sabda Alam (Nature's Order) and soon after the death of Amin Widjaja, one of the founders of Musica Studios. Songwriting was handled by Chrisye, Jockie Soerjoprajogo, and Guruh Soekarnoputra. Backing vocals were provided by rising starRafika Duri. Chrisye, although shocked by Amin's passing and feeling little passion for the music, provided the vocals, mixing pop and jazz; he also hit high notes on "Kehidupanku" ("My Life'). Three drummers played on the album. Chrisye's childhood friend Keenan Nasution played drums on "Kehidupanku", while Jimmy Manopo played drums on "Angkuh" ("Arrogance"); Fariz RM played drums for the rest of the album. The title of the song was decided by a vote. Release and reception Percik Pesona was released in 1979, with Chrisye's favourite "Lestariku" ("My Eternity") as its first single. "Dewi Khayal" ("Goddess of Fantasy") and "Angkuh"were later released as further singles. The album was poorly received. After the failure of the album, Chrisye asked several other artists why Percik Pesona could have failed so badly. In reply, they said that the failure was two-fold. Firstly, new singers with successful first albums often emulate only the positive aspects of the first release, assuming that those are the reason it was successful; they were also under pressure to succeed. In his biography, Chrisye retrospectively suggested that he should have known that the album would do poorly when he felt no passion for it. Track listing References Footnotes
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Woman They Almost Lynched is a 1953 American Western film directed by Allan Dwan and written by Steve Fisher. The film stars John Lund, Brian Donlevy, Audrey Totter, Joan Leslie, Ben Cooper, James Brown and Nina Varela. The film was released on March 20, 1953, by Republic Pictures. Quentin Tarantino called this is favorite Dwan film in part because of the "thrilling stagecoach robbery" shot by William Witney. Plot Civil War factions along the Arkansas-Missouri border are warned by Border City's mayor, Delilah Courtney, to stay five miles from her neutral town or risk arrest. Quantrill, a former Confederate officerhim against foreman Lance Horton, who is secretly a Confederate spy. Sally falls in love with Lance, who is wounded in a gunfight. After saving Kate's life during the melee, the women join forces. Sally prevents the arrest of Lance by claiming to be the spy herself. She is about to be hanged by vigilantes, but Kate reveals the truth, then rides off with the men in hot pursuit, saving Sally. Cast John Lund as Lance Horton Brian Donlevy as Charles Quantrill Audrey Totter as Kate Quantrill / Kitty McCoy Joan Leslie as Sally Maris Ben Cooper as Jesse James
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Andrew Cane (fl. 1602–1650) — also Kayne, Kene, Keine, and other variants — was a comic actor in late Jacobean and Caroline era London. In his own generation he was a leading comedian and dancer, and one of the famous and popular performers of his time. Beginnings A child with the surname "Keane" (no Christian name recorded) was baptized on 2 March 1589; this might have been the actor/goldsmith. In 1602, Cane began a ten-year apprenticeship to his older brother Richard, who had finished his own apprenticeship and established himself as a goldsmith in 1600. The younger Cane won hisBen Jonson kept his membership in the bricklayers' guild, but didn't lay bricks. Andrew Cane, however, was one of a number of actors who pursued a career beyond the stage; he was a member of the goldsmiths' guild and an active goldsmith. He crossed his two careers without hesitation, turning his goldsmithing apprentices into boy actors. The 14-year-old Arthur Savill was apprenticed to Cane the goldsmith on 5 August 1631 — and before the end of the year he was playing Quartilla, one of the female roles in Shackerley Marmion's Holland's Leaguer. The same production featured, in the role ofMillicent, the 17-year-old John Wright, who'd become a Cane apprentice in 1629. (Other theatre figures of the time — actors Robert Armin and John Lowin and manager Robert Keysar — came from or maintained membership in the goldsmiths' guild. Evidence of their activity as goldsmiths, however, is lacking.) The records of the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate (which was near the Fortune Playhouse and the home of many theatre people) state that a foundling child called Hester, "her parents unknown," was christened on 18 April 1628; she is noted as having been "taken up" at Andrew Cane's "stall," hisplace of business. Aftermath After the theatres were closed in 1642 at the start of the English Civil War, Cane was an active supporter of the Royalist cause. By 1644, goldsmith Cane was coining the Royalists' debased coinage; he may have had to spend time in prison as a result. Cane did not abandon acting permanently, however. On 22 January 1650, he was one of eight performers arrested at the Red Bull Theatre, for play-acting against the regulations of the Commonwealth regime. In 1654 Cane became involved in a lawsuit with actor William Wintershall and his wife, over a thirty-year-old
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of educating people about the history of Native People in New England. Sayet's Uncle Harold once stated, “you can’t hate someone you know a lot about”. Education Rachel Sayet received her Bachelor of Science from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. She later received her master's degree from Harvard University in anthropology. Sayet's thesis was on stories of a culture hero named Moshup, a giant who is taller than the tallest trees and stays near the ocean catching whales. Moshup married Granny Squannit who was the leader of little people and keeper of plants and medicine, which ties back to
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Vic by a Catholic Congress. Architect Antoni Gaudí (who lived in Vic for three weeks during May 1910) designed two basalt and wrought iron lampposts for the Plaça Major of Vic in honour of Balmes's centenary. The lampposts were inaugurated on 7 September 1910 but destroyed in 1924. Other natives of Vic include: Trinitarian Saint Michael de Sanctis Joseph Sadoc Alemany, (1814–1888), born in Vic, later Archbishop of San Francisco Caterina Coromina i Agustí, religious woman beatified in 2006 On December 22, 2005, some inhabitants of the city won a total prize of about 500 million euros in the Spanish
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Mount Solitary, a mountain that is part of the Blue Mountains Range, a spur off the Great Dividing Range, is situated within the Blue Mountains National Park, New South Wales, Australia. Mount Solitary is located approximately west of Sydney, and a few kilometres south of Katoomba, the main town in the Blue Mountains. The local indigenous people called the mountain Korowal, meaning 'the strong one'. The origin of the contemporary name is obscure, but it may be based on the fact that Mount Solitary is the only mountain in the Jamison Valley. Description Mount Solitary is located in the middleof the Jamison Valley, one of the main valleys of the Blue Mountains region, immediately south of Katoomba. It is a long, low mountain of sandstone, stretching across the valley from west to east. Its top is approximately long; counting its lower slopes, it would be approximately long. It is approximately above sea level at its highest point. It is nearly covered in eucalyptus forest, with a small group of pine trees at the western end. Small and rugged pockets of semi-rainforest are found along its slopes, particularly where water gathers in gullies. Snow is known to fall occasionally onthe high points during winter. Bushwalking Along the way is the Ruined Castle, a rock formation on a ridge above the track, and the sealed opening of an old coal mine. In this area there's a large clearing which was once home to the mining community and is now used by campers. On the western end of the mountain is Chinamans Gully with a large rock shelter. There are expansive views to the south from the southern side of the mountain. From here the track descends to the Kedumba River, and then up to Kings Tableland, south of Wentworth Falls.
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1866 Sisyphus is a binary stony asteroid, near-Earth object and the largest member of the Apollo group, approximately 7 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 5 December 1972, by Swiss astronomer Paul Wild at Zimmerwald Observatory near Bern, Switzerland, and given the provisional designation . It was named after Sisyphus from Greek mythology. Orbit and classification This S-type asteroid (composed of rocky silicates) orbits the Sun in the inner main-belt at a distance of 0.9–2.9 AU once every 2 years and 7 months (952 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.54 and an inclination of 41° with respectto the ecliptic. The Apollo asteroid has an Earth minimum orbit intersection distance of , which corresponds to 40.4 lunar distances. It will pass from Earth on 24 November 2071, and will peak at roughly apparent magnitude 9.3 on 26 November 2071. When it was discovered it peaked at magnitude 9.0 on 25 November 1972. It is one of the brightest near-Earth asteroids. Physical characteristics In the SMASS classification, Sisyphus is a common stony S-type asteroid. Binary system In 1985, this object was detected with radar from the Arecibo Observatory at a distance of 0.25 AU. The measured radar cross-sectionwas 8 square kilometers. During the radar observations, a small minor-planet moon was detected around Sisyphus, although its existence was not reported until December 2007. Robert Stephens confirmed that it is a suspected binary, and Brian Warner added additional weight to this conclusion, giving hours as the satellite's orbital period, longer than the 25 hours previously reported by Stephens. Diameter and albedo With a measured mean diameter in the range of 5.7–8.9 kilometers, it is the largest of the Earth-crossing asteroids, comparable in size to the Chicxulub object whose impact contributed to the extinction of the dinosaurs. Larger near-Earth asteroidswhich are neither classified as Apollos nor Earth-crossers include 1036 Ganymed (32 km), 3552 Don Quixote (19 km), 433 Eros (17 km), and 4954 Eric (10.8 km). Naming This minor planet is named after Sisyphus from Greek mythology and refers to the cruel king of Ephyra, punished by being given the task of rolling a large stone up to a hill in the underworld, only to have it roll down again each time he neared the top. The official was published by the Minor Planet Center on 20 December 1974 (). Notes References External links Asteroid Lightcurve Database (LCDB), query
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80,000 Suspects is a 1963 British film directed by Val Guest and starring Claire Bloom, Richard Johnson, Yolande Donlan, and Cyril Cusack. It concerns an outbreak of smallpox in Bath, England. Plot Commencing on New Year's Eve in the city of Bath, Dr. Steven Monks (Richard Johnson) diagnoses a mystery patient as being infected with smallpox and sets in motion a citywide quarantine to contain the outbreak. His commitment to the task is affected by the deterioration of his marriage to ex-nurse Julie (Claire Bloom) following his clandestine affair with a family friend. Monks receives an unexpected blow when thedisease strikes closer to home than anticipated and Julie is diagnosed as having contracted the virus. The medical team gradually contains the outbreak until only one unidentified case remains. The search narrows the identity of final carrier down to Ruth Preston (Yolande Donlan), the woman with whom Monks had been having an affair and the wife of his close colleague Clifford (Michael Goodliffe). She's eventually traced to a deserted house where she's sheltering, lonely and desperately ill. Cast Claire Bloom as Julie Monks Richard Johnson as Steven Monks Yolande Donlan as Ruth Preston Cyril Cusack as Father Maguire Michael Goodliffeas Clifford Preston Mervyn Johns as Buckridge Kay Walsh as Matron Norman Bird as Harold Davis Vanda Godsell as Agnes Davis Basil Dignam as Medical Officer Arthur Christiansen as Editor Ray Barrett as Bennett Andrew Crawford as Dr. Ruddling Jill Curzon as Nurse Jill Ursula Howells as Joanna Duten Basil Dignam as Medical Officer Boswell Arthur Christiansen as Mr. Graney Ray Barrett as Health Inspector Bennett David Weston as Brian Davis (uncredited) Pauline Barker as Clara (uncredited) Joby Blanshard as Health Inspector Matthews (uncredited) Felix Bowness as Wellford (uncredited) Olwen Brookes as Senior Nursing Officer (uncredited) Victor Brooks as HealthJohn Merivale as Mr. Bradley (uncredited) Graham Moffatt as Fat Man in Vaccination Line (uncredited) Bruce Montague as Brooks (uncredited) Ian Parsons as Health Inspector (uncredited) Lisa Peake as Nurse Lisa (uncredited) David Rose as Health Inspector (uncredited) Guy Thomas as Himself - Newsreader (uncredited) Kim Tracy as Daphne Davis (uncredited) Russell Waters as Town Clerk of Bath (uncredited) Joseph Wise as Deputy Health Minister (uncredited) Anthony Flagg as Telegraph Engineer (uncredited) External links British Movie Directors Retrieved 2010-03-11. Original Clip from film Retrieved 2010-03-11. Opening scenes Clip from film Retrieved 2010-03-11. Val Guest - Obituary, 15 May 2006 -
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Harrogate International Festivals (HIF) is Yorkshire's longest running arts festival and a registered charity that programmes festivals and events supported by a year-round programme of arts and cultural activities for young people and communities across the north of England. Festivals include the Harrogate Music Festival, Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, Harrogate International Spring Series, Raworths Harrogate Literature Festival and a programme of outreach and new programmes under the banner of HIF+ including the Spiegeltent and Children’s Festival programmes. HIF also runs a broad programme of community outreach under the HIF+ programme including literacy, music and arts programmes for youngpeople and communities with least access to the arts due to rural isolation, geographical location or social exclusion. In 2017, HIF won the Northern Soul Arts Festival of the Year Award. History The Harrogate International Festival was set up in response to local demand to re-establish the quality of event that people had been used to between the wars in the town’s spa heyday. In 1966, with the help of composer Benjamin Britten and singer Peter Pears of Aldeburgh Festival fame, and financial support from Harrogate Borough Council and the Arts Council of England, Clive Wilson launched the Festival andFestival to grow. An incremental expansion of the performing arts programming commenced initially with jazz, contemporary dance and classical ballet, World Music and literature. Over the last 12 months the Festivals have staged over 300 distinct events and attracted over 90,000 people to its activities. Alongside box office sales they rely on sponsorship, grants and charitable giving. The current Chairman of the Trustees is Fiona Movley, she has background in communications and fundraising. This is voluntary position. Previous Chairman include Peter Blackburn CBE and Clive Leach CBE. Current Festivals Harrogate Music Festival Harrogate Music Festival – July International arts festival
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Caterthun, or the Caterthuns, is a ridge of hills near the city of Brechin in Angus, Scotland. The Caterthuns are notable for being the site of two Iron Age forts known as the White Caterthun and the Brown Caterthun which are designated as a scheduled monument. The White Caterthun, on the west, is dominated by an oval fort consisting of a massive dry-stone wall, with a well or cistern in the middle. The light-coloured stone wall gives the White Caterthun its name. The photo shows part of the dry-stone wall on the summit of the White Caterthun: The Brown Caterthun,on the east, consists of a series of earthen embankments (hence the name 'brown'). There is little evidence of settlement, agriculture or water supply here, so the purpose of the earthworks is uncertain. Brown may be from the British word for hill (bron / bryn). Both Caterthuns show several entrances to the summit that radiate outwards, like the spokes on a wheel. The significance of these entrances, if any, is unknown, but they may have aligned with geographical features that no longer exist, such as other settlements. From radio-carbon dating, the Brown Caterthun appears to have been built and modified
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Laith Ashley De La Cruz (born in 1989) is an American transgender model, actor, activist, singer-songwriter and entertainer of Dominican descent. Early life Ashley grew up in a Dominican American household in Harlem, New York. Always athletic and competitive, he practiced individual and team sports and by age 9 was already into boxing, baseball and particularly basketball his preferred sport. He continued playing sports into high school including competitively sometimes in the boys' team. He was named top athlete both boys and girls by the school's athletic director. Ashley was raised in a church-oriented family, his father being Roman Catholicvoice deepened and he quickly grew a beard. About a year later, he had a double mastectomy. Ashley adopted the name Laith (meaning "lion" in Arabic) having admired the works of Laith Hakeem. He didn't however drop his name Ashley keeping it as part of his stage name as Laith Ashley. Ashley attended business school and studied psychology at Fairfield University in Connecticut. He subsequently worked at Callen-Lorde Community Health Center, where he worked with LGBT homeless youth as a social worker. He explained in an interview, "When I was a kid, I’d always wanted to be a performer, singer,
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Oluseyi Abiodun Makinde (born 25 December 1967) is a Nigerian businessman, politician and philanthropist. He is the governor of Oyo State in South-western Nigeria. He is an engineer and a subject matter expert on fluid and gas metering. Until August 2018, he was the Group Managing Director of Makon Group Limited; an indigenous oil and gas company in Nigeria. He established his first oil and gas private business called Makon Engineering and Technical Services, (METS) at the age of 29 in the year 1997, after earning years of work experience with international oil and gas companies. Makinde contested for theOyo State 2015 gubernatorial seat on the platform Social Democratic Party (SDP). Early Life and Education Makinde was born to a renowned teacher turned accountant, late Pa Olatubosun Makinde and Madam Abigail Makinde of Aigbofa Compound in Oja’ba, Ibadan. He is the third child of the family. Makinde began his education at St Paul Primary School and completed his primary education at St Michael Primary School, Yemetu, Ibadan. His secondary education was at Bishop Phillips Academy, Monatan, Ibadan. In 1985, he gained admission to the University of Lagos (Unilag) where he earned his bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering. In 1998,Oluwaseyi trained at Industrial Control Services in Houston, Texas on Safety Shutdown System; and Development of Analytical Competence for Managing Operations at Lagos Business School (now Pan-Atlantic University) in 1999. In 2000, he had training in automation. In 2002, he studied Fundamentals of Crude Sampling at Jiskoot Auto Control Training Centre, Kent, England. Also, in 2005, he studied Understanding and Solving Complex Business Problems at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA. Professional and Business Career Makinde did his national service (NYSC) with Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) of Nigeria, where he was later engaged as a pupil engineer. He servedin different capacities; handling and partaking in several key projects between 1990 and 1992. From 1992 to 1997, he worked as a field Engineer (Eket operations) for Rebold International Limited and in 1995, he was appointed as Field Manager in the same company. In 1997, Makinde established his first business, Makon Engineering and Technical Services Limited (METS), after working for five years (1992-1997) with various international oil and gas companies, as the engineering manager. Until August 2018, he was the Group Managing Director of Makon Group of companies. Makinde is a member of national and international professional bodies notably: NigerianSociety of Engineers (NSE), Council for Regulations of Engineering in Nigeria(COREN), Oil and Gas Design Engineers of Nigeria (OGDEN), International Society of Automation (ISA), Institute of Measurement and Control UK; and American Measurement Institute (AMI). Political career In 2007, Makinde contested for the Oyo South Senatorial seat under the platform of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) but lost to the People's Democratic Party candidate- Kamoru Adedibu. Makinde remained undeterred by his first failed attempt and in 2010, under the People's Democratic Party, PDP, he aspired for the Oyo South 2011 Senatorial seat but lost the primary to the incumbentOyo South Senator. In 2014, Makinde aimed for the Oyo State 2015 governorship ticket under the platform of the People's Democratic Party (PDP). In December 2014, upon the conclusion of the party's primary election, he was denied the governorship nomination ticket. Makinde however, remained true to his ambition and defected to the Social Democratic Party (SDP), under which platform he contested for the Oyo State 2015 SDP gubernatorial candidate, but lost out in the end. In September 2017, the Caretaker National Chairman of PDP, Senator Ahmed Makarfi visited him in Ibadan and following extensive, deep and wide consultations with NationalLeaders, Oyo State leaders and elders of the Social Democratic Party, and cross sections of strategic partners within Oyo State, Engineer Seyi Makinde returned to his former political party, People's Democratic Party (PDP). He maintained that joining the PDP was not for personal gains but for the development of the State by finding lasting solutions to the array of problems facing the State. On September 29, 2018, Makinde emerged as the gubernatorial candidate of the People's Democratic Party (PDP) for the 2019 general elections for Oyo State, after polling 2772 votes at the primary election that took place at Libertystadium, Oke Ado in Ibadan. Seyi Makinde was elected into the Office of the Governor of Oyo State at the 2019 Gubernatorial elections for Oyo State which held on March 9, 2019. He polled 515, 621 votes defeating his closest rival, Mr Adebayo Adelabu of the All Progressives Congress (APC) who polled 357,982 votes. Makinde was sworn in as the 28th executive Governor of Oyo State on 29 May 2019. He took over from Senator Abiola Ajimobi after the latter's eight years in office. Awards and Recognitions ° Nigerian Union of Journalists (Oyo State Council)- Laudable Contribution to Humanity MeritAward. ° National Association of Oke-Ogun Students (Ibadan)- Merit Award. ° Fiditi Grammar School (Oyo State)- Old Student Merit Award in appreciation to the commitment, dedication and service to the association and humanity. ° Junior Chamber International (JCI) University of Calabar Chapter- Entrepreneurial Excellence Award. ° Sports Writers Association of Nigeria (Oyo State Chapter)- Gold Merit Award for immense and invaluable contribution to sports development. ° Nigerian Association of Social Workers Merit Awards (Oyo State Chapter)-Philanthropic gestures and contribution to Social Care Delivery Services. ° CCII National Merit Award. ° Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (Ibadan)- awarded Seyi "Astute Politicianof the Year 2018" for his resilience with which he had continued to assist the less privileged in the society. Personal life Makinde lives in Ibadan, Oyo State. He is married to Ominini, and they have three children. On March 30, 2020, Makinde announced via his social media accounts that he had tested positive for COVID-19. On April 5, 2020, he revealed that he had received his second negative test result for COVID-19 and was now free of the virus. References Category:Living people Category:1967 births Category:Nigerian chief executives Category:Nigerian politicians Category:Politicians from Ibadan Category:Yoruba politicians Category:University of Lagos alumni Category:Pan-Atlantic
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### User:
Alexander James Shepherd (born 13 October 1946 in Toronto, Ontario) was a member of the House of Commons of Canada from 1993 to 2004. Shepherd was a Chartered Accountant based in Port Perry, Ontario when he became the Liberal party candidate for Durham electoral district in the 1993 general election. He won the riding and was re-elected there in the 1997 and 2000 general elections, serving in the 35th, 36th and 37th Canadian Parliaments respectively. He was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Revenue, on the Finance Committee, Chair of Economics Committee for the Liberal Party, on GTA Caucus, Rural
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Alex Shepherd", {"description":'Chartered Accountant, politician', "alias":['Alexander James Shepherd']}], ["Canada", {}]]
Relations:[["Alex Shepherd", "country of citizenship", "Canada"]] |
### User:
The British Red Cross Society is the United Kingdom body of the worldwide neutral and impartial humanitarian network the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. The society was formed in 1870, and is a registered charity with more than 32,500 volunteers and 3,500 staff. At the heart of their work is providing help to people in crisis, both in the UK and overseas. The Red Cross is committed to helping people without discrimination, regardless of their ethnic origin, nationality, political beliefs or religion. Her Majesty The Queen is the patron of the society. Guiding ethos The mission of theBritish Red Cross is to mobilise the power of humanity so that individuals and communities can prepare for, deal with and recover from a crisis, summed up by the strapline 'refusing to ignore people in crisis'. In fulfilling this mission, all volunteers and staff must abide by the seven fundamental principles of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, which are: Humanity Impartiality Neutrality Independence Voluntary Service Unity Universality The British Red Cross also has four values, which guide the way they work. These are: Compassionate Inclusive Dynamic Courageous History Formation The British Red Cross was formed in 1870,just seven years after the formation of the international movement in Switzerland. This followed the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871), and a move across Europe to form similar societies. The society was founded as the 'British National Society for Aid to the Sick and Wounded in War' at a public meeting chaired by Robert Loyd-Lindsay in London on the 4th of August, 1870. It assisted in providing aid to both warring armies in the Franco-Prussian War and subsequent 19th-century conflicts, under the protection of the Red Cross Emblem. The society was one of several British volunteer medical organisations totoday. Amongst the more innovative activities of the Red Cross in the war was the training of Airedale Terrier dogs to search for wounded soldiers on battlefields. Inter-war years In 1919, after the cessation of hostilities, the League of the Red Cross (now the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent societies) was formed, and the role of national societies increased, with a shift of emphasis from wartime relief to focusing on "the improvement of health, the prevention of disease and mitigation of suffering throughout the world". The British Red Cross stayed involved with blood transfusion past the formationhas been active at many major disasters, from the coal tip slide at Aberfan in 1966, the Lockerbie air disaster in 1988 to the London bombings in 2005, providing support on all levels, from front line medical provision, to running helplines for worried relatives and long term emotional care for the victims. In July 2008, the society celebrated the 100th anniversary of the granting of the Royal Charter with a garden party at Buckingham Palace. The party was hosted by TRH The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall. Status and structure The British Red Cross is recognised bythe UK Government as one of three Voluntary Aid Societies, the other two being St John Ambulance and St Andrew's Ambulance Association. It is the sole Red Cross Society for the United Kingdom and the British Overseas Territories. The organisation is divided into three regions, then into operational areas, and then further into 'branches', which in most cases represent an administrative county. Services provided by the British Red Cross are thus able to be adapted, depending on the circumstances and needs of the local area. Overseas Branches Overseas Branches are: British Virgin Islands Red Cross Cayman Islands Red Cross Turksranging from first aid support and distribution of aid during a crisis to managing a disaster appeal scheme and providing telephone support lines in its aftermath. Notably, all services of the British Red Cross can be utilised for the emergency response service, as the situation demands. For example, the therapeutic care service can provide support at a rest centre for survivors, while Ambulances can assist the NHS in caring for the injured. The emergency response service has been present at most types of major emergency such as the London bombings, Manchester Arena bombing, Grenfell Tower fire, rail crashes, other fires,the United Kingdom. It trains people both on a community and commercial basis. The commercial training teams run nationally recognised First aid courses specifically designed to provide skills for use at work. The British Red Cross have been running these courses for 25 years and over 120,000 people are trained each year. Courses range from a basic Emergency Life Support to a three-day First Aid at Work (FAW) course recognised by the Health and Safety Executive. On a community basis, the British Red Cross also is well known as providing many first aid courses across the country to members ofIn addition, these teams are frequently called out to major incidents to provide support to the firefighters and other emergency services, from simply making refreshments available, to providing a confidential listening service for those members of the emergency services traumatised by what they have just seen. They also are key in many Local Authorities' emergency plans and may be given the role of helping at or running Survivor reception centres, setting up Friends and Family reception centres and providing first aid at them, and sometimes the providing first aid at the incident site (such as during the London bombings on7/7) – thus freeing up more highly trained Paramedics. The Red Cross also are able to set up a number of help lines in connection with major incidents. Medical equipment loan British Red Cross provides the public alongside some Hospital trusts to borrow a wheelchair for free. This operates throughout United Kingdom, including Northern Ireland. They nearly have 1,000 different offices that operate this service. This service is operated by the British Red Cross Health and Social Department. Humanitarian education This service provides a way of learning about and understanding the world – best thought of as a form ofare provided for. In cases of destitution, the British Red Cross can provide short-term emergency help, and advice on accessing other services. A peer befriending service also exists to provide help to vulnerable refugees, such as young people and women. The British Red Cross can also assist in cases of large-scale arrivals to the United Kingdom. As of September 2008, the British Red Cross is a member of the European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE). International family tracing This is another specialised international service, operated by the majority of national Red Cross and Red Crescent societies worldwide. Started tothat can provide help in disaster situations. However, the British Red Cross, in common with other national societies, sends paid personnel abroad, called delegates, who have specialised skills such as in logistics, to assist the agencies in the aftermath of a major international disaster. This is in addition to resources the British Red Cross can provide, in co-operation with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. The British Red Cross also provides assistance in recovery after the immediate post-disaster situation, helping prepare communities for future emergencies and facilitating long-term development. As the largest charity of its type,the cause, the Red Cross has a number of celebrity ambassadors which include Angela Rippon, Michael Buerk, James McAvoy, David Bull, Josie d'Arby, Nancy Dell'Olio, Konnie Huq, Craig Gannon and Dougray Scott. British Red Cross Museum The British Red Cross runs a museum containing a variety of materials from its beginnings in 1870 to the present day. This museum is a member of The London Museums of Health & Medicine group. The collections include posters, photographs, badges worn by Society members, medals awarded to Society members, medical equipment and fundraising materials. The collections can only be visited via a guidedHelp.'' Honours The Voluntary Medical Service Medal may be earned by volunteers with the British Red Cross after 15 years service with a Clasp for each additional period of 5 years service. This medal is also awarded by St. Andrew's First Aid in Scotland. See also List of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies References External links Registered Charity No. 220949 Category:Health charities in the United Kingdom Category:Red Cross and Red Crescent national societies Category:Organisations based in the City of London Category:Organizations established in 1870 Category:Medical museums in London Category:Museums in the City of London Category:First aid organizations Category:1870 establishments
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["British Red Cross", {"description":'British humanitarian organisation, part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement', "alias":['British Red Cross Society', 'Red Cross of United Kingdom', 'United Kingdom Red Cross']}], ["United Kingdom", {}], ["1870", {}], ["London", {}], ["International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies", {}], ["City of London", {}]]
Relations:[["British Red Cross", "country", "United Kingdom"], ["British Red Cross", "inception", "1870"], ["British Red Cross", "operating area", "United Kingdom"], ["British Red Cross", "headquarters location", "London"], ["British Red Cross", "member of", "International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies"], ["British Red Cross", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "City of London"]] |
### User:
Bashir Mohamed Jama "Gobe" (, ) is a politician from Somalia. He served as the Director of the National Intelligence and Security Agency from 2013 to 2014. Career Jama hails from one of the country's ethnic minority groups (Beesha Shanaad). He served in Somali Police since 1975 until 1991, and from 2000 until 2013. Before that, he was the Director of the Somali Ministry of Interior before serving as Deputy Minister of Somali Social Development. Beginning in August 2012, he began serving as an MP in the House of the People or Lower House of the Federal Parliament of Somalia.
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Bashir Mohamed Jama", {"description":'former Director for the Somali National Intelligence and Security Agency'}], ["Politician", {}], ["Somalia", {}]]
Relations:[["Bashir Mohamed Jama", "occupation", "Politician"], ["Bashir Mohamed Jama", "country of citizenship", "Somalia"]] |
### User:
Xenotilapia tenuidentata is a species of cichlid endemic to Lake Tanganyika where it is only known from the western shore (Democratic Republic of the Congo). This species can reach a length of TL. It can also be found in the aquarium trade. Some authorities place this species in the genus Microdontochromis along with Xenotilapia rotundiventralis, with X. tenuidentata as the type species. References External links Photograph tenuidentata Category:Fish of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Category:Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Category:Cichlid fish of Africa Category:Fish of Lake Tanganyika Category:Fish described in 1951 Category:Taxonomy articles created by
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Xenotilapia tenuidentata", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Xenotilapia tenuidentata", "parent taxon", "Xenotilapia"]] |
### User:
Marcos Vinícius dos Santos Gonçalves (born 24 May 1979), known as Marquinhos Santos, is a Brazilian football manager. Career Born in Santos, São Paulo, Santos played youth football for Santos FC as a midfielder, but never played professionally. In 1999 he moved to Curitiba, and started working in a small football school in the city called Sociedade Morgenau. In 2003, Santos joined Atlético Paranaense, being in charge of the youth squads until 2009, when he joined Coritiba's under-20 squad. In 2011 he was appointed manager of the Brazil under-15 national team, and took over the under-17s in the following year,issues and remained at Coritiba. On 8 June of the following year, he was relieved from his duties at the latter club, after four consecutive defeats. Santos spent the following three seasons managing clubs in the Série B and in the Série C, such as Fortaleza, Figueirense, Paysandu, Londrina, São Bento and Juventude. On 16 September 2019, he returned to the top tier after being named manager of Chapecoense, seriously threatened with relegation. Honours Club Coritiba Campeonato Paranaense: 2013 Bahia Campeonato Baiano: 2014 Fortaleza Campeonato Cearense: 2016 International Brazil U15 South American U-15 Championship: 2011 References External links Category:1979 births
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Marquinhos Santos", {"description":'Brazilian football manager', "alias":['Marcos Vinícius dos Santos Gonçalves']}], ["Brazil", {}], ["Santos, São Paulo", {}], ["Gonçalves", {}], ["Midfielder", {}]]
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### User:
Nathaniel Hazard (1776 – December 17, 1820) was a U.S. Representative from Rhode Island. Born in Newport, Rhode Island, Hazard was graduated from Brown University in 1792. He served as a member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives and served as speaker. Hazard was elected as a Republican to the Sixteenth Congress and served from March 4, 1819, until his death in Washington, D.C., on December 17, 1820. He was interred in the Congressional Cemetery. Career Nathaniel wrote to Alexander Hamilton on a few occasions in New York where he brings to Hamilton’s attention of the cities problems and
### Assistant:
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### User:
Dunnottar Parish Church is a parish church of the Church of Scotland, serving Stonehaven in the south of Aberdeenshire, Scotland. It is within the Church of Scotland's Presbytery of Kincardine and Deeside. Location The church building is situated in Dunnottar woods, Stonehaven (within the AB39 postcode area), sitting high above the bank on the Carron water. It sits on the south-western periphery of Stonehaven, and is approximately a 20-minute walk from the Market Square in the centre of town. Dunnottar Castle stands approximately one and a half miles to the south-east of the church. The manse stands directly across thein 1852 and later extended in 1869. It again underwent major reconstruction in 1903, which made it considerably larger when a nave and chancel were added, turning the previously rectangular building into a cruciform shape. The building recently underwent more renovations, this time to make it more accessible, and to include a multi-purpose activity room. The churchbell which was cast in 1793 by Andrew Lawson, the last of the Old Aberdeen founders is supposed to be one of the best examples of his work, F. C. Eeles in his “Church bells of Kincardineshire” speaks of it as follows: “Insignificant though
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Dunnottar Parish Church", {"description":'church in United Kingdom', "alias":['Dunnottar Church']}], ["Aberdeenshire", {}], ["Kincardineshire", {}]]
Relations:[["Dunnottar Parish Church", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Aberdeenshire"], ["Dunnottar Parish Church", "historic county", "Kincardineshire"]] |
### User:
The Prix Allez France is a Group 3 flat horse race in France open to thoroughbred fillies and mares aged four years or older. It is run over a distance of 2,000 metres (about 1¼ miles) at Chantilly in late April or early May. History The event is named after Allez France, a successful mare trained at Chantilly during the 1970s. Her victories included the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe in 1974. The Prix Allez France was established in 2004, and the first running was won by Pride. It was one of several races for older fillies introduced that year
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Prix Allez France", {"description":'flat horse race in France'}], ["France", {}]]
Relations:[["Prix Allez France", "country", "France"]] |
### User:
James Lemuel Carey (24 December 1839 - 15 May 1919) was a Union Army soldier who was awarded the Medal of Honor in the American Civil War. He was born in Onondaga County, New York. Carey enlisted in the Army from Syracuse, New York in December 1861 (his name was misspelled as James C. Cary), and was assigned to the 10th New York Cavalry. He was promoted to Sergeant in March 1865. He transferred to the 1st New York Provisional Cavalry in June 1865, and mustered out with that regiment the next month. Carey was buried in Chartiers Cemetery in
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["James L. Carey", {"description":'Medal of Honor recipient', "alias":['James Lemuel Carey']}], ["Medal of Honor", {}], ["Onondaga County, New York", {}]]
Relations:[["James L. Carey", "award received", "Medal of Honor"], ["James L. Carey", "place of birth", "Onondaga County, New York"]] |
### User:
Hilde Krahl (10 January 1917 – 28 June 1999) was an Austrian film actress. She appeared in 70 films between 1936 and 1994. She was born Hildegard Kolačný in Brod, Austria-Hungary (now Slavonski Brod, Croatia) in 1917, and she died in Vienna, Austria in 1999. In 1944 she married Wolfgang Liebeneiner; their daughter Johanna Liebeneiner also became a famous actress. Filmography Die Puppenfee (1936) Mädchenpensionat (1936) Lumpaci the Vagabond (1936) Serenade (1937) Gastspiel im Paradies (1938) Der Hampelmann (1938) The Merciful Lie (1939) Der Weg zu Isabel (1940) Donauschiffer (1940) Herz - modern möbliert (1940) Der Postmeister (1940) The Comedians
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Hilde Krahl", {"description":'Austrian actress', "alias":['Hildegard Kolačný', 'Hildegard Krahl']}], ["Slavonski Brod", {}], ["Vienna", {}], ["Austria", {}], ["Johanna Liebeneiner", {}], ["Krahl", {}]]
Relations:[["Hilde Krahl", "place of birth", "Slavonski Brod"], ["Hilde Krahl", "place of death", "Vienna"], ["Hilde Krahl", "country of citizenship", "Austria"], ["Hilde Krahl", "child", "Johanna Liebeneiner"], ["Hilde Krahl", "family name", "Krahl"]] |
### User:
Palletooru () is a 1952 Indian Telugu-language drama film, produced by P. Sivaramaiah under the People's Art Productions banner and directed by Tatineni Prakash Rao. It stars N. T. Rama Rao, Savitri and music composed by Ghantasala. This Silver Jubilee film initiated a trend of films with rural settings and social themes. Plot Chandram (N. T. Rama Rao) is a dynamic youth of a village who educates the villagers about new scientific technics to develop their agriculture skills. He falls for a beautiful girl Suguna (Savitri) daughter of a farmer Sambaiah (Koduuri Achaiah) The village head Ganapati (S. V. RangaRao) poses himself as a devotee but factually a malevolent person who tries to cease Chandram's activities along with his associate Shankaram (Ramana Reddy). Once Ganapathi tries to molest his henchmen Kondaiah's (Nagabhushanam) wife Shantha (T. G. Kamala Devi) the cousin of Chandram but she escapes. Keeping that grudge in mind, he slanders against Shanta that she has illicit relations with Chandram when Kondaiah necks her out. Meanwhile, Ganapathi exploits Sambaiah and he decides to couple up Suguna with him to which she refuses. So, Ganapathi & Shankaram ploys & indicts Chandram in a crime and he is sentenced. Parallelly,Ganapathi also implicates Kondaiah in a black-marketing case and sends him jail. In prison, Chandram makes Kondaiah realize his mistake. After release, the bravo Chandram stands courageously for justice, gives a check to the baddies and makes them punished for their deeds. Finally, the movie ends on a happy note with the marriage of Chandram & Suguna. Cast N. T. Rama Rao as Chandram Savitri as Suguna S. V. Ranga Rao as Ganapati Ramana Reddy as Shankaram Mikkilineni as Lawyer Perumallu as Pichaiah Chadalavada as Subbaiah Nagabhushanam as Kondaiah Koduuri Achaiah as Sambaiah T. G. Kamala Devi as Shanta Hemalathaas Anasuya Vasundhara as Naagulu Seshamamba as Pichamma Padmavathi as Seetamma Baby Krishna Veni as Lalitha Crew Art: Biranag, S. V. Krishna Rao Choreography: Pasumarthi Stills: V. Kutumba Rao Story - Dialogues - Lyrics: Sunkara, Vasireddy Playback: Ghantasala, P. Leela, Jikki, Pithapuram, Madhavapeddi Satyam, M. S. Rama Rao, B. Gopalam, Vakkalanka Sarala Music: Ghantasala Screenplay: Tatineni Prakash Rao, M. S. Chowdary Editing: Nataraja Modaliyar Cinematography: Ajaykar, Vital Director: Tatineni Prakash Rao Banner: People's Art Productions Release Date: 16 October 1952 Soundtrack Music composed by Ghantasala. Lyrics were written by Sunkara & Vasireddy. The patriotic song "Cheyetti Jai Kottu Telugoda" is
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Palletooru", {"description":'1952 film by Tatineni Prakash Rao'}], ["Film", {}], ["N. T. Rama Rao", {}], ["1952", {}], ["Ramana Reddy", {}], ["T. G. Kamala Devi", {}], ["S. V. Ranga Rao", {}]]
Relations:[["Palletooru", "instance of", "Film"], ["Palletooru", "cast member", "N. T. Rama Rao"], ["Palletooru", "publication date", "1952"], ["Palletooru", "cast member", "Ramana Reddy"], ["Palletooru", "cast member", "T. G. Kamala Devi"], ["Palletooru", "cast member", "S. V. Ranga Rao"]] |
### User:
Pinchas Kehati, born Pinchas Guchtman, (1910 – December 21, 1976) was the author of משניות מבוארות Mishnayot Mevuarot (literally "Explained Mishnayos", popularly known as "the Kehati Mishnayot") which is a commentary and elucidation on the entire Mishnah. This work was written in Modern Hebrew. This work was translated into English and published in 1994 as The Mishnah. Biography Kehati was born in Volhynia, Poland. In his youth he studied in religious and religious Zionist schools. He received rabbinical ordination from the rabbinical school in Warsaw. He made aliyah in 1935. He began studies at Hebrew University but was forced toeach pamphlet, he explicated 14 Mishnayot (two per day), two laws from the Shulchan Aruch, two laws from the Rambam, and a selection from Tanakh. The first pamphlets contained commentaries that Kehati compiled from local yeshiva students. Frustrated at the inconsistencies in the commentary quality and approach, Kehati hired Rabbi Zvi A. Yehuda, who taught Mishna on an Israel Broadcasting Service (Kol Israel) radio program, to help develop a consistent approach to his commentary. Between 1956 and 1959, approximately 150 of pamphlets included attribution to his co-author. The first book-edition of the Kehati Mishna includes this attribution (see image). ManyKehati's commentary was influenced by the clarity of the Meiri's Talmud commentary, as well as the modern approaches of Dr. Petrushka, Rabbi Zvi A. Yehuda, and Professor Hanoch Albeck whom he quotes in his commentary. External links and References Retrospective on the 30th year since his passing (Hebrew), kipa.co.il . Published online as part of a study program of two Mishnayot per day. Currently inactive, but archives contain the complete text of Kehati in English for Moed, Nashim, Nezikin, and about half of Kodashim. Notes Category:Israeli Orthodox Jews Category:1910 births Category:1976 deaths Category:Burials at the Jewish cemetery on the Mount
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Pinchas Kehati", {"description":'Israeli writer', "alias":['Ḳahati, Pinḥas', 'Keg̃áti, Pinkhas', 'Kehati, P.', 'Qohati, Pinhas', 'Kehati, Pinjas']}], ["Volhynia", {}], ["Rabbi", {}], ["Israel", {}]]
Relations:[["Pinchas Kehati", "place of birth", "Volhynia"], ["Pinchas Kehati", "occupation", "Rabbi"], ["Pinchas Kehati", "country of citizenship", "Israel"]] |
### User:
Norman Guest ( – ) was a professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. He played at representative level for Yorkshire, and at club level for Castleford, Featherstone Rovers (Heritage № 179) (two spells as a World War II guest), Batley (World War II guest), Barrow and Doncaster (Heritage № 14), as a , or , i.e. number 1 or, 3 or 4. Playing career County honours Norman Guest won a cap for Yorkshire while at Castleford, he played right-, i.e. number 3, in the 13-22 defeat by Lancashire at Warrington's stadium on Wednesday 5October 1949. County League appearances Norman Guest played in Castleford's victory in the Yorkshire County League during the 1938–39 season. Notable tour matches Norman Guest played in Castleford's 3-17 defeat by New Zealand during the 1947–48 season at Wheldon Road, Castleford on Wednesday 8 October 1947. Club career Norman Guest made his début for Featherstone Rovers on Saturday 2 December 1939, he appears to have scored no drop-goals (or field-goals as they are currently known in Australasia), but prior to the 1974–75 season all goals, whether; conversions, penalties, or drop-goals, scored 2-points, consequently prior to this date drop-goals were oftennot explicitly documented, therefore '0' drop-goals may indicate drop-goals not recorded, rather than no drop-goals scored. In addition, prior to the 1949–50 season, the archaic field-goal was also still a valid means of scoring points. Genealogical information Norman Guest was the father of the rugby league footballer who played in the 1960s and 1970s for Castleford and Doncaster (Heritage № 339); Ian Guest. References External links Search for "Guest" at rugbyleagueproject.org Photograph "14 September 1946. Away v Leeds (Yorkshire Cup 1st Round 1st leg) won 8-11" at archive.castigersheritage.com Photograph "8 October 1947. Home v New Zealand lost 3-17" at archive.castigersheritage.com
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Norman Guest", {"description":'rugby league player'}], ["Featherstone Rovers", {}], ["Rugby league", {}]]
Relations:[["Norman Guest", "member of sports team", "Featherstone Rovers"], ["Norman Guest", "sport", "Rugby league"]] |
### User:
Phlegmariurus squarrosus is a species of lycophyte in the family Lycopodiaceae. The genus Phlegmariurus is accepted in the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), but not in other classifications, which submerge the genus in Huperzia, with this species as Huperzia squarrosa. The species has a wide distribution from the west Indian Ocean, through tropical and subtropical Asia to eastern Australia and the Pacific. References squarrosus Category:Flora of Australia Category:Flora of China Category:Flora of Eastern Asia Category:Flora of Indo-China Category:Flora of Malesia Category:Flora of Papuasia Category:Flora of the Indian subcontinent Category:Flora of the Northwestern Pacific Category:Flora of the south-central
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Phlegmariurus squarrosus", {"description":'species of plant'}], ["Species", {}], ["Phlegmariurus", {}]]
Relations:[["Phlegmariurus squarrosus", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Phlegmariurus squarrosus", "parent taxon", "Phlegmariurus"]] |
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