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Les Avenières is a former commune in the Isère department in the Rhône-Alpes region of south-eastern France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Les Avenières-Veyrins-Thuellin. The inhabitants of the commune are known as Avenièrants or Avenièrantes. Geography Les Avenières lies on the left bank of the Rhône as it loops north some 25 km east by north-east of Bourgoin-Jallieu and 25 km west by north-west of Chambéry. The Rhone river forms the north-eastern border of the commune and is also the border between Isère and Ain departments. Access to the commune is by roadD450 from Veyrins-Thuellin in the south-west which goes to the village then continues south-east to Saint-Genix-sur-Guiers. The D33 goes from Morestel in the north-west and passes through the north of the commune and across the Rhône bridge where it becomes the D10 and goes north-east to join the D19. The D40B goes north from the village to join the D33. The D40E connects the D40 at the eastern edge of the commune to the D40B. Apart from the village there are the hamlets of Le Chamolay, Curtille, Le Grand Chaffard, Le Maitre, Le Bessey, Le Sablonnet, and Les Nappes. Thecommune has a large forest in the north-east on the Île Molettes with a large urban area in the centre mixed with farmland, and in the south mixed forest and farmland. The north-western border of the commune consists entirely of a left branch of the Rhône river as it loops north on its course through Lyon south to the Mediterranean. The Grand Canal de l'Huert forms the south-western border of the commune which curves to join the Huert river which is part of the northern border of the commune. The Canal du Champ forms the southern border of the communewhere it connects the Grand Canal de l'Huert to the Bièvre river which forms the south-eastern border of the commune flowing north-east to join the Rhône. Neighbouring communes and villages Toponymy The name Avenières is derived from the Franco-Provençal avena meaning "oats". History Prehistory From the late Neolithic to the middle Bronze Age the region was inhabited by farmers. A scythe found in Les Avenières region is preserved in the Vienne Museum. It is the only evidence of human occupation before the Gallo-Romans. It was found at the confluence of the Bièvre and the Rhône. Roman Era In 1989 maintenancetown was served two secondary railways: the Chemin de fer de l'Est de Lyon to Lyon and Aosta, and the Tramways départementaux de l'Isère, which was taken over by Tramways de l'Ouest du Dauphiné, to La Tour-du-Pin. This last operated from 1909 to 1935. Administration List of Successive Mayors Mayors from 1941 (Not all data is known) Demography In 2010 the commune had 5,430 inhabitants. The evolution of the number of inhabitants is known from the population censuses conducted in the commune since 1793. From the 21st century, a census of communes with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants is held everyfive years, unlike larger communes that have a sample survey every year. Culture and heritage Civil heritage The Chateau Bertaudières The Chateau Cerisier The Chateau Eau-Morte The André Moiroud Stadium (formerly Epinettes Stadium), owned by the HOC The Walibi Rhône-Alpes Amusement Park Religious heritage The Church of Buvin. The Church contains a Bronze Bell (1661) which is registered as an historical object. Environmental heritage The alluvial area of Rhône du Pont de Groslée at Murs-et-Gélignieux The Huert river and wetland The Corangle wetland The Corneille wetland and lake See also Communes of the Isère department Bibliography Aimé Bocquet, The problemof palafittic occupation in the north of lower Dauphiné. From the late Neolithic to the middle Bronze Ages, Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, Vol. 64, No. 2, 1967, pp. 501–516 Ulysse Robert, General catalogue of manuscripts in the public libraries of France: Departments, Plon, Nourrit & cie (Paris), 1903, Vol. 41 N2007-RA-0098, Bleu Stéphane, 2007, Gallia, adlfi website External links Les Avenières official website Les Avenières on Lion1906 Les Avenières on Géoportail, National Geographic Institute (IGN) website les Avenieres on the 1750 Cassini Map Les Avenières on the INSEE website Notes and references Notes References Category:Former communes of Isère
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Tufail Abbas ( c. 1928 – 8 September 2019) was a Pakistani trade unionist and communist politician. He was a veteran labour leader in the airline industry, heading the Airways Employees Union. In later years he served as chairman of the Pakistan Mazdoor Mahaz ('Pakistan Workers Front') and chief editor of the Urdu monthly Awami Manshoor. Airline industry union leader Abbas was a union leader at Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) during four decades. He had become an employee at Orient Airways in late 1948, and took part in the strike of March 1949. When PIA acquired Orient Airways, Abbas becamea PIA employee. At the time PIA management and union leaders were in close contact, the PIA Managing-Director Malik Nur Khan sent Abbas to India to study labour practices at Air India. Abbas was jailed on different occasions due to his labour activism. In the Communist Party Abbas was recruited to the Communist Party of Pakistan in the early 1950s by Ahmed Aziz (who was later accused of having working as a government infiltrator). At the time Abbas was working in the airline industry. By the late 1950s Abbas held the post of secretary of the Karachi Committee of theCommunist Party. The Karachi Committee was hierarchically placed under the Hyderabad-baded Sindh Provincial Committee, but under Abbas' leadership the Karachi Committee became increasingly independent. Apart from his base in the PIA union, Abbas also counted on support within the National Students Federation and some labour groups in the city. Sino-Soviet split In 1966 the Sindh Provincial Committee was split in pro-Soviet and pro-China parties, a split taking place in the aftermath of the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war. Abbas emerged as the general secretary of the underground, pro-Beijing Communist Party. His group won the support of the majority in the National StudentsFederation. Abbas was invited to the October 1 celebrations in China in 1966. After the 1966 split Abbas' faction began seeking to build an organization across West Pakistan. It also had some contacts in East Pakistan. Abbas' labour wing was known as the Quami Mazdoor Mahaz ('National Labour Front'), which emerged from the Markezi Mazdoor Committee in 1969. The Airways Employees Union was the strongest union inside the Quami Mazdoor Mahaz. Alliance with Bhutto Tacitly, the Abbas faction provided support to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. In the late 1960s, some member of the Abbas' faction joined Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party onthe instruction of the party and began occupying positions in the PPP. Abbas' support base amongst students and workers played an important role in building the PPP in Karachi at its earliest phase. One of the key leaders of Abbas' faction that became a PPP leader was Meraj Muhammad Khan. Nevertheless, Abbas' group opted not to participate in the 1970 elections. In the context of the Bangladesh Liberation War, Abbas' faction opposed military action in East Pakistan at some points whilst maintaining a critical view of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's Awami League. Sino-Albanian split Abbas sided with Albania in the Sino-Albanian
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Kala Keerthi Sybil Wettasinghe is a veteran children's book writer and an illustrator in Sri Lanka. Her books have been translated into several languages. Early life Wettasinghe was born in 1927 and spent the first six years of her childhood in the village of Gintota, situated in the suburbs of Galle, in southern Sri Lanka. Then her family moved to Colombo where she entered into Holy Family Convent. At the age of 17 Wettasinghe joined Lankadeepa newspaper. In 1952, Wettasinghe moved to the much-coveted Lakehouse publications where she became the main illustrator of the Janatha newspaper. Her entry into Lakehouseyear 1995. Prize for illustrations of "Deeptha Lama Maga", awarded by prestigious Biannale of Illustrations in Bratislava (BIB). State Literary Award for "Magul Gedara Bath Natho" book in year 1971. Best Children's Picture Book award for "The Umbrella Thief" by Ministry of Cultural Affairs of Japan, in year 1986. Most popular Children's Book award by Tokyo Children's Library, in year 1987. Award for Illustrations of the Sinhala Children's Bible "Deeptha Lama Maga" in year 1989, presented by Biannale of Illustrations Bratislava. Best Juvenile Children's Book Award for "Meti Gedara Lamay" by Arts Council of Sri Lanka in year 1992. BestEnglish Children's Book award for "Wooley Ball" by Arts Council of Sri Lanka in year 1994. Gratiaen Prize for best English Children's Book for "The Child in Me" in year 1995. Hoity the Fox – By the Ministry of Culture and Social Welfare Japan, in year 1995. "Vishwa Prasadini" Award for Art and Children's Literature presented by the 1st Prime Minister of Sri Lanka Hon. Sirimavo Bandaranayaka, in year 1996. Award of "Rohana Pradeepa" from the University of Ruhuna in year 2003. "Galu Pahansilu" – from the Young Men's Buddhist Association Galle, in year 2004. Kala Keerthi award presented bythe Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, in year 2005. "Solis Mendis Award" in year 2007. For "Dura Gamanak" The State literary awards Nikkei Asia Prize for Culture for 2012 See also Sybil Wettasinghe,1995, Child in Me, Colombo: Published by Author Anoli Perera, 2008,“Women Artists in Sri Lanka: Are they the Carriers of the Women’s Burden?", South Asia Journal for Culture, Vol. 2. Pitakotte: Colombo Institute/ Theertha. References External links http://www.sybilwettasinghe.com Category:Living people Category:1927 births Category:Sinhala-language writers Category:Sri Lankan Buddhists Category:Sri Lankan illustrators Category:Kala Keerthi Category:Women children's writers Category:Sri Lankan women illustrators Category:21st-century women writers Category:People from Galle Category:People from
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Andras Jones (born August 12, 1968) is an American television and film actor, author, and musician. He has participated in the bands The Previous and Mr. Jones and The Previous, as well as under his own name. Jones is the creator and host of Radio8Ball, a musical divination show in which participants' questions are answered by picking songs at random and interpreting the randomly chosen songs as the answer to the question. In 1989 Jones was nominated for a Young Artist Award for Best Young Actor in a Horror or Mystery Motion Picture for his role in A Nightmare on
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Cheiloneurus is a parasitic wasp genus in the family Encyrtidae. Species Cheiloneurus afer Cheiloneurus alaskae Cheiloneurus albicornis Cheiloneurus albinotatus Cheiloneurus angulatus Cheiloneurus angustifrons Cheiloneurus annulicornis Cheiloneurus antipodis Cheiloneurus apeniculus Cheiloneurus argentifer Cheiloneurus assamensis Cheiloneurus axillaris Cheiloneurus bangalorensis Cheiloneurus banksi Cheiloneurus basiri Cheiloneurus beerwahi Cheiloneurus bifasciatus Cheiloneurus bimaculatus Cheiloneurus boldyrevi Cheiloneurus bonariensis Cheiloneurus bouceki Cheiloneurus brunneipes Cheiloneurus burnsi Cheiloneurus caesar Cheiloneurus callidus Cheiloneurus carinatus Cheiloneurus ceroplastis Cheiloneurus cheles Cheiloneurus chiaromontei Cheiloneurus chinensis Cheiloneurus chlorodryini Cheiloneurus chrysopae Cheiloneurus cinctiventris Cheiloneurus claviger Cheiloneurus coimbatorensis Cheiloneurus compressicornis Cheiloneurus cristatus Cheiloneurus cushmani Cheiloneurus cyanonotus Cheiloneurus daghestanicus Cheiloneurus diversicolor Cheiloneurus divinus Cheiloneurus dubius Cheiloneurus dumasi Cheiloneurus
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Frank Gorenc (born October 14, 1957) is a United States Air Force four-star general who served as the Commander, U.S. Air Forces Europe; Commander, U.S. Air Forces Africa; Commander, Allied Air Command; and Director, Joint Air Power Competence Center. He previously served as the Assistant Vice Chief of Staff and Director, Air Staff, Headquarters, United States Air Force at the Pentagon. The general is a command pilot with more than 4,100 flight hours in the T-38A, F-15C, MQ-1B, UH-1N and C-21A. He assumed his final assignment on August 2, 2013. Early life Gorenc was born in Ljubljana, Yugoslavia, present daySlovenia. Frank and his older brother, Stanley immigrated with their parents to the United States from the former Yugoslavia in 1962 when they were 8 and 4. After arriving in America, their father worked as a tailor, and their mother served as a factory machine operator. Gorenc said that he was required to go to summer school each year simply because the opportunity for education existed and was available. "We didn't know the language," Frank said. "We didn't know the culture, and we came to learn (that) the United States is truly a land of opportunity." Frank went to visithis older brother, then a freshman cadet, during Parents' Weekend at the U.S. Air Force Academy, and there he developed his first interest in the Air Force. "As a freshman in high school walking on the academy campus, you couldn't help but be inspired," the younger brother said. Coming from a lower-middle-class background, the opportunities seemed boundless. Military career Gorenc earned his commission in 1979 as a distinguished graduate from the United States Air Force Academy. He has commanded a fighter squadron, an operations group, two wings and the Air Force District of Washington. Gorenc has served in numerous positionsFranklin, 30 March 2012. Since April 2012, Gorenc has served as the Assistant Vice Chief of Staff and Director, Air Staff, Headquarters United States Air Force at the Pentagon. Education 1979 Distinguished graduate, Bachelor of Science degree in civil engineering, United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colorado 1983 Squadron Officer School, by correspondence 1986 Air Command and Staff College, by correspondence 1986 NATO Tactical Leadership Program, Jever Air Base, West Germany 1988 Distinguished graduate, United States Air Force Fighter Weapons School, Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada 1989 Master of Aeronautical Science degree, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, Florida 1994U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C. June 2007 - August 2008, Commander, Air Force District of Washington, Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland August 2008 - August 2009, Director of Air and Space Operations, Air Combat Command, Langley Air Force Base, Virginia August 2009 – March 2012, Commander, 3rd Air Force, Ramstein Air Base, Germany April 2012 – August 2013, Assistant Vice Chief of Staff and Director, Air Staff (United States), Headquarters United States Air Force at the Pentagon, Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland August 2013 – August 2016, Commander, U.S. Air Forces in Europe; Commander, U.S. Air Forces in Africa; Commander,Air Component Command, headquartered at Ramstein Air Base, Germany; and Director, Joint Air Power Competency Centre, Kalkar, Germany. Awards and decorations Other achievements 2006 Joseph A. Moller Trophy, Air Combat Command's Outstanding Wing Commander Effective dates of promotion See also Air Combat Command 3rd Air Force United States Air Force List of commanders of USAFE References External links Third Air Force Factsheet 3rd Air Force welcomes new commander New one-star joins two-star brother Publications Tito's Victory: Theory into Reality, 1995 - National War College, Washington D.C. Category:1957 births Category:Living people Category:United States Air Force generals Category:Recipients of the Legion of
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The Gare des Brotteaux is an old railway station located in the Brotteaux quarter, in the 6th arrondissement of Lyon. History Built by the Paris-Lyon-Méditerranée company (PLM), and especially by Parisian architect Paul d'Arbaut and engineer Victor-Louis Rascol, the station served the line to Ambérieu-en-Bugey and Geneva. Its style is almost the same as the Gare d'Orsay which was built at the same time. The first station, called Gare de Genève, was created in 1858, then was replaced by the current station, built in 1904 and inaugurated on 29 March 1908. The new railway station Since 1982, facades, roofs and
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Hubertusburg is a Rococo palace in Saxony, Germany. It was built from 1721 onwards at the behest of Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, and after his death served as a residence of his son Augustus III. The 'Saxon Versailles' is chiefly known for the signing of the 1763 Treaty of Hubertusburg that ended the Seven Years' War. The palace is located in the municipality of Wermsdorf near Oschatz. History The extended Wermsdorf Forest had already been a hunting ground for the Wettin elector Augustus in the 16th century. A first Renaissance hunting lodge (Jagdschloss) inWermsdorf was erected in 1609–10. From 1699 Augustus the Strong and his governor Prince Anton Egon of Fürstenberg held festive parforce hunts here, while their large entourage and the royal guests had to be accommodated in the village and at nearby Mutzschen Castle. During the feast of Saint Hubertus on 3 November 1721, Augustus the Strong commissioned a new palace that should serve as a hunting lodge but also reflect the royal claims of the Saxon elector, who since 1697 ruled as King of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in personal union. The palace, then one of the largest Baroque castles in
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Gianna Michaels (born 1983 in Seattle, Washington), is an American pornographic actress. Awards 2006 XRCO Award – Best On-Screen Chemistry (Fashionistas Safado: The Challenge - Evil Angel) 2007 AVN Award – Best Group Sex Scene, Video (Fashionistas Safado: The Challenge) – 12-person group scene 2007 FICEB Ninfa Award – Most Original Sex Sequence (Fashionistas Safado - Evil Angel Video/Ifg) with Belladonna, Jenna Haze, Sandra Romain, Rocco Siffredi & 7 others 2008 AVN Award – Unsung Starlet of the Year 2008 AVN Award – Best Sex Scene in a Foreign-Shot Production (Furious Fuckers Final Race) – 10-person group scene 2008 AVN
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Lucy Holleron (née Kite) (born 1 April 1977) is an English journalist and presenter. She is originally from Breaston, Derbyshire. Career Holleron graduated from Nottingham Trent University in 1998 with a degree in Broadcast Journalism. In January 2002, she became a news presenter and producer on Central Tonight for ITV Central. In January 2006, she was appointed the entertainment correspondent, conducting celebrity interviews and reporting for a weekly feature Entertainment Tonight. Holleron also presented Sky High, a regional programme covering views of the Midlands from a helicopter, until she was replaced by Ruth England. On 3 November 2008, she wasappointed as a fill-in presenter on the now defunct West Midlands edition of Central Tonight for the following three months. From 23 February 2009 until 24 May 2016, she was the weather presenter in the East and West Midlands, whilst also deputising as a news presenter. In August 2010, she presented the weather forecasts on London Tonight for ITV London. On 28 December 2010, she guest presented the weather forecasts on Daybreak for ITV Breakfast. Holleron is also an events host, qualified yoga teacher and writer. References External links Lucy Holleron on Twitter. Lucy Holleron on Linked In. Category:1977 births
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The Flight of the Gossamer Condor is a 1978 American short documentary film directed by Ben Shedd, about the development of the Gossamer Condor, the first human-powered aircraft. It won an Oscars at the 51st Academy Awards in 1979 for Documentary Short Subject. The Academy Film Archive preserved The Flight of the Gossamer Condor in 2007. Cast Bryan Allen as Himself - Final Pilot Paul B. MacCready as Himself (as Paul MacCready) Tyler MacCready as Himself Greg Miller as Himself Peter Lissaman (Engineer) as Himself Roger Steffens as Narrator (voice) References External links Watch The Flight of the Gossamer Condor
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Canada–Malaysia relations refers to bilateral foreign relations between the two countries, Canada and Malaysia. Canada has a high commission in Kuala Lumpur, and Malaysia has a high commission in Ottawa. Both countries are full members of the Commonwealth of Nations. Canada has a long history of close and friendly bilateral relations with Malaysia and was the first country to recognise Malaysia's independence. Science and technologies Canada and Malaysia have strengthening ties in sectors such as aerospace, green technology, agriculture, transport, oil and gas. Trade Canada's trade relationship with Malaysia includes commerce across several sectors. Malaysia is also one of themembers of the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership which Canada joined in 2012. In 2018, Canada seeking to enhanced the trade relations with the Malaysian state of Sabah especially in infrastructure, energy, information and communications technology, water treatment and waste since it has expertise in these areas as well in education. High Commission of Malaysia, Ottawa The High Commission of Malaysia in Ottawa is Malaysia's primary diplomatic mission in Canada. It is located at 60 Boteler Street in Ottawa (). The first High Commissioner of Malaysia to Canada was Tan Sri Ong Yoke Lin, who was appointed in April 1967. Thecurrent High Commissioner of Malaysia to Canada is Her Excellency Dato’ Nor’ Aini Abd Hamid, since September 2019, who replaced Her Excellency Dato' Aminahtun (from 2016-2018), and prior to her, Her Excellency Dato' Hayati Ismail (2011-2015). High Commission of Canada, Kuala Lumpur The High Commission of Canada in Malaysia is found in Kuala Lumpur. The High Commissioner since November 2017 is Julia G. Bentley. There is also a consulate headed by an honorary consul in Penang. Further reading Canada's relations with Malaysia JSTOR References External links High Commission of Malaysia in Ottawa Consulate General of Malaysia in Vancouver Malaysia Category:Bilateral
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evolution, there are creationists who believe that evolution is contradicted by the creation myths found in their religions and who raise various objections to evolution. As had been demonstrated by responses to the publication of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation in 1844, the most controversial aspect of evolutionary biology is the implication of human evolution that humans share common ancestry with apes and that the mental and moral faculties of humanity have the same types of natural causes as other inherited traits in animals. In some countries, notably the United States, these tensions between science and religion have
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Josef Pešice (12 February 1950 – 18 December 2017) was a Czech football player and manager. As a player Pešice played for both famous Prague clubs, Sparta Prague and Slavia Prague. His largest success however came with Zbrojovka Brno, when he won the Czechoslovak First League with this team in the 1977/78 season. As a manager Pešice led several Czech clubs before focusing on Czech Republic youth national teams. He was named the temporary head coach of the Czech Republic in September 2013 and won three out of three games (2 competitive and 1 friendly). References External links Profile at
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The North Pole Project is the third studio album by the Christian rock band Number One Gun. It was released under Tooth & Nail Records on January 15, 2008. History After Number One Gun decided to split up in 2006 all four former members went their own directions. Jeff Schneeweis started a band called "The North Pole Project" which would later be his inspiration for the name of this album. Sometime later Schneeweis was approached by Tooth & Nail Records and asked to release his music under the name Number One Gun. When Schneeweis agreed to the deal he began
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Yandoit is a town in Victoria, Australia. The town is in the Hepburn Shire local government area, north west of the state capital, Melbourne. At the , Yandoit and the surrounding area had a population of 154. The Yandoit area was first settled by Captain John Stuart Hepburn. Alluvial gold was discovered in 1854 and 5,000 miners came to the area creating a gold rush. The gold soon ran out and deep lead mining started in 1858. The town was surveyed in 1861 when it had a population of 232. Despite its population declining to 77 in 1881, Yandoit was
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KCBD, virtual and VHF digital channel 11, is an NBC-affiliated television station licensed to Lubbock, Texas, United States. The station is owned by Gray Television. KCBD's studios and transmitter are located in South Lubbock near the interchange of I-27 and Slaton Highway. History KCBD-TV signed on the air on May 10, 1953 as the second television station in Lubbock, after KDUB-TV (now KLBK-TV). It was owned by a group headed by Joe Bryant, owner of KCBD radio (AM 1590). For a short time thereafter, Jim Reese was a broadcaster on KCBD. KCBD was a primary NBC affiliate with a secondarysignal, over VHF channel 11, on June 12, 2009, the official date in which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition VHF channel 9 to channel 11. Programming Syndicated programming on KCBD includes Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, Inside Edition, The Kelly Clarkson Show, Texas Country Reporter, and Right This Minute among others. The station has served as the South Plains' television partner for the Children's Miracle Network since the charity's inaugural 1984 telethon. Starting with the 1989–90 season and ending with its final
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Barry Robert Bickmore is a professor in the department of geological sciences at Brigham Young University (BYU). He is also a devout Mormon, having written Restoring the Ancient Church: Joseph Smith and Early Christianity (Ben Lomond: FAIR, 1999) as well as several articles that have been published in the FARMS Review. Bickmore was born in Redwood City, California, and raised in California and Utah. He served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in Iowa. He obtained a degree in geology with minors in philosophy and chemistry from BYU. He then received aPh.D. in geochemistry from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, where his advisor was Michael F. Hochella. He then was a postdoctoral research assistant at the University of Colorado for about a year and a half prior to joining the BYU faculty in August 2001. Bickmore, a conservative Republican, is known for his activism in support of action to combat global warming, such as when he criticized a proposed bill in Utah that described climate change as a hoax. The bill passed in spite of Bickmore's efforts to defeat it. Among other callings in the LDS Church, Bickmore has servedas a seminary teacher. In geochemistry and related fields, Bickmore has focused on the study of low-temperature geochemical reactions and the development of geoscience curricula as part of the curriculum of elementary education majors. References External links Bickmore's blog, Anti-Climate Change Extremism in Utah Maxwell Institute bio BYU faculty bio Mineralogical study with Bickmore as the lead author Category:American Latter Day Saint writers Category:American Mormon missionaries in the United States Category:20th-century Mormon missionaries Category:Living people Category:Brigham Young University alumni Category:Virginia Tech alumni Category:Church Educational System instructors Category:Brigham Young University faculty Category:American geochemists Category:Mormon apologists Category:Latter Day Saints from California Category:Latter
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José Luis Mendilibar Etxebarria (born 14 March 1961) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a midfielder, and the current manager of SD Eibar. Playing career Mendilibar was born in Zaldibar, Basque Country. He enjoyed an average career as a player, never representing a club in La Liga and successively representing Bilbao Athletic, CD Logroñés, Sestao Sport Club and SD Lemona. Mendilibar was a key player in midfield for Sestao during the side's second division years – playing eight seasons with them in that level and appearing in nearly 300 competitive matches – narrowly missing out on promotion in1986–87 under Javier Irureta. Coaching career After retiring in 1994, Mendilibar worked in the youth categories of Athletic Bilbao before being appointed head coach of UD Lanzarote and then SD Eibar. His success with the latter in the second division, on a very limited budget, translated into a narrow miss on promotion in 2005. Mendilibar then returned to Athletic, the club he supported as a child. He was sacked after a few months, as the Lions were eliminated from the Intertoto Cup in the opening round and were bottom of the league with just one win in nine matches. Forwas appointed at Levante UD, signing a one-year contract with an option for a second season. On 20 October, after only one win in eight games, and no goals scored and 14 conceded from four home fixtures, he was dismissed. Mendilibar returned to Eibar on 30 June 2015, replacing Gaizka Garitano. In 2016–17, he led the team to a best-ever quarter-final finish in the Copa del Rey before an injury-stripped squad lost 5–2 on aggregate to Atlético Madrid. The following year they came ninth in the league, again a club record. Managerial statistics References External links Athletic Bilbao manager profile
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Cyclone of the Range is a 1927 American silent western film directed by Robert De Lacey and starring Tom Tyler, Elsie Tarron, and Frankie Darro. Cast Tom Tyler as Tom MacKay Elsie Tarron as Mollie Butler Harry O'Connor as Seth Butler Richard Howard as Jake Dakin Frankie Darro as Frankie Butler Harry Woods as The Black Rider / Don Alvarado References Bibliography Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links Category:1927 films Category:1920s Western (genre) films Category:American films Category:American Western (genre) films Category:Films
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Reality Sandwiches is a book of poetry by Allen Ginsberg published by City Lights Publishers in 1963. The title comes from one of the included poems, "On Burroughs' Work": "A naked lunch is natural to us,/we eat reality sandwiches." The book is dedicated to friend and fellow Beat poet Gregory Corso. Despite Ginsberg's feeling that this collection was not his most significant, the poems still represent Ginsberg at a peak period of his craft. Poems in this collection include: "My Alba" "The Green Automobile" "Siesta in Xbalba" "On Burroughs' Work" "Love Poem on Theme by Whitman" "Malest Cornifici Tuo Catullo"In Perú" Allen Ginsberg was travelling in South America in 1960 with Lawrence Ferlinghetti. After being in Chile and Bolivia, he arrived alone to Perú, approximately in May. He spend some weeks camping near to Machu Picchu. Then in Lima he knew the Peruvian poet Martín Adán who was living in the Hotel El Comercio where Ginsberg rented a room. During those days he wrote some poems of Reality Sandwiches, like the long "To An Old Poet In Perú" that has three parts: the one that named the poem, "Die Greatly In Thy Solitude" and "The Dazzling Intelligence". The poem
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René Rémond (; 30 September 1918 – 14 April 2007) was a French historian, political scientist and political economist. Born in Lons-le-Saunier, Rémond was the Secretary General of Jeunesses étudiantes Catholiques (JEC France in 1943) and a member of the International YCS Center of Documentation and Information in Paris (presently the International Secretariat of International Young Catholic Students). The author of books on French political, intellectual and religious history, he was elected to the Académie française in 1998. He was also a founding member of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. Rémond is the originator of the famous division ofduring the Vichy régime.) Similarly, he classes the National Front (Le Pen's party) in this group. Orléanists he identifies as economic liberals, which characterizes present-day conservative parties. This group presents itself as bourgeois rather than populist. Rémond died in Paris. Bibliography Lamennais et la démocratie (1948) La Droite en France de 1815 à nos jours (1954) Histoire des États-Unis (1959) Les Catholiques, le communisme et les crises (1929–1939) (1960) Les États-Unis devant l’opinion française (1815–1852), 2 volumes (1962) Les Deux Congrès ecclésiastiques de Reims et Bourges (1896–1900) (1964) La Vie politique en France, tome 1 : 1789-1848 (1964) Forces religieuseset attitudes politiques dans la France depuis 1945 (contributing editor; 1965) Atlas historique de la France contemporaine (contributing editor; 1966) Léon Blum, chef de gouvernement (contributing editor; 1967) La droite en France, De la Première Restauration à la Ve République, 2 volumes (1968) La Vie politique en France, tome 2 : 1848-1879 (1969) Le Gouvernement de Vichy et la Révolution nationale (contributing editor; 1972) Introduction à l’histoire de notre temps, 3 volumes (1974) L’Anticléricalisme en France de 1815 à nos jours (1976) Vivre notre histoire (Entretien avec Aimé Savard) (1976) Édouard Daladier, chef de gouvernement (1977) La France et lesFrançais en 1938-1939 (1978) La Règle et le consentement. Gouverner une société (1979) Les droites en France (1982, published in 2005) Quarante ans de cabinets ministériels (contributing editor, 1982) Le Retour de de Gaulle (1983) Essais d’ego-histoire (in collaboration; 1987) Pour une histoire politique (contributing editor; 1988) Notre siècle (1918–1988), rééditions mises à jour, 1992 et 1995 (1988) Age et politique (in collaboration; 1991) Paul Touvier et l’Église (in collaboration; 1992) Valeurs et politique (1992) Histoire de la France religieuse (co-contributing editor; 1992) La politique n’est plus ce qu’elle était (1993) Le Catholicisme français et la société politique (1995) LeFichier juif (in collaboration; 1996) Les Crises du catholicisme en France dans les années trente (1996) Religion et société en Europe aux XIXe et XXe siècles. Essai sur la sécularisation (1998) Une laïcité pour tous (1998) L'Anticléricalisme en France (1999) Les Grandes Inventions du christianisme (1999) La politique est-elle intelligible ? (1999) Le Christianisme en accusation (2000) Discours de réception à l'Académie française (2000) Regard sur le siècle (2000) Du mur de Berlin aux tours de New York : douze années pour changer de siècle (in collaboration with François Azouvi) (2002) La République souveraine (2002) Une mémoire française (2002) LeSiècle dernier (2003) Le nouvel anti-christianisme (2005) Les Droites aujourd'hui (2005) References External links L'Académie française Intervention Colloque L’Europe en quête de son identité culturelle. Décembre 2005 Category:1918 births Category:2007 deaths Category:People from Lons-le-Saunier Category:École Normale Supérieure alumni Category:Sciences Po faculty Category:Historians of France Category:Historians of Vichy France Category:Lycée Louis-le-Grand alumni Category:Members of the Académie française Category:Members of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences Category:Grand Officiers of the Légion d'honneur Category:Grand Cross of the National Order of Merit (France) Category:Commandeurs of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres Category:Commandeurs of the Ordre des Palmes Académiques Category:Commanders of the Order of
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Leo Friedman (July 16, 1869 - March 7, 1927) was an American composer of popular music. Friedman was born in Elgin, Illinois and died in Chicago, Illinois. He is best remembered for composing the sentimental waltz "Let Me Call You Sweetheart" with lyrics by Beth Slater Whitson in 1910. Another popular composition was "Meet Me Tonight in Dreamland." He also wrote the music for the popular ragtime song "Coon, Coon, Coon" in 1900. Lyrics were added by Gene Jefferson in 1901. The song was claimed to be the most successful song of 1901. It was published and promoted by "Sol
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Niccolò Granello, also Nicholas Granello and Granelo Nicolao (1553 - 30 November 1593), was an Italian painter established in Spain, specialized in frescos decorative painting grotesques. Son of the first marriage of Giovanni Battista Castello ("Il Bergamasco"), Granello came to Spain while still a child, around 1567, accompanying his stepfather, and called by Álvaro de Bazán, 1st Marquis of Santa Cruz to work on his palace in Viso del Marqués. In 1571, his father died and he was appointed painter to the king for King Philip II of Spain. Granello performed some of the decoration of the golden tower ofthe old Royal Palace of Madrid, where he continued to work until 1575. He went to the Royal Monastery of San Lorenzo de El Escorial with his half-brother Fabrizio Castello and other team members who had accompanied his stepfather from Genoa, including brothers Gian Maria and Francesco da Urbino, Francesco da Viana and others, with whom he worked continuously in the decoration of vaults and some walls of various units of the basilica and monastery of El Escorial until his death. References Brown, Jonathan, The Hall of Battles of El Escorial: the work of art as a cultural artefact, Ediciones
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Kristián Koštrna (born 15 December 1993) is a Slovak footballer who plays as a defender for Romanian Liga I club Dinamo București. Club career He played for the Bulgarian First League side Pirin Blagoevgrad. In January 2020, he signed a contract with Romanian Liga I club Dinamo București. International career He played for Slovakia national team at youth level. In October 2019 Koštrna was called to Slovakia national team for Euro 2020 qualifying match against Wales. However, on 7 October 2019 it was announced that he will be replaced by Boris Sekulić due to an ankle injury. References External links
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The 1984 Clemson Tigers football team was an American football team that represented Clemson University in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) during the 1984 NCAA Division I-A football season. In its seventh season under head coach Danny Ford, the team compiled a 7–4 record (5–2 on the field against conference opponents, but officially 0–0), and outscored opponents by a total of 346 to 215. The team played its home games at Memorial Stadium in Clemson, South Carolina. The 1984 season was Clemson's final season on probation for violation of recruiting rules. The probation was imposed by the NCAA and ACC
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Funan County () is a county in the northwest of Anhui province, China, bordering Henan province to the south. It is under the administration of the prefecture-level city of Fuyang. Funan has an area of and a population of 1,553,000. Administrative divisions Funan County administers twenty towns and 11 townships. Former divisions are indicated in italics. Towns: Lucheng, formed from the merger on 27 December 2006 of Chengguan () and Chengjiao Township () Fangji (方集镇) Zhonggang (中岗镇) Caoji (曹集镇) Tianji (田集镇) Chaiji (柴集镇) Yuanji (袁集镇), which was assigned to Yingzhou District's administration on 10 October 2006 Zhaoji (赵集镇) Miaoji (苗集镇)
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Relations:[["Funan County", "country", "China"], ["Funan County", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Fuyang"]] |
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is a baseball arcade video game developed and originally published by SNK on 26 April, 1990. A follow-up to the original Baseball Stars on Nintendo Entertainment System, it was one of the launch titles for both the Neo Geo MVS (arcade) and Neo Geo AES (home) platforms, in addition of also being one of the pack-in games for the AES, as well as the first baseball title released for the Neo Geo. In the game, the players compete with either computer-controlled opponents or against other players in matches across various ballparks. Although it was originally launched for the Neo GeoMVS, Baseball Stars Professional would be later released for both Neo Geo AES and Neo Geo CD in 1991 and 1995 respectively, in addition of being re-released through download services for various gaming consoles, among other ways to play it as of date. Baseball Stars Professional garnered mixed reception from critics upon its original release, with reviewers praising various aspects of the game such as the presentation, visuals and quality of the digitized voice samples but many were divided in regards to the gameplay. Gameplay Baseball Stars Professional is a baseball game similar to the original Baseball Stars and othersimilar golf titles from the era, where players compete in matches against computer-controlled opponents or other players across two ballparks. There are only two modes featured in the game: Tournament is the main single-player mode where one player compete against CPU-controlled opponents in a season. Versus, as the name implies, is a two-player mode where two people compete against each other. Most of the original teams featured in the first Baseball Stars return in this game, however some of the features within the first game were removed for a more arcade-style approach of the sport, such as team management andthe ability to create a new team from the ground up, among others. If a memory card is present, the players are allowed to save their progress and resume into the last match the game saved at through a password system. Development and release Baseball Stars Professional was initially launched for arcades on 26 April 1990 and holds the distinction for being the first baseball game to be developed for the Neo Geo platform. The game was also released during the same period for the Neo Geo AES, when the system was originally a rental-only system for video game storesand hotels in Japan, but this was later reversed due to high demand and price, coming into the market as a luxury console on 1 July 1991. It was re-released for the Neo Geo CD on 21 April 1995, with minimal changes compared to the original MVS and AES versions. The game has received multiple re-releases in recent years on various digital distribution platforms such as the Virtual Console, PlayStation Network, Nintendo eShop and Xbox Live. Reception Baseball Stars Professional received mixed reception from critics after its initial launch. Famicom Tsūshin scored the Neo Geo CD version of the game
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Eila Kivikk’aho, actually Eila Sylvia Sammalkorpi née Lamberg (8 February 1921 – 21 June 2004) was a Finnish poet. Kivikk'aho was born in Sortavala soon after the World War I. One of her most famous poems is "Nocturno", which was already published in the debut work Sinikallio (1942). Kivikk'aho was awarded the State Prize for Literature in 1951, 1961, 1971 and 1976. She also received the Eino Leino Prize in 1976 and the Aleksis Kivi Prize in 1981. As a translator to Finnish, Kivikk'aho was awarded the State Prize for Translation in 1970 and 1979. She died in Helsinki at
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Parker Sawyers (born 1984) is an American actor. His first leading film role was starring as a young Barack Obama in Southside With You. He is also featured in Don't Hang Up as Mr. Lee. He also stars as the Parisian jazz musician, Albert Fallou, in the BBC production World on Fire. He is the son of Paula Parker-Sawyers (now Means), who was deputy mayor of Indianapolis from 1989 to 1991, and James Sawyers, a teacher and administrator. Filmography Video Games References External links Category:Living people Category:1984 births Category:21st-century American male actors Category:African-American male actors Category:People from Indianapolis Category:American emigrants
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Roger M. Rueff (13 December) is an award-winning writer whose produced dramatic works include stage plays, teleplays, and screenplays. Movie career His stage play Hospitality Suite premiered at South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa, California in 1992 and has been subsequently produced internationally. So Many Words also premiered at South Coast Rep, where it garnered two awards from the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle: one for best writing and the other for best play to receive its world premiere in Los Angeles or Orange counties (the Ted Schmitt Award). Mr. Rueff's works for the screen include the teleplay God Livesproduced by the Magic Door Children's Theater in Chicago and The Big Kahuna, his screen adaptation of Hospitality Suite, starring Kevin Spacey and Danny DeVito. The Big Kahuna premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September, 1999, and was one of three films nominated for the 2000 Humanitas Prize for independent film. In 2011 he collaborated with the Italian screenwriter Nicola Barile, author of The Art of Happiness, at the international Boys & Girls web series, directed by Fulvio Iannucci and co-funded by the European Community to raise awareness among European teenagers on some topics, such as nutrition, use
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Greg Hire (born 19 September 1987) is an Australian professional basketball player for the Rockingham Flames of the State Basketball League (SBL). A product of Wanneroo Basketball Association, Hire played four years of college basketball in the United States before joining the Perth Wildcats in 2010 as a development player. In 2011, he was elevated to the full-time roster. After playing in back-to-back losing NBL Grand Finals in 2012 and 2013, Hire won his first championship as a member of the Wildcats in 2014. He went on to win three more championships in 2016, 2017 and 2019. Early life Hireis the son of a Hungarian immigrant, his mother having moved to Australia as a refugee and settled in Perth, Western Australia. Hire's parents did not have a healthy relationship and split when he was around 10 years old. He grew up around domestic violence, drugs, alcohol, depression and a lack of positive role models. He eventually turned to basketball, where at Woodvale Senior High School, he played basketball and Australian Rules football. He was a fan of the Perth Wildcats growing up, idolising club legends Andrew Vlahov and Scott Fisher. Junior career Hire is a product of the WannerooWolves and represented Western Australia at both the under-18 and under-20 national championships. He was named the SBL Most Improved Player with Wanneroo in 2006, before moving to the United States for college. He attended Miles Community College from 2006 to 2008, before spending his final two years at Augusta State University. He averaged a double-double during both seasons at Miles, including 16.5 points and 10.7 rebounds per game during the 2007–08 season. He was a Mon-Dak all-conference first-team selection in 2006–07 and second-team selection in 2007–08. He was also an all-region first-team pick in both 2006–07 and 2007–08. Inhis first season at Augusta State, he averaged 5.3 points and 5.1 rebounds in 35 games (34 starts). He helped Augusta State win the Peach Belt Conference regular season championship and the Peach Belt Tournament title in 2009. The next year, he led them to the Peach Belt East Division regular season championship as well as the Peach Belt Tournament semi-finals. He was also part of the Augusta State team that advanced to the NCAA Division II Final Four in 2009 and the Elite Eight in 2010. Hire played for the Wanneroo Wolves in the State Basketball League (SBL) everyyear between 2005 and 2012, where he earned the nickname "Mayor of Wanneroo". In August 2011, Hire guided the Wolves to the SBL Championship after recording 31 points and 28 rebounds in the grand final against the Perry Lakes Hawks, earning Grand Final MVP honours. Professional career Perth Wildcats (2010–2019) Hire started his NBL career in the 2010–11 season with the Perth Wildcats as a development player, having earned his call-up after a strong season at the Wolves. He impressed in his first season, showing a significant improvement in his fitness, mobility, strength and shooting, and took the floor inNew Zealand Breakers in Perth. He delivered a rousing half-time speech before injecting life into Perth in the third term, recording seven points and four rebounds for the quarter, leading the way as the key figure in the comeback that reduced a deficit that at its worst reached 13 points. He finished the game playing almost 17 minutes in what was a one-point win. The Wildcats went on to lose the championship to the Breakers with a loss in game three. While playing for the Wolves during the 2012 NBL off-season, Hire suffered a finger injury. Hire continued on withUnited 3–1 in the 2019 NBL Grand Final series. Post-Wildcats career (2019–present) Hire's first game with the Rockingham Flames for the 2019 SBL season saw him record a triple-double with 18 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists against the Cockburn Cougars. In May 2019, he played in the same SBL game alongside former Wildcats teammates and fellow retirees Brad Robbins and Shawn Redhage when the Flames faced the Perry Lakes Hawks. Later that month, he travelled with the Australian men's 3x3 team to compete in the 3x3 Asia Cup. Hire thought his basketball career was over after retiring from theHire married long-time partner Ainsleigh Sanders. Teammate Damian Martin was chosen by the couple as the marriage celebrant, while former Wildcats teammates Cameron Tovey and Brad Robbins were chosen as his groomsmen. Robbins is Hire's brother-in-law, with the pair having both married sisters. Hire is an ambassador for the Perth-based charity, "Youth Focus". The charity offers mental health support to young people. In December 2014, he started his own charity called "A Stitch in Time". Earlier in the year, Hire won a Pride of Australia medal after saving at least two young lives through his charity work. On 1 June2018, Hire was named the recipient of the 2018 Western Australian of the Year Youth Award, for his work with A Stitch in Time. References External links Greg Hire at wildcats.com.au Greg Hire at wolfpackbasketball.com.au Greg Hire at aug.prestosports.com "The man behind that hair" at nbl.com.au "Perth Wildcats veteran Greg Hire tipped to keep spot on roster" at thewest.com.au "Fourth Championship Caps Amazing Career for Hire" at nbl.com.au "Retiring Perth Wildcats vice-captain Greg Hire breaks down in tears after winning fourth NBL championship" at thewest.com.au "Hire on 3x3: I Absolutely Love It" at nbl.com.au Category:1987 births Category:Living people Category:Augusta Jaguars
### Assistant:
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Joseph Church Helm (June 30, 1848—May 13, 1915) was a jurist from Colorado. He served as a Colorado state representative, a Colorado state senator, and as an associate justice and chief justice of the Colorado Supreme Court. He ran for governor in 1892 and was defeated by Davis Hanson Waite. At the age of 13, he enlisted as a drummer boy in the Union Army during the Civil War. Over four years, he saw numerous battles and then was a captured and held at the Belle Isle Prisoner Camp, when he was released in 1863, he became private. He stayedin the war until its end, when he was 17 years of age. He saved his pay from his service to pay for his college education. Early life Helm was born in Chicago on June 30, 1848 to Sarah (Bass) from Canada and Ruggles Helm from New York. The family moved to Prescott, Ontario soon after Helm was born. In 1854, they moved to Iowa. Both his mother and father's families served during the American Revolutionary War. Civil War At the age of 13, he signed up as a drummer boy during the Civil War (1861–1865). He was first withhe was admitted to the bar in 1875. In 1890, he received an honorary Doctor of Law (LLD) from the University of Iowa. Helm began working as a lawyer in Colorado Springs, Colorado in 1875. He was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives in 1877 and to the State Senate in 1879, representing El Paso County in both offices. He became a district judge in 1880. He was elected to the Colorado Supreme Court in 1882 and re-elected in 1891. He served as chief justice from 1889 to 1892. Helm resigned from the supreme court in 1892 to runfor Governor of Colorado as a Republican. He was his party's nominee but was defeated by Populist Party politician Davis Hanson Waite. Helm practiced law until his death, except for a period from 1907 to 1909 when he was appointed by Governor Henry Augustus Buchtel to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court. As an attorney, he represented the interests of the Moffat Tunnel, Moffat estate and Moffat railway. Another client, beginning in 1904, was the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad. He had an office in the Equitable Building. Personal life He married on September 27, 1881 to MarciaStewart of Wisconsin. Her family moved to Colorado Springs in 1874 for her father George H. Stewart's health. They did not have any children. Her sister was Alice Stewart Hill, the wife of Francis B. Hill, was an artist and art instructor of Colorado Springs. Helm was a member of a number of organizations. He died May 13, 1915 at his home in Denver and is buried in there in the Fairmount Cemetery in a large mausoleum, where he was interred following public funeral services in Denver. After Joseph died, Marcia lived part of the time with her sister Hattie
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Surprised Parties is a 1942 Our Gang short comedy film directed by Edward Cahn and starring George McFarland, Billie Thomas, Mickey Gubitosi, Billy Laughlin, and Janet Burston. It was the 206th Our Gang short (207th episode, 118th talking short, 119th talking episode, and 38th MGM produced episode) that was released. Plot Upset because, as a leap year baby (he only has a birthday every four years), Froggy remembers the fact that he has almost never had a birthday party. The gang decides to throw a surprise party in Froggy's honor, but they pretend to throw him out of the clubhouse
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Mona Mansour is an American playwright of Middle Eastern descent. She has been a member of the Public Theater's Emerging Writers Group and a Playwrights' Center Core Writer. She is currently a resident playwright at New Dramatists. Mansour often writes about the Middle East, and she has frequently collaborated with English director Mark Wing-Davey. In addition to her theater work, Mansour has written for the television shows Queens Supreme and Dead Like Me. Produced works Urge for Going - Public Theater (New York, 2011) (Public LAB production) The Hour of Feeling - Humana Festival at Actors Theatre of Louisville (2012)
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Abel Rey (; 29 December 1873, Chalon-sur-Saône – 13 January 1940, Paris) was a French philosopher and historian of science. Abel Rey succeeded Gaston Milhaud as professor of the history of philosophy in its relation to science at the Sorbonne, and established the Institut d'histoire des sciences et des techniques to encourage cooperation between the sciences and humanities. It has been argued that Rey influenced Philipp Frank and the formation of the Vienna Circle. Rey's history of science was wide, including sciences from physics to sociology, and deep, ranging from antiquity to the present; moreover, it included the study ofculture's influence on the sciences of the time. Works L'énergétique et le mécanisme au point de vue des conditions de la connaissance, Paris, F. Alcan, 1905 (reprinted 1923) La théorie de la physique chez les physiciens contemporains, 1907 La philosophie moderne, éd. Flammarion, 1908 La science dans l'antiquité, dans L'évolution de l'humanité, vols. 1-5 La Science orientale avant les Grecs (1930) La jeunesse de la science grecque (1933) La maturité de la pensée scientifique en Grèce (1939) L'apogée de la science technique grecque : les sciences de la nature ; les mathématiques d'Hippocrate à Platon (1939) L'apogée de la science
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Marietta Holley (pen names, Jemyma, later, Josiah Allen's Wife; July 16, 1836 – March 1, 1926), was an American humorist who used satire to comment on U.S. society and politics. Holley enjoyed a prolific writing career and was a bestselling author in the late 19th century, though she was largely forgotten by the time of her death. Her writing was frequently compared to that of Mark Twain and Edgar Nye. Along with Frances Miriam Whitcher and Ann S. Stephens, Holley is remembered as one of America's most significant early female humorists. Holley's work appealed to all classes of society. Herreaders are scattered over the entire world and include men and women of every station and grade. Her books are widely read in Europe. Early years and education Holley was born in a modest cottage in Ellisburg, New York, on the outskirts of Adams, New York, July 16, 1836. She was the youngest of Mary Tabor and John Milton Holley's seven children. The family lived on a small farm in Jefferson County, New York, on the road leading from Adams to Pierrepont Manor. The Holleys went to Jefferson county from Connecticut. Her maternal grandfather, "Old Squire Taber" as he wascalled, went to Pierrepont Manor from Rhode Island. She received the rudiments of an English education at a neighboring school, and later, with the exception of teachers in music and French, she pursued her studies at home. At fourteen, she ended her formal education in order to supplement the family income by giving piano lessons. When she was a young girl she was given to poetry, and wrote a great deal. She thought she should like to become a great painter; then she decided to be a poet, but finally abandoned both intentions. Holley commenced her career as a writerwhat they called "a sweet little poem " from her pen. She wrote also for the Independent and several other weekly and monthly journals. Her articles at that time were mostly poems, and were widely copied in the United States and in Europe. It was in a dialect sketch written for Peterson's Magazine that she first adopted the pen-name "Josiah Allen's Wife". That pen name and "Jemyma" were a protest against the too musical pen-names of literary aspirants. Those articles attracted the attention of Elijah Bliss, president of the American Publishing Company, of Hartford, Connecticut. Against the protest of hispoem of hers called The Mormon Wife. Holley's follow-up prose work, Sweet Cicely, (New York, 1885) was wrought out through her horror of intemperance and her desire to see the young of her country saved from the evils of strong drink. This was followed by Samantha at Saratoga (Philadelphia, 1887). Poems (New York, 1887), revealed strength and tenderness, but failed to suit the popular taste because they were wanting in the grotesque humor and pathetic homeliness of style which characterized her prose works. Samantha Amongst the Brethern, appeared in 1891. After Holley became a successful novelist, she built a mansionmarried. A maiden sister resided with her. Holley died March 1, 1926, at age 89. Selected works '[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc2.ark:/13960/t5db7wk1v;view=1up;seq=9 'My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet's: Designed as a Beacon Light, To guide Women to Life Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness, But which May Be read by Members of the Sterner Sect, Without Injury to Themselves or The Book]. Josiah Allen's Wife. Hartford Conn., : American Publishing Company, 1873, c. 1872 Josiah Allen’s Wife as a P.A. and P.I.: Designed as a Bright and Shining Light, To Pierce the Fogs of Error and Injustice That Surround Society and Josiah, And to BringOther Stories. New York: J.S. Ogilvie, 1887 ''Poems]. New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1887 [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=coo1.ark:/13960/t6h13kh3s;view=1up;seq=11 Samantha at Saratoga or Flirtin’ with Fashion. Philadelphia: Hubbard Brothers, 1887 Samantha Among the Brethren. New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1890 Samantha on the Race Problem. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1892; republished 1898 as Samantha Among the Colored Folks Tirzah Ann's Summer Trip and Other Sketches. New York: F. M. Lupton, 1892 Samantha at the World's Fair. New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1893 Widder Doodle's Love Affair and Other Stories. New York: F. M. Lupton, 1893 Josiah's Alarm and Abel Perry’s Funeral. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1895New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1913 Josiah Allen on the Woman Question. New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1914 What Is Behind Ouija? The World Magazine (27 June 1920): 5,13 The Story of My Life, Published serially. Watertown Daily Times, Watertown, N.Y., 5 February to 9 April 1931 References Bibliography External links Marietta Holley's 1890 Book 'Samantha Among the Bretheren' has been serialized in Mister Ron's Basement Podcast Marietta Holley (links, bibliography, and pictures at the American Authors site) Electronic Books Marietta Holley site created by South Jefferson Central School Students Category:1836 births Category:1926 deaths Category:American humorists Category:19th-century American women writers
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Andreas Lasnik (born 9 November 1983) is an Austrian footballer. Club career Lasnik came up through the youth system of FK Lankowitz. He broke into the professional level in 2001 with ASK Köflach. In 2001, he was signed by SV Ried of the Austrian first division, the Österreichische Fußball-Bundesliga. He would appear in over 80 matches with the club and net 14 goals. In 2005, he was signed by FK Austria Wien where he played until the end of the 2007–08 season. After that season, he signed a three-year-contract for the German Second division club Alemannia Aachen After the endof his contract on 30 June 2010, he left Alemannia Aachen. Lasnik signed on 26 June 2010 with Dutch club Willem II Tilburg. International career He made his debut for Austria in an October 2005 friendly match against England, coming on for the last ten minutes of his only international so far. Honours Austria Wien Austrian Football Bundesliga: 2005–06 Austrian Cup: 2005–06, 2006–07 SV Ried Austrian Football First League: 2004–05 References External links Category:1983 births Category:Living people Category:People from Voitsberg Category:Austrian footballers Category:Austria international footballers Category:Austrian expatriate footballers Category:SV Ried players Category:FK Austria Wien players Category:Alemannia Aachen players Category:Willem II
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Ngainga also called Ngaimu is a village located west of Ukhrul in Ukhrul district, Manipur state, India. The village is approximately 17 kilometers from Ukhrul. As per 2011 census, the village has a total of 267 households with 2881 persons of which 964 are male while 917 are female. Of the total population, 323 are in the age group of 0–6 years. The average sex ratio of the village is 1015 female per 1000 male which is higher than the state's average of 930. The literacy rate of the village is 92.22%. Neighbouring villages of Ngainga are Seikhor, Tolloi, PhaleeSomdal and Tuinem. Ngainga is the birthplace of Luingamla who was shot dead on 24 January 1986 by Indian army personnel for resisting their attempt to rape her. Religion Ngainga is one of the Tangkhul villages that embraced Christianity very early. For this, the villagers got access to western education right from the coming of Christian missionaries to Ukhrul district. Majority of the inhabitants are Christians. As per 2011 census, the literacy rate of the village stood at 92.22% which is higher than the state's average of 76.94%. People and occupation The village is home to people of Tangkhul Naga
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Erasmo Solórzano (born July 20, 1985 in Los Fresnos, Michoacán) is a Mexican soccer player, who plays midfielder for Bakersfield Brigade in the USL Premier Development League, having been waived by CD Chivas USA of Major League Soccer at the end of the Major League Soccer 2007 season References Erasmo Solorzano at the Major League Soccer website Category:1985 births Category:Living people Category:Chivas USA players Category:Footballers from Michoacán Category:University of California, Riverside alumni Category:LA Laguna FC players Category:Bakersfield Brigade players Category:USL League Two players Category:Major League Soccer players Category:UC Riverside Highlanders men's soccer players Category:Chivas USA draft picks Category:Mexican footballers Category:Association
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Lophoptera is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae. Species Lophoptera abbreviata Walker, 1865 Lophoptera africana (Berio, 1974) Lophoptera arabica Hacker & Fibiger, 2006 Lophoptera bismigera Holloway, Lophoptera buruana (Holland, 1900) Lophoptera conspicua Berio, 1957 Lophoptera hemithyris Hampson, 1905 Lophoptera illucida (Walker, 1865) Lophoptera lineigera Holloway, Lophoptera litigiosa (Boisduval, 1833) Lophoptera longipennis (Moore, 1882) Lophoptera melanesigera Holloway, 1985 Lophoptera methyalea (Hampson, 1902) Lophoptera nama Swinhoe, 1900 Lophoptera paranthyala (Holland, 1900) Lophoptera pustulifera (Walker, 1864) Lophoptera semirufa Druce, 1911 Lophoptera squammigera Guenee, 1852 Lophoptera vittigera Walker, 1865 Lophoptera togata Prout A. E., 1927 Lophoptera triangulata Berio, 1973 References Moths of
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The Sir James Whitney School for the Deaf is a provincial school in Belleville, Ontario with residential and day programs serving elementary and secondary deaf and hard-of-hearing students. Along with three (ECD and Robarts School for the Deaf) other provincial schools for the deaf in Ontario, it is operated by the Ministry of Education under Education Act of Ontario section 13 (1). Teachers are both deaf and hearing. Deaf student population is approximately 50 students in the senior school and 60 in the elementary school; total is 90 students. Deaf students from Canada often attend Gallaudet University in Washington D.C.and Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York for post-secondary programs. History This school is named after the former premier of Ontario, James Whitney. It has been renamed three times: The Ontario Institution for the Education of the Deaf and Dumb (1870–1912), The Ontario School for the Deaf (1913–1973) and The Sir James Whitney School for the Deaf (since 1974). The Ontario Heritage Trust erected a plaque for the 'Ontario School for the Deaf' on the grounds of the school, now The Sir James Whitney School, 350 Dundas Street West, Belleville. "The first provincial school for deaf children, this
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The 2017–18 Sunfoil 3-Day Cup was a first-class cricket competition that took place in South Africa from 12 October 2017 to 15 April 2018. The competition was played between the thirteen South African provincial teams and Namibia. Unlike its counterpart, the Sunfoil Series, the matches were three days in length instead of four. The tournament was played in parallel with the 2017–18 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge, a List A competition which features the same teams. Northerns and Free State were the defending champions, as the final of the previous tournament ended in a draw. In the fixture between Border andEastern Province in November 2017, Marco Marais of Border scored 300 not out from 191 deliveries. This was the fastest triple century in first-class cricket, the ninth triple century in first-class cricket in South Africa and the first in the country since 2010. Following Namibia's fixture against Free State in February 2018, Namibia's captain Sarel Burger and vice-captain Craig Williams retired from cricket. They played their final match for Namibia in the corresponding one-day fixture in the 2017–18 CSA Provincial One-Day Challenge on 25 February 2018. The final was played between KwaZulu-Natal and Namibia at the Kingsmead Cricket Ground in
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Kevin Foxx (born in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian comedian and radio host. He is best known as the host of the radio program The Kevin Foxx Show on CFRB in Toronto, Ontario. Foxx performs regularly at comedy clubs across the country. He recently filmed his own one-hour special for CTV and The Comedy Network. He has done several stand-up performances for Madly Off in All Directions on CBC Radio, the Halifax Comedy Festival, Comedy at Club 54, Just for Laughs and the Global Comedy Festival. External links Kevin Foxx http://www.straight.com/article/canwest-comedy-fest Category:1970 births Category:Canadian radio personalities Category:Canadian male comedians Category:Comedians
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Cours is a French word that can refer to: Cours (TV production), a unit of production in Japanese TV programs equivalent to 13 episodes Places Cours is the name or part of the name of several communes in France: Cours, Rhône, in the Rhône departement Cours, Lot, in the Lot department Cours, Lot-et-Garonne, in the Lot-et-Garonne department Cours, Deux-Sèvres, in the Deux-Sèvres department Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire, in the Nièvre department Cours-de-Monségur, in the Gironde department Cours-de-Pile, in the Dordogne department Cours-la-Ville, in the Rhône department Cours-les-Bains, in the Gironde department Cours-les-Barres, in the Cher department Le Cours, in the Morbihan department Magny-Cours,
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Denis Mihai Drăguș (; born 6 July 1999) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a left winger for Standard Liège and the Romanian national under-21 team. Club career Standard Liège In early August, Drăguș joined Standard Liège for an undisclosed fee, with Viitorul Constanța retaining 30% of the player's economic rights. He missed the 2019 UEFA European Under-21 Championship after being ruled out with a severe injury (calcaneus fracture). Personal life He is the son of former Romanian professional footballer Mihai Drăguș. Career statistics International Honours Club Viitorul Constanța Cupa României: 2018–19 References External links Category:1999 births Category:Living
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"The Golden Kite, The Silver Wind" (1953) is a short story by Ray Bradbury, one of his collection The Golden Apples of the Sun. The story was published during the Cold War, and serves as an allegory to the nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union. Plot summary The story, set in China, begins in a small pastoral town or village, apparently in a time or place where trade and agriculture are still the norm. There is little in the way of modern technology; no electricity, automobile or advanced irrigation. Superstition is also rampant. The town
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Victor Davis Hanson (born September 5, 1953) is an American classicist, military historian, columnist, and farmer. He has been a commentator on modern and ancient warfare and contemporary politics for National Review, The Washington Times and other media outlets. He is a professor emeritus of Classics at California State University, Fresno, the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow in classics and military history at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, and visiting professor at Hillsdale College. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush, and was a presidential appointee in 2007–2008 on the American Battle Monumentsin classics and general college honors, Cowell College, from the University of California, Santa Cruz, in 1975 and his Ph.D. in classics from Stanford University in 1980. He won the Raphael Demos scholarship at the College Year in Athens (1973–74) and was a regular member of the American School of Classical Studies, Athens, 1978–79. In 1991, Hanson was awarded American Philological Association's Excellence in Teaching Award, given annually to the nation's top undergraduate teachers of Greek and Latin. He was named distinguished alumnus of the year for 2006 at University of California, Santa Cruz. He has been a visiting professorof classics at Stanford University (1991–92), a National Endowment for the Humanities fellow at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, California (1992–93), an Alexander Onassis traveling fellowship to Greece (1999), as well as Nimitz Fellow at UC Berkeley (2006) and held the visiting Shifrin Chair of Military History at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland (2002–03), and often the William Simon visiting professorship at the School of Public Policy at Pepperdine University (2009–15), and was awarded in 2015 an Honorary Doctorate of Laws from the graduate school at Pepperdine. He gave the Wriston Lecture in 2004for the Manhattan Institute. He has been a board member of the Bradley Foundation since 2015, and served on the HF Guggenheim Foundation board for over a decade. He is a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and professor emeritus at California State University, Fresno, where he began teaching in 1984, having created the classical studies program at that institution. Since 2004, Hanson has written a weekly column syndicated by Tribune Content Agency, as well as a weekly column for National Review Online since 2001, and has not missed a weekly column for either venue since he began. He hasbeen published in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Times Literary Supplement, The Daily Telegraph, American Heritage, and The New Criterion, among other publications. He was awarded the National Humanities Medal (2007) by President George W. Bush, as well as the Eric Breindel Prize for opinion journalism (2002), and the William F. Buckley Prize (2015). Hanson was awarded the Claremont Institute's Statesmanship Award at its annual Churchill Dinner, and the Bradley Prize from the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation in 2008. Writing Hanson's Warfare and Agriculture (Giardini 1983), his PhD thesis, argued that Greek warfare could not bethe edge of the Eastern Roman Empire, instead of being in the center as Bateman argued, and claimed that the Romans lost because of divided leadership rather than as a result of superior Islamic generalship as Bateman had contended. United States education and classical studies Hanson co-authored the book Who Killed Homer? The Demise of Classical Education and the Recovery of Greek Wisdom with John Heath. The book explores the issue of how classical education has declined in the US and what might be done to restore it to its former prominence. This is important, according to Hanson and Heath,approaches first in the wars against the Taliban and Saddam, largely because I saw little alternative." Hanson's 2002 volume An Autumn of War called for going to war "hard, long, without guilt, apology or respite until our enemies are no more." In the context of the Iraq War, Hanson wrote, "In an era of the greatest affluence and security in the history of civilization, the real question before us remains whether the United States— indeed any Western democracy—still possesses the moral clarity to identify evil as evil, and then the uncontested will to marshal every available resource to fight andto tell you I wanted my son to marry a Jewish woman because 'Jews are really successful', you would understand that statement for the stupidity which it is ... There is no difference between my argument above and the notion that black boys should be avoided because they are overrepresented in the violent crime stats. But one of the effects of racism is its tendency to justify stupidity." British-born American journalist Andrew Sullivan called Hanson's column "spectacularly stupid", writing: "Treating random strangers as inherently dangerous because of their age, gender and skin color is a choice to champion fear overreason, a decision to embrace easy racism over any attempt to overcome it". American journalist Arthur Stern called "Facing Facts About Race" an "inflammatory" column based upon crime statistics that Hanson never cited, writing: "His presentation of this controversial opinion as undeniable fact without exhaustive statistical proof is undeniably racist." Anglo-American journalist Kelefa Sanneh, in response to "Facing Facts About Race", wrote "It's strange, then, to read Hanson writing as if the fear of violent crime were mainly a "white or Asian" problem, about which African-Americans might be uninformed, or unconcerned—as if African-American parents weren't already giving their children moreto the Second World War. Coronavirus pandemic During the coronavirus pandemic of 2020, Hanson pushed unsubstantiated theories that the coronavirus had first infected Americans in the fall of 2019. During April 2020, when the United States was in large parts practicing social distancing and closing down non-essential in-person activities, Hanson called for a re-opening of the economy and end to social distancing. He criticized models on the coronavirus spread and referred to these models as "science" in scare quotes. Works Warfare and Agriculture in Classical Greece. University of California Press, 1983. . Rev. ed. 1998. online edition The Western Wayand colleagues Hanson's National Review articles – archive at National Review Online Hoover Institution bio Category:1953 births Category:Living people Category:20th-century American historians Category:21st-century American historians Category:American columnists Category:American essayists Category:American male writers Category:American military historians Category:American people of Swedish descent Category:American political writers Category:American orchardists Category:American Protestants Category:California State University, Fresno faculty Category:Critics of postmodernism Category:Farmers from California Category:Hillsdale College faculty Category:Hoover Institution people Category:American male essayists Category:National Humanities Medal recipients Category:People from Fowler, California Category:Stanford University alumni Category:The Washington Times people Category:Theorists on Western civilization Category:University of California, Santa Cruz alumni Category:Viticulturists Category:Writers from California Category:People from Selma, California
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WFXE (104.9 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Mainstream Urban format. Licensed to Columbus, Georgia, United States, the station serves the Columbus GA area. The station is currently owned by Davis Broadcasting, Inc. of Columbus. Its studios are co-located with four other sister stations on Wynnton Road in Columbus east of downtown, and its transmitter is located in Phenix City, Alabama. History The station was assigned the call letters WFXE-FM on 1978-12-01. Prior to that the station was known as WWRH or RH105 as the jingles implied and had an adult contemporary type format. On 1980-03-07, the station changed
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"Dan ljubezni" ("A Day of Love") is a song performed in Slovene by the band Pepel in kri (credited in the contest as Ashes and Blood). It was the Yugoslav entry song in the Eurovision Song Contest 1975, and it marks the fourth and final time the Socialist Republic of Slovenia represented the whole of Yugoslavia at Eurovision (Slovene would not be heard again until Slovenia gained independence and returned as its own sovereign nation in 1993). The music composition was written by Tadej Hrušovar, lyrics were written by Dušan Velkaverh and arranged by Dečo Žgur. The song was performedeighth on the night, following Switzerland's Simone Drexel with "Mikado" and preceding the United Kingdom's The Shadows with "Let Me Be the One". At the close of voting, it had received 22 points, placing 13th in a field of 19. The song is a ballad, with Pepel in Kri calling for a day of love in the whole world that never ends. It was succeeded by Ambasadori with "Ne mogu skriti svoju bol", the Yugoslav representative at the 1976 Contest. The song was released as "A Day of Love" in English but failed to enter the charts. Sources and external
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Shiva Boloorian ({شیوا بلوریان}, born 6 October 1979) is an Iranian Playwright, Actress and both Film and Theatre director, as well as a Television presenter. Career Shiva Boloorian has starred in 21 Movies, 29 TV-series and 32 theatre performances. She has also produced and directed 3 short films and over 10 theatre performances. Film TV series Television Film Theatre Television Play Television Presenter Awards See also Iranian women List of famous Persian women Cinema of Iran List of Iranian artists Persian theatre References Shiva's weblog Official Website since 2001 External links "The statement of the stoned women" on Iranian Theatre
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Quiet Is the New Loud is the debut album by Norwegian indie pop duo Kings of Convenience, released on March 6, 2001 by Astralwerks. Critical reception Quiet Is the New Loud received mostly positive reviews from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 71, based on 11 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews". Caroline Hennessy of RTE was quoted saying that "If quiet is indeed the new loud then Eirik and Erlend are on to a sure winner. A bittersweet pop albumto wrap yourself up in when the world feels like a scary place." Track listing Personnel Kings of Convenience Erlend Øye – steel string acoustic and electric guitars, harmony (all but 5) and lead (5) vocals, piano, drums, percussion, string arrangements Eirik Glambek Bøe – nylon string acoustic and electric guitars, lead (all but 5) and harmony (5) vocals, piano, drums, string arrangements Additional personnel Ian Bracken – cello (4, 5, 8, 10) Matt McGeever – cello (1) Ben Dumville – trumpet (3) Tarjei Strøm – drum fills (5) Certifications References Category:Kings of Convenience albums Category:2001 debut albums Category:Albums produced
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Villiersdorp is a town of approximately 10,000 people located in the Western Cape province of South Africa in the Overberg region. Unlike most of the geographical region which specialises in wheat and canola farming, the Villiersdorp Valley is now agriculturally and in micro-climate more similar to the Elgin Valley and Grabouw since the building of the Theewaterskloof Dam, and thus also specialises in deciduous fruit farming and viticulture. The Theewaterskloof Dam, the largest dam in the Western Cape and seventh largest in South Africa and important water supply to Cape Town fills the majority of the valley floor. The VilliersdorpCo-Op is also the only place in South Africa that processes and dries persimmons. The three big packsheds in Villiersdorp, Betko, Arbeidsvreugd and Ideafruit, as well as the Villiersdorp Co-Op process the fruit grown in the area for export and transport to other parts of South Africa. The town is named after Field Cornet Pieter de Villiers, a local farmer who founded the settlement in 1843. Notable people Sir David Graaff, 1st Baronet and his younger brother Jacobus Arnoldus Graaff were born in Villiersdorp. After making their fortune in Cape Town they went on to found the De Villiers Graaff
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David Feiss (born April 16, 1959) is an American animator and the creator of Cow and Chicken and I Am Weasel. Biography Feiss was born in Sacramento, California. He joined Hanna-Barbera around 1978 while still a teenager. He worked on the 1980s revival of The Jetsons, was a key animator on the Jetsons movie, co-animated the Ren and Stimpy pilot "Big House Blues", was an animation director on The Ren & Stimpy Show during its first season and created the Cartoon Network original series Cow and Chicken and its spin-off, I Am Weasel. Feiss stated that The Adventures of Rockyreprinted in WildStorm's The Maxx Volumes 1 and 5 trades). Feiss also collaborated with Kieth on a story featured in Parody Press's 1992 one-shot comic book Pummeler, spoofing Marvel Comics' famous character The Punisher. In 2006, he was the head of story for Sony's first CG animated film, Open Season. Filmography References External links Category:Animators from California Category:American film directors Category:American male screenwriters Category:American male voice actors Category:American storyboard artists Category:American television directors Category:Television producers from California Category:American television writers Category:American animated film directors Category:Male television writers Category:People from Brampton Category:Sony Pictures Animation people Category:Artists from Sacramento, California Category:1959 births
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Arnold Saul (May 30, 1924 – April 6, 2012) was an amateur American tennis player in the 1940s and 1950s and tennis coach. At the 1949 Cincinnati Masters, Saul was seeded No. 3 and reached the singles final before losing to James Brink of Seattle in four sets (4–6, 8–6, 4–6, 0–6). He also reached the doubles final in Cincinnati that year, with partner Gil Shea. Saul and Shea lost in that final to eventual International Tennis Hall of Famer Tony Trabert and Andy Paton. Saul played his collegiate tennis at the University of Southern California. In 1948, he teamed
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Jason Thomas Berken (born November 27, 1983) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. He has played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Baltimore Orioles and Chicago Cubs. College Berken graduated from West De Pere High School. He played college baseball for the Clemson Tigers. While at Clemson, he played for the New England Collegiate Baseball League's Keene Swamp Bats. In 186 innings with Clemson, Berken pitched to an 18–6 record, 3.04 ERA, and 156 strikeouts. Professional career Baltimore Orioles Berken was drafted by the Baltimore Orioles in the sixth round (175th overall) of the 2006 MLB draft. OnMay 26, 2009, after pitching just 25 innings for Triple-A Norfolk, he was called up to the Orioles' roster to replace injured outfielder Lou Montanez. He earned his first major league win that day, giving up two runs in five innings in a 7–2 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. However, he finished the year with a 6–12 record, along with a 6.54 ERA in 119 innings pitched. This led to Berken being named the "AL Les Sweetland Award winner" by SI writer Joe Posnanski for finishing the year as the worst starting pitcher in the American League. Chicago Cubs
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Dr. Leonard Jan Le Vann (1 August 1915 – 29 September 1987) was the medical superintendent at the Alberta Provincial Training School for Mental Defectives (also known as the Michener Center) from the years 1949–1974. Although he was born and raised in the United States, Le Vann trained as a physician in Scotland. Throughout his career Le Vann wrote many articles, the majority of which were published during his 25-year career at the Provincial Training School. These articles covered a broad range of topics that include alcoholism, schizophrenia and experimental treatments of antipsychotic drugs. In 1974 Le Vann resigned fromthey repealed the Sexual Sterilization Act. This had an immense impact on the school, "closing wards and tearing down dorms". Eventually, in 1974, Dr. Leonard Jan Le Vann resigned from the facility. The old Provincial Training School was eventually closed and renamed the Michener Center. As of 2009 the Michener centre supports 274 adults by "providing an impressive range of recreational, social, residential, spiritual and health services." Dr. L.J. Le Vann’s Controversial Practices At the Provincial Training School for Mental Defectives As superintendent of the Provincial Training School, Le Vann was a key player in many sterilizations and antipsychotic drugseemed to be a strange practice and drugs should be administered as a last resort. Publications By Dr. Leonard Jan Le Vann Le Vann, L. J. (1953). A clinical survey of alcoholics Canadian Medical Association Journal, 69(6), 584-588. Le Vann, L. J. (1953). Controlling unpleasant odors among mental patients Hospitals, 27(2), 93-94. Le Vann, L. J. (1959). Trifluoperazine dihydrochloride: An effective tranquillizing agent for behavioural abnormalities in defective children Canadian Medical Association Journal, 80(2), 123-124. Le Vann, L. J. (1960). A pilot project for emotionally disturbed children in Alberta Canadian Medical Association Journal, 83, 524-527. Le Vann, L. J. (1961).
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Algona Community School District is a school district headquartered in Algona, Iowa. The district, mostly in Kossuth County, has small sections in Hancock and Winnebago counties. It serves Algona, Burt, Titonka, and Whittemore. History On July 1, 2001, the Burt Community School District consolidated into the Algona district. On July 1, 2014, the Titonka Consolidated School District consolidated into the Algona district. The Algona district, which took control of the Titonka school building, was scheduled to sell it to the Titonka city government on January 12, 2015. On July 1, 2015 the Corwith-Wesley Community School District dissolved, with a portion
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Stig Halvard Dagerman (5 October 1923 – 4 November 1954) was a Swedish journalist and writer. He was one of the most prominent Swedish authors writing in the aftermath of World War II, but his existential texts transcend time and place and continue to be widely published in Sweden and abroad. Stig Dagerman was born in Älvkarleby, Uppsala County. In the course of five years, 1945–49, he enjoyed phenomenal success with four novels, a collection of short stories, a book about postwar Germany, five plays, hundreds of poems and satirical verses, several essays of note and a large amount ofjournalism. Then, with apparent suddenness, he fell silent. In the fall of 1954, Sweden was stunned to learn that Stig Dagerman, the epitome of his generation of writers, had been found dead in his car: he had closed the doors of the garage and run the engine. Dagerman's works deal with universal problems of morality and conscience, of sexuality and social philosophy, of love, compassion and justice. He plunges into the painful realities of human existence, dissecting feelings of fear, guilt and loneliness. Despite the somber content, he also displays a wry sense of humor that occasionally turns his writinginto burlesque or satire. “An imagination that appeals to an unreasonable degree of sympathy is precisely what makes Dagerman’s fiction so evocative. Evocative or not, as one might expect, of despair, or bleakness, or existential angst, but of compassion, fellow-feeling, even love.” - Alice McDermott in her foreword to Sleet: Selected Stories (David R. Godine, Publisher, 2013). The British writer Graham Greene said this about him: "Dagerman wrote with beautiful objectivity. Instead of emotive phrases, he uses a choice of facts, like bricks, to construct an emotion." This style is exemplified in the following excerpt from the story, "The GamesThe Stig Dagerman Society in Sweden annually awards the Stig Dagerman Prize to individuals who, like Dagerman, through their work promote empathy and understanding. In 2008, the prize went to the French writer J. M. G. Le Clézio, who later was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. Life and work Stig Dagerman, born in 1923, spent his childhood on a small farm in Älvkarleby, where he lived with his paternal grandparents. His unwed mother gave birth on the farm but left shortly thereafter, never to return. He would see her again only when he was in his twenties. Dagerman's father,thousand daily poems, many highly satirical, commenting on current events. He called "Arbetaren" his "spiritual birthplace". Dagerman's horizons were greatly expanded by his marriage in 1943 to Annemarie Götze, an eighteen-year-old German refugee. Her parents, Ferdinand and Elly, were prominent Anarcho-Syndicalists, and the family escaped Nazi Germany to be at the center of the movement in Barcelona. When Spanish fascists brutally crushed the Anarcho-Syndicalist social experiment there, the Götzes fled through France and Norway, with Hitler's army at their heels, to a neutral Sweden. Dagerman and his young wife lived with his in-laws, and it was through this family, andthe steady stream of refugees that passed through their home, that Dagerman felt he could sense the pulse of Europe. In 1945, Stig Dagerman at age twenty-two published his first novel Ormen (The Snake). It was an anti-militaristic story with fear as its main theme, channeling the war-time zeitgeist. Positive reviews gave him a reputation as a brilliant young writer of great promise. He left "Arbetaren" to write full-time. The following year, Dagerman published De dömdas ö (The Island of the Doomed), completed over a fortnight during which, he says, it was as if he "let god do the writing".Using nightmarish imagery, this was an allegory centered on seven shipwrecked people, each doomed to die, each seeking a form of salvation. Critics have compared Dagerman's works to those of Franz Kafka, William Faulkner and Albert Camus. Many see him as the main representative of a group of Swedish writers called “Fyrtiotalisterna” (“the writers of the 1940s”) who channeled existentialist feelings of fear, alienation and meaninglessness common in the wake of the horrors of World War II and the looming Cold War. In 1946, Dagerman became a household name in Sweden through his newspaper travelogue from war-ravaged Germany, later publishedin book form with the title Tysk Höst (German Autumn). Rather than blaming the German people for the war's atrocities, calling them crazed or evil, Dagerman portrayed the human ordinariness of the men and women who scraped by in the ruins of war. To him, the root of disaster lay in the anonymity of mass organizations that obstructed empathy and individual responsibility, qualities without which the human race is threatened by extinction.“I believe that man’s natural enemy is the mega-organizationbecause it robs him of the vital necessity to feel responsible for his fellow-man,restricting his possibilities to show solidarity and loveandgrandparents’ farm and characters to describe the human condition, including a search for forgiveness and salvation. In this book, Dagerman, who throughout his career experimented with different literary styles, used stream-of-consciousness as a method of penetrating a character. After his early and rapid successes, expectations kept rising, not the least his own. Dagerman struggled with depression and an onset of writer's block. He became restless in the now suburbanized Götze family, and was drawn to the medium of theater. As a playwright, and even a one-time director, he met friends and lovers within the theater world, leaving his family forperiods at a time. Eventually, Dagerman broke away for good to live with and later marry the celebrated actress Anita Björk, with whom he had a daughter. But the break proved difficult, emotionally and financially. Dagerman felt guilty leaving his young sons, and took on mounting debt to support his first family. The assumption being that his debt would be paid up when he were to publish his next book ... While battling deepening depression and a debilitating writer's block, Dagerman wrote an autobiographical essay “Vårt behov av tröst är omättligt” (“Our need for consolation is insatiable”) about his strugglesand search for a way to stay alive. He also wrote “Tusen år hos gud” (“A Thousand Years with God”) – part of a new novel he was planning – which signaled a turn to a more mystical bent in his writing. In spite of his struggles, Dagerman continued to deliver his daily satirical verses for “Arbetaren”, the last one published on November 5, 1954, the day after his suicide. Main works Ormen (The Snake) 1945, novel De dömdas ö (The Island of the Doomed) 1946, novel Tysk höst (German Autumn), 1947, non-fictional account of post-war Germany Nattens lekar (The
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Sally Ann's Experience is an 1898 short story written by American author Eliza "Lida" Calvert Obenchain under the pen name Eliza Calvert Hall. Aunt Jane "Aunt Jane", an elderly spinster, was a recurring character in Lida Obenchain's short stories. She told the experiences of the people in a rural southern town named Goshen to a younger woman visitor who relayed them to the reader. This type of rhetorical device, called a "double narrative", was a common form of storytelling in this era. Aunt Jane spoke with a heavy regional dialect and a folksy style. She tells of the problems facing
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The Interurban Bridge, also known as the Ohio Electric Railroad Bridge. is a historic interurban railway reinforced concrete multiple arch bridge built in 1908 to span the Maumee River joining Lucas and Wood counties near Waterville, Ohio. The span was once the world's largest earth-filled reinforced concrete bridge.One of the bridge's supports rests on the Roche de Boeuf, a historic Indian council rock, which was partially destroyed by the bridge's construction. The bridge, which is no longer in use, is a popular subject for photographers and painters, who view it from Farnsworth Metropark. Builder Lima-Toledo Traction The bridge has beenabandoned for many years. It was constructed by the Lima-Toledo Traction company, an early 1900s interurban trolley line that ran primarily adjacent to the Baltimore and Ohio steam railroad from Toledo to Lima and from there south to Springfield on a connecting interurban line, the Dayton, Springfield, and Urbana. Many Ohio interurban lines struggled financially from inception. In an attempt to create operational efficiency under one management, the L-T along with other Ohio interurbans was brought under lease control of the Ohio Electric corporation to form one large widespread Ohio interurban network. All equipment was relettered and operated as theOhio Electric. Financially the consolidation didn't work, and when the OE went bankrupt in 1921, the L-T returned to its former owners and operated as the Lima-Toledo Railroad. It continued interurban service between Toledo and Lima using its essential long bridge over the wide Maumee River. Final railway use by the Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad In 1929, two adjacent Ohio interurbans (the Cincinnati Hamilton and Dayton, and the Indiana, Columbus and Eastern) combined with the Lima-Toledo to form the 323 mile long Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad to establish interurban service from Toledo to distant Cincinnati. A branch operatedfrom Springfield to Ohio's capitol Columbus. The corporate goal was to increase passenger business and particularly interurban freight business in this heavily industrialized part of Ohio. From 1929 to 1930, the C&LE borrowed heavily to rebuild track and purchase new passenger and freight equipment in order to provide high speed operation between its major cities of Toledo, Lima, Springfield, Dayton, and Cincinnati. Starting at 1930, the C&LE was successful and business increased particularly with freight shipments, but the collapsing national and local economy in the following years due to the Great Depression, numerous floods requiring very expensive track and facilityreconstruction, competition from newly paved state highways carrying growing automobile and truck competition steadily reduced revenue and forced C&LE abandonment in 1937. This was the last year that the unique Interurban Bridge saw rail traffic. On June 19, 1972, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places Reference and notes Further reading Keenan, Jack: The Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad: The Great Ohio Interurban. 1974. pp 226. Golden West Books, San Marino, Calif Middleton, Wm D: The Interurban Era. pp 330; 1962, Kalmbach Publishing. Milwaukee, WI. Middleton, Wm D: The Last Interurbans. Central Electric Railfans Association, Chicago, IL.
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Hercules Pieterszoon Seghers or Segers (c. 1589 – c. 1638) was a Dutch painter and printmaker of the Dutch Golden Age.<ref name="MacLaren"> Segers is in fact the more common form in contemporary documents, and was used by the painter himself (modern use is about equally divided between the two): Neil MacLaren, The Dutch School, 1600-1800, Volume I, National Gallery Catalogues,p. 418-20, 1991, National Gallery, London, </ref> He has been called "the most inspired, experimental and original landscapist" of his period and an even more innovative printmaker. Life Hercules was born in Haarlem, as the son of a Mennonite cloth merchant,originally from Flanders, who moved to Amsterdam in 1596. There Hercules was apprenticed to the leading Flemish landscapist of the day Gillis van Coninxloo, but his apprenticeship was presumably cut short by Coninxloo's death in 1606. Seghers and his father bought a number of his works at the auction of the studio contents, as Pieter Lastman did. Seghers' father died in 1612, after which he returned to Haarlem, joining the Haarlem Guild of St. Luke. He returned to Amsterdam in 1614 to obtain custody of an illegitimate daughter, and the following year married Anneke van der Brugghen from Antwerp, whowas sixteen years older than he was. In 1620 he bought a large house in the Jordaan on the Lindengracht for about 4,000 guilders, but by the late 1620s he was in debt, and in 1631 had to sell it. From his studio at the top of the house, which was pulled down in 1912, he had a view on the recently finished Noorderkerk which is on one of his etchings. In the same year he moved to Utrecht and started to sell art. In 1633 he moved to the Hague. He appears to have died by 1638, when aCornelia de Witte is mentioned as widow of a "Hercules Pieterz.". Like much of the detailed documentation of Segher's life, this link depends on the assumed rarity of his first name. Some later sources said that Segers took to drink towards the end of his life and died after falling down the stairs. His posthumous reputation was boosted by the Inleyding tot de hooge schoole der schilderkonst (Introduction to the High School of Painting) of Samuel van Hoogstraten which presented him rather as a Romantic genius avant la lettre, lonely, poor and misunderstood, based mostly on his etchings. Prints Heis mainly known for his highly innovative etchings, mostly of landscapes, which were often printed on coloured paper or cloth, and with coloured ink, and hand-coloured and often hand-cropped to different sizes. He also made use of drypoint and a form of aquatint as well as other effects, such as running coarse cloth through the press with the print, for a mottled effect. Altogether only 183 known impressions survive from all his fifty-four plates and most are now in museums; the Rijksmuseum print room has easily the best collection. Rembrandt collected both paintings (he had eight) and prints by Seghers,and acquired one of his original plates, Tobias and the Angel (HB 1), which he reworked into his own Flight into Egypt (B 56), keeping much of the landscape. Rembrandt also reworked the Seghers painting Mountain Landscape, now in the Uffizi, and his landscape style shows some influence from Seghers. Although the dating of his prints remains unclear, his Town with four towers (HB 29) is believed both to be one of the later prints and, by comparison with paintings, to date from around 1631. Given the small number of surviving impressions, it is unlikely that prints were a majorsource of income for him. His Pile of books (see Rijksmuseum link) is an unusual still-life subject for a 17th-century print. He seems to have invented the "sugar-bite" aquatint technique, which was rediscovered in England over a century later by Alexander Cozens (it is also called lift-ground etching). Paintings Hercules Seghers was probably best known to his contemporaries for his paintings of landscapes and still-life subjects such as The River Valley; his paintings are also rare, with perhaps only fifteen surviving (one was destroyed in a fire in October 2007). The Stadholder, Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange bought landscapes in1632. Many of his painted landscapes are fantastic mountainous compositions, whereas in his prints it is often the technical approach rather than the subject which is extreme. Seghers painted landscapes tend to show a wide horizontal view, with emphasis on earth rather than sky; two in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin had strips of sky added at the top later in the century to meet a changed taste. Apart from Coninxloo, Seghers drew from the Flemish landscape tradition, perhaps especially Joos de Momper and Roelandt Savery, but also the "fantastic and visionary aspects of Mannerist" landscape painting. The 1680 inventory of thecollection of the marine painter Jan van de Cappelle, who owned five paintings by Seghers, describes one as a view of Brussels, which if correct would presumably mean Seghers traveled there, probably when young, when his style shows most Flemish influence (in so far as the chronology of his work is clear). Gallery Sources George S. Keyes in: K.L. Spangenberg (ed), Six Centuries of Master Prints, Cincinnati Art Museum, 1993, no.s 75 & 76, Footnotes External links images of many prints of Seghers in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam Hercules Seghers. Pictures and Biography Etchings: Town with four towers from Cincinnati (have
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Virginia Mayo (born Virginia Clara Jones; November 30, 1920 – January 17, 2005) was an American actress and dancer. She was in a series of comedy films with Danny Kaye and was Warner Brothers' biggest box-office money-maker in the late 1940s. She also co-starred in the 1946 Oscar-winning movie The Best Years of Our Lives. Biography Early life Born Virginia Clara Jones in St. Louis, Missouri, she was the daughter of newspaper reporter Luke and his wife, Martha Henrietta (née Rautenstrauch) Jones. Her family had roots back to the earliest days of St Louis, including great-great-great grandfather Captain James Piggott,who founded East St. Louis, Illinois, in 1797. Young Virginia's aunt operated an acting school in the St. Louis area, which Virginia began attending at age six. She also was tutored by a series of dancing instructors engaged by her aunt. Vaudeville Following her graduation from Soldan High School in 1937, Jones landed her first professional acting and dancing jobs at the St. Louis Municipal Opera Theatre (more commonly known as The Muny) and in an act with six other girls at the Hotel Jefferson. Impressed with her ability, performer Andy Mayo, recruited her to appear in his act "MortonMidnight Witness (1993) and The Man Next Door (1997). Mayo was one of the first to be awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Hers is located at 1751 Vine Street. In 1996, Mayo was honored by her hometown as she received a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame. In 1993, Mayo published a Christmas themed children's book entitled, Don't Forget Me, Santa Claus through Barrons Juveniles Publishers. Personal life Mayo wed Michael O'Shea in 1947, and they remained married until his death in 1973. The couple had one child, Mary Catherine O'Shea (born 1953). Thefamily lived for several decades in Thousand Oaks, California. In later years she developed a passion for painting and also occupied her time doting on her three grandsons. She converted to Roman Catholicism , inspired by Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen. A lifelong Republican, she endorsed Richard Nixon in 1968 and 1972, and longtime friend Ronald Reagan in 1980. Death Mayo died of pneumonia and complications of congestive heart failure in Los Angeles on January 17, 2005, aged 84, at a nursing home in Thousand Oaks. Her death was reported the next day in the New York Times. She is buried
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For the geometric construction, see angle trisection. Trisector is the tenth studio album by the British rock group Van der Graaf Generator. It was released on Virgin/EMI Records in March 2008. It is an important release for Van der Graaf Generator because it is the first album the band recorded as a trio. Saxophonist David Jackson departed the band following the 2005 tour. Track listing All songs by Hugh Banton, Guy Evans and Peter Hammill except where noted. "The Hurlyburly" (instrumental) – 4:38 "Interference Patterns" – 3:52 "The Final Reel" – 5:49 "Lifetime" (Hammill) – 4:47 "Drop Dead" – 4:53"Only in a Whisper" – 6:44 "All That Before" – 6:29 "Over the Hill" – 12:29 "(We Are) Not Here" – 4:04 Personnel Van der Graaf Generator Peter Hammill – voice, piano, electric guitar Hugh Banton – organs (including bass pedals), bass guitar Guy Evans – drums, percussion References External links Van der Graaf Generator - Trisector (2008) album review by François Couture, credits & releases at AllMusic.com Van der Graaf Generator - Trisector (2008) album releases & credits at Discogs.com Van der Graaf Generator - Trisector (2008) album credits & user reviews at ProgArchives.com Van der Graaf Generator -
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Ilse Kristiina Lillak (born 15 April 1961) is a Finnish former javelin thrower. She is the 1983 world champion and 1984 Olympic silver medalist. She also twice broke the world record, with throws of 72.40 metres in 1982 and 74.76 metres in 1983. The latter distance ranks third on the all-time list with the old javelin model. Career Lillak finished fourth in the 1982 European Athletics Championships, which were held in Athens. On July 29, 1982, she threw a new world record in Helsinki of 72.40 meters. The record lasted until September when Greek thrower Sofia Sakorafa reached 74.20 meters.The following year, Lillak again broke the world record, throwing 74.76 meters in Tampere on June 13. This distance remained a world record until June 1985, and also stood as a national record for Finland until 1999, when the javelin type was altered and the former records were wiped clean. Among female javelin throwers, only Petra Felke and Fatima Whitbread have ever thrown further. (The record with the current model is 72.28m). At the 1983 World Championships in Athletics held in Helsinki, Lillak became the champion in front of her home crowd when she threw for 70.82 meters on herlast attempt leaving Britain's second placed Fatima Whitbread in tears at track side as she went running off down the track celebrating with the ecstatic crowd. The whole season was a success for Lillak, who threw over 70 meters in 16 separate competitions and didn't lose a single time. Although Lillak had only taken part in three competitions earlier in the year, she still managed to earn an Olympic silver medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. Medals did not materialise at the 1986 European Athletics Championships (fourth) or the 1987 World Championships in Athletics (sixth). She
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Dorothy L. Hollingsworth (born October 29, 1920) is an American educator based in Seattle. Dorothy L. Hollingsworth was born on October 29, 1920 in Bishopville, South Carolina. Her family moved to North Carolina when she was young. She graduated from Paine College in 1941. In 1946 she moved to Seattle with her husband. She worked as a social worker in Seattle's Central District in the 1950s and 1960s. Hollingsworth became the first director of Seattle Public Schools' Head Start program in 1965. She was elected to the Seattle School Board in 1975, serving in that role until 1981. She was
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David James Tweedie (1870–1926) was a Scottish mathematician, educated at the University of Edinburgh who became the Headmaster of the Public School, Kilconquhar, Fife. Biography Tweedie was born to David Tweedie (1847, a colliery clerk and book keeper) and Jemima Tweedie (1845). He was the oldest of 5 children. His siblings were Marjory (born 1875), Alice (born 1877), James (born 1881) and John (born 1885). He attended the University of Edinburgh in 1889, where he first studied English, Latin and Greek. In 1892 he changed course to Mathematics, Natural Philosophy and Chemistry. He graduated with an MA in 1895. Hethen went on to teach at George Heriot's Hospital School in Edinburgh. In January 1897, Tweedie joined the Edinburgh Mathematical Society. He was one several members of the Society with the name Tweedie. The following year he took up the position of Headmaster, Public School, Kilconquhar, Fife and the next year, as he was no longer in Edinburgh, he left the Society. Personal life Tweedie married Jeanie (Jessie) Fleming Allison on 13 April 1879 and they had two children: Jean (Ena) (born 1898) and David (born 1901). See also Clan Tweedie Tweedie Source The Tweedie family – a genealogy References
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Melissa Deanne Holliday (born October 30, 1969) was Playboy magazine's Playmate of the Month for January 1995. Holliday also made an appearance on Baywatch that same year. From June 26-July 12, 1995, she underwent ECT for depression at St. John's Hospital and Health Center in Santa Monica, California. She later sued the hospital and the doctors involved in a civil lawsuit over alleged medical malpractice, assault and battery, and personal injury. She has also claimed that: "I've been through a rape, and electroshock therapy is worse". Holliday has sung at a Chrysler convention and done voice-overs for TV commercials. See
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Relations:[["Melissa Holliday", "given name", "Melissa"]] |
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Tania Mary Dalton (née Nicholson; 26 November 1971 – 1 March 2017) was a New Zealand international netball player. After retiring from playing professionally, she worked as a netball commentator on SKY Sports for international tests, the ANZ Championship and National Championships, alongside former internationals Anna Stanley, Natalie Avellino, Kathryn Harby-Williams and Bernice Mene. Dalton was also a part owner of the franchise food outlet chain, Pita Pit New Zealand Limited. Career Dalton was a member of the New Zealand national netball team, the Silver Ferns from 1996–2004 and 2006–07; she was also named in 2005 but was forced outthrough injury. She played domestic netball for the Northern Force from 1998 until 2000, and the championship-winning Southern Sting from 2002–2006. She was part of the 2003 Netball World Championships winning Silver Ferns squad. She made 12 caps for the Silver Ferns in total, playing in the positions of goal shooter (GS) and goal attack (GA). In 2007, she withdrew from the Silver Ferns to concentrate on family commitments. In 2008, Dalton made a minor comeback to elite netball replacing injured Australian import Megan Dehn in the Southern Steel line. She did not take the court but was also offereda two-game contract by Northern Mystics who lost Paula Griffin to injury, which she declined. During the 2011 ANZ Championship pre-season, Southern Steel shooter Daneka Wipiiti injured her ankle and was ruled out of action for up to a week. Dalton returned to the Steel as a temporary replacement player on 14 February that year. Death Dalton collapsed on 23 February 2017 while playing a regular game of social touch rugby in her home suburb of Takapuna, Auckland. She was running at the time and was not injured in the game. She was immediately hospitalised in a critical condition with
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Raffaele Lauro (born 10 February 1944, in Sorrento) is an Italian politician, member of the Senate of Italy, prefect and a private adviser for institutional relations and communication. Early life and education Raffaele Lauro was born in Sorrento to Luigi and Angela Aiello, one of four brothers. In his youth, he worked as a receptionist in hotels in the Sorrento Peninsula. He attended high school in Sorrento, at the Sant'Anna Institute, graduating with honors and reporting of the Commission. After high school, he continued his studies at the University of Naples Federico II. There, he got three degrees: in Politicalthe Documentation française. In Rome, at the Institute of Journalism and Audiovisual Techniques, he also got a degree in Journalism, cum laude and became a journalist, member of the Order of Journalists of Lazio and Molise. He was then director of the scientific magazine Post and Telecommunications published by the Fondazione Ugo Bordoni and has worked as commentator of new information technologies, for "Il Tempo" in Rome and "Il Mattino" in Naples. For Radiocorriere TV, he has been a columnist about citizens and institutions. At the New University of Cinema and Television in Rome, he graduated in Directing Film, withMasters Giuseppe De Santis, Carlo Lizzani and Florestano Vancini. Career Since 1971, he was a professor of History and Philosophy in high schools. For many years, he has taught Law of Mass Communications at the Faculty of Political Sciences at LUISS University in Rome. Political career The administrative-institutional activities of Raffaele Lauro began in Sorrento in 1980. Pupil of politician Francesco Compagna, he was elected Councillor of Sorrento, holding the positions of Deputy Mayor, Councillor for Finance, Personnel and Culture. During the period in which he took the latter department, he organized the Public Library of Sorrento and established atheater school, with director Lorenzo Ferrero di Roccaferrera and a theatrical review, with actor Bruno Cirino Pomicino. He left Sorrento in 1984 and he moved to Rome where he was chief of the secretariat of the Post and Telecommunications Ministry, of the Finance Ministry and of the Interior Ministry, he was Councillor of the national Audit Office then head Prefect. He has had a sensitive assignment at the Interior Ministry (Chief of Cabinet, Director of Border Regions and Inspector General of Administration). In October 2003 he was appointed Councillor to the Minister of Government Program Implementation at the Office ofjoined the Democratic Party of Lazio. Writing career Lauro is a freelance journalist, essayist, screenwriter, author, director, librettist and writer. Among his most important essays include: "Viêtnam: ricerca della pace perduta", 1969 "La D.C. verso il Duemila", Rusconi Editore, 1984 "A look at China. Political and economic notes", 1986 "Comunicazioni e sviluppo: la sfida del cambiamento", Ed. CEI, 1987 "Da Moro: il futuro della democrazia in Italia", 1987 "Comunicazione e trasparenza bancaria", con P.Rivitti, Ed. CEI, 1990 "Mondazzi. Sulla via di Damasco", 1990 "Leadership e preferenza unica" Maggioli Editore, 1992 "Il Prefetto della Repubblica", con G.Balsamo, Maggioli Editore "La riforma1991 "Il sogno di Pedro", Rusconi Editore, 1993 "Il progetto","La crociera" and " La condanna", Lancio Editore, 1997 "Mutus", Lancio Editore, 1998 "Quel film mai girato" Volume I, GoldenGate Edizioni, 2002 "Quel film mai girato" Volume II, GoldenGate Edizioni, 2003 "Cossiga Suite", GoldenGate Edizioni, 2009 "Sorrento The Romance", GoldenGate Edizioni, 2013 "Caruso The Song - Lucio Dalla and Sorrento", GoldenGate Edizioni, 2015 "Lucio Dalla and San Martino Valle Caudina. In the eyes and in the heart", GoldenGate Edizioni, 2016 "Lucio Dalla and Sorrento Tour - Stages, images and testimonies", GoldenGate Edizioni, 2016 "Dance The Love - A Star in VicoThe praise of solitude (1942-1990)", GoldenGate Edizioni, to be released in 2020 Musical compositions, tragedies and television documentaries "Voyage" (for soprano and piano coloring), "Io sono come sono" (for tenor and piano), "Austerlitz" (for tenor and piano) "Antinoo", "Memory", "Il mondo di Carlos", "Il caso Ciaikovskij", "Margaret by Margaret" "I ponti della storia e della leggenda": Ponte Sublicio, Ponte Emilio, Ponte Milvio, Ponte Fabricio, Ponte Cestio e Ponte Elio, RAI, 2000 "Lucio Dalla and Sorrento - The Places of the Soul", produced by GoldenGate Edizioni, 2015 "Uno straccione, un clown" (A beggar, a clown), lyrics by Raffaele Lauro, music byEmpedocle", in memory of Paolo Borsellino, conferred by the Academy of Mediterranean Studies. In 2005, the "Premio Personaggio Speciale 2005" by Confartigianato and, in 2006, together with the Maestro Lucio Dalla, the International Prize "Sorrento nel Mondo". In 2015, in Manfredonia, he received the "International Award for Culture - Re Manfredi" for his merits in the field of culture and defence of the rule of law. On 18 December 2015, with a special session, the City Council of San Martino Valle Caudina (AV), awarded him with honorary citizenship in recognition of the literary work, which enshrined the historic link betweenLucio Dalla, Sorrento and San Martino Valle Caudina. He was also awarded, in December 2016, with the honorary citizenship of Meta, in Sorrento Peninsula. During 2015/2016, he has realized the "Lucio Dalla and Sorrento Tour" in 21 stages, in Italy and abroad (in Sofia, under the patronage of the Presidency of the Republic), at prefectures, embassies, theaters, libraries and town halls, with 81 witnesses on Lucio Dalla’s bond with Sorrento, with Manfredonia and the South of Italy.The tour, which lasted a year, has been documented in a book, presented in Sorrento and Manfredonia, to mark the fourth anniversary of Bologneseartist’s death (March the 1st 2012/March the 1st 2016). On the fifth anniversary of Lucio Dalla’s death (1 March 2012/ 1 March 2017) he dedicated a song to the great Bolognese artist, entitled "A beggar, a clown". Career Award "Sorrentine Peninsula Arturo Esposito 2019" for the narrative References External links Raffaelelauro.it Legislative activities Category:1944 births Category:Living people Category:People from Sorrento Category:The People of Freedom politicians Category:Senators of Legislature XVI of Italy Category:Politicians of Campania Category:University of Naples Federico II alumni Category:Commanders of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic Category:Grand Officers of the Order of Merit of the Italian
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Pyaar Ka Punchnama 2 () is a 2015 Indian Hindi-language romantic comedy film, it is a sequel to the 2011 film Pyaar Ka Punchnama. The sequel is directed by Luv Ranjan and produced by Viacom 18 Motion Pictures and Panorama Studios Production. The film stars Kartik Aaryan, Omkar Kapoor, Sunny Singh, Nushrat Bharucha, Ishita Raj Sharma and Sonnalli Seygall. The film was released on 16 October 2015. Plot Anshul a.k.a. Gogo (Kartik Aaryan), Siddharth a.k.a. Chauka (Sunny Nijar) and Tarun a.k.a. Thakur (Omkar Kapoor) are flatmates and best friends. Gogo meets Ruchika a.k.a. Chiku (Nushrat Bharucha) and gives her hishim in exchange for dropping the police case against him. All three boys leave the girls. The film ends with them acknowledging that the only place where they can get true love is from their mother. Cast Kartik Aaryan as Anshul "Gogo" Sharma Omkar Kapoor as Tarun Thakur Sunny Singh as Siddharth "Chauka" Gandotra Nushrat Bharucha as Ruchika "Chiku" Khanna Ishita Raj Sharma as Kusum Sonnalli Seygall as Supriya Sharat Saxena as Supriya's father Manvir Singh as Sunny Rumana Molla as Ruchi Karishma Sharma as Tina Mona Ambegaonkar as Supriya's mother Prakhar Shukla as Ruchika’s bestfriend Rajan as Gift DeliveryMan Soundtrack The music for Pyaar Ka Punchnama 2 has been composed by Shaarib-Toshi, Hitesh Sonik and Luv Ranjan. The music rights are acquired by Zee Music Company. Reception Some critics enjoyed the comedy but were disappointed at the over the top misogyny in the final act of the movie. Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN gave the movie 3 stars describing the movie as "The film is funnier and slightly less misogynistic than the prequel." He notes that "It’s in the last act that the film throws away any pretence of humor and adopts an especially spiteful tone that’s reminiscent ofthe earlier film. Until this point the jokes were consistently funny and the stereotyping seldom mean-spirited." Hindustan Times praised the performance of the actors, stating "All the actors fit perfectly into their characters: The boys effortlessly depict what men often discuss during boys’ talk and the girls play dumb as and when the character demands." The Hindu review stated "Carrying forward the flavour of the original, it is a film that many men make in their minds!" The Economic Times review mentioned "Sure, the film may resonate with the masochistic sorts who like taking a whipping in love or eventhose who enjoy a few laughs no matter the joke, but the rest can easily skip this one." Like the 2011 film's famous five minute long monologue where Kartik Aaryan's character vents about the frustrations with dating women, this movie delivered a seven minute long monologue. Box office The film grossed 5.50–5.75 crore on its opening day, beating the records of Piku, Katti Batti and Jazbaa. By the end of the first weekend, a total of total had been collected. The film collected by the end of its opening week. References External links Pyaar Ka Punchnama 2 on Facebook Category:2015
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The Sixth Street School, at Sixth and C Sts. in Hawthorne, Nevada, was built in 1936 and expanded later, including in 1942 and 1950. Also known as Hawthorne Elementary School, it is an Art Deco style building that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1999. It was funded by a local bond issue rather than by any New Deal program, although its expansion was funded by federal programs, after the start of World War II led to growth at the 1928-founded Hawthorne Naval Ammunition Depot and to local population growth. It was deemed significant forits association with military history, and is also locally significant as an Art Deco work, designed by a young architect, University of Pennsylvania-trained Willis Humphry Church. No longer a school as of the time of its NRHP listing, it is located kitty-corner across from the former Mineral County Courthouse building, which also is NRHP-listed. References Category:Schools in Nevada Category:Hawthorne, Nevada Category:History of Mineral County, Nevada Category:Buildings and structures in Mineral County, Nevada Category:School buildings completed in 1936 Category:School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Nevada Category:Art Deco architecture in Nevada Category:1936 establishments in Nevada Category:National Register of
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Year 934 (CMXXXIV) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire Spring and Summer – The Hungarians make an alliance with the Pechenegs and fight their way through Thrace to Constantinople. They kill the inhabitants, inflict severe damage on the countryside and defeat both the Byzantine Empire and Bulgaria at the Battle of W.l.n.d.r, forcing to pay them tribute. Emperor Romanos I signs a peace treaty with the Hungarians. Europe King Henry I ("the Fowler") pacifies the territories to the north, where the Danish Vikings havebeen harrying the Frisians by sea. He defeats the Danes petty King Gnupa, and conquers Hedeby. Summer – Caliph Abd-al-Rahman III invades Navarra and forces Queen Toda to submit to him. Her son the 15-year-old King García Sánchez I becomes a vassal of the Caliphate of Córdoba. Haakon I ("the Good"), a son of the late King Harald Fairhair, once again reunites the kingdom after he has deposed his half-brother Eric Bloodaxe. Haakon is installed as king of Norway. The Eldgjá volcanic eruption is the largest basalt flood in history (first documented). England King Tewdwr of Brycheiniog attends the court
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Coleostephus myconis, known as the corn marigold, is an annual herbaceous plant belonging to the genus Coleostephus of the family Asteraceae. Description Coleostephus myconis is an annual plant that reaches a height of . It is glabrous to hairy, the stem is erect, usually branched. The lower leaves are spatulate. the median ones are lanceolate, dentate, more or less amplexicaul. Inflorescences are orange-yellow, about wide, solitary and terminal. The flowering period extends from April to July. Distribution and ecology C. myconis occurs in the Mediterranean region of southern Europe. It usually grows in grassy fields, at altitudes of . It
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Relations:[["Coleostephus myconis", "parent taxon", "Coleostephus"]] |
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WSCC-FM (94.3 MHz), also known as "News Radio 94.3 WSC", is a commercial radio station licensed to Goose Creek, South Carolina, and serving the Charleston metropolitan area. It is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and airs a talk radio format. WSCC-FM has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 25,000 watts. The station's studios and offices are on Houston Northcutt Boulevard in Mount Pleasant. The transmitter is also in Mount Pleasant, off Venning Road. Weekdays begin with a news and information show, "Mornings with Kelly Golden." The rest of the schedule is nationally syndicated shows, mostly from co-owned Premiere Networks: Rush Limbaugh,the call letters WWHT, with the HT standing for Hot. The Hot 94 disc jockeys or "Hot Jocks" as they were known, included Madeline (formerly of crosstown Album Rock WAVF) for the morning, Mick Barker (from rival Top 40 outlet WSSX) for middays, with Chris Kelly (from WMMC/Columbia, South Carolina) for the afternoon, and Rocky Love (from WXTU/Philadelphia) for evenings. The station was programmed by Bob Casey, formerly VP-Programming of crosstown WXTC. Switch to Oldies Hot 94 failed to make headway due to strong competition from Top 40 stations WKQB (Q-107) and WSSX (95SSX). Hot 94 had a 3,000 watt1992, WUJM entered into a LMA with WSSX, which resulted in the station's format changed to Contemporary hit radio (CHR) as "Fly 94." The WSSP call sign was added that October. Although the station became Charleston's only CHR when WSSX moved to a Hot Adult Contemporary sound, the ratings for WSSP were still dismal. In September 1993, the LMA was broken off and WSSP flipped to satellite fed adult standards as "Stardust 94.3." In 1999, Clear Channel Broadcasting, the forerunner to current owner iHeartMedia, bought both AM 730 WSCC and FM 94.3 WSSP. WSSP dropped adult standards for a return
### Assistant:
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Diego Costa Silva (born 11 May 1979), known simply as Diego, is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Club career Born in Itaqui, Rio Grande do Sul, Diego represented in his country Esporte Clube Juventude, Clube Atlético Paranaense, Fluminense FC and Esporte Clube Santo André. He competed in the Série A with all the clubs, for example being an undisputed starter for the second as it finished second in the 2004 season (45 games). In 2009, Diego moved to Portugal, where he played for Leixões S.C. and Vitória FC, both in the Primeira Liga. At theend of his second campaign with the Setúbal-based team, he was chosen as best player in the squad. In June 2012, 33-year-old Diego signed for Azerbaijan Premier League side Gabala FC, on a two-year contract. In his first season at his new club he split starting duties with Anar Nazirov, appearing in a total of 18 official matches – two in the domestic cup – and making his debut on 4 August against Simurq PFC. Club statistics Honours Club Juventude Campeonato Gaúcho: 1998 Copa do Brasil: 1999 Atlético Paranaense Campeonato Paranaense: 2005 Fluminense Copa do Brasil: 2007 Copa Libertadores: Runner-up
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Leah Goldstein (born February 4, 1969 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) is a professional Israeli road racing cyclist. Born in Canada, Goldstein was raised in Israel when her family made aliyah. She spent 9 years in the Israeli commandos and secret police. A natural athlete she won the 1989 World Bantamweight Kickboxing Championship, and was Israel's Duathlon champion. However, during her cycling career she has had some bad luck. Shortly before the 2004 Olympics, she broke her hand in a race in Pennsylvania. And then in 2005, after winning 9 of her first 11 races she was involved in ahorrific crash during the Cascade Classic that almost ended her career. In 2011, Goldstein won the women's solo category of Race Across AMerica (RAAM), breaking the previous record by 12 hours. Results 2000 3rd in National Championship, Road, ITT, Elite, Canada (F) (CAN) 2001 3rd in National Championship, Road, ITT, Elite, Canada (F) (CAN) 2002 2nd in Stage 1 Tour de Toona (F) (USA) 2nd in National Championship, Road, ITT, Elite, Canada (F) (CAN) 2003 3rd in Stage 1 Tour of the Gila (F) (USA) 2005 1st in Stage 2 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 3rd in Stage 4 MountHood Classic (F) (USA) 1st in Stage 3 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 1st in Stage 5 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 1st in General Classification Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 2006 2nd in Stage 4 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 3rd in Stage 6 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 1st in General Classification Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 2007 1st in Stage 4 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 2nd in Stage 5 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 1st in General Classification Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 1st in National Championship, Road, ITT, Elite, Israel (F) (ISR) 1st in NationalChampionship, Road, Elite, Israel (F) (ISR) 2nd in Tour de Gastown (F) (CAN) 2nd in Stage 3 Tour de Delta (F) (CAN) 2nd in General Classification Tour de Delta (F) (CAN) 2008 3rd in Stage 1 San Dimas Stage Race (F), Glendora (USA) 1st in Stage 1 Tour of the Gila (F), Mogollon R.R. (USA) 2nd in Stage 3 Tour of the Gila (F) (USA) 1st in General Classification Tour of the Gila (F) (USA) 1st in Stage 4 Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 3rd in General Classification Mount Hood Classic (F) (USA) 1st in National Championship, Road, ITT, Elite,
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Scott and Seringapatam Reefs is a group of atoll-like reefs in the Timor Sea more than northwest of Cape Leveque, Western Australia, on the edge of the continental shelf. There are three or four separate reef structures, depending on whether Scott Reef Central is counted separately. The group is just one of a number of reef formations off the northwest coast of Australia and belongs to Western Australia. Further to the northeast are Ashmore and Cartier Islands, and to the southwest are the Rowley Shoals. Location and Description Each of the reefs rises steeply from the seabed below. Much of
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Dr. Maureen Gaffney (born 1947) is an Irish clinical psychologist, broadcaster, writer and columnist. Biography Gaffney was born in 1947 in Midleton, County Cork. Educated there in St Mary's High School the Presentation Convent, she was the first in her family to go to university and she graduated with a B.A in Psychology from the University College Cork. Her brother John followed her in her choice of study. Gaffney got a scholarship in 1974 which allowed her to get her masters in Behavioural Sciences from the University of Chicago. She returned to Ireland to gain her PhD from Trinity College
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Relations:[["Maureen Gaffney", "occupation", "Writer"], ["Maureen Gaffney", "given name", "Maureen"]] |
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The 2018 ATP World Tour was the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2018 tennis season. The 2018 ATP World Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the ATP World Tour Masters 1000, the ATP World Tour 500 series, the ATP World Tour 250 series, the Davis Cup (organized by the ITF), and the ATP Finals. Also included in the 2018 calendar are the Hopman Cup (organized by the ITF) and the Next Gen ATP Finals, which do not distribute ranking points. Schedulematches Point distribution Retirements Following is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the ATP Rankings top 100 [singles] or top 100 [doubles] for at least one week) who announced their retirement from professional tennis, became inactive (after not playing for more than 52 weeks), or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2018 season: Julien Benneteau (born 20 December 1981 in Bourg en Bresse, France) joined the professional tour in 2000 and reached a career-high of no. 25 in singles in November 2014. He reached the quarterfinals of the 2006 French Openexit at the Austrian Open Kitzbühel in August 2017, Haas announced his retirement from professional tennis on 15 March 2018. Scott Lipsky (born 14 August 1981 in Merrick, New York, USA) joined the professional tour in 2003 and reached a career-high of no. 21 in doubles in 2013. He won 16 ATP doubles titles with six different partners. Together with Casey Dellacqua, he won the French Open Mixed Doubles event in 2011. He announced his retirement in June 2018. The 2018 French Open was his last tournament. Marinko Matosevic (born 8 August 1985 in Jajce, SFR Yugoslavia (present-day Bosnia andretirement following his first round defeat to Borna Ćorić at the 2018 US Open. Max Mirnyi (born 6 July 1977 in Minsk, Soviet Union (present-day Belarus)) joined the professional tour in 1996 and reached a career-high of no. 18 in singles and no. 1 in doubles in 2003. Having won 52 doubles titles, including six Grand Slam titles, Mirnyi announced his retirement from professional tennis on 29 November 2018. Gilles Müller (born 9 May 1983 in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg) joined the professional tour in 2001 and reached a career-high of no. 21 on 31 July 2017. He won 2 ATP
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Relations:[["2018 ATP World Tour", "sport", "Tennis"]] |
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Muhamed Keita (born 2 September 1990 in Banjul, Gambia) is a Norwegian footballer of Gambian ancestry. Club career Early career Born in Banjul, Gambia, Keita began his career with Norwegian side Drafn. While with Drafn he caught the attention of Strømsgodset, joining the club's youth system in 2006. Strømsgodset Keita made his first team debut for Strømsgodset away against Brann, and followed this up with some notable performances: he scored a hat-trick after coming off the bench against Pors Grenland in the Norwegian Cup, and was impressive against Viking in the final match of the 2008 season. On 26 April2009 Keita scored his first league goal for Godset, scoring on a free kick in a 1–0 victory over Stabæk. Keita's progress caught the eye of Parma, and he attended trials with the Italian club in January 2009. However, he stayed in Norway for the next four years, winning the league with Strømsgodset in 2013. Lech Poznań On 2 July 2014 he joined Lech Poznań in the Polish Ekstraklasa. On 20 July 2014, Keita made his league debut for Lech, starting in a 4–0 victory over Piast Gliwice. On 26 October 2014, Keita scored an 80th-minute goal to lead hisclub to a 1–0 victory over Górnik Łęczna. This was also his first goal with his new side. On 3 March 2015, Keita scored in a 5–1 victory over Znicz Pruszków in a Polish Cup match. On 4 April 2015, Keita opened the scoring for Lech in a 2–1 victory over GKS Bełchatów. In his first year in Poland, Keita helped his club capture the 2014–15 Ekstraklasa title. During the season he appeared in 28 matches and scored three goals. Stabæk On 22 June 2015 Keita returned to Norway joining Stabæk on loan. On 25 July 2015, Keita made hisas Stabæk finished in third place qualifying for the 2016–17 UEFA Europa League. Return to Strømsgodset During January 2016, Keita returned to Strømsgodset on loan from Lech Poznań. During his second spell with the club Keita scored many key goals for Strømsgodset. On 22 May 2016 Keita helped his club to a 3–2 come from behind victory over Vålerenga, scoring the first goal of the match for Godset. On 4 July 2016 Keita opened the scoring for his club in a 4–2 victory over Aalesund. Keita contributed with a game-winning goal the next matchday to help Godset to a 1–0to impress. He was released from the club after the 2019 season. Ohod Club On 2 January 2020 Keita signed a To the end of the season with Prince Mohammad bin Salman League side Ohod Club. Career statistics Club Honours Club Strømsgodset Tippeligaen (1): 2013 Norwegian Football Cup (1): 2010 Lech Poznań Ekstraklasa (1): 2014-15 References External links Keita at altomfotball.no Category:1990 births Category:Living people Category:Sportspeople from Drammen Category:Gambian emigrants to Norway Category:Naturalised citizens of Norway Category:Norwegian footballers Category:Norwegian people of Gambian descent Category:Strømsgodset Toppfotball players Category:Lech Poznań players Category:Stabæk Fotball players Category:Vålerenga Fotball players Category:New York Red Bulls players
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Paul Schmitthenner (born Lauterburg, Elsass-Lothringen, Germany 15 December 1884 – 11 November 1972) was a German architect, city planner and Professor at the University of Stuttgart. During Nazi Germany, Schmitthenner was one of Adolf Hitler's architects. Early life and education He studied at the technical universities of Karlsruhe and Munich and later became a Professor at the University of Stuttgart, where he formed together with Paul Bonatz the architectural style of the Stuttgart School. Architecture His belief that the traditional methods and styles in architecture revealed best the German character led to his appointment as expert group leader for finearts in the Kampfbund. He believed that Schönheit ruht in Ordnung (German: "Beauty lies in (geometric) order"). Schmitthenner was in open opposition to modern architects like Walter Gropius. For him, Goethe's cottage at Weimar was still the ideal type of the German residential building. However, despite official approval, his enthusiasm did not bring many large commissions. He had to leave his chair at the University after war without a pension and worked as an architect till the end of his life. In Stuttgart he built the "Königin-Olga-Bau" for the Dresdner Bank in 1950. Works Baugestaltung. Das Deutsche Wohnhaus, 1932. See
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Markelle N'Gai Fultz (born May 29, 1998) is an American professional basketball player for the Orlando Magic of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played college basketball for the Washington Huskies before joining the NBA. During his single season (2016–17) with the Huskies, Fultz played point guard and shooting guard. Despite Washington's relatively disappointing year, he was named to the third-team All-American and to the first-team All-Pac-12. He was then selected by the Philadelphia 76ers as the first overall pick in the 2017 NBA draft. He played with the 76ers before geing traded to the Magic in February 2019. Highschool career Fultz was born on May 29, 1998 in Prince George's County, Maryland, the younger of two children. His father abandoned the family, so he relied heavily on his mother, Ebony. Impassioned by basketball, Fultz was mentored in his early years by a local instructor named Keith Williams. In 2012, he began attending DeMatha Catholic High, an all-boys prep school as well as basketball powerhouse. He had shown promise on the DeMatha Stags' freshman team; but as a sophomore, the guard was cut from the varsity roster. He was overlooked due to his awkward gait, having the appearance of"Bambi"; as assistant coach Cory McCrae explained, "He was long and lanky, and he’d walk and his knees would be hurting". However, Fultz outplayed the competition at the junior varsity level, making it apparent that he did not belong there. Assistant coach Raphael Chillious of the Washington Huskies was the first to notice Fultz's potential, describing him as an athlete with the makings of an NBA All-Star-caliber player if he continued to grow. At the start of his junior season, Fultz stood . As a starter for DeMatha's varsity team, he averaged 16.8 points, 7.9 rebounds, and 4.3 assists pergame and was named the Player of the Year in the highly-competitive Washington Catholic Athletic Conference. Among the highlights of his junior campaign were the game-winning foul shots he made in a 16-point performance while being guarded by Jayson Tatum of Chaminade and the triple-double he posted in a matchup against Roselle Catholic at the Hoophall Classic. His recruiting stature abruptly soared during this season, with Rivals.com ranking him number 24 in the Class of 2016 and over 20 college programs offering him scholarships. Before his senior season, Fultz made a verbal commitment on August 21, 2015, to the WashingtonHuskies. He concluded his high school career with exceptional numbers as he recorded the Stags' single-season record for assists, with 278, and led the team to their second consecutive conference championship. At the McDonald's All-American Game on March 31, 2016, Fultz tallied 10 points, 6 rebounds, and 4 assists. At the Jordan Brand Classic come April, Fultz accumulated 19 points in a 131–117 East team victory. During the summer, he was selected to Team USA's FIBA Americas Under-18 roster. With Fultz as its leading scorer, the team progressed to the gold medal championship game; and in dominant fashion, Fultz posted23 points and earned the tournament's MVP award for his performance. By the end of his senior year, Fultz was rated as a five-star recruit and ranked the seventh-best overall recruit and third-best guard in the 2016 high school class. At DeMatha, Fultz was a teammate and friend of Chase Young, who was selected by the Washington Redskins with the second pick of the 2020 NFL Draft. College career The Washington Huskies were fully expecting to open the 2016–17 season with Dejounte Murray and Marquese Chriss; instead, however, both freshmen were selected in the first round of the 2016 NBAdraft. Fultz said of the anticipated scenario if they had stayed: "I think we would be No. 1 in the country. We would have gone to the (NCAA) tournament and won". Without any proven talent and only one returning starter, Fultz took charge as a team leader and primary scorer. As the starting point guard, he debuted in a 98–90 home game loss to the Yale Bulldogs in which he posted 30 points. Although the Huskies finished with a disappointing 9-22 record, Fultz enjoyed one of the best freshman seasons in all Pac-12 Conference history. In 25 games that season,his 23.2 point average was the highest mark in the Pac-12 in 20 years and second in Huskies history behind Bob Houbregs' 25.6 points per game in 1952–1953. Fultz also led the team in minutes played with 35.7 per game as well as assists with 5.7 per game and was second in rebounds with 5.9 per game. By the time Pac-12 honors were awarded, Fultz—the lone Husky selected—was named to the First-team All-Pac-12 and Third-team All-American. A player who "jumps off the page athletically and possesses creative scoring instincts and playmaking skills", the consensus among sports analysts was that Fultzwould be the first overall pick in the 2017 NBA draft. Professional career Philadelphia 76ers (2017–2019) Rookie season (2017–18) Fultz was selected as the first overall pick in the 2017 NBA draft by the Philadelphia 76ers, who then finalized his four-year rookie contract on July 8. The 76ers, after years of mediocrity, had lofty expectations of returning to the playoffs for the first time since 2012; such were the high hopes that rested on their new core consisting of Fultz, Joel Embiid, and Ben Simmons. In his first regular season game, on October 18, the rookie posted 10 points, 3rebounds, and 1 assist in 18 minutes of play coming off the bench. It was not long, however, before a shoulder injury—termed a "scapular muscle imbalance"—so ravaged his shooting that he shot only 33 percent from the field and attempted zero three-pointers in four games. In response, the 76ers decided to sit Fultz indefinitely until he recovered. Debate ensued between sports analysts and the organization over how much his shooting woes were of physical versus psychological origin. Fultz himself later clarified: "What happened [...] was an injury. Let me get that straight. It was an injury that happened that didn’tallow me to go through the certain paths that I needed to, to shoot the ball." During his hiatus, Fultz's basic shooting mechanics appeared to change under a trainer from outside the 76ers organization; this and his lengthy recovery period taken were heavily scrutinized. The team's president of basketball operations, Bryan Colangelo, suggested that the rookie might very well sit for the remainder of the season; but on March 26, 2018, it was announced that Fultz would return to the hardwood for an upcoming game against the Denver Nuggets. Despite some missteps, such as one air ball shot and someshots blocked, Fultz put up 10 points and 8 assists in 14 minutes of playing time. On April 11, at 19 years-old, Fultz became the youngest player in NBA history to record a triple-double, breaking the mark set by fellow rookie Lonzo Ball earlier that season. 2018–19 season For the 2018–19 season, head coach Brett Brown named Fultz the starting shooting guard over veteran JJ Redick. Fifteen games into the season, however, Fultz lost the position to Jimmy Butler, whom the 76ers acquired in a trade with the Minnesota Timberwolves. Conflicting statements regarding Fultz's health and poor production continued tobe sources of conflict and drama for the team. On November 20, 2018, his agent Raymond Brothers announced Fultz would not participate in practice or games until a shoulder injury was evaluated; his ailment was later described as thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS), the neurogenic type of the disorder which “affects nerves between the neck and shoulder resulting in abnormal functional movement and range of motion, thus severely limiting Markelle’s ability to shoot a basketball”. Orlando Magic (2019–present) On February 7, 2019, Fultz was traded to the Orlando Magic in exchange for Jonathon Simmons and two draft picks, an Oklahoma CityThunder first round pick, and a Cleveland Cavilers 2nd round pick . Magic coach Steve Clifford later stated in March that he did not anticipate Fultz returning to play during the season, stressing that his shoulder injury was indeed "very serious." Fultz made his debut for the Magic in the season opener October 23, 2019, scoring 12 points and making the ESPN top plays at number 4 looking comfortable on the court once again. Career statistics NBA Regular season |- | style="text-align:left;"| | style="text-align:left;"| Philadelphia | 14 || 0 || 18.1 || .405 || .000 || .476 || 3.1 ||3 || 0 || 7.7 || .143 || – || .750 || 1.0 || 1.7 || .7 || .0 || 1.7 College |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2016–17 | style="text-align:left;"| Washington | 25 || 25 || 35.7 || .476 || .413 || .649 || 5.7 || 5.9 || 1.6 || 1.2 || 23.2 References External links Washington Huskies bio USA Basketball bio Category:1998 births Category:Living people Category:African-American basketball players Category:All-American college men's basketball players Category:American men's basketball players Category:Basketball players from Maryland Category:DeMatha Catholic High School alumni Category:McDonald's High School All-Americans Category:Orlando Magic players Category:People from Upper Marlboro, Maryland Category:Philadelphia 76ers draft
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John Corwin Rule, (born 2 March 1929 in Warren, Indiana-died 12 January 2013 in Columbus, Ohio) was a widely respected historian of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century French history at the Ohio State University from 1958 to 1995. Early life and education The son of Corwin Rule and Elaine Rule, John Rule attended Broad Ripple High School in Indianapolis, Indiana and went on to graduate from Stanford University with a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in history in 1952 with a thesis on "Nicolas de Lamoignon de Basville and the Protestants of the Languedoc, 1685-1702." He went on to Harvard University,where he completed his doctorate in history in 1958 with a thesis on "The preliminary negotiations leading to the Peace of Utrecht, 1709-1712". Academic career In his final year of graduate study at Harvard in 1957-58, Rule taught history at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts, then joined the faculty at the Ohio State University, where he retired as professor emeritus in 1995. He served as associate editor of the journal French Historical Studies and was awarded research grants from the American Philosophical Society, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Folger Library, and the Huntington Library. His last book, AWorld of Paper (co-written with Ben S. Trotter) won the American Historical Association's Leo Gershoy Award in 2015. The Ohio State University Foundation established in his memory the Elaine S. and John C. Rule Study Abroad Fund for graduate student travel. Published works Books A select bibliography for students of history, edited by John C. Rule, et al. (1957). Bibliography of works in the philosophy of history, 1945-1957, edited by John C. Rule, et al. (1961). The character of Philip II: the problem of moral judgments in history (1963). Louis XIV and the craft of kingship (1969). Louis XIV (1973)Observations from the Hague and Utrecht: William Harrison's letters to Henry Watkins, 1711-1712, edited by Linda Frey, Marsha Frey, and John C. Rule. (1979) A World of Paper: Louis XIV, Colbert de Torcy, and the Rise of the Information State, by John C. Rule and Ben S. Trotter (2014) Contributions "The Old Regime in America: A Review of Recent Interpretations of France in America" in The William and Mary Quarterly, Third Series, Vol. 19, No. 4, (1962). "Paul Vaucher: Historian" in French Historical Studies, Vol. 5, No. 1, (Spring 1967). "William F. Church, 1912-1977" by A. Lloyd Moote and John
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Vaughan Garfield Bowen BCom, MAICD (born 14 December 1972 in Australia) is an Australian businessman. He is the founder and former Executive Director of M2 Telecommunications, an Australian telecommunications company. Career Prior to founding M2 Telecommunications, Bowen spent several years managing and profitably growing the South East Asian operations of Secure Parking, one of the region's largest facilities management companies. He is a member of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and was named as a finalist in the Entrepreneur of the Year Southern Region 2004 and 2009. In 2012, Bowen received the ACOMMS Communications Ambassador award. On 29 August
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Relations:[["Vaughan Bowen", "country of citizenship", "Australia"], ["Vaughan Bowen", "place of birth", "Australia"]] |
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John "Johnny" Lawless (born 3 November 1974) is a rugby league footballer who played in the 1990s and 2000s. He played at representative level for England, and Ireland, and at club level for Halifax (two spells), Sheffield Eagles and Huddersfield-Sheffield Giants. Club career Lawless started his career at Halifax, making his début in 1992. He joined Sheffield Eagles in 1995. Lawless played in Sheffield Eagles' 17–8 victory over Wigan in the 1998 Challenge Cup Final during Super League III at Wembley Stadium, London on Saturday 2 May 1998. After spending the season with Huddersfield following the club's merger with Sheffield,Lawless returned to Halifax in 2000. He retired in January 2004. Since retirement, Johnny has gone on to found, with his colleague, the Minds Matter Charity, dealing with the stigma of mental health in men and advocating for Mental health Practitioners to be utilised in Healthcare and Social settings in a similar way to First Aiders are utilised. Along with his Colleague, Johnny has presented across Britain to both healthcare and non-healthcare establishments. Representative career Lawless was an Ireland international and played at the 2000 Rugby League World Cup. References External links (archived by web.archive.org) The Teams: Ireland Category:Living people
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Dhesian is a village in Dera Baba Nanak in Gurdaspur district of Punjab State, India. It is located from sub district headquarter and from district headquarter. The village is administrated by Sarpanch an elected representative of the village. Demography , The village has a total number of 163 houses and the population of 848 of which 441 are males while 407 are females. According to the report published by Census India in 2011, out of the total population of the village 0 people are from Schedule Caste and the village does not have any Schedule Tribe population so far. See
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Pete McGrath (born 6 June 1953) is an Irish Gaelic football manager and former manager of the Down senior football team. Professional career McGrath was employed for many years as a physical education teacher at St Colman's College, Newry. He retired from this position in 2006. Management career In 1987 McGrath was in charge of the Down team that won the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship. He managed the Down senior team between 1989 and 2002, and was at the helm when Down won the Ulster and All Ireland Senior Championships in 1991 and 1994. He managed the Ireland team inthe International Rules Series in 2004 and 2005. McGrath managed the Down under 21 team to the All Ireland final in 2009, before stepping down in October 2009. McGrath has had spells in club management with Cooley Kickhams, An Riocht, and Bryansford. He also coached the Gaelic football teams at St Colman's College, guiding them to five Hogan Cup wins between 1975 and 1998 with Ray Morgan. In October 2010, he returned to county management after being named as the Down minor manager on a three-year term, his second time in charge of the team. He took manager of the
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Beatriz Adriana Flores de Saracho (born March 5, 1958), commonly known as Beatriz Adriana, is a Mexican singer of ranchera. She has a recognized artistic trajectory in her country of origin. She is also the ex-wife of Mexican singer Marco Antonio Solís, with whom she has a daughter, also named Beatriz Adriana (but performs under the name Beatriz Solís). Adriana became a grandmother when her daughter Beatriz gave birth to a son, Leonardo. In 2000, Adriana suffered the loss of her son Leonardo Martínez who was murdered by kidnappers. Fearing for the life of her daughter Betty, she moved to
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Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533 (1964), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled that the electoral districts of state legislative chambers must be roughly equal in population. Along with Baker v. Carr (1962) and Wesberry v. Sanders (1964), it was part of a series of Warren Court cases that applied the principle of "one person, one vote" to U.S. legislative bodies. Prior to the case, numerous state legislative chambers had districts containing unequal populations; for example, in the Nevada Senate, the smallest district had 568 people, while the largest had approximately 127,000 people. Somestates refused to engage in regular redistricting, while others enshrined unequal representation in state constitutions. The case of Reynolds v. Sims arose after voters in Birmingham, Alabama challenged the apportionment of the Alabama Legislature; the Constitution of Alabama provided for one state senator per county regardless of population differences. In a majority opinion joined by five other justices, Chief Justice Earl Warren ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause requires states to establish state legislative electoral districts roughly equal in population. Warren held that "legislators represent people, not trees or acres. Legislators are elected by voters, not farms orcities or economic interests." In his dissenting opinion, Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan II argued that the Equal Protection Clause was not designed to apply to voting rights. The decision had a major impact on state legislatures, as many states had to change their system of representation. Historical background That a State Senate was to represent rural counties, as a counterbalance to towns and cities, was understood before the industrialization and urbanization of the United States. State and national legislatures had been reluctant to redistrict. This reluctance developed because there existed general upper-class fear that if redistricting to meet populationhad one member in the California State Senate, as did the 400 people of one rural county (Alpine County, California). In the Idaho Senate, the smallest district had 951 people; the largest, 93,400. In the Nevada Senate, seventeen members represented as many as 127,000 or as few as 568 people. Decision The eight justices who struck down state senate inequality based their decision on the principle of "one person, one vote." In his majority decision, Chief Justice Earl Warren said "Legislators represent people, not trees or acres. Legislators are elected by voters, not farms or cities or economic interests." Inthe Senate. Aftermath Since the ruling applied different representation rules to the states than was applicable to the federal government, Reynolds v. Sims set off a legislative firestorm across the country. Senator Everett Dirksen of Illinois led a fight to pass a constitutional amendment allowing legislative districts based on land area, similar to the United States Senate. He warned that: Numerous states had to change their system of representation in the state legislature. For instance, South Carolina had elected one state senator from each county. It devised a reapportionment plan and passed an amendment providing for home rule to counties.Sims the "best Supreme Court decision since 1960," with Chemerinsky noting that in his opinion, the decision made American government "far more democratic and representative." See also Rotten borough, an English phenomenon The Shaff Plan Alabama Legislative Black Caucus v. Alabama (2015) List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 377 References Notes External links California Legislative District Maps (1911–Present) Category:United States equal protection case law Category:United States Supreme Court cases Category:United States electoral redistricting case law Category:United States One Person, One Vote Legal Doctrine Category:1964 in United States case law Category:American Civil Liberties Union litigation Category:Jefferson County, Alabama Category:Alabama
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Itkohwa is one of the villages under Block-Madanpur, Aurangabad district, Bihar, India. The village is bounded by Bijuliya and Basant. Gaya is its nearest largest city and the neighboring district headquarters. History The common belief is that the village was a sati-asthal once, but during Raja Ram Mohan Roy-led reforms and initiatives of Lord William Bentinck it was completely abolished. Statistics Headquarters: Chowk Area: Total 5,000 m2 Population: Total: 200–250 Agriculture: wheat, potato, rice, seasonal vegetables Temperature: minimum 4 °C, maximum 42 °C Location of Itkohwa In Bihar Administrative division Magadh Headquarters Aurangabad, India Literacy rate 80% Lok Sabha Constituencies
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Maia Mitchell (born 18 August 1993) is an Australian actress and singer. She is known for her roles as Brittany Flune in the children's television series Mortified for the Nine Network, and as Natasha Ham in the Seven Network's teen drama Trapped. For American audiences, since 2013, she has played the role of Callie Adams Foster in the Freeform drama The Fosters (2013–2018) and its sequel series Good Trouble. She also co-starred with Ross Lynch in the Disney Channel original films Teen Beach Movie (2013) and Teen Beach 2 (2015) as McKenzie. Early life Maia Mitchell was born in Lismore,
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Selim I (Ottoman Turkish: سليم اول, Turkish: Birinci Selim; 10 October 1470 – 22 September 1520), known as Selim the Grim or Selim the Resolute (), was the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1512 to 1520. His reign is notable for the enormous expansion of the Empire, particularly his conquest between 1516 and 1517 of the entire Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt, which included all of the Levant, Hejaz, Tihamah, and Egypt itself. On the eve of his death in 1520, the Ottoman Empire spanned about , having grown by seventy percent during Selim's reign. Selim's conquest of the MiddleEastern heartlands of the Muslim world, and particularly his assumption of the role of guardian of the pilgrimage routes to Mecca and Medina, established the Ottoman Empire as the most prestigious of all Muslim states. His conquests dramatically shifted the empire's geographical and cultural center of gravity away from the Balkans and toward the Middle East. By the eighteenth century, Selim's conquest of the Mamluk Sultanate had come to be romanticized as the moment when the Ottomans seized leadership over the rest of the Muslim world, and consequently Selim is popularly remembered as the first legitimate Ottoman Caliph, although storiesof an official transfer of the caliphal office from the Abbasid Dynasty of Cairo to the Ottomans were a later invention. Biography Born in Amasya around 1470, Selim was the youngest son of Şehzade Bayezid (later Bayezid II). His mother was Gülbahar Hatun, a Turkish princess from the Dulkadir State centered around Elbistan in Maraş; her father was Alaüddevle Bozkurt Bey, the eleventh ruler of the Dulkadirs. Some academics state that Selim's mother was a lady named Gülbahar, while chronological analysis suggests that his biological mother's name could also have been Ayşe Hatun. By 1512 Şehzade Ahmet was the favoritecandidate to succeed his father. Bayezid, who was reluctant to continue his rule over the empire, announced Ahmet as heir apparent to the throne. Angered with this announcement, Selim rebelled, and while he lost the first battle against his father's forces, Selim ultimately dethroned his father. Selim ordered the exile of Bayezid to a distant "sanjak", Dimetoka (in the north-east of present-day Greece). Bayezid died immediately thereafter. Selim put his brothers (Şehzade Ahmet and Şehzade Korkut) and nephews to death upon his accession. His nephew Şehzade Murad, son of the legal heir to the throne Şehzade Ahmet, fled to theneighboring Safavid Empire after his expected support failed to materialize. This fratricidal policy was motivated by bouts of civil strife that had been sparked by the antagonism between Selim's father and his uncle, Cem Sultan, and between Selim himself and his brother Ahmet. Conquest of the Middle East Safavid Empire One of Selim's first challenges as Sultan involved the growing tension between himself and Shah Ismail, who had recently brought the Safavids to power and had switched the Persian state religion from Sunni Islam to adherence to the Twelver branch of Shia Islam. By 1510 Ismail had conquered the wholeworked with livestock.) Some historians, however, suggest that he died of cancer or that his physician poisoned him. Other historians have noted that Selim's death coincided with a period of plague in the empire, and have added that several sources imply that Selim himself suffered from the disease. On 22 September 1520 Sultan Selim I's eight year reign came to an end. Selim died and was brought to Istanbul so he could be buried in Yavuz Selim Mosque which Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent commissioned in loving memory of his father. Sultan Selim I had conquered and unified the Islamic holylands. Protecting the lands in Europe, he gave priority to the East, as he believed the real danger came from there. Personality By most accounts, Selim had a fiery temper and had very high expectations of those below him. Several of his viziers were executed for various reasons. A famous anecdote relates how another vizier playfully asked the Sultan for some preliminary notice of his doom so that he might have time to put his affairs in order. The Sultan laughed and replied that indeed he had been thinking of having the vizier killed, but had no one fit totake his place, otherwise he would gladly oblige. A popular Ottoman curse was, "May you be a vizier of Selim's," as a reference to the number of viziers he had executed. Selim was one of the Empire's most successful and respected rulers, being energetic and hardworking. During his short eight years of ruling, he accomplished momentous success. Despite the length of his reign, many historians agree that Selim prepared the Ottoman Empire to reach its zenith under the reign of his son and successor, Suleiman the Magnificent. Selim was also a distinguished poet who wrote both Turkish and Persian verseunder the nickname Mahlas Selimi; collections of his Persian poetry are extant today. In one of his poems, he wrote: "A carpet is large enough to accommodate two sufis, but the world is not large enough for two kings" Foreign relations Relations with Shah Ismail While marching into Persia in 1514, Selim's troops suffered from the scorched-earth tactics of Shah Ismail. The Sultan hoped to lure Ismail into an open battle before his troops starved to death, and began writing insulting letters to the Shah, accusing him of cowardice: Ismail responded to Selim's third message, quoted above, by having anenvoy deliver a letter accompanied by a box of opium. The Shah's letter insultingly implied that Selim's prose was the work of an unqualified writer on drugs. Selim was enraged by the Shah's denigration of his literary talent and ordered the Persian envoy to be torn to pieces. Outside of their military conflicts, Selim I and Shah Ismail clashed on the economic front as well. Opposed to Shah Ismail's adherence to the Shia sect of Islam (contrasting his Sunni beliefs), Selim I and his father before him "did not really accept his basic political and religious legitimacy," beginning the portrayalof the Safavids in Ottoman chronicles as kuffar. After the Battle of Chaldiran, Selim I's minimal tolerance for Shah Ismail disintegrated, and he began a short era of closed borders with the Safavid Empire. Selim I wanted to use the Ottoman Empire's central location to completely cut the ties between Shah Ismail's Safavid Empire and the rest of the world. Even though the raw materials for important Ottoman silk production at that time came from Persia rather than developed within the Ottoman Empire itself, he imposed a strict embargo on Iranian silk in an attempt to collapse their economy. Forthe borders of the Ottoman Empire under Selim I. Shah Ismail received revenue via customs duties, therefore after the war to demonstrate his commitment to their thorny rivalry, Selim I halted trade with the Safavids—even at the expense of his empire's own silk industry and citizens. This embargo and closed borders policy was reversed quickly by his son Suleyman I after Selim I's death in 1520. Relations with Babur Relations with Babur (first Mughal Emperor in Northern India) were initially troubled because Selim provided Babur's arch-rival Ubaydullah Khan with powerful matchlocks and cannons to counter the influence of the Safavids.In 1517, when ordered to accept Selim as his Caliph and suzerain, Babur refused. In 1519, Selim reconciled with Babur, dispatched Ustad Ali Quli the artilleryman, Mustafa Rumi the matchlock marksman, and many other Ottoman Turks to assist Babur in his conquests. Thenceforth this particular assistance proved to be the basis of future Mughal-Ottoman relations. Family Sons Selim had at least six sons: Suleiman the Magnificent; Şehzade Salih (died 1499, buried in Gülbahar Hatun Mausoleum, Trabzon); Şehzade Orhan, Şehzade Musa and Şehzade Korkut Üveys Pasha; Daughters Selim had at least ten daughters, including; Fatma Sultan, daughter of Hafsa Sultan. Marriedfirstly to Mustafa Pasha, married secondly to Kara Ahmed Pasha, married thirdly to Hadım Ibrahim Pasha; Hatice Sultan,daughter of Hafsa Sultan. Married to Kapudan Iskender Pasha in 1509, once believed to be a wife of Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha but recent research revealed that such marriage never occurred. She might have secondly married Çoban Mustafa Pasha son of Iskender Pasha. She had at least one daughter.; Hafsa Sultan, married firstly to Dukakinzade Ahmed Pasha, she might have secondly married in 1517 to Çoban Mustafa Pasha, son of Iskender Pasha. Had one son Sultanzade Osman Pasha, also known as Kara Osman-sah; ŞahSultan (buried in Eyüp), married in 1523 to Lütfi Pasha (div.), they had a daughter called Ismihan Hanimsultan Beyhan Sultan, probably daughter of Hafsa Sultan. Married in 1521 to Ferhad Pasha. She had at least one child, Ismihan Hanimsultan; Gevherhan Sultan, married Isfendiyaroglu Damad Sultanzade Mehmed Bey. Sehzade Sultan, might have married Çoban Mustafa Pasha son of Iskender Pasha. Had at least one daughter Gallery Modern day The German battlecruiser SMS Goeben was renamed Yavuz Sultan Selim after being handed over to the Turkish Navy in 1914. A third bridge over the Bosphorus in Istanbul is called the Yavuz SultanSelim Bridge. This $3 Billion bridge garnered some criticism as Selim 1 was known for his ruthlessness, especially against Shi'a muslims. Popular culture Selim I appears as an important character in the action-adventure video game Assassin's Creed: Revelations. Selim I is the love interest in the romance novel, The Kadin, written by Bertrice Small. See also Babur Tuman bay II Al-Mutawakkil III References Sources External links Category:1470s births Category:1520 deaths Category:16th-century Ottoman sultans Category:Deaths from anthrax Category:Infectious disease deaths in the Ottoman Empire Category:Turks of the Ottoman Empire Category:People of Turkic descent Category:People from Amasya Category:Suleiman the Magnificent Category:Turkic rulers
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For people with the surname, see Rivaz (surname). Rivaz (pro. ree-vah) is a municipality in the canton of Vaud in Switzerland, located in the district of Lavaux-Oron. History Rivaz is first mentioned in 1138 as Ripa. Geography Rivaz has an area, , of . Of this area, or 67.7% is used for agricultural purposes, while or 0.0% is forested. Of the rest of the land, or 22.6% is settled (buildings or roads), or 6.5% is either rivers or lakes. Of the built up area, housing and buildings made up 9.7% and transportation infrastructure made up 12.9%. Out of the forested
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Jules Owchar (born October 12, 1944 in Lac La Biche, Alberta) is a Canadian curler, curling coach, and golf coach from Edmonton, Alberta. Owchar is best known as the longtime coach of Kevin Martin, a retired Olympic champion, world champion, and Canadian champion. Owchar is also the curling coach of the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology curling teams. He is also currently coaching Brad Gushue's Newfoundland and Labrador team. Teams coached by Owchar have won six Briers, one Olympic gold and two silvers, two world championships, 24 Slam titles and 34 conference championship gold medals, as of March 2019 whenhe was named to Curling Canada's Hall of Fame. Career Playing career Owchar was officially listed as the alternate for the Kevin Martin team, which he coached, at the 1991, 1992, 1995, 1996, and 1997 Briers. As the alternate, he won various medals with the team, including two Brier titles and a silver medal at the 1991 World Men's Curling Championship. Coaching career Owchar is a Level 3 certified curling coach by the National Coaching Certification Program. Northern Alberta Institute of Technology Owchar began his career at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT) as a physical education instructor in1969. Throughout his career, he has coached NAIT curling teams to 33 college championships. Along with the golf championships he has also coached his students to, he has over 40 provincial and national championships as a coach. Most recently, he coached the NAIT men's curling team to their first national college championship. Coaching Kevin Martin Owchar began coaching Kevin Martin when he enrolled at NAIT in 1984. Martin had enrolled at NAIT specifically to curl under Owchar, and he and Martin were together for thirty years. In their first few years together, Owchar coached Martin to a Canadian junior titleand a silver medal at the World Junior Curling Championships. As they continued, Martin and Owchar made their first Brier appearance in 1991 representing Alberta, and won their first Brier title. Martin then lost the championship game in the world championship later that year. In the next six years, Martin and Owchar returned to the Brier four times, and finished within the top three all four times. However, Martin came up short at the world level, losing the semifinal at the world championship in 1997 and the gold medal game at the 2002 Winter Olympics, which had come down toa draw for the win. Martin also missed another opportunity to represent Canada at the Olympics in 2005. Martin returned to the Brier in 2006, but failed to advance in the playoffs. However, with a new team and with Owchar continuing to coach, Martin made the playoffs at the 2007 Tim Hortons Brier, won the 2008 and 2009 Briers, and won a gold and silver medal at the 2008 and 2009 world championships, respectively. Then, the next year, Martin won the 2009 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials and the right to represent Canada at his third Olympics, and won his firstwin at the 2017 Tim Hortons Brier on home ground in St. John's and going undefeated to win the 2017 world championship in Edmonton. They repeated as Brier champions in 2018. Owchar was named to Curling Canada's Hall of Fame at the 2019 Tim Hortons Brier. Awards and honours Petro-Canada Coaching Excellence Award: 2002, 2008, 2009 NAIT Athletics Wall of Fame: 2003 Canadian Curling Hall of Fame (2019) References External links Category:Curlers from Alberta Category:Canadian curling coaches Category:Curlers at the 1992 Winter Olympics Category:Olympic curlers of Canada Category:Living people Category:1944 births Category:Sportspeople from Edmonton Category:People from Lac La Biche County
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Next was the Manchester & Liverpool District Bank on Spring Gardens in 1832, followed by many others in the same area around Spring Gardens, Fountain Street and King Street which became the Central Business District and banking centre. Legacy Many 18th- and 19th-century cotton mills, canals, supporting bridges and infrastructure exist today. The square mile of "warehouse city" is cited as the finest example of a Victorian commercial centre in the United Kingdom. This area is a core component of the listing of Manchester and Salford on a tentative list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites The Royal Exchange was renovated
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Pulloli Thomas Chacko was a prominent politician of Travancore and later Kerala. He was the first Leader of Opposition of the newly formed state of Kerala. He was also the Home Minister of Kerala holding the additional portfolios of Revenue and Law during the period 1960-64. Early life P. T. Chacko was born on 9 April 1915 to Thomas Puthiaparampil and Annamma Thomas Koottumkal(Pullolil) Chirakkadavu in erstwhile Travancore. He was married to Mariamma Ottaplackal, Chirakkadavu and was survived by six children. His son, P. C. Thomas, represented the Muvattupuzha constituency in Lok Sabha from 1989 to 2009, and also servedas the Union Minister of State for Law in the Atal Behari Vajpayee cabinet. He graduated from St. Joseph’s College, Trichy, the University of Madras after studying in St. Berchmans College Changanacherry. He continued his studies in law in Law College, Trivandrum, where as a student leader in 1938, he launched himself into the freedom movement and the struggle for self-government in the princely State of Travancore. Political career A lawyer by profession, after Independence, he served as a member of Travancore Legislative Assembly from 1948 to 1949. After the integration of the states of Travancore and Cochin, he continuedto be a member of the Travancore-Cochin Legislative Assembly from 1949 to 1952. In 1949, he also served as a member of the Constituent Assembly of India. He was the Chief whip of Legislature party of the Indian National Congress in the Travancore Legislative Assembly in 1948, and also acted as Secretary of Congress Legislature Party in Travancore-Cochin Legislative Assembly. He was also the first M. P. (1952–53) of Meenachil (Lok Sabha constituency). P. T. Chacko was elected in 1957 to the first Kerala Legislative Assembly from Vazhoor constituency and became the first Leader of Opposition of the newly formedsexual allegations. He returned to his law practice and also continued to work for the Congress Party. He Introduced First Open jail In India Nettukaltheri Near Neyyar Trivandrum on 28 August 1962. The promising political career ended abruptly when he succumbed to a heart attack on 1 August 1964 at the age of 49. As a defense lawyer, he was visiting a scene of crime in Pulappara Mala in Thottilpalam, Kozhikode District, when he met with his sudden death. After his untimely death, the Chacko loyalists in the Congress party grouped together and formed the Kerala Congress under the leadership
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Tahir Demi (1919–1961) was an Albanian politician. He was high-ranking member of the Party of Labour of Albania and representative of Albania at Comecon. In 1960 he was arrested and sentenced to death in 1961 for being a member of a pro-Soviet group, led by Rear Admiral Teme Sejko, that had been planning a coup d'état against Enver Hoxha. Life Tahir Demi, a member of the Demi family, was born in Filiates, modern northwestern Greece (Chameria) in 1919. In the 1930s he studied at the faculty of law of the University of Tirana. He was married to Sadete Demi Totoand has 3 children Pellumb, Ilirjan, Teuta. In 1943 he joined the National Liberation Movement of Albania and became a member of the Party of Labour of Albania. After World War II he became chairman of the Party of Labour committee of Elbasan District and Albania's delegate at Comecon. In July 1960 he was arrested by the Sigurimi, Albania's secret police, for being part of an alleged joint Greek-Yugoslav-Italian-US Sixth Fleet counterrevolutionary plot to overthrow the Albanian government. He was arrested along with seven military commanders including Teme Sejko, a Rear Admiral of the Albanian Navy. The other defendants includedex-editor-in-chief of Zëri i Popullit Taho Sejko and Liri Belishova, chairwoman of the Central Committee of the Party of Labour of Albania. They were tried in May 1961 and convicted. Tahir Demi was sentenced to death and executed after the trial along with three other high-ranking members of the Albanian army and the Party of Labour of Albania, Teme Sejko, Abdyl Resuli and Hajri Mane on 31 May 1961. The four remaining defendants received prison sentences ranging from 15 years to life imprisonment. According to some sources the executions had arisen because Enver Hoxha disagreed with the conclusions of a
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Maurice Samuel "Mo" Vaughn (born December 15, 1967), nicknamed "The Hit Dog", is a former Major League Baseball first baseman. He played from 1991 to 2003. Vaughn was a three-time All-Star selection and won the American League MVP award in with the Boston Red Sox. Early life and education Vaughn attended New Canaan Country School in New Canaan, Connecticut. He played baseball for Trinity-Pawling School in Pawling, New York. He then moved on to play baseball at Seton Hall for head coach Mike Sheppard. While there he set the school record for home runs with 28. In his three yearsat Seton Hall he hit a total of 57 home runs and 218 RBIs, both team records. His teammates included seven-time All-Star and Hall of Famer Craig Biggio and Red Sox teammate John Valentin. Vaughn earned the Jack Kaiser Award as MVP of the 1987 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament while keying the Pirates' championship run. While at Seton Hall, Vaughn played collegiate summer baseball for two years (1987-88) with the Wareham Gatemen of the Cape Cod Baseball League (CCBL), and in 2000 was named a member of the inaugural class of the CCBL Hall of Fame. Professional career Bostonfirst play of his first game, badly spraining his ankle. Vaughn was nevertheless seen as a viable middle of the line-up producer before the 2002 season and was traded to the New York Mets for Kevin Appier on December 27, 2001. Following Vaughn's departure from Anaheim, Angels closer Troy Percival took a shot at him, saying "We may miss Mo's bat, but we won't miss his leadership. Darin Erstad is our leader." This prompted the normally mild-mannered Vaughn to go off on a profanity-laced tirade, saying that Percival and the Angels "ain't done (expletive) in this game." He remarked "Theyain't got no flags hanging at friggin' Edison Field, so the hell with them." The Angels won the World Series that year and hung a World Series flag at Edison Field. New York Mets With the Mets, Vaughn was counted upon to be a key catalyst in a revamped lineup that featured imports Roger Cedeño, Jeromy Burnitz, and Roberto Alomar. Vaughn got off to a slow start in 2002, and he was ridiculed in local sports columns and on sports talk radio shows for being out of shape; he weighed 268 pounds during his first season in New York. However,in Gates Mills, Ohio, and is the president of a trucking company (Mo Vaughn Transport) in Solon. His cousin Greg Vaughn has a son named Cory Vaughn who played professional baseball for nine seasons. However, Cory was initially drafted by the New York Mets organization in the 4th round of the 2010 June amateur draft out of San Diego State University where he played under Tony Gwynn. On April 18, 2013, Vaughn bought an advertisement section of The Boston Globe and used it to salute those involved in helping the victims of the April 15, 2013 Patriots Day Bombing inBoston. "You are all heroes in my eyes", wrote Vaughn, "Boston will march on." Vaughn became eligible for the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2009. 75% of the vote was necessary for induction, and 5% was necessary to stay on the ballot. He received 1.1% of the vote and dropped off the ballot. Performance-enhancing drugs It was revealed on December 13, 2007, in the report by Senator George J. Mitchell that Vaughn had purchased steroids or other performance-enhancing drugs from Kirk Radomski, who said he delivered the drugs to him personally. Radomski produced three checks, one for $2,200 andbut Vaughn never agreed to set a meeting. See also List of Major League Baseball career home run leaders List of Major League Baseball career runs batted in leaders List of Major League Baseball annual runs batted in leaders List of Major League Baseball players named in the Mitchell Report References External links USA Today article Category:1967 births Category:Living people Category:Major League Baseball first basemen Category:Anaheim Angels players Category:Boston Red Sox players Category:Drugs in sport in the United States Category:New York Mets players Category:American League All-Stars Category:Baseball players from Connecticut Category:African-American baseball players Category:American League RBI champions Category:Sportspeople from Norwalk,
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Mo Vaughn", {"description":'American baseball player', "alias":['Maurice Samuel Vaughn']}], ["Boston Red Sox", {}], ["Baseball", {}], ["First baseman", {}], ["Trinity-Pawling School", {}], ["New York Mets", {}], ["United States", {}]]
Relations:[["Mo Vaughn", "member of sports team", "Boston Red Sox"], ["Mo Vaughn", "sport", "Baseball"], ["Mo Vaughn", "position played on team / speciality", "First baseman"], ["Mo Vaughn", "educated at", "Trinity-Pawling School"], ["Mo Vaughn", "member of sports team", "New York Mets"], ["Mo Vaughn", "country of citizenship", "United States"], ["Mo Vaughn", "country for sport", "United States"]] |
### User:
Röttingen is a town in the district of Würzburg, in Bavaria, Germany. It is situated south of Würzburg, and east of Bad Mergentheim. Geography Climate The valley of Tauber is one of the driest areas in Bavaria and belongs to the continental, dry and warm type of climate with very little of rain. There are more than 30 days every year when the temperature is above 25° Celsius (77 °F) and fewer than 10 days every year where the temperature is below 0° Celsius (32 °F). Parts of the town Parts of the town are Aufstetten, Röttingen, Strüth. History TheOther religions and denominations constitute 2% of the population. Politics Municipal council 12 seats election from 2 March 2008: CSU/Freie Bürger: 9 seats Unabhängige Bürger Röttingen (UBR): 3 seats Mayor Martin Umscheid (CSU / Freie Bürger) 75,59%. Er hat seit 2003 das Direktmandat für den unterfränkischen Bezirkstag und ist dort stellvertretender CSU-Fraktionsvorsitzender. Röttingen ist Sitz einer Verwaltungsgemeinschaft mit folgenden Mitgliedsgemeinden: Bieberehren, Riedenheim, Röttingen, Tauberrettersheim. City partnerships The city maintains a partnership with: Bad Mitterndorf, Steiermark, Austria Neighbouring communities Amalgamations Economy and infrastructure Röttingen is a wine-producing community in the Tauber Valley. Vineyards covering about produce grapes made into Frankonian wine
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Röttingen", {"description":'municipality in Germany'}], ["Germany", {}], ["Bad Mitterndorf", {}]]
Relations:[["Röttingen", "country", "Germany"], ["Röttingen", "twinned administrative body", "Bad Mitterndorf"]] |
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